J. E. BRULATOUR
(INC.)
Fort Loo, N. J. • Chicago • Hollywood
At the call of
"Camera"
...a bank responds
. . . responds with a banking service that is
directed by men who appreciate the unique
problems of America's great motion picture
industry.
One of Hollywood's best-known "extras" is this
extra measure of understanding which is so
important a part of the service which Bank of
America brings to the great producers, stars,
technicians, and the manv workers.
IBank of Kmtvitu
NATIONAL I^iSNTct ASSOCIATION
Member Federal Reserve System and Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
Complete Banking Services . . . Commercial . . . Savings . . . Trust . . . Safe Deposit
/
C'C
0
The 1940
FllJI II ill V
1 1 Li if 1 V/llLl
(3
1 h \ It DUUK
OF MOTION PICTURES
4%
Q
(^ )
Jack Alicoate, Editor
t 0
V'i
\ Y
^ )
22nd Annual Edition
Copyright, 1040, by THE FILM DAIT,Y (Wid's Films and Film Folk, Inc.)
J /
, 1
CINE (HjjPOl^) F'LM
A CONSISTENT PERFORMER
ALL through 1940, as in the past, you
k. can count on Du Pont Cine Film to
produce excellent screen results. Fine
photographic qualities help you achieve
the faithful rendition of highlight and
shadow. A high degree of uniformity from
roll to roll lets you work with confidence.
For better cinematography and sound
reproduction, rely on Du Pont Cine
Products in your coming production
schedules.
DuPont Film Manufacturing Corporation, Inc.
9 Rockefeller Plaza Smith & Aller, Ltd.
New York . . . N.Y. 6656 SantaMonicaBlvd.
Plant . . Parlin.N. J. Hollywood . . California
BETTER THINGS for BETTER LIVING through CHEMISTRY
— BY THE EDITOR
THIS, the 22nd Edition of the Year
Book of Motion Pictures, makes
its appearance as the American
film industry, for a second time in a
generation, is faced with the perplex-
ing problems resulting from a world
at war.
How Hollywood and New York,
and points far beyond the domestic
horizon ivhere the industry maintains
its outposts, have met, are meeting
and propose to further meet those
problems is reflected, necessarily, in
the pages which follow. In the light
of world events, the prosaic becomes
keenly dramatic, ivhether the subject
■■■■■■■■■■^^■■■^■■b he statistical or chronological, re-
portorial or analytical.
While the present volume properly is keyed to the inter-
national developments, the record of the domestic scene is de-
signed to maintain its integrity as the industry's primary source
book and recognized authority.
To this end, there have been many forward steps, both in
text, in arrangement and in format. The statistical section has
been revised and augmented; the exploitation section has been
amplified that it may the better meet the shoivman's needs;
labor and the Guilds receive full coverage.
Additionally, and importantly, television's marked progress
as ivell as the year's achievements in the equipment field are
chronicled, as are recent developments in the law of motion
pictures in a notable article by Louis Nizer.
As in the instances of the 21 preceding editions, the contents of
this volume reflects the zeal and work of many contributors,
the MPPDA, the Academy, the studios, distributors, exchanges,
Federal agencies, the daily press, foreign collaborators, among
them. To them and all others, for assistance cheerfully and pains-
takingly extended, the Editor's sincere appreciation and thanks.
3
There's a G-E MAZDA lamp to meet
every Theatre Lighting Need
GENERAL ELECTRIC makes a lamp
for every theatre lighting service.
A few of them are shown here. G-E
MAZDA lamps represent the result of
more than 40 years of research and de-
velopment. Each of them must pass 480
GENERAL LIGHTING SERVICE lamps fulfill most
of the lamp requirements for ordinary theatre
use. Made in sizes from 6 up to 1 500 watts, and
available in certain sizes in clear, inside frosted,
colors and daylight bulbs.
G-E MAZDA Projector lamp combines a mirror
reflector, a light-directing lens, and a 1 50-watt
lamp filament in one sealed-in unit. Available
in both Spotlight and Floodlight types. Both
types list at S 1 .70.
checks and inspections in manufacture
to guard against imperfections that might
affect their performance in service. Al-
ways look for the monogram @. For de-
tailed information, see the nearest Gen-
eral Electric Lamp Sales Office.
MAZDA LAMPS for motion picture projection
and spotlight use have extreme concentration
of light source. Because of technical improve-
ments including heat-resistant bulbs, small
bulb size is possible. Sizes up to 2000 watts.
G-E MAZDA F (fluorescent) lamps give several
times more light than regular filament lamps
of the same wattage and color. They are avail-
able in gold, pink. blue, green, red. white, and
daylight.
GENERAL m ELECTRIC
A
A F. E. CORP.:
Personnel 610
ACADEMY OF MOTION PICTURE ARTS AND
SCIENCES:
Personnel 664
Awards, 1927-1928 to 1938-1939 77
Academy Productions, Inc., Personnel 627
Accounting Systems 1043
Acoustical Products and Service 1043
Action Film Co., Inc., Personnel 593
Actors and Actresses, Work in 1938 and 1939 337
Actors Equity Association, Personnel 664
ADAPTERS:
Carbon, Incandescent Projection, Lens 1043
ADDRESSES:
(See Producers, Distributors, Buying Guide. Ex-
changes, Circuits, Associations, etc. I.
Advance Trailer Service Corp., Personnel 617
Advertising Accessories, Inc., Personnel 617
Advertising Film Producers, Personnel 593
Advertising Projectors 1054
Agents and Managers 653
Aisle Lights 1045
Air Conditioning . 1045
Air Purifiers 1045
Alexander Film Co., Personnel ...... 593
Alexander Preview Co., Personnel 610
Alexander, William, 1939 Release 253
Algeria, A Survey 1095
Alicoate, Charles A., "Eastern Production". 75
Alicoate, Jack, Foreword ...... 3
ALLIANCE FILMS CORP.:
Personnel 610
1939 Releases 253
Allied Exhibitors of Nova Scotia, Personnel 675
Allied Exhibitors of Ontario, Personnel 675
"Allied in 1939," by Abram F. Myers . 754
Allied Independent Theater Owners of Eastern
Pennsylvania, Inc., Personnel 674
Allied-Independent Theater Owners of Iowa-
Nebraska, Inc., Personnel 672
ALLIED STATES ASSOCIATION OF MOTION PIC-
TURE EXHIBITORS:
Personnel 670
"Allied in 1939," by Abram F. Myers 754
Allied Theater Owners of Louisiana, Inc., Per-
sonnel 672
Allied Theater Owners ot New Jersey, Inc., Per-
sonnel 673
A lied Theater Owners of New York, Inc., Per-
sonnel .... 673
Allied Theater Owners of Rhode Island, Inc.. Per-
sonnel 674
Allied Theater Owners of Texas, Personnel. ... 675
Allied Theater Owners of the District of Colum-
bia, Personnel 671
Allied Theater Owners of the Northwest, Inc.,
Personnel • • 672
Allied Theaters of Connecticut, Inc., Personnel.. 671
Allied Theaters of Illinois, Inc., Personnel 671
Allied Theaters of Massachusetts, Inc., Personnel 672
Allied Theaters of Michigan, Inc., Personnel 672
Altec Service Corp., Personnel 610
American Federation of Musicians, Personnel 664
American Film Corp., Personnel 593
American Seating Co., Financial Summary . 980
AMERICAN SOCIETY OF CINEMATOCRAPHERS:
Personnel 664
"ASC in 1939," by John Arnold 770
American Society of Composers, Authors and Pub-
lishers, Personnel 664
AMKINO CORP.:
Personnel .... 610
1939 Releases 253
Amplifiers 1045
Andlauer Film Co., Personnel 593
Anglo-American Films Corp., Ltd., Personnel 1088
Apex Pictures, 1939 Release 253
Arc Lamps 1057
Arcadia Pictures Corp., Personnel 627
Architects 1046
Argentina, A Survey 1095
Argus Pictures, Inc., Personnel 627
Arnold, John, "ASC in 1939" 77C
Art Directors 452
Artcinema Associates, Inc., Personnel 61C
Artificial Flowers 1055
Associate Producers, Work in 1938 and 1939 335
Associated Actors and Artistes of America, Per-
sonnel 664
Associated British Cinemas, Ltd., Personnel . 1091
Associated British Film Distributors, Ltd., Per-
sonnel 1088
ASSOCIATED BRITISH PICTURE CORP.. LTD.:
Personnel 1088
Studio Personnel 1090
Associated Motion Picture Advertisers, Personnel 664
Associated Motion Picture Costumers, Personnel 665
Associated Screen News, Ltd., Personnel 593
5
The Trend Today is RCA because
ONLY RCA PHOTOPHONE
DOES THE WHOLE JOB
Research. Recording, Reproducing, Sales and Service
RESEARCH
RCA's research and engineering in all fields of sound enables it to
pioneer the movie industry's greatest advances in both recording and
reproduction.
RECORDING
Major film companies and Industrial Producers have been quick to rec-
ognize the advantages offered by RCA Photophone. Such film leaders
as Columbia. Walt Disney, Pathe. Republic, RKO. 20th Century-Fox,
and Warner Brothers use RCA Photophone Ultra-Violet Recording
equipment. Recording Facilities are available at 411 Fifth Ave., New
York City, N. Y.. and 1016 N. Sycamore Ave.. Hollywood, California.
REPRODUCING
Over 5,000 theaters use RCA Photophone Magic Voice of the Screen
with the famous Rotary Stabilizer Soundhead.
We will gladly furnish facts and information about RCA Photo-
phone's latest and greatly improved theatre sound equipment.
THEATRE SOUND SERVICE
For more than ten years the RCA Photophone service organization
has rendered outstanding service to thousands of theatres — that's
why more and more theatres are contracting for Photophone service.
i; II I T O It I A L I \ II i> \
Associated Talking Pictures, Ltd., Personnel 1090
Associated Theater Owners of Indiana, Inc., Per-
sonnel 672
Associated Theaters, Ltd., Personnel • 675
Association of Motion Picture Producers, Personnel 665
Associations, Personnel . 663
ASTOR PICTURES CORP.:
Personnel 610
1939 Releases .253
Astor Productions, Inc., Personnel . . 627
Atlantic Screen Service, Personnel . . 593
Atlas Educational Film Co., Personnel . 593
Atlas Pictures, Inc., Personnel. . 627
Audio Pictures, Ltd., Personnel 595
Audio Productions, Inc., Personnel 595, 613
Auerbach Educational Productions, Personnel 595
Australia, A Survey 1097
Authors, Work in 1938 and 1939. . 357
Authors' Club, Inc., Personnel.. 665
Authors' Guild, Personnel... . 665
Authors' League, Personnel. . 665
Automatic Changeovers 1049
AVRAMENKO FILM CO., LTD.:
Personnel . . 627
1939 Release 253
IS
Background Processes ... 652
Bahamas, A Survey 1097
Bahn, Chester B„ Industry Statistics. .37
Baird Television, Ltd., Personnel. .1088
Banners and Flags .1054
Barbados, A Survey 1097
Barsky, Bud, Productions, Personnel .. 627
Batteries . ]046
Belgium, A Survey 1097
Bermuda, A Survey 1099
BEST PICTURE SELECTIONS:
Film Daily Ten Best of 1939 83
Film Daily, 1939 Local Polls Result 109
Film Daily, 1922-1938 113
National Board of Review 81
Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences,
1927-28 to 1938-39 77
Newspaper Film Critics of America 119
Blache Screen Service, Personnel . 595
Bohemia and Moravia, A Survey.. .1099
Bolivia, A Survey HOI
Bolts, Seat Anchor 1068
Bonded Film Storage Corp., Personnel 611
Bondy, Al O., Personnel . , 595
Books on Motion Picture Subjects. . . 723
BOOTHS:
Projection . .1046
Ticket ...1047
Boots & Saddles Pictures, Inc., Personnel 628
Boyce-Smith, John & Mitch Leichter, Personnel... 611
Briy Picture Corp., Personnel 595
Brazil, A Survey 1101
Breakdown of Labor Organizations 771
British & Continental Trading Co., Inc., Personnel 611
British Companies, Personnel. .1088
British Circuits, Personnel 1091
British East Africa, A Survey 1101
British Honduras, A Survey.. 1101
British Studios, Personnel 1090
British Instructional Films, Ltd., Personnel 1088
BRITISH LION FILM CORP., LTD.:
Personnel 1088
Studio Personnel 1090
British Malaya, A Survey 1101
British National Films, Ltd., Personnel 1088
Brobuck, Inc., Personnel 595
Brokers, Insurance 659
Brulatour, J. E., Inc., Personnel 611
Bulgaria, A Survey 1101
Burma, A Survey 1103
Business Administrators 662
Business Films, Inc., Personnel 595
Buying Guide for 1940. 1043
C
"CBS Television Developments," by Adrian Murphy 679
Cabinets, Film 1047
Cable, Motion Picture .1047
California Theaters Association, Inc., Personnel . . 671
Call Systems 1047
Cameramen, Work in 1938 and 1939 381
Cameras, Parts and Supplies 1047
CANADA:
A Survey 1081
Theaters 933
(Canadian addresses are carried with many of
the U. S. lists in this book).
Canadian Government Motion Picture Bureau, Per-
sonnel 597
Canadian Performing Right Society, Ltd., Person-
nel 665
Caravel Films, Inc., Personnel 597
Canary Islands, A Survey 1103
Canary Islands, East, A Survey. 1103
Carbon Adapters 1043
Carbon Savers 1048
Carbons 1048
Carpet Cushions .1048
Carpets 1048
Cartoon Producers 640
Cases and Cans, Reel 1048
CASINO FILM EXCHANGE, INC.:
Personnel 61 1
1939 Releases 253
Casting Directors 452
Castle Films, Inc., Personnel 597
Catholic Actors Cuild of America, Inc., Personnel 665
Catholic Writers Guild of America, Inc., Personnel 665
Cauger, A. V., Service, Inc., Personnel 597
7
Made in America
IN 1842, in New York City, the company that is now known
as Agfa Ansco began to supply American photographers
with photographic materials.
Today, in a modern plant at Binghamton, N. Y., Agfa Ansco
manufactures, for the American motion picture photographer,
35 mm. films that are famous for their "extra margin of quality."
These films include Agfa Supreme, combining astonishing
speed with remarkably fine grain and improved color balance
and gradation . . . and Agfa Ultra-Speed Pan, for use where
extreme speed is the vital consideration.
Specify these two great films from now on.
Look for the Agfa Diamond trademark. It is your guarantee
of the highest quality . . . backed by 98 years of experience,
and the modern quality-control methods of America's first
and oldest photographic manufacturers. Agfa Ansco Products.
Made in Binghamton, New York, U.S.A.
AGFA RAW FILM CORPORATION
HOLLYWOOD
6424 Santa Monica Blvd.
Tel. Hollywood 2918
VA
NEW YORK
245 West 5 5th Street
Tel. Circle 7-4635
s
I<: II I T O K I A I, 1 \ II K X
Celebrity Productions, Inc., Personnel 611
Cement, Film 1048
Censor Boards and Rules 744
Central Film Service, Personnel 597
Century Pictures Corp., Personnel 628
Ceylon, A Survey 1103
Chair Covers 1050
Chandeliers, Crystal 1049
Change Makers 1049
Changeovers 1049
Changeovers, Automatic 1049
Chaplin, Charles, Film Corp., Personnel 628
Chewing Gum Removers 1049
Chicago Film Laboratory, Inc., Personnel . . 597
Chile, A Survey 1103
China, A Survey 1103
Chosen (Korea), A Survey 1103
Church, Frank, Films, Personnel 597
Cinecolor, Inc., Personnel 611
Cinecraft Studios, Inc., Personnel 597
Cinema Patents Co., Inc., Personnel 612
Cinema Sales, Inc., Personnel 599
CIRCUITS:
United States 943
British, Personnel 1091
Clark, Kenneth, "The 50th Anniversary" 73
Cleaners, Film 1049
Cleaning Systems, Theater 1049
Cleveland Motion Picture Exhibitors Association,
Inc., Personnel 674
Code of Ethics, Production 742
Cole's, King, Sound Service, Inc., Personnel 599
Colombia, A Survey 1104
Colonial Pictures Corp., Personnel. 628
Colony Pictures, Inc., Personnel 628
"Color Developments," by Al Steen 69
Color Hoods 1056
Color Processes 662
Columbia (British) Productions, Ltd., Personnel 1088
COLUMBIA PICTURES CORP.:
Home Office Personnel . . 611
Production Personnel . 628
Financial Summary . 981
1939 Releases 253
Columbia Pictures Corp., Ltd., Personnel 1088
Company Releases, 1939 253
Commercial Film Producers, Personnel 593
Commonwealth Pictures Corp., Personnel 599
Commonwealth Productions, 1939 Release 254
Composers, Music, Recent Work 317
Concord Films, 1939 Release 254
Condensing Lenses 1049
CONSOLIDATED FILM INDUSTRIES, INC.:
Personnel 612
Financial Summary 983
Construction, Theater 1050
Continental Pictures, Inc., Personnel 628
Converters, Electric . 1050
Cooling Systems 1050
Costume Fabrics 1050
Costumers 1050
Copyright Protection Bureau, Personnel 666
Coronado Films, Inc., Personnel 628
Coronet Pictures, Inc., Personnel 628
Cosmocolor Corp., Personnel 612
Costa Rica, A Survey 1104
Courier Productions, Inc., Personnel 599
Covers, Chair 1050
Craftsman Motion Picture Co., Personnel 599
Credo Pictures, 1939 Release 254
Crescent Pictures Corp., Personnel 628
Cresswell's Photo Service, Personnel 599
Crime Club Productions, Personnel 629
Critics and Editors, Motion Picture 760
Crystal Chandeliers 1049
Cuba, A Survey 1104
Current Changers 1050
Curtain Controls 1051
Curtain Tracks 1051
Curtains and Draperies 1051
Curtains, Fireproof 1052
D
D. & P. Studios, Ltd., Personnel 109O
Dale Productions, Inc., Personnel 629
Dance Directors, Recent Work 333
DANUBIA PICTURES, INC.:
Personnel 612
1939 Releases 254
"Dark Victory," One of The Film Daily Ten Best
Pictures of 1939 97
Darmour, Inc., Personnel 629
Dealers, Theater Supply 1031
Deaths of 1939 51
Decorators, Theater 1052
D3 Frenes & Co., Personnel 599
deMille, Cecil B., Productions, Inc., Personnel ... . 629
Denman Picture Houses, Ltd., Personnel 1091
Denmark, A Survey .1105
Deodorants 1052
"Department of Commerce Promotes Exports of
Motion Picture Products," by Nathan D. Golden 1079
Dephoure, Joseph, Studio, Personnel 599
De Vry Corp., Personnel 599
Dimmers 1052
DIRECTORS:
Feature Work in 1938 and 1939 343
Short Subject Work in 1938 and 1939 353
Art and Casting 452
Dance 333
Disney, Walt, Productions, Personnel 629
Distribution Percentages 758
Distributors 641
Distributors, 16 mm 640
Dominican Republic, A Survey 1105
Doors, Fireproof 1052
Dowling and Brownell, Personnel 600
Dramatists' Cuild, Personnel 666
9
yOU CANT MAKE AJULK PURSE
... and you can't show color features
in natural hues with unbalanced light
• The audience .sees on the motion picture screen only those colors
that are present in the projection light. If certain colors are absent
from the light, the dye on the film can't put them on the screen.
Kxcess of certain colors likewise distorts the natural hues of color
features. • High intensity carbon arc projection assures an evenly
balanced light with all colors pres-
ent in essentially equal intensity.
This is apparent from the chart of
color distribution here shown.
• This is the quality of projection
light for which color film is proc-
essed. It is the only quality of
light that giyes natural color re-
production.
USE HIGH INTENSITY PROJECTION LIGHT FOR HIGH QUALITY PROJECTION
COLOR DISTRIBUTION OF LIGHT FROM HIGH INTENSITY CARBON ARC
YELLOW ORANGE
NATIONAL CARBON COMPANY, INC
Unit of Union Carbide |I|M and Carbon Corporation
Carbon Sales Division, Cleveland], Ohio
GENERAL OFFICES
30 East «2nd Street, Ne- York, N. Y.
BRANCH SALES OFFICES
N«_ York Pittsburgh Chicago San Francitco
I< II I T O It I A L I \ II K X
Draperies and Curtains 1051
Drapery Fabrics 1053
Dreifuss, Arthur, Productions, Inc., Personnel 629
Drops 1053
Duhem Motion Picture Manufacturing Co., Per-
sonnel 600
Dunningcolor Corp., Personnel 612
DuPont Film Manufacturing Corp., Personnel 612
E
Ealing Studios, Ltd., Personnel 1090
"Eastern Production," by Charles A. Alicoate . ... 75
Eastern Service Studios, Personnel .. 629
EASTMAN KODAK CO.:
Personnel 613
Financial Summary 984
Eberson, John, "The Present Day Film Theater" 1015
Ecuador, A Survey 1106
Edited Pictures System, Inc., Personnel .. 600
Editing Machines, Film 1053
Editors and Critics, Motion Picture . . 760
Effect Projectors 1064
Egypt, A Survey .11 05
El Salvador, A Survey ..1106
Electric Converters .. ..1050
Electrical Contractors 1053
Electrical Research Products, Inc., Personnel 613
Elevators 1053
Emergency Lighting Systems.. 1060
ENCLAND:
A Survey 1118
"Who Can Prophesy?" by Ernest W. Fredman 1085
Companies, Personnel 1088
Circuits, Personnel .. ...1091
Studios, Personnel 1090
EQUIPMENT:
Buying Guide for 1940. .1043
Theater Supply Dealers... 1031
"Equipment Advances of 1939," by George H.
Morris 1009
"The Present Day Film Theater," by John
Eberson 1015
Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., Personnel 613
Escar Motion Picture Service, Inc., Personnel. .. . 600
Eshbaugh, Ted, Studios, Inc., Personnel 600, 629
ESPERIA FILM DISTRIBUTING CO.:
Personnel 613
1939 Releases 254
Estonia, A Survey 1106
Exchanges, Product-Managers ... . 642
Exhibitor Organizations, Personnel 670
Exhibitors' Association of Chicago, Personnel. . 671
EXPLOITATION:
"Exploitation in 1939," by Gecrge H. Morris.. 67
Showmen's Calendar 799
Outstanding Campaigns of 1939 .. 801
Exporters and Importers 1075
F
Famous Paintings Productions, Ltd., Personnel 629
Famous Players Canadian Corp., Ltd., Financial
Summary 986
Fan and Trade Publications 715
Fans 1053
FEATURES:
1939 Credits 139
Imported in 1939 . 258
1915-1939 (17,238 Titles) 453
"50th Anniversary, The," by Kenneth Clark 73
FILM ALLIANCE OF THE UNITED STATES, INC.:
Personnel 613
1939 Releases . . 254
Film Arts Corp., Personnel . 600
Film Cabinets . . 1047
Film Carriers . . 660
Film Cement . .1048
Film Cleaners 1049
Film Company of Ireland, Personnel . 614
FILM DAILY, THE
Personnel 26
Ten Best Pictures of 1939 83
Ten Best Pictures, 1922 to 1938 113
Coif Tournaments .121
Film Libraries . . 657
Film Perforators 1063
Film Player's Club. Inc., Personnel 666
Film Processes . 1064
Film Renovating 1066
Film Safes 1067
Film Technicians of the Motion Picture Industry,
Personnel 666
Filmack Laboratories and Filmack Trailer Co.,
Personnel 600
Filmart Motion Pictures, Personnel 600
Films, Inc., Personnel 600
Films of Commerce Co., Inc., Personnel . . 600
Financial Summaries 979
"Financial Summary, A" . . 63
Fine Arts Pictures, Personne . . . 629
Finland, A Survey... .1106
Fire Extinguishers ..1054
Fire Hose .1054
Fireproof Curtains . .1052
FitzPatrick Pictures, Personnel . 629
FIXTURES:
Brass, Bronze. Iron, Lighting, Plumbing 1054
Flags and Banners 1054
Flashers 1054
Fleischer Studios, Inc., Personnel 630
Flood Lights 1060
Floor Coverings . ..1054
Flowers, Artificial ..1055
FOREIGN:
Importers and Exporters. .1075
"Department of Commerce Promotes Exports of
Picture Products," by Nathan D. Golden . . . 1079
11
THE WORM 'S MDM IMPMDMI
presents
A PROGRAM OF SUREFIRE ROX OFFICE HITS
It II I II II II I I HIIll IT The prize film of the decade — hooked
ll II 1 I II II I I Ml! I l>> RKO, Loew. Warners Publix, Fox
Ullllllf IIJIJI LJIU11 Westcoast an(] pverv imporlan, ,-ireuit
mm (IF THE MAYAKS i^W,s.—
M 0 \ k K I I 51 T 0 M 1 II ™e" ^e^' VS^i'1 no, e.lty ! !
PEARLS (IF THE CROWN &SX-fcS= ce"
FIRST FILM CONCERT
^ The outstanding artists of the
concert stage in one great film
1|| I 11 1/1 Hooked by W arners, Comerford, Consolidated, Brandt,
illjlj Skouras, Fabian — starting on its way to fame
Ijl flT^V ^ne outstanding documentary film now playing
Ei \)\ ;)" 'eaf''n" circuits from coast to coast
^|j1 A new film bj Jean Renoir, creator
of Grand Illusion
r|^ Harry Baur's greatest role in
Alfred Neuman's classic story
A new film by Nebenzahl,
creator of Mayerling
Note To Producers
INDIVIDUAL DISTRIBUTION AND SPECIALIZED
EXPLOITATION IS OUR. GUARANTEE OF MAXIMUM
RESULTS FOR YOUR PRODUCTIONS
WORLD PICTURES CORR
729 7th AVE . N .Y.C.
TEL. MEDALLION 3-2943
CA?LE ADRESS WORLDFIIM
FORf IGN TERROOKIHS AVAILABLE
12
i: i» ■ i o it i vi ■ \ i» g \
Canada and Newfoundland in 1939 1081
"Who Can Prophesy?" by Ernest W. Fredman 1085
British Companies, Personnel .1088
British Circuits, Personnel .1091
British Studios, Personnel 1090
An International Survey of Motion Picture
Markets 10?5
"Foreign Film Markets," by George H. Morris 65
Foreign Branches of U. S. Companies 610
Foreword, by Jack Alicoate ■ ■■■ 3
Frames, Lobby Display.. .1055
France, Producers, Distributors, Exporters 1106
Franco-American Fi!m Corp., Personnel 614
Fredman, Ernest W., "Who Can Prophesy?" .1085
FRENCH CINEMA CENTER, INC.:
Personnel 614
1939 Release 254
French Films Import Co., Inc., Personnel 614
French Film Exchange, Personnel 614
French Motion Picture Corp., 1939 Releases 254
French Indo-China, A Survey 1107
French Oceania, A Survey 1107
G —
G. & S. Films, Ltd., Personnel. .1088
Gainsborough Pictures (1928), Ltd., Personne 1090
Canz, William J., Co., Personnel 601
CARRISON FILM DISTRIBUTORS, INC.:
Personnel 614
1939 Releases 254
GATEWAY PRODUCTIONS, INC.:
Personnel 630
1939 Release 254
Gaumont-British Distributors, Ltd., Personnel. 1038
Gaumont-British Pictures Corp., Ltd., Personnel 1091
Gaumont-British Picture Ccrp. of America, Per-
sonnel 614
Gaumont Super Cinemas, Ltd., Personnel 1091
Gelatines 1055
General Business Films, Inc., Personnel 601
General Electric Co., Non-Theatrical Dept. Per-
sonnel 601
General Film Co., Personnel 630
General Film Library, Inc., Personnel 614
General Films, Ltd., Personnel 601
General Screen Advertising, Inc., Personnel 601
Ceneral Service Studios, Inc., Personnel 613, 630
General Theater Corp., Ltd., Personnel 1091
General Theaters Equipment Corp., Financial Sum-
mary 987
Generators 1055
Germany, A Surve/ .1107
Gibraltar, A Survey 1108
Class, Decorative 1056
Globe Productions, Inc., Personnel 630
Colden, Nathan D., "Department of Commerce
Promotes Exportes of Motion Picture Products" 1079
Goldwyn, Samuel, Inc., Ltd., Personnel 630
Goldwyn, Samuel, Studios, Personnel 630
"Gone With the W,nd," Cost Schedule . 53
"Goodbye, Mr. Chips," One of The Finn Daily
Ten Best Pictures of 1939 89
Gordon, Max, Plays & Pictures Corp.. Personnel 630
Government Film Activities 756
Grand National Pictures, 1939 Re.eas.3 . 254
Crand National Pictures, Ltd., Personnel 1089
Granada Theaters, Ltd., Personnel 1091
Great Britain, A Survey 1118
Greece, A Survey 1103
Grey, Zane, Inc., Personnel 614
Grey, Romer, Pictures, Ltd., Personne 614
Crono Film Productions, Inc., Personnel 614
Guaranteed Pictures Co., Inc., Personnel 614
Guatemala, A Survey 1108
Gutlohn, Walter O., Inc., Personnel . 601
II
H-0 Films, 1939 Release 254
Haiti, A Survey 1 108
Hard of Hearing Devices 1056
Hardware, Stage 1056
HarFilms, Inc., Personne . 601
Hastings, Charles B., Studios, Personnel 602, 630
Hays Office, See: Motion Picture Producers and
Distributors of America
Hays, Will H., "Responsibilities" 35
Headlines of 1939 49
Heaters, Organ 1056
Heating Systems .1056
History, A Tabloid .123
Hoffberg, J. H., Co., 1939 Releases . 254
Hoffberg Productions, Inc., Personnel 614
Hollywood Famous Pictures, Inc., Personne 1630
Hollywood Film Enterprises, Inc., Personnel 1630
HOLLYWOOD PRODUCTIONS:
Personnel 630
1939 Releases 254
Holmes, Burton, Films, Inc., Personnel 602
Home Film Co., Personnel .. 602
Honduras, A Survey ..1108
Hong Kong, A Survey. 1108
Hoods, Color .1056
Horns and Speakers 1056
Hungaria Pictures, 1939 Releases . . 254
Hungary, A Survey .1108
Hunt, Hubbard, Productions, Personnel . 602
Hutchinson, Thomas H., "Television Progress Dur-
ing 1939" 678
|
Ideal Pictures Corp., Personnel 615
Ideal Pictures Corp., (Chicago), Personnel 602
Ideal Sound Studios, Inc., Personnel .631
Imperial Pictures, Inc., Personnel. 615
Imported Features, 1939 258
Importers and Exporters 1075
13
POTH6 LABORATORies.
\0
More and more each day
those who value the
importance of prints of
quality and perfection are
following the footsteps of
the Pathe Rooster.
Pathe Laboratories, Inc.
NEW YORK • BOU7STD BROOK • HOLLYWOOD
IIM I OKI A I I \ IM \
In Memoriam ...... ...... 51
Incandescent Lamps .1058
Incandescent Projection Adapters .1043
Independent Exhibitors, Inc., (Boston), Personnel 672
Independent Theater Owners Association, Inc.,
(New York), Personnel 673
Independent Theater Owners of Ohio, Personnel.. 674
Independent Theater Owners of Northern Cali-
fornia, Personnel 671
Independent Theater Owners of Southern Califor-
nia, Personnel 671
Independent Theater Owners of Washington,
Northern Idaho, and Alaska, Personnel 675
Independent Theaters Association (Toronto), Per-
sonnel 675
Independent Theaters Protective Association of
Wisconsin and Upper Michigan, Personnel 675
India, A Survey 1109
Indicators, Film Speed 1057
Industrial Film Laboratory, Personnel. . 602
Industrial Pictures, Inc., Personnel . 602
Inspection Machines, Film.... 1057
Inspection Tables 1057
Insurance Brokers . 659
Inter-Allied Films, Inc., Personnel 615
International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Em-
ployees and Moving Picture Machine Operators
of the United States and Canada, Personnel. . 666
International Film Center, Personnel 666
International Photographers of the Motion Picture
Industries, Personnel 666
INTERNATIONAL ROAD SHOWS:
Personnel ... 61 5
1939 Releases 254
Intermountain Theaters Association, Personnel... 675
Iran, A Survey 1109
Iraq, A Survey 1109
Iron Work, Architectural 1057
Isaacs & Walsh, Inc., Personnel. . . 602
Italy, A Survey 1109
J
Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc., Personnel 602
Jamaica, A Survey 1109
Jamieson Film Co., Personnel. . 603
Japan, A Survey 1109
Java, A Survey 1110
Jewel Productions Co., Personnel. . 631
Jewish Art Pictures, Inc., Personnel 631
"Juarez," One of The Film Daily Ten Best Pic-
tures of 1939 103
K
Kansas-Missouri Theater Association, Personnel. 673
Keith-Albee-Orpheum Corp., Financial Summary. 989
Kennahan, Hollis, "Labor in Review" 71
Kobzar Film Corp., Personnel 631
Korda, Alexander, Film Productions, Ltd;-, Per-
sonnel 1089
Kuykendatl, Ed, "M.P.T.O.A. in 1939" 752
L
LABOR:
"Labor in Review," by Hollis Kennahan 71
"SAG in 1939," by Kenneth Thomson 768
"SDC in 1939," by J. P. McCowan 769
"SWC in 1939" 769
"ASC in 1939," by John Arnold 770
A Breakdown of Labor Organizations 771
Producer-Screen Actors Guild Basic Minimum
Agreement of 1937 773
Producer - Screen Actors Guild Modification
Agreement of 1938 779
Producer-Screen Directors Guild Basic Agree-
ment of 1939 790
Laboratories 1037
Ladders 1057
Lambs, The, Personnel 666
LAMPS:
Are ...r 1057
Incandescent, Projection, Reflector 1058
Lantz, Walter, Productions, Personnel 631
Larsen Picture Corp., Personnel 603
Latin Films, 1939 Release 254
Latvia, A Survey 1110
Laurel & Hardy Feature Productions, Personnel 631
"Law of Motion Pictures, The," by Louis Nizer 687
Leichter, Mitch & John Boyce-Smith, Personnel 611
LENAUER INTERNATIONAL FILMS, INC.:
Personnel 615
1939 Releases .254
Lens Adapters 1043
LENSES:
Condensing 1049
Motion Picture Camera .1058
Projection 1059
Lenwal Productions, 1939 Release 254
Libraries, Film-Music ...... 657
Lighting 1059
LIGHTING EQUIPMENT:
Stage 1059
Studio 1060
Lighting Fixtures 1054
Lighting Systems, Emergency 1060
LIGHTS:
Aisle 1045
Flood 1060
Spot 1061
Lithuania, A Survey. 1110
Lloyd, Harold, Corp., Personnel 631
Lloyds Film Storage Corp., Personnel 615
Lobby Display Frames 1055
15
PEOPLE DO WANT TO SEE
THIS WORLD . . . BEFORE THEY
SEE THE NEXT!
99 out of a 100 people will tell you: "If I had
a pot of money — I'd start traveling and never
stop!" Fitzpatrick Traveltalks satisfy the travel
hunger of millions. That's why they have such
enormous ticket selling value! Logical, isn't
it? And true!
M-G-M's FITZPATRICK TRAVELTALKS
IN MAGIC TECHNICOLOR
Current Releases: "Old Natchez," "Night Descends
on Treasure Island," "Seattle, Gateway to the
Northwest," "Calling on Colombia."
HIM TO III AL INDEX
Lobby Displays 10S1
Lobby Photographs 1061
LOEWS, INC.:
Personnel 615
Studio Personnel 631
Financial Summary . 990
1939 Releases 254
London Film Productions, Ltd., Personnel 1089
Long Island Theater Owners Association, Per-
sonnel 673
Loucks & Norling Studios, Personnel 603
Luporini & Variety Film Ccrp., Personnel 616
Luxemburg, A Survey 1110
Lyricists, Recent Work 317
M
M. P. T. O. of Arkansas, Mississippi and Tennes-
see, Personnel 675
M. P. T. O. of Connecticut, Personnel . 671
M. P. T. 0. of Kentucky, Personnel 672
M. P. T. 0. of Maryland, Personnel 672
M. P. T. 0. of Mississippi, Personnel 673
M. P. T. 0. cf Nebraska and Western Iowa, Per-
sonnel 673
M. P. T. O. of Northern New York, Personnel... 673
M. P. T. 0. of Rhode Island, Personnel 674
M. P. T. 0. of St. Louis, Eastern Missouri and
Southern Illinois, Personnel 673
M. P. T. 0. of the District of Columbia, Per-
sonnel 671
M. P. T. O. of Virginia, Inc., Personnel 675
M. P. T. 0. of Western Pennsylvania, Inc., Per-
sonnel 674
M. P. T. O., State of New York-Western Zone,
Personnel 673
"M. P. T. 0. A. in 1939," by Ed Kuykendall ... 752
Majestic Pictures, Inc., Personnel 631
Make-Up Artists, Personnel 667
Malmar Pictures, 1939 Release 255
Malta, A Survey 1110
Managers and Agents 653
Manchuria, A Survey. 1110
March of Time, Personnel 631
Marquees 1061
Mascot Pictures Co., Personnel 631
Masquers, The, Personnel 667
Mattsson, Ernst, 1939 Release 255
Mayer, Arthur and Jcseph Burstyn, 1939 Releases 255
Mayflower Pictures Corp., Ltd., Personnel 616
McGowan, J. P., "SDG in 1939" 769
McCrory Studios, Personnel 603
McCurdy Films, Personnel 603
McLarty Business Films, Personnel 603
Merit Pictures, 1939 Releases 255
Mstro-Coldwyn-Mayer, See: Loew's, Inc.
Metro-Coldwyn-Mayer British Studios, Ltd., Per-
sonnel 1090
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Cartoon Studios, Personnel. 632
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures, Ltd., Personnel 1089
Metropolitan Motion Picture Co., Personnel 603
METROPOLITAN PICTURES CORP.:
Personnel 632
1939 Releases 255
Mexico, A Survey 1110
Microphones 1062
Miles Film Library Corp., Personnel 616
Million Dollar Productions, 1939 Release 254
Mirrors 1062
"Mr. Smith Goes to Washington," One of The
Film Daily Ten Best Pictures of 1939 91
MODERN FILM CORP.:
Personnel 616
1939 Release 255
Modern Talking Picture Service, Inc., Personnel.. 603
Mogull's, Inc., Personnel 603
Monogram Distributing Corp., Personnel 617
MONOGRAM PICTURES CORP.:
Personnel 617
Financial Summary 992
1939 Releases 255
Mcnogram Productions, Inc., Personnel 617, 632
Morocco, A Survey 1111
MORRIS, GEORGE H.:
"Equipment Advances of 1939" 1009
"Exploitation in 1939" 67
"Foreign Film Markets" 65
"Television Progress" 61
Morros, Boris, Productions, Inc., Personnel 632
Moss Empires, Ltd., Personnel 1091
Motion Picture Advertising Service Co., Inc., Per-
sonnel 604
Motion Picture Associates, Inc., Personnel 667
Motion Picture Distributors and Exhibitors of Can-
ada, Personnel 667
Motion Picture Laboratory Technicians, Personnel 667
Motion Picture Location Managers' Association,
Personnel 667
Moving Picture Machine Operators' Union (Local
306), Personnel 668
Motion Picture Markets, An International Survey 1095
MOTION PICTURE PRODUCERS AND DISTRIBU-
TORS OF AMERICA, INC.:
Personnel 667
Activities in 1939 733
Motion Picture Relief Fund, Inc., Personnel . 668
Motion Picture Research Council, Personnel 668
Motion Picture Service Co., Personnel 604
Motion Skreenadz, Ltd., Personnel 604
Motion Picture Studio Mechanics, Personnel 668
MOTION PICTURE THEATER OWNERS OF
AMERICA:
Personnel 670
"M. P. T. 0. A. in 1939," by Ed Kuykendall.. 752
Movietonews, Inc., Personnel 632
Murphy, Adrian, "CBS Television Developments" 679
Musart Film Productions, Inc., Personnel 632
17
WHEN MINUTES
MEAN MONEY-
SEND IMPORTANT MESSAGES
VIA POSTAL TELEGRAPH!
WHEN PtOPU AM "TOO BUSY," remember this:
A Postal Telegram is not kept waiting in an outer office. Postal
messengers are trained to get a signed receipt!
WHEN A DEAL'S ALMOST CLOSED, speed last-min-
ute, important facts via Postal Telegraph. You can be sure they
will be transmitted accurately!
WHEN THE UNEXPECTED HAPPENS, notify an
concerned by Postal Telegraph. It costs surprisingly little, thanks
to new low Postal Telegraph rates !
WHENEVER SPEED IS ESSENTIAL, count on *«
nation-wide Postal Telegraph system— for helpful, personal
service. Just phone Postal Telegraph. Charges appear on your
phone bill.
Tostal Telegraph
"SWIFT. . . ACCURATE . . . ECONOMICAL"
18
MM I (MCI AL IMM;\
Music Composers, Recent Work 317
Music Libraries 657
Music Publishers' Protective Association, Inc.,
Personnel 668
Music Stands ... 1062
Music Supervisors, Recent Work 317
Musical Instruments 1062
Myers, Abram F., "Allied in 1939" . 754
N
NATIONAL BOARD OF REVIEW OF MOTION
PICTURES:
Personnel 668
Activities in 1939 747
Best Film Selections, 1939 81
National Film Carriers, Inc., Personnel. 668
National Pictures Corp., Personnel 617
National Poster Service Association, Inc., Per-
sonnel 668
National Screen Accessories, Inc., Personnel. . 617
NATIONAL SCREEN SERVICE CORP.:
Personnel 617
West Coast Studio, Personnel . . 632
National Variety Artists, Inc., Personnel 669
Needles 1062
Negro Theaters . . 941
Netherlands, A Survey .1111
Nettlefold Studios, Personnel . 1090
New Ycrk Film Critics, The, Personnel . 669
New Zealand, A Survey .1112
News Stories of 1939 49
Newspaper Film Critics of America, 1939 Selec-
tions 119
Newsreels 652
Nicaragua, A Survey... 1112
1939 News Stories 49
Nizer, Louis, "The Law of Motion Pictures" 687
Non-Theatrical Films in 1939 59
Non-Theatrical Producers, Personnel. 593
Norris Bros. Productions, Personnel 633
North Dakota Theater Owners, Personnel.. 674
Northwest Motion Pictures, Personnel. 604
Norway, A Survey 1112
Novelties, Advertising and Exploitation 1062
Nu-Art Films, Inc., Personnel 604
o
Odeon Theaters, Ltd., Personnel 1091
Offical Films, Inc., Personnel. 604
"Old Maid, The," One of The Film Daily Ten
Best Pictures of 1939 . . 107
Olympic Pictures Corp., Personnel 617
Organ Blowers 1063
Organs 1063
Organizations. Personnel 663
Original Titles of Books and Plays Made Into Pic-
tures Under New Titles 273
Orlob, Harold, Productions. Personnel 633
Ornaments, Plaster 1063
P
Paganelli, Personnel . 604
Paint-Plaster, Decorative 1063
Palestine, A Survey. . . 1113
Panama, A Survey 1113
Panel Boards . . 1063
Paraguay, A Survey 1113
Paramount British Productions, Ltd., Personnel 1089
Paramount Film Distributing Corp., Personnel 618
Paramount Film Service, Ltd., Personnel.. 1089
Paramount-Pep Club, Inc., Personnel. 669
PARAMOUNT PICTURES, INC.:
Personnel 617
Production Personnel 633
Financial Summary 992
1939 Releases 255
Paramount Theaters Service Corp., Personnel 618
Parrot Films, Personnel 604
Pascal Film Productions, Ltd., Personnel 1089
Pathe Equipment, Ltd., Personnel 1089
Pathe Laboratories, Inc., Personnel 619
Pathe Laboratories, Inc., of California, Personnel. 619
PATHE FILM CORP.:
Personnel 618
Financial Summary 993
Pathe News, Inc., Personnel . 620
Pathe Pictures, Ltd., Personnel.. 1089
PAX FILM, INC.:
Personnel 619
1939 Release 255
Peerless Pictures, Inc., Personnel . 633
Percentages, Distribution ... 758
Perforators, Film ... 1063
PERSONNEL:
Associations 663
British Circuits 1091
British Companies . .1088
British Studios 1090
Exhibition Organizations . 670
Film Daily 26
Important Companies 610
Non-Theatrical Producers . 593
Producers 627
Peru, A Survey 1113
Philippine Islands, A Survey . ... .1113
Photo Media Corp.. Personnel 604
Photoelectric Cells 1063
Photographers, Portrait-Still 658
Pick-Ups 1063
Pictorial Films, Inc., Personnel . 604
Plaster Ornaments .1063
Plaster-Paint, Decorative . .1063
AHHOUHCEMEHL
This is a grand occasion for us. We feel warm, happy and grateful and we want to
thank you . . . Exhibitor Leaders, Exhibitors, Producers, Trade Paper Publishers and
Editors . . . the whole industry . . . for the hundreds of congratulatory mes-
sages you sent on the creation of our new child . . . ADVERTISING ACCESSORIES, INC.
SCREEN family we assume a tremendous obli-
gation to our customers, to the distributors
whose product we handle and to the industry.
Our aim is satisfied customers . . . good, show-
manship theatre advertising that will help you
sell your show . . . and increased service . . .
NATIONAL SCREEN Service) ... and fair deal-
ing to all.
We have nothing to sell but advertising. Trail-
ers on the screen through NATIONAL SCREEN
SERVICE, lobby displays through NATIONAL
SCREEN ACCESSORIES, INC., and now the
complete line of distributor accessories for all
companies serviced through the new baby . . .
ADVERTISING ACCESSORIES, INC. Our aim
has been and always will be to give you the best
theatre advertising it is possible to produce at
the fairest prices.
Accessories for all companies serviced through
the new ADVERTISING ACCESSORIES, INC.,
will be available to you on a rental basis with
current rental prices prevailing
That mean* immediate
hibitors who now buy their accessories outright.
And, peering into the future, we feel certain that
as our organization develops and our business
increases we wiff be able to make substantial
reductions in the price of accessories, as we did
with trailers. Our record speaks for itself.
and as our business has grown we have shared
the benefits with our customers in reduced prices
and superior service. We will continue to share,
for we have learned during the years that fair
dealing pays dividends.
We are optimistic about our future and the
future of motion pictures. The whole NATIONAL
SCREEN SERVICE ORGANIZATION has been
built around men with the ability to accept ond
foresee new trends ... to inject new creative
inspiration into theatre advertising.
We will continue to build that way, with the
new baby too, ADVERTISING ACCESSORIES,
INC., devising new ways and means of bringing
more people into your theatres through these
great mediums of theatre advertising . . . TRAIL-
ERS LOBBY DISPLAYS . . . ACCESSORIES.
We repeat -ADVERTISING ACCESSORIES,
INC., entails many heavy obligations. A tre-
mendous financial obligation to our COMPANY
... a serious obligation to DISTRIBUTORS
whose productions we handle ... an important
obligation to EXHIBITORS whom we service.
We will try to meet them in the same manner
that we have always met our obligations.
For it has been a rule of our business life to let
performance be our best advertisement. We will
continue to live by that rule.
ce • nflTionmS^ accessories
HDVERTISinG RCCE550RIE5, inc.
I< IM TOIt I AL INDEX
Plastering, Architectural . 1064
Play and Story Brokers 656
Play's The Thing Productions, The, Inc., Per-
sonnel 633
Players, Work in 1938 and 1939 . 387
Plumbing Fixtures 1054
Polish American Film Co., 1939 Release 255
Portable Projectors 1064
Portrait Photographers . . . . 658
Portugal, A Survey 1113
Portuguese East Africa, A Survey. 1114
Post Pictures Corp., Personnel , ... 605
Posters 1064
"Present Day Film Theater, The," by John
Eberson 1015
Principal Productions, Inc.. Personnel 633
Printing Machines 1064
PROCESSES:
Background ....... 652
Color 662
Film 1064
PRODUCERS:
Cartoon 640
Feature 637
Non-Theatrical Personnel 593
Short Subject 639
16 mm 640
Trailer 1034
Producers, Associate Producers, Supervisors, Work
in 1938 and 1939 335
PRODUCERS PICTURES CORP.:
Personnel 633
1939 Releases 255
PRODUCTION:
Cartoon Producers 640
Serials, Releases Since 1920 265
Code of Ethics, Text 742
"Eastern Production," by Charles A. Alicoate. . 75
1939 Feature Releases, Credits 139
Company Releases, 1939 253
Government Film Activities 756
Non-Theatrical Film Producers, Personnel 593
Producers 637
Producers, Personnel 627
Short Subject Producers 639
16 mm. Producers 640
Short Subject Releases, 1939 248
Progress Films, Inc., Personnel 619
Projection Booths 1046
Projection Lamps 1058
Projection Rooms 657
Projectors Safety Devices 1067
PROJECTORS:
Advertising, Effect, Portable 1064
Theater 1065
Properties, Studio 1065
Provincial Cinematograph Theaters, Ltd., Per-
sonnel 1091
Publications, Fan and Trade 715
Puerto Rico, A Survey 1114
Purifiers, Air 1045
Puritan Pictures Corp., Personnel 619
"Pygmalion," One of The Film Daily Ten Best
Pictures of 1939 93
R
RCA Manufacturing Co., Inc., Personnel 619
RCA Photophone Division of RCA Manufacturing
Co., Production Personnel 633
RCA Photophone, Ltd., Personnel 1089
RKO RADIO PICTURES, INC.:
Home Office Personnel 620
Production Personnel . . . . 633
1939 Releases 255
RKO-Radio Pictures, Ltd., Personnel 1089
RADIO CORPORATION OF AMERICA:
Personnel 619
Financial Summary 995
RADIO-KEITH -ORPHEUM CORP.:
Personnel 619
Financial Summary 995
Ramsey Pictures, Personnel 605
Randol, George, Productions, Personnel 634
Raspin Productions, Inc., Personnel.. 621
Ray-Ee!l Films, Inc., Personnel 605
Recorders, Disc, Film 1065
Rectifiers, A. C 1065
Reed, Luther, Inc., Personnel 605
Reed, Roland, Productions, Personnel 605
Reels, Film 1066
Reeves Sound Studios, Inc., Personnel 634
Reflector Lamps 1058
Reflectors 1066
Regal Distributing Corp., 1939 Release 256
RELEASES:
1915 to 1939 (17,238 Titles) 453
1939 Features, Credits 139
Company, 1939 253
1939 Imports 258
Relkin, Edwin A., 1939 Releases.. 256
Renovating, Film . ... 1066
Renovating Machines 1066
REPUBLIC PICTURES CORP.:
Home Office Personnel 621
1939 Releases 256
Republic Productions, Inc., Personnel 621, 634
"Responsibilities," by Will H. Hays.. 35
Rewinders 1066
Rheostats 1(567
Rhode Island, Theaters 913
Rice, Grantland, Sport Pictures Corp., Personnel.. 634
Rigging, Stage 1067
Roach, Hal, Studios, Inc., Personnel 634
Rockett, Frederick K., Co., Personnel 605
Rogers, Rowland, Picture Service, Inc., Personnel 606
21
Motiograph Proudly Presents
the new
Mirrophonic De Luxe
The Latest Development
in Sound
This New System
is Western Electric built
throughout except for the Re-
producer Set which is built by
Motiograph and based on de-
signs of Electrical Research
Products, Inc. Truly this sound
system is the logical equipment
companion to
MOTIOGRAPH
PROJECTORS
The Standard of the World
CONSULT OUR INDEPENDENT SUPPLY DEALER
O R
MOTIOGRAPH INC.- -CHICAGO
IIM I OKI A I INDEX
Ross Federal Service, Inc., Personnel. 621
Rossi, Charles A., Studios, Personnel . 634
Rowland, William, Productions, Personnel. . 634
Rumania, A Survey 1114
s
"S. M. P. E. in 1939," by E. Allan Williford . . . 751
Sack Amusement Co., 1939 Releases . 256
Safes, Film, Theater .1067
Safety Devices, Projector... 1067
San Marino, A Survey 1114
Scandinavian Talking Pictures, 1939 Releases . 256
Scenery, Stage 1067
Schaindlin, Jack, Screen Scores, Personnel . 634
Schlesinger, Leon, Production, Personnel 634
Scientific Films, Inc., Personnel . 634
Scrap Film Buyers .1067
SCREEN ACTORS GUILD:
Personnel 669
"SAC in 1939," by Kenneth Thomson 768
Basic Minimum Agreement of 1937 773
Modification Agreement of 1938 779
Screen Adettes, Inc., Personnel.. 606
Screen Broadcast Corp., Personnel 606
SCREEN DIRECTORS' CUILD:
Personnel 669
Basic Agreement of 1939 . 790
Screen Gems, Inc., Personnel 635
Screen Traveler, The, Inc., Personnel.. . 622
SCREEN WRITERS' CUILD, INC.:
Personnel 669
"SWG in 1939," by J. P. McGowan . 769
Screened Exchange, Personnel 606
Screenplay Writers, Work in 1933 and 1939 . 369
Screens 1068
Seat Anchor Bolts . .1068
Seat Indicators . .1068
Seats, Theater 1068
SELECT ATTRACTIONS, INC.:
Personnel 622
1939 Releases 256
Selznick International Pictures, Personnel. . 635
Serials Released Since 1920 265
Seton, Marie, 1939 Release 256
Sherman, Harry, Productions, Personnel. 635
Sherwill Productions, Inc., Personnel . 635
SHORT SUBJECT:
Directors, Work in 1938 and 1939 . 353
Producers . 639
Releases, 1939 248
Showmen's Calendar 799
SIGNS:
Changeable Letter, Directional 1068
Electric, Luminous Tube 1069
16 mm. Producers and Distributors 640
Skinner, C. R., Manufacturing Co., Personnel... 606
Slides 1069
Sly-Fox Films, Inc., Personnel 606
Small, Edward, Productions, Inc., Personnel. . 635
Society for Visual Education, Inc., Personnel 606
SOCIETY OF MOTION PICTURE ENGINEERS:
Personnel 669
"S. M. P. E. in 1939," by E. Allan Williford . 751
Sound Devices 1069
Sound Masters, Inc., Personnel 606
Soundfilm Enterprises, Inc., Personnel. . . . 635
South Dakota Theater Owners Association, Per-
sonnel 674
Southeastern Theater Owners Association, Per-
sonnel 671
Spain, A Survey. . . .1114
Speakers and Horns. . . 1056
Special Effects and Titles .661
SPECTRUM PICTURES CORP.:
Personnel 622
1939 Releases . . 256
Speed Indicators, Film 1057
Sphinx Films, 1939 Releases. 256
Splicing Machines 1070
Sports World Pictures, Inc., Personnel.. . 635
Spot Lights 1061
Sprinklers, Automatic .1070
Stage Equipment .1070
Stage Rigging 1067
Standard Films of California, Personnel 607
STANDARD PICTURES DISTRIBUTING CO., INC.:
Personnel 622
1939 Release 256
"Stanley and Livingstone," One of The Film Daily
Ten Best Pictures of 1939 105
STANLEY COMPANY OF AMERICA:
Personnel 625
Financial Summary 997
Stark-Films, Personnel 607
State Theater Co., Personnel 619
STATISTICS:
Industry, by Chester B. Bahn .37
U. S. Theater 47
Statuary 1070
Steen, Al, "Color Developments" 69
Still Photographers 658
Stills 1070
Stocks in 1939 63
Stone Film Library, Inc., Personnel 607
Storage Vaults .657
Story and Play Brokers 656
Straits Settlements, A Survey .1116
Strickland Industrial Film Corp., Personnel. 607
Studio Electricians and Sound Technicians, Per-
sonnel ■ 669
STUDIOS:
U. S. Personnel. -627
British, Personnel 1090
Sunday Closings, A Summary. 745
i:iM TOIUA L IMIKX
Supervisors, Work in 1938 and 1939.
335
Supervisors, Music, Recent Work..
317
Supreme Pictures Corp., Personnel
635
Supply Dealers, Theater
1031
Sweden, A Survey. .
1116
Switchboards
1070
Sv/itzerland, A Survey . .
1116
Swcger, Arthur, Personnel
607
Syndicate Exchange, 1939 Release
256
Syria, A Survey
1117
T
Tables, Inspection
.1057
Taiwan, A Survey
.1117
Talisman Pictures Corp., Personnel
. 635
Talking Sales Pictures, Inc., Personnel...
OU /
TECHNICOLOR, INC.:
Personnel
. 622
998
Technicolor Motion Picture Corp.,
Personnel .
. . 622
TELEPHONE NUMBERS:
Los Angeles .
56
New York City
. . 54
(Telephone Njmbers are included
with most
of
the lists in this book.)
TELEVISION:
"Television Progress," by George
H. Morris.
. . 61
"Television Progress During 1939," by Thomas
H. Hutchinson 678
"CBS Television Developments," by Adrian
Murphy 679
1939 Television Program Highlights
Television Stations
Television Stations, Personnel..
Television Allocation Table
Television Standards
Television Headlines
TEN BEST PICTURES, FILM DAILY
1939 Selections
Local Polls Result
1922 to 1938 Selections. .
Tennessee, Theaters
Terre Haute Theaters Association, Personnel
Territorial Distribution Percentages
Terrytoons, Inc., Personnel . .
Thailand (Siam), A Survey..
Theater Advertising Corp., Personnel
Theater Construction
678
680
686
681
683
684
83
109
113
916
672
758
635
1117
607
1050
Theater Equipment Dealers of America, Personnel
Theater Owners of North and South Carolina. Inc.,
Personnel
Theater Statistics, United States
Theater Supply Dealers
THFATERS:
United States
Canada
Circuits
Nsgro
Thomscn, Kenneth, "SAC in 1939"
Ticket Booths
Ticket Bcxes and Choppers, Registers
Tickets, Admission
Tile Flooring
Times Pictures, 1939 Release
TITLES:
1939 Releases, Credits
Releases, 1915-1939 (17,238)
Company Releases, 1939.
Short Subject, 1939.
Serials, 1920-1939
Original
Titles and Special Effects
Tower Pictures, 1939 Release.
Towers, Horn
Trade and Fan Publications
Tradefilms, Inc., Personnel.
Trailer-Made, Inc., Personnel
Trailers
Transatlantic Films, 1939 Releases
Transformers, A. C
Trans-Lux Corp., Financial Summary
Trans-Oceanic Film Expert Co., Personnel
TRI-NATIONAL FILMS, INC.:
Personnel
1939 Releases .
Trinidad, A Survey . .
TUBES:
Amplifier
Rectifier
Tunisia, A Survey
Turkey, A Survey. ...
TWENTIETH CENTURY-FOX FILM CORP.:
Home Office Personnel
Production Personnel
Financial Summary
1939 Releases
Twentieth Century Productions, Ltd., Personnel
670
673
47
1031
833
933
943
941
768
1047
1071
1071
1071
256
139
453
253
. 248
265
273
661
256
1071
715
607
622
1034
256
1071
999
622
615
256
1117
1071
1072
.1117
1117
622
635
1001
256
1089
24
E II I T O II I A L I \ II E X
u
U. S. Government Film Activities 756
U. S. S. R., A Survey . ... . 1117
UFA FILMS, INC.:
Personnel 622
1939 Releases 257
Ultra Films, 1939 Release 257
Uniforms 1072
Union of South Africa, A Survey 1118
UNITED ARTISTS CORP.:
Personnel 622
1939 Releases 257
United Artists Corp., Ltd., Personnel 1089
United Artists Theater Circuit, Financial Sum-
mary 1002
United Ad Film Service, Inc., Ferscnnel 607
United Kingdom, A Survey .1118
United Motion Picture Theater Owners of Penn-
sylvania, Southern New Jersey and Delaware,
Inc., Personnel 674
United Picture Theaters, Ltd., Personnel 1091
United Scenic Artists, Personnel 670
Unity Pictures, 1939 Release. 257
UNIVERSAL PICTURES CO., INC.:
Home Office Personnel 623
Production Personnel 636
Financial Summary 1003
1939 Releases 257
Universal Pictures, Ltd., Personnel 1089
Upholstery 1072
Units 1072
Uruguay, A Survey. 1120
V
Van, Wally, Productions, Personnel . 608
Vaults, Stcrage 657
Vedis Films, 1939 Release. 257
Vending Machines 1072
Venezuela, A Survey 1120
Victor Pictures, Personnel 636
Victoria Films, Inc., Personnel 636
Visavox, Inc., Personnel 608
Vitagraph, Inc., Personnel 624
Vitaphone Corp., The, Personnel 625
Wanger, Walter, Productions, Inc., Personnel . ... 636
WARNER BROS. PICTURES, INC.:
Home Office Personal 624
Production Personnel . 636
Financial Summary 1004
1939 Releases 257
Warner Bros. Pictures, Ltd., Personnel 1089
Warner Bros. Teddington Studios, Personnel 1090
Warner Club, Inc., Personnel 670
Warwick Pictures, 1939 Release 257
Weatherstripping 1072
Welwyn Studios, Ltd., Personnel 1090
Wembley Film Studios, Ltd., Personnel 1090
Western Association of Motion Picture Advertisers,
Personnel 670
Western Electric Co., Ltd., Personnel 1089
"Who Can Prophesy?" by Ernest W. Fredman . . 1085
Wickmar Film Productions, Inc., Personnel 636
Wilding Picture Productions, Inc., Personnel 603
Willard Pictures, Personnel 608
Williams, Clem, Films, Personnel 608
Williford, E. Allan, "S. M. P. E. in 1939" 751
"Wizard of Oz, The," One of The Film Daily
Ten Best Pictures in 1939 101
Wolff, Raphael G., Inc., Personnel 608
"Women, The," One of The Film Daily Ten Best
Pictures of 1939 99
Wcrld Famous Artists, Inc., Personnel 636
WORLD PICTURES CORP.:
Personnel 625
1939 Releases 257
WRITERS:
Authors, Work in 1938 and 1939 357
Screenplay Writers, Work in 1938 and 1939 369
"Wuthering Heights," One of The Film Daily Ten
Best Pictures of 1939. . .95
Y
Y. M. C . A. Motion Picture Bureau, Personnel 608
YORK PICTURES CO., INC.:
Personnel .
1939 Release 257
Yorke, Emerson, Studio, Personnel 608
Yugoslavia, A Survey ,12°
w
Wafilms, Inc., Personnel
Walch Film Corp., 1939 Releases
636
257
Zenith Cinema Service, Personnel.. 608
Zeidman, Bennie F., Productions, Ltd., Personnel.. 636
25
AIL THE NEWS
ALL THE TIME
?DAILY-
1501 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
BRyant 9-7117
THE RECORDS, REFERENCES AND PERSONNEL
OF THE FILM DAILY ARE "AT YOUR SERVICE''
John W. Alicoate
Publisher
Chester B. Bahn Don M. Mersereau
Editor General Manager
Ralph Wilk
Los Angeles Rep.
Winfield Andrus Hollis Kennahan
Statistician Editorial
Al Steen
Editorial
George H. Morris
Editorial
CIRCULATION
S. D. Kohler
Anne Unger
A. J. Dash
George Farrell
Chas. A. Alicoate
Special Representative
L. H. Mitchell
Editorial
ADVERTISING
James H. Maher
Frances Gross
Flora Schikler
Ethel Quinn
LONDON
Ernest W. Fredman
HOLLYWOOD PARIS
Ralph Wilk P. A. Harle
6425 Hollywood Blvd. La Cinematographie Francaise Daily Film Renter
Granite 6607 Rue de la Cour-des-Noues 19 127-133 Wardour St
Publishers of
THE FILM DAILY
THE FILM DAILY YEAR BOOK
SHORT SUBJECTS QUARTERLY
26
A
Adler Sign Letter Co 1020
Advertising Accessories,
Inc 20
Advitagraph Corp 1010
Agfa Raw Film Corp.. . . 8
Alexander Film Co 598
Altec Service Corp 1008
Ameche, Don 60
American Seating Co.. . . 1016
Arnold. Edward 386
Arthur. Jean 392
Artists Managers Guild . . 70
Associated Publications
724 & 725
Astaire. Fred 388
Atlas Film Exchange,
Inc 186
Audio Productions, Inc... 598
Autry, Gene 52
Ayres, Lew 396
B
Bank of America
Facing Page 1
Barnes Printing Com-
pany. Inc 626. 832
Battisti Studios 1024
Benny, Jack 390
Bergen, Edgar 50
Billboard, The 726
Blake. B. K.. Productions. 198
Blake. Sid 186
Blanke, Henry 238
Bonded Film Storage Corp.
Facing Inside Back Cover
Boyd, William 66
Brown, Harry Jca 296
Bruce, George 122
Brulatour. J. E„ Inc.
Inside Front Covers
Butler, David 90
Burnette, Smiley (Frog) . . 422
Buzzell, Edward 278
c
Cameron Publishing Co.. 722
Canadian Moving Picture
Digest. The 1082
Capra, Frank 76
Chapman, Patricia ... 414
Chidnoif Studio 322
Christie, Al 172
Cinelab. Inc 1038
27
Cinema Sales, Inc 592
Citron, Sam 184
City Photo Engraving
Corp 326
Cline, Edward F 104
Colbert, Claudette 38
Columbia Pictures 112
Comerford Theaters. Inc.. 200
Connolly. Walter 402
Consolidated Film Indus-
tries, Inc. .Inside Back Cover
Conway, Jack 278
Cooper, Gary 34
Cortez, Stanley 380
Cosmo-Sileo Co 204
Cromwell, John 96
Crosby, Bing 42
Curtiz. Michael 234
D
Daily Film Renter, The.. 1086
Daily Variety 136
Darmour, Larry 144
Dazian's, Inc 1022
Del Ruth, Roy 102
De Luxe Laboratories,
Inc 134
A MODERN AND COMPLETE
LABORATORY FOR DEVELOPING
AND PRINTING SOUND OR
SILENT FILM
35 MM. 16 MM.
SPEED - SERVICE
FILM LABORATORIES imc
723 Seventh Ave.
NEW YORK, N. Y.
NAT SALAND
GUS HARRIS
President
Treasurer
28
ADVERTISING INDEX
Disney. Walt 312
Dmylryk, Edward 218
Du-Art Film Laboratories . 1038
Duo Art Pictures, Inc.. . . 186
Du Pont Film Manufac-
turing Corp.. Inc. 2
Durbin, Deanna 46
E
Eastman Kodak Co.
Back Cover
Eberson. John 1014
Electrical Research Prod-
ucts, Inc. .Facing page 1120
El Indicador 1102
Ellis, Robert 304
Ellison, lames . . 410
em 418
Esperia Film Distributing
Company 1074
F —
Fabian Theaters Corp.. . 202
Filmlab. Inc 1036
Filmmuveszti Evkonyv. .1104
Film Weekly. The 1096
Fine Arts Producing 4
Distributing Corp. ... 124
Finney, Edward 126
FitzPatrick Traveltalks . . 16
Foote, Bradbury 276
Formica Insulation Co.,
The 1024
Foster, Ray 184
Franklin-Blank Prods. . . 108
French Cinema Center,
Inc 1076
G
Garnett, Tay 94
Gateway Productions,
Inc MB
General Electric 4
General Film Library, Inc.
Facing Inside Back Cover
Gilbert, Billy 416
Goldberg, Bert & Port, Inc. 148
Goulding, Edmund 82
Grant. Cary 36
Gray, Danny 284
Greater Amusem?-t-> . . 734
Grey, Nan 406
Guaranteed Pictu"?->
Company, Inc 1078
Gwenn, Edmund 404
II
Hadley, Hap' 328
Hancock, Don 176
Hathaway, Henry 78
Havrilla, Alois 182
Henie, Sonja 43
Heraldo del Cinematog-
rafista 1098
Herbert. Hugh 426
Hersholt, Jean ...... . . 316
Heywood-Wakefield 1006
Hitchcock, Alfred 100
29
Hoffberg Productions.
Inc 1074
Hollywood Productions . 146
Hollywood Reporter, The 732
Hollywood Spectator . . . 736
Horton. Edward Everett. 400
Hurley. Harold 212
I
International Projector
Corp 1042
International Projectionist 738
International Ssat Corp. 1012
~ J
Jason, Leigh 344
lay Emanuel Publications,
Inc 728 & 729
Jewish Art Pictures, Inc.. 186
Juno Films, Inc 188
— li
Kandel. M. J.
Facing Inside Back Cover
Keighley. William 238
Kenney. Charles H.,
Studios, Inc 1020
Kinsmatograph Weekly
1092 & 1093
King, Henry 294
Korda, Alexander 32
Korman, Murray 162
ADVERTISING INDEX
L
La Cava, Gregory 314
La Cinematographie
Francaise 1094
Lang. Walter 298
Laurel & Hardy Feature
Productions 398
Lee. Rowland V 84
Leisen. Mitchell 80
Leonard. Robert Z 270
Le Roy. Mervyn Produc-
tions 268
Lesser. Sol, Productions. 120
Lloyd, Frank 334
Lloyd's Film Storage
Corp 170
Logan, Helen 304
London Films 32
Lowe, Edward T 222
Lubitsch, Ernst, Produc-
tions 120
Ludwig, Edward 342
Luporini & Variety Film
Corp 1076
Me
McDonald. Frank 348
McGuire, Wm. Anthony. . 110
M
Macgowan, Kenneth 304
Malcolm Laboratories
Corp 1036
Martin. Tony 408
Master Photographers,
Inc 676
Mayfair Productions, Inc. 178
Menjou. Adolphe 394
Mercury Film Labora-
tories, Inc 28
Mersereau. Jacques 318
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
261 to 284
Metropolitan Photo Ser-
vice 196
Miljan. John 424
Modern Talking Picture
Service, Inc 594
Mogull's, Inc 596
Monogram Pictures 128
Morgan, Dennis 240
Morris, William, Agency,
Inc. 132
Morros, Boris. Produc-
tions, Inc. 106
Motiograph, Inc 22
Muni, Paul 240
National Screen Service. 20
National Carbon Co.. Inc. 10
Neagle, Anna 159
News of the Day 266
Neill. Roy William 350
Nu Art Films, Inc 188
30
o
Otterson, Jack 178
Owen, Reginald . 386
P
Paramount Pictures . 207 to 224
Pascal. Gabriel 154 & 155
Pathe Laboratories. Inc.. 14
Pax Films. Inc 188
Pictorial Films. Inc 190
Pike. S. S.. Co.. Inc 168
Postal Telegraph 18
Power. Tyrone 58
n
Quigley Publications
720 & 721
R
RCA Manufacturing Co..
Inc 6
RCA Photophone . 6
RKO Pathe News 310
RKO Radio Pictures . 308 to 316
Radio City Music Hall. . 180
Radio Daily, The 718
Rambusch 1022
Randol. George. Produc-
tions 148
Revista Del Exhibidor 1100
ADVERTISING INDEX
Ritter. Tex 126
Roach, Hal, Studios 114
Robinson, Edward G 236
Rock, Joe 174
Rogers, Ginger 40
Rogers, Roy 420
Rosenheim, J., & Co. 1026
Ross. Charles, Inc.
1040 & 1041
Ross Federal Service, Inc. 138
Ruggles, Wesley 92
s
Sandrich, Mark 88
Sanlley, Joseph 180
Schlesinger, Leon 244
Schoedsack, Emest B. 216
Schuster, Harold 346
Scientific Films, Inc 224
Screen Broadcast Corp.. 593
Screencraft Pictures, Inc. 190
Seiler, Lewis 242
Seiter, William A 300
Select Attractions, Inc... 166
Selwyn, Edgar 280
Selznick International
Pictures 62
Sheehan, Winiield 274
Sherman, Harry, Produc-
tions 142 & 143
Shorts, Inc 164
Showmen's Motion Pic-
ture Trade Review .... 730
Skirball, Jack H 334
Skouras Theatres Corp.. . 130
Simon, S. Sylvan 342
Sloane, Paul H 218
Small, Edward. Produc-
tions, Inc 118
Smith, Alexander, & Sons
Carpet Co 1018
Smith, Pete 282
Spence, Ralph 302
Stahl, John M 86
Stanwyck, Barbara . . 44
Stradling, Harry 380
Stevens, George 98
Sullivan, C. Gardner . . . . 368
Sullivan, Wallace 358
Swerling, Jo 356
I
Technicolor Motion Pic-
ture Corp 74
Terry, Paul 306
Thomas, John Charles . . 72
Thomas, William C 220
Tucker, Forrest 68
Twentieth Century-Fox
289 to 306
Twist, John 356
u
Ufa Films, Inc 1078
Union Carbide & Carbon
Corp 10
United Artists 64
31
Universal Pictures. .150 & 151
Usairco 1032
V
Van der Veer, Willard . 382
Van Every, Dale 216
Van Leer, Arnold 194
Variety 136
Venturini, Ed. D 352
Vidor, King 272
w
Walker, Stuart 214
Wanger, Walter, Produc-
tions, Inc 116
Warner Bros 229 to 244
Wayburn, Ned 324
Wayne, John 412
West, Claudine 282
Western Electric Co.
Facing Page 1120
Wilcox, Herbert 158
Williams. T. R 334
Wilson, Carey 280
Winston, Charles J., &
Co., Inc 1026
World Pictures Corp 12
Y-Z
York, Katherine 192
Yorke, Emerson, Studio.. 182
Zukor, Eugene J 220
GARY COOPER
34
RESPONSIBILITIES
NEVER in the motion picture's half-century of life has there
been a time when we who are trustees for this art-industry
have necessarily been so conscious of the significance of our
responsibilities.
Only in a country dedicated to the principles of liberty could
the screen have gained its present high estate. It is distinctively
a product of the American spirit and under its system of self-
regulation has rendered its service to a universal public in the
American way.
Determined to square its performance with its obligations,
with roots firm in the soil of this free land, the American motion
picture must and will continue to serve, to grow and prosper
and for the pleasure and benefit of the millions, with vision, ini-
tiative and enterprise, continue to record all of life which is
worthwhile and the best and greatest in art and entertainment.
35
36
General
Capital Invested in World Film Industry $3,000,000,000
Capital Invested in U. S. Film Industry $2,050,000,000
Breakdown: Studios, $117,000,000; Distribution, $20,000,000: Theaters. $1,903,000,000;
Non-Theatrical Enterprises, $10,000,000.
World Film Industry Expenditure for Advertising in 1939 $185,000,000
U. S. Film Industry Expenditure for Advertising in 1939 $110,000,000
Film Industry Expenditure for U. S. Advertising in 1939 $80,000,000
Breakdown: Newspapers, magazines, etc., $00,000,000: Outdoor Advertising, $8,000,000;
Accessories and Direct Mail, $6,000,000.
Number of Trade and Fan Publications in the U. S 58
Number of Ads Placed Daily in Various U. S. Media 16.000
Rank of U. S. Film Industry in National List of Total Expenditures for Advertising.
Publicity, Promotion (estimated) Fifth
Summary of 1938 Stock and Bond Sales of New York Markets:
Stock Market, 5,370.880 shares; Curl) Market. 905.000 shares; Bond Market. $9,046,000.
Estimated Cost of U. S. Studio Expansion in 1939 $5,000,000
Annual Expenditures for Insurance in the U. S $30,000,000
Breakdown: Theaters, 90%; Production and Distribution, 10'.} .
Approximate Annual Taxes Paid by the Industry to the Federal Government $100,000,000
Approximate Annual Taxes Paid to State and Local Governments $250,000,000
Number of People Employed in U. S. Film Industry 300,000
Total Industry Payroll $410,760,000
Number of Hollywood Correspondents and Staff Photographers on Duty as of Ian. 1.
1940 432
Breakdown: Wire services, 19; newspapers, 140: trade publications, 50: national maga-
zines, 41; fan magazines, 21; foreign publications, 75: free lance writers. 34; radio news
gatherers, 33: photographers. 9.
Production
Hollywood Studio Investment $117,000,000
U. S. Production Costs, 1939-40 (estimated) $165,000,000
Breakdown: Features. $153,000,000: Short Subjects, $12,000,000.
Annual Hollywood Payroll (estimated) $133,000,000
Weekly Hollywood Payroll (estimated) $2,557,692.30
Weekly U. S. Production Payroll Outside of Hollywood (estimated) $100,000
Number of People Employed in U. S. Production in 1939 32,000
Total Positive and Negative Footage Used Annually in U. S 2.100.000,000
Features Produced by Majors in the U. S. in 1939 367
Features Produced by Indies in the U. S. in 1939 (including seven foreign language
features) 116
Foreign Features Released in the U. S. in 1939 278
Breakdown: Released by Majors, 21; by U. S. Indies, 257.
Total Number of Feature and Shorts Film Titles Used Since Birth of the U. S. Film
Industry to Jan. 1. 1940 41,850
Number of Feature and Shorts Film Titles Registered with MPPDA in 1939 3,312
Features Approved by the Production Code Authority in 1939 599
Breakdown: West Coast Office, 623; East Coast Office, 76.
Short Subjects Approved by the PCA in 1939 715
Breakdown: West Coast Office. 436; East Coast Office, 279.
37
CLAUDETTE COLBERT
38
f
U. S. Studio Investment in Film Rights to Stage Plays from 1926, effective date of
Dramatists Guild basic agreement, to Jan. 1. 1940 $12,210,356.66
Actors Under Term Contracts to Major Coast Studios in 1939 458
Directors Under Term Contracts to Major Coast Studios in 1939 117
Writers Under Term Contracts to Major Coast Studios in 1939 375
Percentage of Production Dollar Spent in Los Angeles and Vicinity 28%
Hollywood's 1939 Bill for Supplies, Including Maintenance Costs $46,000,000
Foreign-made Features Imported and Given at Least One Showing in the U. S.
During 1939 278
Breakdown: Germany, 85; England, 44: France, 36; Mexico, 21; Italy, 16; Hungary 15;
Russia. 13; Sweden, 10; Poland, 7; Argentina, 6; Czechoslovakia, 6; Spain, 4; China, 3;
Cuba, 2; Finland, 2; Ireland, 2; Denmark, Egypt, Greece, Holland, Norway, Switzerland,
1 each.
The Production Dollar is Divided as Follows:
Cast, 25%; extras, bits and characters, 6%; director, 10%; director assistants, 2%;
cameramen and crew, 1.5%; lights, 2%; make-up, hair-dressers and supplies, 0.9%;
teachers, 0.2%; crew and labor, 1.2%; story preparation, 7%; story costs, 5%;
costumes and designers, 2%: sets and art directors, 12.5%; stills and photographs.
0.4%; cutters, 1%; film negative, 1%; tests, 1.2%: insurance, 2%; sound-engineering
and negatives, 3.1%; publicity, transportation, research, technical, miscellaneous, 2%;
indirect costs, 16 % .
Producers of Features in the U. S 110
Producers of Short Subjects (Theatrical) in the U. S 50
Breakdown: California, 43; New York, 6; Florida, 1.
Producers of Cartoon Films in the U. S 7
Producers of News Reels in the U. S 5
Number of Industrial and Advertising Film Producers in U. S 110
Number of Theatrical Shorts Produced Annually (estimated) 600
Average Negative Cost per Feature Production in the U. S $300,000
Average Shooting Days for Photographing a Feature 22
Number of Different Industries, Arts and Professions Involved in the Making of a
Motion Picture 276
Approximate LineaT Feet of Positive Film Stock Used Annually 2,000,000.000
Total Cost (1 cent per foot) $20,000,000
Approximate Linear Feet of Negative Film Stock Used Annually 100,000,000
Total Cost (4 cents per foot) $4,000,000
Width of 35 mm. Positive Film in Inches l3/a
Thickness of 35 mm. Positive Film in Inches .00575
Language Markets for U. S. Films in Order of Importance:
English, Spanish, German, French.
Total 1939 Extras Payroll for West Coast Studios Served by Central Casting $3,124,671.64
Comparable 1938 Figure $2,848,445.68
Average 1939 Daily Wage of Extras $10.61
Comparable 1938 Figure $10.78
Average Number of Days Work per Individual in 1939 29.89
Average Annual Earnings per Individual in 1939 $316.26
Total Placements by Central Casting in 1939 294,432
Breakdown: Men, 197,615: women, 81,710: boys, 8,993; girls, 6,114.
Earning Range of Extras Employed in 1939:
Less than $500, 6,678; from $500-$l,000, 2,245; from $1,000-$2,000, 868; from $2,000-
$3,000, 68.
Average Number of Extras Employed Daily in 1939 959
Breakdown: Men, 644; women, 266; children, 49.
Total Number of Individuals Used as Extras by Coast Studios in 1939 9,849
Exports of American Motion Picture Films in 1938 and 1939:
1939 1938
Percentage
Negative Feet Value Change Feet Value
Sound 8,079,437 $ 339,602 — 4.3 % 8,498,012 $ 300,361
Positive
Sound 152,602,878 $3,061,055 — 18.9% 186,739,117 $3,968,467
Total 160,582,316 $3,400,667 — 14.7% 188,237,129 $4,268,818
Language Markets for U. S. Films in Order of Importance in 1939:
Brazil, Argentina, Mexico, United Kingdom, British West Indies, Panama, Sweden. France,
Cuba, Venezuela. (Exports to the U. K. dropped more than 50 per cent, sent the U. K.
from first in 1938 to fourth in 1939).
U. S. Exports of Photographic and Projection Goods for 1939 $19,064,000
Comparable figure for 1938 $19,867,000
39
itaiqpiip
40
Distribution
U. S. Industry Distribution Investment $20,000,000
Number of People Employed in U. S. Distribution Field in 1939 13,000
Annual Payroll in U. S. Distribution Field in 1939 $27,760,000
Number of U. S. Film Exchanges 434
Number of Exchanges of Major Companies:
RKO Radio. 33; Universal, 32; 20th Century-Fox, 32; Paramount, 32; M-G-M, 32;
Columbia, 32; Warner Bros.-First National .32: United Artists, 27.
Film Footage Handled Daily by Exchanges 27.000 Miles
Number of Shipments of Film Between Exchanges and Theaters Weekly 24,000
Average Storage Vault Capacity of Exchanges 750 cu. ft.
Features Released in U. S. Market in 1939 761
Features Released in U. S. Market. 1917-1939:
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Ph
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U
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o
a
s
E>
a
388
367
21
363
346
16
408
393
15
303
348
14
356
340
16
361
350
11
338
317
21
318
300
18
324
307
17
362
356
6
393
379
14
463
429
33
510
501
9
0
a
a
a
H
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o
o
h
u
o
1?
a
S
278
21
314
16
240
15
213
14
241
18
182
11
137
21
106
18
121
17
86
6
145
14
103
83
65
9
1939
1938
1937
1936
1935
1934
1933
1932
1931
1930
1929
1928
1927
1926
1925
1924
1923
1922
1921
1920
1919
1918
1917
761
769
778
735
766
662
644
685
622
595
707
834
743
740
579
579
576
748
854
796
646
841
687
388
362
408
362
356
361
338
318
324
362
393
462
510
447
442
426
432
373
407
370
373
410
301
306
367
298
233
314
372
233
293
137
163
144
373
407
370
373
410
301
306
367
298
233
314
372
233
116
109
145
174
185
130
190
189
194
163
183
212
177
257
298
225
199
225
171
116
178
104
80
131
160
56
483
455
538
367
346
393
522 348
535 340
480
507
489
501
509
350
317
300
307
366
563 379
641 429
678 501
116
109
145
174
185
130
190
189
194
153
183
212
177
Average Number of Prints Required per Feature: Majors
Indies
Average Number of Prints Required for News Reels (per company)
Estimated Annual Film Rentals
Average Distribution Cost for U. S. Industry (estimated)
General Minimum Booking Accounts per Feature Picture
Number of Distribution Zones in the U. S
Average Number of Bookings per Print
Average Number of Actual Playing Days per Print
Average Cost for Each Positive Print
Number of Theatrical Film Distributors in the U.S
Number of Theatrical Film Exchanges in the Six Canadian Key Cities.
41
250
100
725
$250,000,000
26%
2.000
32
37
100
$200
71
53
42
Features Released by Major Companies, 1923-1939 (calendar years):
1923 1924 1925 1926 1927 1928 1929 1930 1931 1932 1933 1934 1935 1936 1937 1938 1939
Assoc. Exhibitors
15
18
17
27
Assoc. First Nat.
48
C. B. C
10
Columbia
19
17
15
25
32
22
29
31
29
32
43
49
62
52
63
55
Famous Players-
Lasky Corp. . .
OX
ftO
nrt
II
ftft
DO
* *
''
Film Booking1 Of.
32
42
53
61
5o
6"
First National . .
46
66
51
66
53
46
37
30
Fox Film Corp. .
60
56
44
47
60
49
53
48
48
40
50
52
52
Goldwyn-Cosmop.
29
17
Metro
32
Metro-Gold wyn
46
M-G-M
42
39
51
52
52
47
46
39
42
43
47
45
51
46
60
Paramount • . .
78
64
68
64
62
65
58
55
63
68
61
60
58
6
8
4
12
78'
53
24
14
Producers Dis-
tributing Corp.
32
30
9
14t
OK
oo
33
4ft
443
4ft
4 f\
oy
**»
do
4U
SelznickDist.Corp. 34
16t
20th Century-Fox
67
61
56
59
United Artists.. .
4
3
11
11
11
15
17
16
13
14
16
20
19
17
26
16
18
65
48
51
54
66
56
41
36
23
30
37
44
37
28
37
46
46
16
15
12
Warner Bros
13
16
28
65
43
26
36
39
24
Warner Bros.-
First National.
55
65
58
49
56
68
52
53
432
426
442
447
510
462
393
362
324
318
338
361
356
362
408
362
388
t Following bankruptcy proceedings in November, features were turned over to Associated Exhibitors
for distribution.
• Including 31 P. D. C. films,
i Released by RKO Radio.
Exhibition
U. S. Film Theater Investment $1,903,000,000
Total of Film Theaters Throughout the World '69.153
Wired for Sound *67.030
Breakdown: Europe, *35.936 (34,694 wired): United States. 19,032 (all wired); Far
East, 6,568 (6,220 wired): Latin America, 5.403 (4.884 wired): Canada, 1,246 (all
wired) : Africa and Near East, 968 (954 wired).
Decrease in World Film Theaters in 1939 * 23,975
Decrease in Wired for Sound Theaters *908
* 1940 figures do not include some 30,000 workers' halls in Russia where pictures are
shown without admission charges.
Total U. S. Theaters (as of Ian. 1, 1940) 19.032
Total U. S. Theaters Operating (as of Ian. 1. 1940) 17,003
Increase in U. S. Film Theaters in 1939 1,203
Increase in Operating U. S. Theaters in 1939 1,302
Theaters Directly Operated and Controlled by the Five Major Circuits 1,150
Theaters in which Producing and Distributing Companies Have Some Interest. But
Which Are Actually Under Local Management and Operation Through Partner-
ships, Stock Interests, etc 1.150
Theaters in the
Year*
Total
Wired
U. S.. 1926
Wired
Open
1939:
Wired
Closed
Silent
Silent
Open
Silent
Closed
1940 19,032 19,032
1939 17,829 17,829
1938 18,182 18.182
1937 18,192 18,192
1936 15,858 15,858
1935 15,273 15,273
1934 16,885 14,381
1933 18,533 14,405
1932 18,716 13.880
1931 21.993 13,128
1930 »23,000 8,860
1929 23,344 "800
1928 22,304 »100
1927 21,664 '20
1926 19,489
17,003
15.701
16,251
16,055
14,161
13.386
12,574
12,480
12.605
•800
'100
•20
2,029
2,128
1,931
2,137
1.697
1,887
1.807
1.925
1.275
2,504
4.128
4,836
8,865
•14.140
•22,544
•22,204
•21,644
19.489
1,521
2,504
4.128
3,314
*• January 1.
• Estimated.
Average Weekly Attendance of U. S. Film Theaters in 1939
Average Weekly Attendance of U. S. Film Theaters Since 1922:
1938. 85 million: 1937. 88 million: 1936. 88 million: 1935, 80 million: 1934, 70 million;
1933, 60 million; 1932. 60 million; 1931, 75 million; 1930, 110 million; 1929, 95
million: 1928, 65 million; 1927, 67 million; 1926, 50 million; 1925, 46 million: 1924,
46 million: 1923, 43 million: 1922, 40 million.
85,000,000
43
BARBARA STANWYCK
44
Average Weekly Attendance of British Film Theaters in 1939 18,000.000
Total U. S. Film Theaters Gross in 1939 $1,000,000,000
Breakdown of approximate distribution of the year's U. S. Box Office Receipts:
Theater retains 65% of total receipts for local expenses as follows:
25% Payroll, theater staff and management $260,000,000
15% Real Estate-Rent, insurance, taxes, interest, and depreciation 150,000,000
8% Local advertising and publicity 80,000,000
5% Light and heat 50,000,000
5% Interest and dividends 50,000,000
4% Other taxes and insurance 40,000,000
3% Miscellaneous extra attractions 30.000,000
66 7c $650,000,000
Distributor receives 35% oi total receipts lrom theater:
26% to studios for producing the film $260,000,000
10% to distributor for prints, advertising, sales, service costs 100,000,000
35% $350,000,000
Average Admission Price in the U. S. in 1939 23 cents
Number of People Employed in U. S. Exhibition Field 255,000
Annual Exhibition Payroll in 1939 $250,000,000
General Maximum Bookings per Feature: Majors 10.000
Indies 3.000-6,000
Maximum Number oi Simultaneous Daily Runs per Picture 200
Average Screening Time per Print 200
Average Run of Picture 2V4 days
Average Number of Showings 2Vi daily
Largest Percentage of Adult Admissions for Any Single Hour of Day 75%-85%
This Maximum Occurs from 7:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.
Theater Attendance by Days of the Week:
Monday 10%
Tuesday 10
Wednesday 10
Thursday 10
Friday 15%
Saturday 20
Sunday 25
100%
Ratio of Population to Seats in Cities of 100.000 and Over 8.9
U. S. Amusement Tax Receipts in 1939 $19,876,312
U. S. Amusement Tax Receipts Since 1930:
1938. $19,661,337; 1937, $20,974,031.33; 1936. $18,457,482.07; 1935, $10,406,021.90;
1934, $16,243,342.55; 1933, $14,097,910.43; 1932. $9,295,617.83; 1931, $2,474,531.36;
1930, $3,544,554.70.
British Entertainments Tax in 1939 (estimated) £5.000,000
Percentage of Screen Time in All Foreign Markets for U. S. Films 65%
Total 1939 Expenditures for Theater Construction, and Remodeling in the U. S.
(estimated) $28,537,000
Breakdown: New Construction, $19,211,000; Remodeling, $9,326,000.
Annual Total Expenditure for U. S. Theater Equipment and Supplies $25,000,000
Average U. S. Daily Attendance per Theater 500
Average Seating Capacity of U. S. Film Theaters 591
Average Daily U. S. Attendance per Theater, per Show 250
Average Daily Film Rental per U. S. Theater $25
U. S. DeLuxe First-Run Rental per Picture ranges Weekly from $5,000 to $25,000
Negro Theaters in the U. S 399
Approximate Number of First-Run Theaters in 95 Cities of Over 100,000 Population. . . 450
There is One Motion Picture Theater Seat for Every 12 Inhabitants in the U. S.
There is One Motion Picture Theater Open in the U. S. for Every 8,000 Persons.
Average Length of American-produced Features (in Feet) 7,020
Average Screen Time of American-produced Features (in Minutes) 78
Theaters Controlled by 394 Independent Circuits 4,130
Aggregate Number of Seats in All U. S. Film Theaters 11.248.639
Breakdown: Affiliated circuits, 2,500,000; independent circuits, 3,282,879; independents,
6,466,760.
Number of U. S. Theaters Showing Double Features 10,031
Note: This approximates 59% of all theaters: of the 59%, 30% follow a consistent
double feature policy, 29 % play both double features and singles as occasion dictates.
Territorial high for duals is the Northeast's 72%, territorial low, the South's 28%.
Number of U. S. Theaters Showing Single Features Only 6,972
45
Theater Statistics
United States
State
Total
Theaters
Seats
Closed
Theaters
Seats
Operating
Theaters
Seats
Alabama 266 98,784
Arizona 101 44,702
Arkansas 241 90,324
California 1,095 804,872
Colorado 270 116,060
Connecticut 223 176,420
Delaware 34 22,343
District of Columbia 64 61,246
Florida 313 144,198
Georgia 320 137,866
Idaho 192 60,630
Illinois 1,100 720,593
Indiana 649 293,515
Iowa 536 208,211
Kansas 445 193,865
Kentucky 318 141,203
Louisiana 306 150.721
Maine 202 94,819
Maryland 228 129,617
Massachusetts 443 431.050
Michigan 684 445.938
Minnesota 544 233,715
Mississippi 202 82,553
Missouri 672 355,010
Montana 202 63,664
Nebraska 372 140,215
Nevada 47 15,739
New Hampshire 102 58,753
New Jersey 435 425,931
New Mexico 92 39,894
New York 1,418 1,609,773
North Carolina 387 172,787
North Dakota 185 50,739
Ohio 942 695,530
Oklahoma 433 195,973
Oregon 239 113.084
Pennsylvania 1,258 882,062
Rhode Island 61 60,039
South Carolina 169 69.908
South Dakota 199 60,163
Tennessee 254 118,119
Texas 1,068 603,294
Utah 224 71,639
Vermont 66 35,422
Virginia 311 148,036
Washington 342 162,682
West Virginia 327 127.626
Wisconsin 480 274,821
Wyoming 62 25,632
TOTALS 19,032 11,248.639
27
12
15
124
45
18
2
1
77
19
36
168
86
46
71
61
27
47
17
51
60
53
9
138
36
75
8
26
48
12
78
17
20
68
34
16
49
9
16
15
17
75
29
7
16
31
43
65
10
8.256
3,610
6,704
61.362
10,855
12,911
600
1,000
22,126
8.737
7,357
63,354
22,625
14,581
18.823
15.852
10.989
18,779
6,887
28,803
23,706
14,563
3,459
49,626
6,264
22,347
1,400
12,011
44,489
4,425
62,978
5,650
3,875
27.623
14,037
4,772
35,114
8,567
6.650
4.626
6,834
22,892
6,410
2,696
4,837
13,637
9,845
27,626
2,582
239
89
226
971
225
205
32
63
236
301
156
932
463
491
374
257
279
155
211
392
624
491
193
534
176
297
39
76
387
80
1,340
370
165
874
399
223
1,209
52
163
184
237
993
196
58
295
311
284
415
52
90,618
41.092
83.620
753,520
104,195
163,509
21,743
50,246
122,072
129,128
63,273
667,239
270,890
193,630
176,042
126,351
139,732
76,040
123,730
402,247
422,232
219,162
79,004
306,384
68,390
117,868
14,339
46,742
381,442
35,469
1.546,795
167,137
46.864
667,907
181.936
108,312
846,938
61.472
63.268
65,638
111.285
480,402
65,229
32,726
143,199
148,945
117,781
247,195
22.950
2,029 785,831 17,003 10,462,808
FIGURES FROM FILM DAILY SURVEY AS OF JANUARY 1, 1940. WHEN SEATING CAPACITIES
WERE NOT AVAILABLE, THEATERS WERE ADDED IN AS HAVING 100 SEATS.
47
SONJA HENIE
4$
I
THE WAR. curtailing foreign revenues, presents the U. S. film industry with its No. One
problem. Great Britain continues the Films Act in effect, "freezes" 50 per cent of American remit-
tances. War-time taxation and exchange restrictions plague distributors.
II
TRADE REFORMS, evolved through long distributor-exhibitor consultation and negotiation, are
doomed by Department of Justice warning on August 17 that the proposed Code is an invitation to
further Government litigation. Warners and Metro subsequently embody Code essentials in their
own sales policies.
Ill
ON THE LEGISLATIVE FRONT, the U. S. Senate again passes the controversial Neely measure
by a 46-28 vote on July 17, sending it to the House. North Dakota, in late February, repeals the
state's pioneer theater divorcement statute, already challenged in the courts.
IV
ANTI-TRUST litigation continues to hold the spotlight, with both the Government and inde-
pendent exhibitors as plaintiffs. The Department of Justice in a new line of attack files suits against
three large independent circuits. May 1 is set as the New York equity suit trial date; "pre-trial"
will shorten its duration.
V
DEATH ends the careers of two notable industry pioneers — Carl Laemmle. Sr., on Sept. 24;
Douglas Fairbanks, Sr., on Dec. 12.
VI
RKO REORGANIZATION PLAN and underwriting agreement, both Atlas-sponsored, are
approved by Federal Judge William Bondy, and consummation directed. George J. Schaefer is
named RKO Corp. president; Richard C. Patterson, Jr., board chairman. Pandro S. Berman resigns
as studio head; Jules Levy as sales exec. Harry Edington succeeds Berman as executive producer.
Ned E. Depinet signs a new contract as sales chief. Phil Reisman is elected a vice-president.
VII
TELEVISION finally turns the corner; NBC inaugurates public service of programs; FCC com-
mittee recommends limited commercialization; marked technical advances are disclosed.
VIII
THE DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE inaugurates a series of conferences with industry leaders,
the full import of which is yet to be determined. Marked effect upon Government-industry relations
is not impossible.
IX
ON THE LABOR FRONT, the IATSE move to establish jurisdiction in the player field via a
charter to the AFA is successfully blocked by the AAAA, the USTG loses its battle to gain control
of 12,000 IA members and the Conference of A. F. of L. Studio Unions forces producer acceptance
of its wage demands under threat of a nationwide strike.
X
"GONE WITH THE WIND," after more than three years, emerges with a Dec. 15 world
premiere at Atlanta, Ga., as the industry's first $4,500,000 production and 70 per cent rental release.
49
EDGAR BERGEN
charlie McCarthy
50
Jin ifcttoriam
WITH the close of 1939, the amusement industry pauses to pay a final tribute
to those affiliates in all branches whose deaths were recorded in the 1 2-month
period. In this necrology, the more widely known personalities to pass are given
with place of death and date obituary was published in THE FILM DAILY.
BERT ADLER. publicity di-
rector. New York. FD: 3-20
ALICE BRADY, actress. New
York. FD: 10-31
JOE BRANDT, producer. Hol-
lywood. FD: 2-24
EUGENE V. BREWSTER, fan
magazine publisher, Brook-
lyn. N. Y. FD: 1-4
CARLTON BREWSTON, L. I.
exhibitor, at New Smyrna,
Fla. FD: 1-6
HEYWOOD BROUN, column-
ist, former drama critic.
New York. FD: 12-19
HENRY CHESTERFIELD, NVA
secretary. New York.
FD: 1-13
H. COOPER CLIFFE, actor.
New York. FD: 5-4
SOTEROS D. COCALIS, cir-
cuit executive. New York.
FD: 4-24
M. E. COMERFORD. pioneer
Pennsylvania exhibitor, at
Miami Beach. FD: 2-3
HERB CRUIKSHANK, film
editor. New York. FD: 9-28
ALBERT G. DAVIS. General
Electric executive. New
York. FD: 4-27
PHIL DE ANGELIS. outdoor
advertising executive. New
York. FD: 6-30
RICHARD ETTELSON. presi-
dent Consolidated Theaters.
New York. FD: 7-12
DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS. SR..
stage and film star, Santa
Monica. FD: 12-12
GEORGE FAWCETT, actor,
Nantucket. FD: 6-12
GEORGE FELT, pioneer ex-
hibitor. Philadelphia. FD:
1-24
ISIDOR FREY. Metro execu-
tive and assistant counsel.
New York. FD: 6-20
IRA FURMAN. Metro branch
manager. San Francisco.
FD: 5-5
GEORGE GERHARD, film
editor and publicist, Cos
Cob, Conn. FD: 12-12
FLOYD GIBBONS, newsreel
commentator, at Strouds-
burg. Pa. FD: 9-25
MILES F. GIBBONS. Para.
News sales executive. New
York. FD: 6-22
CLAUDE GIL LING WATER.
actor. Hollywood. FD: 11-3
ETIENNE GIRARDOT, veteran
stage and film actor, Hol-
lywood. FD: 11-13
ROBERT P. GLECKLER, actor.
Hollywood. FD: 2-28
MAURICE GOODMAN, film
executive. New York, FD:
3-21
SIDNEY HOWARD, dramatist.
Tyringham, Mass. FD: 8-24
MERRITT HULBURD. producer.
at West Palm Beach. Fla.
FD: 1-24
BERTHA KALICH. actress.
New York: FD: 4-21
WALTER C. KELLY, actor.
Philadelphia. FD: 1-5
KATHRYN KIDDER, actress.
New York. FD: 9-12
JUDGE MORRIS KLEIN, pi-
oneer exhibitor, Baltimore.
FD: 5-16
ALFRED S. KRELLBERG. film
attorney. New York. FD:
3-7
CARL LAEMMLE. veteran pro-
ducer, Hollywood. FD: 9-25
EDWARD MAERTZ. president.
ITPA of Wis. FD: 10-3
CARL F. LOMB, v.-p. Bausch
& Lomb, Rochester. FD: 1-30
Robert h. Mclaughlin.
playwright. Cleveland. FD:
1-18
BERYL MERCER, actress. Hol-
lywood. FD: 7-31
FRED MILLER, veteran West
Coast exhibitor. Hollywood.
FD: 5-22
JOHN F. MILLER, pioneer pro-
ducer. Culver City. FD: 5-26
OWEN MOORE, actor, Holly-
wood. FD: 6-12
I AMES MULHAUSER, scenar-
ist, Hollywood. FD: 6-19
HERBERT MUNDIN. actor, Hol-
lywood. FD: 3-7
GEORGE P. NICHOLLS. di-
rector, Hollywood, FD: 11-14
JAMES GIBBONS PARROTT,
director, Hollywood. FD:
5-12
E. PAUL PHILLIPS. Para, exec-
utive, Wauseca, Minn. FD:
11-2
CHARLES PORTER, exhibitor,
president of Michigan Al-
lied. Detroit. FD: 3-13
WALTER RAYNER, Regal
sales manager, Toronto. FD:
10-10
TOM RICKETS, veteran actor-
director, Hollywood. FD: 1-23
HUGO RIESENFELD. orchestra
conductor. Hollywood. FD:
9-12
EDWARD ROSE, playwright.
Fremont. Wis. FD: 4-4
L. R. RUBINSTEIN, exhibitor.
Minneapolis. FD: 1-10
J. E. SAXE. circuit operator.
Milwaukee. FD: 11-7
HARRY SHIFFMAN. veteran
exhibitor. New York. FD:
1-30
JACK SNYDER, veteran film
lab. man, Hollywood. FD:
9-27
FREDERIC ULLMAN. SR., pi-
oneer theater manager. Buf-
falo. FD: 11-14
BOBBY VERNON, former film
star, Hollywood. FD: 6-30
HELEN WARE, actress. Car-
mel, Calif. FD: 1-26
LOIS WEBER, first woman
film director, Hollywood.
FD: 11-15
HARRY LEON WILSON, novel-
ist and playwright, Mon-
terey. FD: 6-20
FRANK. E. WOODS, Griffith
associate, formerly with
Dramatic Mirror, Hollywood.
FD: 5-2
JOE YOUNG, lyricist Ascap
secretary and board chair-
man. New York. FD: 4-24
51
GENE AUTRY
52
COST SCHEDULE OF
"Gone With the Wind"
Salaries of Stars and Cast and Extra Talent 466.688.00
Cameramen, wardrobe workers, property men, make-up artists, hairdressers, musicians,
copyists, transportation drivers, carpenters, grips, painters, plasterers, laborers,
electricians, projectionists, machinists, tractor drivers, prop-makers, drapers, uphol-
sterers, sound crew, special effects men , 961,215.00
Film cutters, assistant directors, unit managers, artists (set designers), script clerks 119,433.00
Extras 108,469.00
Department heads, technical advisers, stenographers, watchmen, interior decorators, ward-
robe manufacturers, clerks, messenger boys, telephone operators 328,
Total cost of Sets (as per detail below) 197,
Interior Armory
Exterior Twelve Oaks — Barbecue Pits. .
Interior Melanie's House
Exterior Road — Escape
Exterior McDonough Road
Exterior Paddock
Jump Sequence
Road to Twelve Oaks
Exterior Shantytown
Backings. Miniatures, Flats, etc
Miscellaneous Small Sets, etc
Exterior Atlanta Street $31,155
Exterior and Interior Tara and Gardens 28,149
Exterior and Interior Twelve Oaks .... 20,372
Exterior and Interior Rhett's Home .... 17,035
Railway Station, including Tracks and
Cars 13,937
Exterior Peachtree Street 12,058
Interior Aunt Pitty's Home 7,236
Exterior of Church 5,573
Exterior and Interior Frank Kennedy's
Store 3,991
Interior Church Hospital 3,959
Total cost of Women's Wardrobe $ 98.154.00
Total cost of Men's Wardrobe 55.664.00
Total cost of Wardrobe 153,
Projection cost 11,
Picture Raw Stock (474,538 feet) cost 109,
(Since the Technicolor process uses three negatives this total should be multiplied by
three to arrive at the total of 1.423.614 lineal feet of negative raw stock.)
Picture Negative developed (390,792 feet — 1,172,376 lineal feet) cost 23,
and Picture Negative printed (272,658 feet) cost 33,
Sound Track Raw Stock (535,000 feet) cost 5
Sound Track developed (221.303 feet) cost 2
and Sound Track Printed and reprints (232.885 feet) cost 8,
Lighting cost, which includes Electricians, Equipment Rentals and Electric Power and
Supplies 134
It is estimated we used 1,000.000 board feet of lumber. Estimated cost 35,
Cost of Research 9
The Transportation cost (Auto and Truck hire) was 59
Location Expenses were 54
The cost of Props purchased, manufactured and rented was 96
The estimated cost of Music, which includes the salaries of Lou Forbes, head of the Selznick
International Pictures' Music Department, and Secretary, Max Steiner, Musicians and
Copyists, also Miscellaneous License Fees and Supplies and Expenses $ 99
Price Paid for the Novel was $50,000, largest ever paid for a first novel.
Cost of the Search for Scarlett O'Hara has been computed by studio accountants at $92,000, of
about 2/3 represents cost of screen tests.
Negative Cost of G.W.T.W. is computed at $3,957,000.
Final computation of the production will be higher.
349.00
877.00
3.397
2,764
2,714
2.449
2.083
1.529
1.145
1.070
1.069
13.589
22.603
818.00
376.00
974.00
448.00
701.00
511.00
213.00
150.00
497.00
000.00
,987.40
917.00
341.00
,758.00
822.00
which
53
Theaters
*stor Circle 6-4642
Cameo Wisconsin 7-1789
Capitol COIumbus 5-1250
Cinema de Paris ALgonquin 4-7661
Criterion BRyant 9-3839
Embassy Newsreel CHickering 4-7300
55th Street Playhouse COIumbus 5-0425
Globe Circle 6-0800
Music Hall Circle 6-4600
Palace BRyant 9-4300
Paramount CHickering 4-7022
Rialto Wisconsin 7-0206
«ivoli Circle 7-1633
Rockefeller Center Newsreel CHickering 4-7300
Roxy Circle 7-6000
Strand Circle 7-5900
Hotels
Algonquin VAnderbilt 3-2500
Ambassador Wickersham 2-1000
Astor Circle 6-6000
Barbizon-Plaza Circle 7-7000
Edison Circle 6-5000
Lincoln Circle 6-4500
Lombardy PLaza 3-8600
Park Central Circle 7-8000
Pierre REgent 4-5900
Plaza PLaza 3-1740
Plymouth Circle 7-8100
Ritz Tower Wickersham 2-5000
St. Morirz Wickersham 2-5800
Savoy Plaza Volunteer 5-2600
Sherry Netherland VOIunteer 5-2800
Taft Circle 7-4000
Victoria Circle 7-7800
Waldorf-Astoria ELdorado 5-3000
Warwick Circle 7-2700
Restaurants
Algonquin VAnderbilt 3-2500
Dinty Moore's CHickering 4-8642
Sardi's LAckawanna 4-5785
Tavern CHickering 4-4200
21 ELdorado 5-6500
Air Lines
American Air Lines HAvemeyer 6-8800
Eastern Air Lines MUrray Hill 2-8420
TWA MUrray Hill 6-1640
United Air Lines MUrray Hill 2-7300
Polo Grounds EDgecombe 4-8160
Yankee Stadium JErome 7-3300
Raw Stock
Agfa Raw Film Corp Circle 7-4635
Brulatour, J. E.. Inc FOrt Lee 8-2460
Du Pont Film Mfg. Co Circle 6-3347
Eastman Kodak Co MUrray Hill 2-6068
Gevaert COIumbus 5-1223
Producers-Distributors
Alliance Films Corp Circle 7-3945
Amkino Corp BRyant 9-7680
Astor Pictures Circle 7-3687
Bondy, Al Circle 6-6744
Columbia Pictures BRyant 9-7900
Cosmopolitan Productions BRyant 9-9020
Danubia Pictures BRyant 9-4175
Disney, Walt Circle 6-3120
Esperia Film Dist. Co Circle 6-3169
French Film Exchange VAnderbilt 6-5178
Grand National Circle 7-5310
Guaranteed Pictures Co., Inc BRyant 9-4369
Hoffberg, J. H., Co., Inc MEdallion 3-3813
Ideal Pictures Circle 6-0081
Imperial Picture BRyant 9-8669
Lenauer International Films, Inc Circle 7-6591
Loew's Inc BRyant 9-7800
Luporini, Ferdinand V CHickering 4-6205
March of Time Circle 5-4400
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer BRvant 9-7800
Metropolis Pictures REctor 2-5045
Modern Film Corp BRyant 9-9635
Monogram Pictures Corp. CO umbus 5-7674
Musart Film Productions LOngacre 3-5657
New Star Films BRyant 9-7281
Olympic M. P. Corp COIumbus 5-3176
Paramount Pictures CHickering 4-7050
Pax Films MEdalion 3-3248
RKO Radio Pictures COIumbus 5-6500
Reliable Film Export Co MEdallion 3-0436
Republic Pictures COIumbus 5-2501
Roach. Hal BRyant 9-7266
Scandinavian Talking Pictures Wisconsin 7-2152
Spectrum Pictures BRyant 9-2964
Sphinx Film Corp VAnderbilt 6-5022
Stage & Screen Productions Circle 7-3473
Trans-Oceanic Film Export Co MEdallion 3-5377
Twentieth Century-Fox COIumbus 5-3320
Ufa Film Corp BRyant 9-7890
United Artists BRyant 9-7300
Universal Pictures Circle 7-7100
Variety Film Distributors LOngacre 5-0790
Warner Bros Circle 6-1010
World Pictures MEdallion 3-2943
Sport Arenas
Ebbets Field MAin 4-7030
Madison Square Garden COIumbus 5-6800
Railroad Terminals
Crand Central MUrray Hill 6-9100
Pennsylvania PEnnsylvania 6-5600
54
Studios
Laboratories
Biograph Studio TRemont 8-5500
Filmart Studio RAymond 9-9300
General Service Studio RAvenswood 8-8300
Movietonews COIumbus 5-7200
Paramount Newsreel MEdallion 3-4300
Producers Service Studio BRyant 9-7754
Reeves Sound Studio Circle 6-6686
Vitaphone Studio Nightingale 4-8700
West Coast Service Studio Circle 7-2062
Exchanges
American Trading Association BRyant 9-4312
Aywon Exchange Circle 6-8866
Central Film Co Circle 6-5499
Columbia Pictures Circle 6-0900
Carrison Film Distributors Circle 6-4868
Grand National Circle 6-2828
Guaranteed Pictures BRyant 9-4369
Kleinerman, Morris Circle 6-0888
Loew's, Inc Circle 6-6200
Marcy Pictures Corp Circle 6-4655
Melbert Pictures, Inc Circle 6-8866
Monogram COIumbus 5-7674
Paramount Circle 6-6160
Public Welfare Pictures VAnderbilt 6-1172
RKO Distributing Corp Circle 6-4700
Republic Film Exchange Circle 6-0760
Ross, Herman MEdallion 3-0436
Syndicate Exchange Circle 6-8866
Times Pictures, Inc Circle 6-0980
Tower Productions Circle 6-0760
Twentieth Century-Fox Circle 6-6700
United Artists Circle 6-5480
Universal (Big U) Circle 6-4747
Vitagraph, Inc Circle 6-1010
Warner Bros Circle 6-1010
Costnmers
Brooks Costume Co VAnderbilt 6-5060
Eaves Costume Co BRyant 9-7212
Cinelab, Inc COIumbus 5-0878
Consolidated Film Industries, Inc. . .COIumbus 5-1776
De Luxe Laboratories. Inc. (Fox) Circle 7-3220
Du-Art Film Laboratories, Inc COIumbus 5-5584
Filmlab, Inc BRyant 9-4981
Film Service Laboratories, Inc Circle 6-6690
H. E. R. Laboratories, Inc Circle 6-5232
Major Film Laboratories Circle 6-6950
Malcolm Film Laboratories Circle 6-6150
Mecca Film Lab Circle 6-5290
Mercury Film Laboratories BRyant 9-2790
Paramount News Laboratory MEdallion 3-4300
Pathe Film Corp COIumbus 5-0764
Precision Film Laboratory BRyant 9-8396
Producers Laboratories, Inc Circle 6-6446
Star Safety Film Lab Circle 6-0888
Theater Snpply Dealers
Amusement Supply Co Circle 6-0850
Auditorium Supply Co MUrray Hill 2-1995
Behrend, M. P. Supply Co Circle 6-9168
Beseler, Charles Co GRamercy 5-3358
Blue Seal Sound Devices, Inc BRyant 9-7754
Capitol M. P. Supply Co Circle 6-0340
Continental Theater Accessories Circle 6-1010
Crown M. P. Supplies Circle 6-4780
Andre Debrie BRyant 9-2954
Electrical Research Products, Inc BArclay 7-5900
Eye Gate House, Inc BRyant 9-2062
General Register Corp BRyant 9-6546
General Talking Picture Corp Wisconsin 7-8626
International Projector Co BEekman 3-2672
Motion Picture Accessories LAckawanna 4-0912
National Theater Supply Co Circle 5-6900
Neumade Products Corp MEdallion 3-3480
Newman's Camera Exchange LOngacre 5-8236
RCA Mfg. Co., Inc AShland 4-7605
Raven Screen Corp MUrray Hill 5-2012
S. O. S. Corp Circle 6-9090
Trans Lux Daylight Picture Screen
Corp Circle 7-4970
Willoughby Camera Store PEnnsylvania 6-0329
Film Libraries
General Film Library Circle 6-0081
Miles Film Library BRyant 9-5600
Progress Film Library BRyant 9-5600
Stone Film Library SChuyler 4-1148
Projection Rooms
Lloyd's Projection Room BRyant 9-5600
Miles Projection Room BRyant 9-5600
Sound Film Enterprises MEdallion 3-3248
Trailers
National Screen Service Circle 6-5700
Trailer-Made BRyant 9-1777
Organizations
A.M.P.A. (Paul Benjamin) Circle 6-5700
Actors' Equity BRyant 9-3550
Allied of New Jersey Circle 6-9890
American Federation of Musicans Circle 7-6482
American Projection Society Wisconsin 7-6619
Friars Club Circle 6-0282
I.A.T.S.E Circle 5-4370
Independent Thea. Owners Circle 6-6460
International Photographers Circle 7-2091
Lambs Club BRyant 9-8020
Motion Picture Operators
(Local 306) Wisconsin 7-3808
Motion Picture Producers & Distributors of
America BRyant 9-4000
MPTOA Circle 6-6220
Musicians' Union (Local 802) Circle 7-6482
N. Y. A. C Circle 7-5100
National Board of Review ALgonquin 4-8344
N. Y. Film Board of Trade Wisconsin 7-7601
T.O.C.C COIumbus 5-7940
Film Deliveries
Daily Film Delivery LOngacre 5-4567
Elk Film Delivery Circle 6-4994
Prudential Film Distributors. .. LAckawanna 4-6938
State Film Delivery Circle 6-4994
Tacme Film Service Circle 6-0662
Forwarders
Cofod, A. F. & Co., Inc BOwling Green 9-3377
Massce & Co., Inc BRyant 9-3266
Trade Publications
Billboard MEdallion 3-1616
Box Office COIumbus 5-6370
Exhibitors' News Circle 7-6871
FILM DAILY BRyant 9-7117
Jay Emanuel Publications Circle 6-6220
M. P. Daily & M. P. Herald Circle 7-3100
Radio Daily Wisconsin 7-6336
Showmen's Trade Review BRyant 9-5606
Variety BRyant 9-8153
55
A Quick Reference to Important Telephone Numbers in
OS MGE
Studios
Chas. Chaplin HEmpstead 2141
Columbia Studios Hollywood 3181
Darmour GRanite 1166
Walt Disney MOrningside 12131
Educational Hillside 215S
General Service GRanite 3111
Goldwyn, Samuel, Studios GRanite 5111
Grand National GRanite 6131
Hollywood Film Enterprises HEmpstead 2181
International Film Studios OLvmpia 2978
Metro-Coldwyn-Mayer AShley 4-3311
Charles Mintz Hollywood 2907
Paramount Prods Hollywood 2411
RKO-Radio Hollywood 5911
Republic SUnset 21121
Hal E. Roach AShley 427-61
ichulberg, B. P Hillside 2825
Selznick International AShley 4-3355
Talisman Studios OLympia 2131
Twentieth Century-Fox OXford 2211
Western Avenue Hollywood 3141
Jnited Artists GRanite 5111
Universal STanley 71211
Vitagraph (Warner Bros.) OLympia 2136
Warner Bros. -First National (Burbank)
Hollywood 1251
Warner Bros. (Sunset Blvd.) Hollywood 581 1
Independent Producers
Academy Productions GRanite 3111
Alexander Bros GRanite 0604
Arcadia Pictures GRanite 6131
C C. Burr OLympia 2978
Cartoon Films, Ltd OXford 2316
Cathedral Films, Inc AShley 4-3355
Colony Pictures GRanite 0604
Cosmopolitan Prods CRestview 15696
Crescent Pictures OLympia 2131
Crime Club Productions Hillside 7474
Darmour GRanite 1166
de Mille, Cecil Hollywood 2411
Derr, E. B OLympia 2131
Walt Disney Productions MOrningside 12-131
Dowling & Brownell GRanite 3111
Este Productions Hollywood 1101
Fairbank & Carlisle GLadstone 7101
Famous Productions STanley 7-1211
Fine Arts CRanite 6131
Fufter Corp., Ltd CLadstone 6137
Gateway Productions Hillside 8520
General Film Co Hillside 7474
Gilliam, Rodney Hillside 2220
Goldstone, Phil Hillside 7561
Grand National GRanite 6131
Grey, Romer STerling 7-9555
Goldwyn, Samuel GRanite 5111
Hackel. A. W Hillside 7178
Harman-lsing Prods ASh'ey 4-3311
Hirliman, George CRanite 6131
Hughes Products HEmpstead 1181
Jay Dee Kay Productions GRanite 3545
Jester, Ralph AShley 4-3355
Sam Katzman Hollywood 5035
Kent, Willis NOrmandie 6806
Kirkwood, Ray GRanite 1121
Landres, M. M HEmpstead 1191
Walter Lanfz STanley 71211
Leichter, Mitch Hillside 4116
Sol Lesser AShley 1-2135
Lewis Lewyn GRanite 8606
Ralph M. Like OLympia 2978
Harold Lloyd Prods GRanite 3111
Lcew, David L. -Albert Lewin AShley 4-3355
Lubitsch, Ernst AShley 1-2135
Malvern. Paul. Inc MOrningside 11191
Metropolitan Productions Hillside 9418
Charles Mintz Hollywood 2907
Monogram Pictures MOrningside 11191
Plays The Thing Productions HOMywood 5911
Principal Pictures Corn AShley 1-2135
Producers Pictures Corp Hillside 8101
Progressive Pictures Hillside 8101
Randol Cooper Productions Hillside 8520
Reed, Roland, Productions AShley 4-3355
Republic Prods SUnset 21121
Frederick K. Rockett Co GRanite 7920
Rodney-Glliam Co Hillside 2220
Royal Revues HEmpstead 7806
Leon Schlesinger HOMvwood 4131
B. P. Schulberg Hillside 2825
Scientific Films, Inc GLadstone 7101
Selznick International Pictures AShley 4-3355
Harry Sherman HOIlvwood 1101
Small, Edward CRanite 3111
Supreme Pictures Hillside 7178
Technicolor Prods GRanite 1101
20th Century-Fox OXford 2211
Victory Ticts. Corp HOIlvwood 5035
Walter Wanger Films, Inc GRanite 5111
Webb, Harry Hillside 9418
Weiss Bros AShley 4-3355
Wilding Picts. Frods REpublic 0252
Zeidman. B. F OLympia 2131
Associations
Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences
GLadstone 5131
Actors' Equity Hillside 5121
Actors Fund of America Hillside 5121
All Year Club of Co. Calif VAn Dyke 2091
American Federation of Actors HOIlvwood 7359
56
American Guild of Musical Artists Hillside 5121
American Society of Cinematographers. .GRanite 2135
American Society of Composers, Authors and
Publishers, Philip Cohen TRinity 3306
American Society of Recording Artists
WOodbury 61585
Artists Managers Guild Oxford 4585
Assistance League of So. Calif Hollywood 1973
Association of Motion Picture Producers
GLadstone 6111
Authors' Club Hillside 7497
Breakfast Club OLympia 1917
Call Bureau Hollywood 2921
Central Casting GArfield 3711
Chamber of Commerce — Hollywood HEmpstead 2121
Chamber of Commerce — Los Angeles. . PRospect 3431
Dominos HOIIywood 3157
Empire Projectionists Union REpublic 4442
Film Technicians, Local No. 683, I.A.T.S.E.
6 M.P.M.O Hillside 7221
Hollywood Athletic Club HEmpstead 1161
Hollywood Bowl Ass'n Hollywood 3151
Hollywood Cuild Hillside 9158
Hollywood Legion Stadium HOIIywood 2951
Hollywood Masonic Temple Ass'n. ... HOIIywood 9733
Hollywood Studio Club (Y.W.C.A.) . .GLadstone 3166
I, A. T. S. E Hillside 7221
I. B. E. W. Studio Electricians Local Union
No. 40 GRanite 5139
Independent Theater Owners of S. C. . Rochester 1171
International Association of Machinists,
Lodge 1185 GRanite 5811
International Photographers, Local No. 659,
I. A. T. S. E Hillside 7221
I.A.T.S.E., Local 37 HEmpstead 7221
International Sound Technicians, Local No. 695,
I.A.T.S.E. & M.P.M.O Hillside 7221
Make-Up Artists HOIIywood 6351
Masquers HOIIywood 2164
Mayfair Club YOrke 8131
Motion Picture Operators Union WYoming 1300
Motion Picture Relief Fund Hillside 8211
Music Corp. of America OXford 2001
Musicians Mutual Protective Association
PRospect 6056
Screen Actors' Cuild HOIIywood 7311
Screen Directors Cuild Hillside 8165
Screen Playwrights HEmpstead 9055
Screen Writers' Guild GLadstone 4181
Society of M. P. Film Editors Hillside 0275
Society of Motion Picture Engineers. .. .Hillside 2354
Studio Carpenters, Local 946 MOrningside 1101
Studio Labor Committee HOIIywood 3507
Studio Technicians Local No. 37, I.A.T.S.E.
and M.P.M.O HOIIywood 1152
Studio Utility Workers, Local No. 724
HOIIywood 5105
The Troupers Hillside 9331
Theatrical Stage Hands PRospect 1055
United Scenic Artists of America HOIIywood 3957
West Coast Studio Locals I.A.T.S.E Hillside 7221
Air Lines
American Airlines Michigan 8822
Catalina Island Airline MAdison 1151
Grand Central Air Terminal CHapman 5-1222
Pan American Michigan 2121
Paul Mantz Air Service HOIIywood 3173
TWA Michigan 8881
Union Air Terminal CHarleston 6-2161
United Air Lines TRinity 4771
Western Air Express TRinity 4711
Hotels and Apartments
Ambassador DRexel 7011
Beverly Hills Hotel CRestview 18131
Beverly-Wilshire OXford 7111
Biltmore Michigan 1011
Canterbury Apartments GRanite 4171
Castle Argyle Arms HOIIywood 2141
Chateau de Fleurs GRanite 5101
Chateau Elysee HOIIywood 2171
Chateau Marmont HOIIywood 2911
Christie HOIIywood 2241
Cocoanut Grove Ambassador Hotel DRexel 7011
Colonial House Hillside 9803
Country Club Manor GRanite 9000
El Royale Apts HOIIywood 1131
Garden of Allah HOIIywood 3581
Gaylord, Apts Exposition 4161
Hermoyne HOIIywood 3661
Hollywood A. C HEmpstead 1161
Hollywood Knickerbocker GLadstone 3171
Hollywood Plaza Hotel GLadstone 1131
Hollywood Studio Club GLadstone 3166
La Belle Tour HOIIywood 3621
Los Angeles Athletic Club MAdison 2211
Montecito Apts GLadstone 5124
Ravenswood HOIIywood 5391
Roosevelt Hotel HOIIywood 2442
The Town House Exposition 1234
Sunset Plaza CRestview 19145
Sunset Towers Hillside 7171
Newspapers, Trade Publica-
tions and Fan Magazines
American Cinematographer GRanite 2135
Associated Publications GLadstone 1186
Box Office GLadstone 1186
Cinelandia PRospect 9094
Daily Variety HOIIywood 1141
Evening Herald-Express Richmond 4141
Evening News PRospect 6121
Fame Box Office Check-Up GRanite 2145
Fawcett Publications Hillside 7511
FILM DAILY QBanita 6607
Handibook, The GLadstone 4141
Hitchcock's Int. Celebrity Register WHitney 1660
Hollywood Citizen-News HOIIywood 1234
Hollywood Low Down GRanite 1508
Hollywood Motion Picture Review. .. HOIIywood 5982
Hollywood Reporter Hillside 7411
Hollywood Review HEmpstead 5982
Hollywood Spectator GLadstone 5213
Independent Exhibitor GRanite 5213
International Photographer Hillside 7221
Jay Emanuel Publications HOIIywood 6725
Los Angeles Times MAdison 2345
Los Angeles Examiner Richmond 1212
McFadden Publications Hillside 5146
Modern Screen BRadshaw 24550
Motion Picture Daily GRanite 2145
Motion Picture Herald GRanite 2145
Motion Picture Magazine Hillside 7511
Pacific Coast Showman Rochester 1171
Picture Reports GLadstone 5689
Radio Daily GRanite 6607
Review of Reviews CRestview 6-3632
Showmen's Trade Review HOIIywood 1390
Studio Blu-Book Hillside 5111
Studio News GRanite 5730
Variety HOIIywood 1141
Bob Wagner's Script BRadshaw 21040
57
IT y R © INI E IPOWEIR
58
IF THE non-theatrical iilm scored no sensational gains in the American exhibition field in 1939.
it apparently safely held its own.
Of the approximately 17,000 theaters operating on Jan. 1. 1940. it is estimated that about
12,000 commercialize their screens to some degree, either through the presentation of local
advertising reels or the exhibition of reels sponsored by national advertisers.
Investment in screen advertising through the companies serving the field in 1939 is estimated
at $4,500,000, with the largest volume admittedly controlled by Alexander Film Co. of Colorado
Springs. Latter company, reputed to handle from 50 to 60 per cent of all American theater screen
advertising, absorbed its largest competitor. TAD Screen Advertising, Inc., of Dallas, late in
the year.
Of the 12,000 theaters, independent and circuit, playing short-length advertising films, it is
estimated that 35 per cent accept contracts from more than one distributor.
The financial stability of the non-theatrical industry is reflected by the more than $3,000,000
investment of its producer-distributors. It is obvious, of course, that this figure represents only
those companies engaged in servicing theaters with sponsored reels, and does not take into
consideration firms specializing in slide-films, sales-dealer instructional, institutional and educational
pictures designed for other than theatrical exhibition.
A year-end survey placed the number of advertisers, local and national, contracting for the
short length ad reels at 22.000. Exhibitors' aggregate revenue from this source is estimated at
more than $2,000,000.
One of the most interesting gains of the last year was scored on the so-called "co-operative
front," wherein the manufacturer provides specific product playlets for his dealers. Offered by
Alexander Film in 1936, this type of screen advertising was used by 10 manufacturers; in 1938.
the plan was adopted by 25, while last year the number had jumped to 35.
Probably the largest national advertiser to engage in a short ad reel test in 1939 was R. J.
Reynolds Tobacco Co., which sponsored a series of four 120-foot Technicolor productions to plug
Camel cigarets. The "minute movies" were planned, written and produced by West Coast Sound
Studios, and were placed in 1,000 theaters. Sports personalities such as Pete Desjardins. Ted
Allen, Bernard Grimes and Dorothy Lewis were "starred." while Graham McNamee was the
narrator.
From the standpoint of sponsored feature production, the outstanding achievement in 1939 was
Westinghouse's five-reel feature, "The Middleton Family at the World's Fair." Film, in Techni-
color, was made by Audio Productions in its Astoria studios and "on location" at the New York
exposition. Fuller & Smith & Ross was the advertising agency.
Incidentally, exhibitors at both the New York and San Francisco fairs offered a wealth of
non-theatrical films. No less than 612 films of varying lengths were shown at the former, with the
number to be materially increased this year.
Early in 1940, two non-theatrical features made their appearance. One was "The Green
Hand," sponsored by the Future Farmers of America, produced by C. L. Venord Co. of Peoria, 111.,
and said to have been financed by Sears, Roebuck. This picture, with a 90-minute running time,
was unique in that it was an adaptation of a book by Dean Paul Chapman of the College of
Agriculture, University of Georgia,
Of equal importance was Hotpoint's full length feature, "Blame It on Love," produced in the
Hal Roach studios with Wallace Fox as director. Professional cast of 100 includes John King,
Joan Marsh. Nella Walker, Cecelia Loftus, Morgan Wallace. Mary Forbes and Frank Faylen.
59
Don Ameche
Management
George Frank, Inc.
60
DEFINITE progress was achieved by television during the past twelve months, despite knotty
problems which still continue to loom large. Most spectacular stride the science took, certainly
as far as public interest was concerned, was virtually coincident with the opening of the New York
World's Fair, at which time RCA-NBC launched regular tele programs for consumption by set-owners
in the densely populated Metropolitan area.
Less spectacular, but of vital importance and interest to all concerned with the future fortunes
of television, was the step taken in mid-November to free the science sufficiently from Federal
regulatory fetters to enable it to effect further advances. A television committee, headed by Com-
missioner T. A. M. Craven, and including Commissioners Norman S. Case and Thad H. Brown, urged
upon the FCC the division of tele licenses into two classifications — one group of stations to be
licensed for technical research, and another to be licensed to develop program technique.
A plan of allocation was outlined for FCC which would permit granting of licenses in 96 metro-
politan centers throughout the country. The committee took cognizance of the fact that only seven
of the 19 tele channels were sufficiently developed, and suggested that cities whose metropolitan
districts exceed 1.000,000 population be allocated three channels: those whose districts are not
less than 500,000 or more than 1,000,000, two channels; and those whose districts are less than
500,000, one channel.
What course should be taken with regard to receiving set standards, occupied the controversial
spotlight, it being maintained that the public, which is the key to progress, must be protecled with
respect to potential set obsolescence.
Paul W. Kesten. vice-president of CBS, which during 1939 made elaborate preparations to
present telecasts from its studios atop New York's Chrysler Building, stated the tele set acquisition
problem pointedly before the FCC shortly after the turn of the year. "Television must not attempt
a public trial at public expense." he asserted, adding, "Such public trial should not induce large-
scale investment by broadcasters, only to destroy it. Scheduled program service must not be allowed
to delude the public into buying sets that may suddenly become useless — or to betray the broad-
caster into wasting his resources on abortive efforts." As a panacea, he proposed three solutions:
(1) Fixing the standards now for a 10-year period, and telling people they are fixed and they can
count on any set they buy, or (2) not fixing the standards now and telling people they are not fixed
and they cannot count on any set they buy, or (3) in between these alternatives, fixing such flexible
standards that neither public investment nor broadcasting investment will be jeopardized by change.
Advent of 1940 found 23 applications, including those of B. & K. and other Paramount affiliates,
pending with FCC for construction of new stations. Several of the 21 already licensed stations were
planning expansion operations.
Public apathy toward television was cited anew at Washington hearings to spring from (1) Lack
of facilities on a nation-wide scale; (2) Lack of program service both in quality and quantity in any
community; (3) Hesitation to purchase costly receivers at an early stage of technical development,
and, (4) Lack of sufficient information upon which to base a logical licensing policy.
During the past 12 months, a quantity of motion picture footage was employed by television
interest for experimentation, and in some instances used by RCA-NBC on its New York area
programs. Feature films were essentially outmoded ones, as motion picture interests at large con-
tinued to frown upon any close wedding of its product with television. Nevertheless, breakdown
of NBC's telecasts showed approximately 30 per cent of the programs embraced films.
Outstanding news developments spotlighting television came early in 1940. RCA disclosed
that a new radio relay method of transmitting television pictures had been developed, making
possible, it was claimed, early television service to 20,000,000 persons, and presaging network
telecasting. The FCC field force brought other notable advances by RCA and Philco to the fore,
including large screen television in color. On Feb. 29, the FCC okayed limited commercial tele-
vision, beginning Sept. 1, and kept standards open.
61
Selznick International Pictures
GONE WITH THE WIND
Released by Loew's, Incorporated
REBECCA
Released by United Artists
Produced My ^cuud 0. Mel^ucA
New York Stock Market Sales Reach 5,370,880
1939
Stocks and Dividend* in Dollars
Sales
High
Date
Low
Date
Last
Net Ch'ge
American Seat ( % ) g
59.300
20
1-3
9
9-5
10%
— 9%
Columbia Pictures vtc. (2% %)f
82.600
15%
1-4
6%
12-15
6%
— 8%
Columbia Pictures pfd. (2.41)k
16,600
30%
3-6
15%
12-15
18%
— 7%
53,400
2%
1-5
%
12-27
1
— %
Consolidated Film Ind. pfd. (l)k
82,000
12%
3-10
7%
9-12
8%
— 1%
Eastman Kodak (6.00)
253,500
186%
1-5
138%
4-27
166%
—17%
Eastman Kodak pfd. (6.00) . . .
4,350
183%
2-8
155%
9-25
175
+ 2
General Theater Equip. (.80)g.
124,600
15%
1-4
8%
9-5
12%
— 3
Loew's (2.00)a
533.900
54%
1-4
30%
9-12
35%
—18%
10,600
109%
7-17
101%
9-29
105%
— %
1,461,300
14%
1-4
6%
9-5
7%
— 6
Paramount 1st pfd. (6.00)....
28.500
107%
1-4
72
9-11
85%
—17%
Paramount 2nd pfd. (.60)
136.900
13%
1-5
7%
9-11
9
— 4
728.300
13%
7-27
5%
4-10
10
— %
RKO*
287.200
2%
1-5
1%
12-22
1%
— 1%
20th Century-Fox
456.800
26%
1-4
11%
12-19
12
—14%
20th Century-Fox pfd. (1.50)..
48.300
34%
1-5
19%
9 9
24%
—10%
Universal Pictures, pfd.**
5.090
78
2-25
45%
4-10
69
+ 1
984,400
6%
1-4
3%
12-20
3%
— 2%
Warner Bros, pfd.**
12,240
58
7-24
36
2-3
47%
+ 8
TOTAL 5,370,880
*• Unit of trading. 10 shares.
• In bankruptcy or receivership or beingr reorganized under Bankruptcy Act, or securities assumed by
such companies.
Rates of dividend in the foregoing table are annual disbursements based on the last quarterly or semi-
annual declaration. Unless otherwise noted, special or extra dividends are not included.
a Also extra or extras, f Payable in stock, g Declared or paid so far this year, k Accumulated divi-
dends paid or declared this year.
New York Curb Market Sales Total 905,500
1939
Stocks and Dividends in Dollars Sales High Date Low Date Last Net Ch'ge
Monogram Pictures* 62,000 3% - % - % — 1%
Sonotone Corp. (.15)g* 56.800 1% - 1% - 1%
Technicolor (1.00)g 209,000 22% - 9% - 12% — 9%
Trans-Lux* 54,700 2% - 1 - 1% — %
Universal Corp. vtc 449,000 4% - 2% - 2% — 1%
Universal Pictures 74.000 9% 6 - 8% + 1%
TOTAL 905,500
* Stocks so marked are fully listed on the Curb Exchange. All others are dealt in on an unlisted
trading basis. Rates of dividends in the foregoing table are annual disbursements based on the last quar-
terly or semi-annual declaration. Unless otherwise noted special or extra dividends are not included.
S Declared or paid so far this year.
New York Bond Market Sales for 1939, $9,046,000
1939
Bonds and Maturity
Sales
High
Date
Low
Date
Last
Net Ch'ge
Keith, B. F., ref. 6s46
$786,000
102
12-5
93%
4-11
102
+10
3,391,000
103%
7-26
92
9-28
102 %
+ 3%
397.000
57%
1-17
45%
12-21
48
— 9%
Paramount Pictures 6s55x
651,000
102
3-8
99%
1-3
100%
+ 1
Paramount Pictures cv. 3%s47. .
1.750,000
91%
8-15
77
9-26
83%
— 4%
RKO 6s41* t $
1,136.000
79
1-18
50%
12-20
50%
—28%
RKO 6s41s* t $
10.000
63
6-23
63
Warner Bros. dbs. 6s48
935,000
92
7-10
79%
9-21
85
TOTAL $9,046,000
x Issue called. <t Selling flat on account of default. $ Matured bonds. • Being reorganized under
the bankruptcy act.
63
RTISTS
WAR'S outbreak in Europe arrested sharp gains motion picture commerce had registered in that
sector during the first eight months of 1939. Immediate consequences of hostilities included
readjustments in both French and British film trade. Reality of national emergency, coupled with
the facing of unpredictable factors, saw production virtually cease in those countries, and distribu-
tion and exhibition were understandably affected.
England, from whence the largest increment of revenue accrued to American companies operat-
ing in overseas marts, acted quickly to stabilize its film relations with the United States, and enacted
measures calling for monetary exchange restrictions. Briefly, Britain postponed until March 31, 1940,
the question of quota abrogation, but instituted provisos limiting transfer of revenues to 50 per cent
of the theoretical normal which was based on United States companies' average "take" during the
two years prior. American film interests were accredited with having transacted business amounting
to some $35,000,000 in Britain during each of those years; therefore, $17,500,000 was subject to the
non-transfer edict.
As fear of air invasion diminished in Britain, film theater attendance reverted more nearly to a
peacetime status, although the turn of the year disclosed some estimates of a 40 per cent drop
having occurred in the large cities — particularly London — and 20 per cent in similar communities.
This was directly attributable to population transfer, war psychology and blackouts, but improvement
was noted with the advent of 1940.
Britain's overseas domains, under stress of supporting the prosecution of the war against
Germany, enacted in several instances measures affecting film trade. Among these were Australia
and New Zealand.
As 1939 drew to a close, American distributors eyed with some concern the threat of exchange
control in Canada. Exhibition in the Dominion continued on a generally even keel.
Continuance by Italy of its monopolistic film agency, ENIC, caused American major and leading
indie companies to remain out of that market, since no profitable contact was possible. Rumors
emanated from time to time of possible rapproachement with Fascist officialdom, but this failed to
materialize. As 1940 commenced, reports were current in Rome that a new successor body to ENIC
might be instituted, and toward the end of January this step took more concrete form.
Product shipments to Germany, already at a low stage in the eight months prior to the invasion
of Poland, can be said to have ceased entirely.
Spain, recovering slowly from its bitter civil war, has not by the year's end enunciated any
definite official policy with respect to motion picture trade. However, United States companies and
their representatives in that land made considerable progress toward restoration of pre-war
conditions.
Scandinavian countries as well as those of southeastern Europe afforded outlets for Hollywood
product, but the chief hurdle which confronted the holding of trade to normal in the final four months
of 1939 were hazards at sea, and curtailed sailing schedules.
lapan continued to be a dynamic problem. Nevertheless the tension with respect to trade
relations, intensified by uncertainty as to whether the long-standing commercial treaty with the
United States was actually to be vitiated in late January, 1940, was eased considerably via a year-
end announcement that the Japanese Government would permit the importation of more than 80
American pictures, out of a total of some 120 allowed to foreign lands. As a safeguard against a
iess favorable attitude. United States majors were reported to have shipped into Japan sufficient
features to enable their branches and agents to establish a backlog amounting to approximately
one year's supply. A critical factor continued to be the transfer of revenues out of Japan as a result
of restrictions attendant upon that country's "adventure" in China.
Hollywood product, already dominant in Latin American favor, faced further gains as the
result of production-cessation in competitive lands. Trade pact negotiations with Argentina and
Chile failed, thus leaving the list of such treaties with South and Central American countries in
status quo. Pacts extant at the wind-up of 1939 were with Costa Rica, Ecuador, Venezuela,
Cuba, Haiti, Brazil, Honduras, Colombia, Guatemala, Nicaragua and El Salvador.
65
66
BALLYHOO hit new high levels in 1939. the year witnessing an unprecedented intensification of
exploitation campaigns designed to capture public attention in behalf of both top-bracket
pictures and those of less ostentatious proportions.
Salient among the factors noted during the twelve-month span was the trend toward more
forceful spotlighting of premiere performances, on the premise that the greater the prominence
given to a film production at the time of its initial showing, the greater too, will be the benefits
accruing from and to the exhibition field. Exemplifying the strenuous exploitation of features on
premiere occasions were the campaigns attending the inaugurals of "Gone With the Wind." "Union
Pacific." "Dodge City," "Wuthering Heights," "Allegheny Uprising," "Mr. Smith Goes to Washing-
ton," "The Under-Pup" and "Hollywood Cavalcade." An interesting instance of multiple premieres
occurred when "Drums Along the Mohawk" was launched via initial showings simultaneously in
five cities of Upstate New York. Unique was the film-motor industry tie-up. effected by Paramount,
which marked the premiere of "Disputed Passage" in Detroit; new auto models were disclosed
simultaneously.
While the producer-distributors vigorously stepped-up premiere ballyhoo on ace attractions,
there was discernible a tendency generally to accelerate exploitation on all types of features,
shorts and even newsreels. Much of the credit for rugged box-office returns in 1939 must be
credited to the campaigns executed in communities, large and small, by individual theater men
and their exploiteers, wise in the ways of attendance-building.
Consistently increasing prestige of the motion picture made possible in 1939 the effectuation
of a vast number of co-operative tie-ups with public and private agencies throughout the United
States, the former group constituting national, state and community channels, and the latter such
instrumentalities as industrial and commercial enterprises, plus newspapers and other publications.
Malor companies as well as leading indies in many instances added to their already wide-
spread use of billboards. This result was noted particularly with respect to the exploitation of
big-budget pictures in the various key cities. To consciousness of the more substantial quality of
their 1939 attractions, together with the realization of corresponding competitor picture strength,
can be attributed this trend toward intensification of outdoor exploitation.
Many highly effective and unique campaigns were delineated in press books, the latter
reaching a new high mark for elaborateness and potential profit production. In the hands of enter-
prising circuits and exhibs., these campaigns proved strong stimuli to box-offices.
National advertisers and their agencies linked the fortunes of commercial accounts more closely
than ever with pictures and Hollywood personalities. This was apparent in commodity advertising
which appeared in newspapers and magazines throughout 1939, having a so-called Hollywood
angle to flag the public, thus ingratiate the commodity to purchasers through the personal endorse-
ment by individual film personalities. On many occasions the link was directly with a forthcoming
or current attraction. In any event, such tie-ups effectuated much good and permitted of benefits
not merely to the national account but to producer-distributors and their theater-customers.
Several important film organizations accented cooperative exploitation with their accounts by
employing more ballyhoo specialists to serve in various cities and territories. This practice appeared
to be progressing as a corollary of greater playing time on a percentage basis, thus placing the
theater outlet in nominal "partnership" with film distributors. With the merging of local theater
exploiteers' talents with those of the distributor emissaries, many high-powered campaigns resulted.
One of the retarding factors which exploitation faced during the year naturally resulted through
the allocation by theaters of substantial portions of their budgets to "giveaways." rather than to
the more orthodox media for audience-creation. In some localities, where competition was actually
non-existant, the "lure" of giveaways was perpetuated or installed on the premise that larger
attendance would accrue. Notwithstanding, accessory business during 1939 was carried on at a
brisk pace, with indications that increases would be registered in 1940.
67
FOIRIREST TUCKER
08
✓"NBSTACLES, which in the past have retarded the progress of color in motion pictures, were
almost completely eliminated during 1939. Experts in general and A. L. McCormick. president
of Cinecolor, in particular, predicted early this year that 1940 "will be remembered as the year in
which the greatest number of consumers began to accept color film as a practical, durable and
serviceable commodity — not as an expensive luxury."
Engineering developments in 1939, McCormick asserted, unquestionably were five times as
great as in any previous year. The time when all pictures will be in color is still in the future, but
it has been moved forward by 10 years through 1939 s engineering achievements.
Technicolor's outstanding advancement was the introduction last year of the new high speed
film. This film, about three times as fast as the type it superseded, reduces studio operation costs
and gives sharper definition and better pictures. The first feature production on which it was used
was "Gone With the Wind."
Better lighting at lower cost and technical innovations in the realm of trick and process
shots also marked Technicolor's year. Dr. Herbert T. Kalmus, upon accepting the SMPE's Progress
Award, predicted that in a year's time. Technicolor will be employing a single negative going
through any standard motion picture camera.
Early 1939 witnessed the realization of Technicolor's million-dollar expansion program. This
program included opening of the new Hollywood laboratory and office building; increase of print
volume of the Hollywood plant to 130,000,000 feet a year; completion of new Technicolor cameras
and perfection of the new Technicolor high speed film. Shipments of Technicolor positive prints
have increased nearly six-fold in the last five years. Technicolor's high mark lor simultaneous
production was reached last July when nine Technicolor features were before the cameras.
Harriscolor, which suspended operations in 1932, is being reorganized and President J. B.
Harris, Jr., expects his company to be in full swing again within six months. Harris claims that
his process was the first three-color method in Hollywood, making practical the split beam camera
by using a pin movement which insured the registration of images on the negative, a system which
had been considered improbable by many experts.
Two processes for the making of prints are claimed by Harriscolor. One is the so-called
imbibition method, very similar to the one Technicolor is now using and based on the old Hands-
chiegl spot color system. The second is a chemical process which is said to be fully patented and
calls for two chemical images in one emulsion on one side of the film and an imbibition color placed
as a third image or color.
Cinecolor's endeavors in the future, according to President McCormick, will be largely confined
to refinement of color pictures, inasmuch as its engineers have been able to destroy engineering
obstructions, of which the most stubborn was the inability to perfect a color film with emulsion on
one side only.
Four years ago, Cinecolor instructed its research engineers, under the direction of Alan
Gundelfinger, to redouble their efforts on the elusive problem of trying to find a way of producing
color prints in a single layer of emulsion. The result is now on the market — a color film having
all the characteristics of black-and-white, but in natural color, McCormick claims.
Lighting for color photography also has made progress. The Mole-Richardson Co., in pointing
out that natural noon sunlight is the basic illuminant for the production of color pictures, contends
that the principal source of artificial daylight is the high intensity carbon arc, claiming that it is
the only company supplying such arc equipment in a form acceptable to the industry. The com-
pany's M R Type 170 (150 amp.), M R Type 90 (120 amp.) and M R Type 65 (65 amp.) are the arc
spots used most extensively for spotlighting purposes.
Meanwhile, other color companies were active. Improvement of Magnacolor was claimed by
its sponsors, Dunningcolor in its new three-color laboratory in Hollywood, turned its attention to
commercial pictures, while Dufaycolor confined most of its activities to still photography. One
feature produced in Phoenix, Ariz., was made in Cosmocolor, receiving favorable comment.
69
THROUGH THE AFFILIATIONS OF THE
Artists Managers Guild
IS REPRESENTED THE GREATEST SOURCE
OF TALENT IN THE ENTERTAINMENT WORLD
EXECUTIVE OFFICES
9441 WILSHIRE BLVD.
BEVERLY HILLS, CALIF.
70
TVTINETEEN thirty-nine was a turbulent year in the industry's labor field, the 12-month period
*™ bringing strikes, threats of strikes and fiercely-contended jurisdictional disputes. The struggle
between the IATSE and AAAA for control of the actor unions was both stormy and lengthy, but
the IA withdrew its claims after a nation-wide shutdown of the entertainment industry loomed,
leaving the 4A's in complete control of this field. However, the IATSE, operating under the American
Federation of Labor standard, once again maintained its supremacy in its own field by thwarting
abortive attempts of the CIO to get a foothold in the entertainment industry.
Wage increases were won by the majority of the unions within the industry, with advances
also granted to the signatories of the Basic Pact when it was renewed. However, a number of
increases granted by the producers carried rider clauses which provided for a reopening of
negotiations early in 1940 to examine effects of the war upon the film industry. Revision or rescind-
ing of increases thus is possible.
Strike called by the projectionists union. Local 306, in New York City at one time threatened
to darken the majority of the Metropolitan area houses, all operators walking out of home office
and exchange projection rooms. The union made a strong bid with this strike to force distributors
to stop servicing houses not employing IATSE operators, but the strike ended without the union
achieving this objective. Increases to operators in home offices and projection rooms was the
only tangible result.
At this writing a decision is still awaited from the National Labor Relations Board on charges
made by the Screen Writers Guild that the producers had tried to kill off the SWG by intimidating
and coercing its members and prospective members and had fostered the Screen Playwrights.
These charges were instituted after negotiations between the SWG and the producers had come
to a standstill.
A nine-year agreement was reached between the producers and the Screen Directors Guild
and the Unit Managers Guild. At hearings before the NLRB, producers had contended that
directors should be classified as creative artists, instead of employes, but the agreement was
ratified, thus doing away with the necessity of any ruling by the NLRB.
After a deadline had been set for a national strike of its members unless the studios granted
a 20 per pay tilt, IA agreed to a 10 per cent increase. The producers protested that the IA, in face
of war conditions and the industry being hard hit by lost European markets, had forced through
its demands. Soon the producers asked the IA to relinquish the increase. This only resulted in
A. F. of L. studio locals joining forces with the IA and insisting that the pay tilt be enforced and
a like increase be given the A. F. of L. studio crafts. Late in November the producers agreed to
also grant the pay increase to the A. F. of L. unions, subject to adjustment and arbitration in
February, 1940.
The painters, representing the only A. F. of L. studio union which did not join forces with the
I A, won a 15 per cent boost in pay. Part of the boost represented the five per cent increase which
was promised them when the 1937 strike was settled.
The IA did not participate in the December conferences of the studio basic agreement confer-
ences at Atlantic City, at which three International Brotherhood unions were awarded 10 per cent
wage increases, contending it had won its main Hollywood fight and would negotiate on the Coast
in regard to working conditions.
The Screen Publicists Guild won a five-year contract with the producers, which provides a
minimum salary of $100 a week for senior members.
At the September election ordered by the NLRB, the IA won over the United Studio Technicians
Guild by better than two to one. USTG admitted receiving some financial support from the CIO,
but denied being affiliated with any national organization.
Meanwhile, an IA theater organization drive was intensified, with the CIO also beaten in
this field.
71
"He has a heart which itself sings"
Alfred Mynders, in the Chattanooga News, of
John Charles Thomas
72
Two basic purposes were sought
marked the 50th anniversary of motion
1. To underline the significance of the
screen's contributions to the country's
general well-being; and
2. To emphasize the importance of the
motion picture theater as an institution
in the local community.
Such a program naturally reguired the co-
operation of all elements — production, distribu-
tion and exhibition — in the industry. This
was to be no high-pressure campaign but
rather a voluntary effort in which those who
desired could, if they wished, participate. The
emphasis was on local observances which
could be adapted to particular conditions and
needs. A national group was set up to pro-
vide such cooperation and assistance as might
be required locally as well as to service na-
tional media of publicity and exploitation.
The results seem to have been decidedly
worthwhile, less because the Anniversary
Committee can point to several books of press
clippings, etc.. that will soon gather dust,
than because it was demonstrated that a vol-
untary effort of this kind can enlist the en-
thusiastic participation of industry people in
all parts of the country. This is something
to remember in future.
Now to speak of more mundane things.
Newspapers, magazines, radio stations,
clubs, school libraries, civic officials and
business men joined in commemorating the
Anniversary. Analysis of voluminous press
comment reveals an overwhelming percentage
of editorials and columns — 96.7 per cent — fa-
vorable to the screen's accomplishments. Of
the remaining comment, 2.8 per cent was neu-
tral and only one half of one per cent was
adverse. In themselves these figures tell
an eloquent story.
At the initial meeting of Directors of Ad-
vertising and Publicity held at the Motion
Picture Producers and Distributors of America
to discuss the Anniversary celebration, the
following subcommittee was appointed to
work out details:
Kenneth Clark, MPPDA, chairman; Lester
Thompson and Joel Swensen, MPPDA; William
R. Ferguson, M-G-M; Harry Goldberg, Warner
in the industry-wide campaign which
pictures:
Bros.; Ben Grimm, RKO; and Lou Pollock, Uni-
versal. The MPPDA was designated as the
clearing house and coordinator.
On August 1 a manual was sent to all thea-
ters inviting them in the name of the Fiftieth
Anniversary Committee to join in the cele-
bration. The manual contained publicity and
exploitation suggestions for observances to
be planned and staged locally, a series of
four feature articles on the highlights of film
history and a list of articles available on
request.
The merit of conducting the campaign on
a decentralized basis soon appeared in the
ingenuity revealed by showmen in different
parts of the country. Each local celebration
had an individuality of its own, making use
of local personages and events. Several cir-
cuits prepared special trailers which utilized
footage from early thrillers to give an Anni-
versary flavor.
Will H. Hays opened the campaign with
an Anniversary statement which was widely
published in newspapers throughout the coun-
try. Later he went to Thomas A. Edison's
laboratory in West Orange, N. J., to pay the
industry's tribute to the memory of the in-
ventor of the motion picture. There a news-
reel subject was filmed of Mr. Hays and the
inventor's widow, Mrs. Mina M. Edison
Hughes, posed with a Kinetoscope. This
reached theater screens the week of October
1 to 7, which had been designated as Anni-
versary Week.
On the anniversary of the invention of the
Kinetoscope, October 6, Mrs. Hughes described
the events of 50 years ago in a radio inter-
view over a nationwide hookup conducted by
Mrs. Malcolm P. MacCoy, chairman of the
Motion Picture Department of the New York
State Federation of Women's Clubs.
Without the widespread support of exhib-
itors, producers, distributors and the trade
press, the campaign could not have succeeded,
and the Fiftieth Anniversary Committee wishes
to extend its thanks and appreciation to all
those who so generously gave time and effort
to signalize 50 years of motion picture
progress.
73
SHOWMEN'S TRADE REVIEW
Polled Exhibitors
on This Question:
TECHNICOLOR MOTION PICTURE CORPORATION
HERBERT T. KALMUS
President
•JlHE fate of large-scale Eastern production in 1940 apparently hinged in late February on the
result of the move inaugurated by Mayor F. H. LaGuardia to induce major companies to make
a percentage of their annual programs in New York City.
The Mayor's interest in Eastern production was disclosed when he appeared, by invitation, to
address the SMPE convention in October. This was followed by conferences with labor leaders, who
pledged that Eastern production, if resumed, would not be beset with labor controversies, and with
executives of major companies, independent producers, and banking interests.
While from time to time it was announced that the Mayor was finding his various conferees
sympathetic and co-operative, it was evident that the progress at best was slow. Nevertheless,
there was no curtailment of effort on the part of the Mayor, who staunchly stood by his forecast that
within two years' time, 125 features — roughly 27 per cent of all features produced in the United
States — would be produced in Greater New York.
The cause of Eastern production suffered two major setbacks in 1939. The first was the decision
of Erpi, announced in November, to concentrate on industrial films at the Astoria studios; the deci-
sion in effect spelled the end of Erpi's efforts, through Eastern Service, to serve as an intermediary
between producers and financial interests.
While Eastern Service facilities remained — and remain — available to producers, the organiza-
tion which had been developed there especially to handle feature production was disbanded.
The second setback was the suspension of activity by Biograph Studios, although subsequently
it was indicated that its facilities might be utilized by independent producers who appeared on the
New York scene in the wake of the LaGuardia campaign.
While no features for major release were produced in the East during 1939, there was some
independent activity, confined, however, to modest budget foreign language pictures and others
with all-Negro casts.
Production of shorts continues in the metropolitan area, but on the restricted basis resulting
from the closing of the Vitaphone studios. Resumption of Warner activity there during the present
year is not indicated.
75
FRANK €APUA
"MR. SMITH GOES TO WASHINGTON"
76
IT AH
1927-1928 —
(Seventh Heaven, Street
of All Flesh, Last
ACTRESS — Janet Gaynor
Angel, Sunrise)
ACTOR — Emil Jannings (Way
Command)
DIRECTORS — Frank Borzage (Seventh Heaven), Lewis
Milestone (Two Arabian Knights)
OUTSTANDING PRODUCTIONS— Wings (Paramount),,
Sunrise (Fox)
CINEMATOGRAPHY— Charles Rosher and Karl Strussl
(Sunrise)
ART DIRECTION — William Cameron Menzies (Tempta
tion. The Dove)
WRITING ACHIEVEMENTS— Ben Hecht (Underworl
Benjamin Clazer (Seventh Heaven)
TITLE WRITING— Joseph W. Farnham
World, Fair Co-ed)
ENGINEERING ACHIEVEMENT— Roy
(Wings)
FOR MARKINC AN EPOCH IN MOTION
HISTORY — Warner Bros, for producing
(TeJ
J.
CTURE
e Jaiz
Singer.
— 1928-1929 —
ACTRESS— Mary Pickford (Coquette)
ACTOR — Warner Baxter (In Old Arizona)
DIRECTION— Frank Lloyd (Weary River, Divine LarJy,
Drag)
OUTSTANDING PRODUCTION— The Broadway Meljbfyj
( Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer)
CINEMATOGRAPHY— Clyde DeVinna (White Shadx*
of the South Seas)
ART DIRECTION— Cedric Gibbons (Bridge of San
Rey)
WRITING— Hans Kraly (The Patriot)
— 1929-1930 —
ACTRESS — Norma Shearer (The Divorcee)
ACTOR — George Arliss (Disraeli)
DIRECTION— Lewis Milestone (All Quiet on the Wesj
ern Front)
OUTSTANDING PRODUCTION— All Quiet on
Western Front (Universal)
CINEMATOGRAPHY— Joseph T. Tucker and Willa1
Vander Veer (With Byrd at the South Pole)
ART DIRECTION— Herman Rosse (King of Jazz)
SOUND RECORDING — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studil
(The Big House)
WRITING — Frances Marion (The Big House)
— 1930-1931 —
ACTRESS— Marie Dressier (Min and Bilfj
ACTOR — Lionel Barrymore (A Free Soul]
DIRECTION — Norman Taurog (SkippyU
BEST PRODUCED PICTURE— Cimarron
ORIGINAL STORY — John Monk
Patrol)
ADAPTATION— Howard Estabrq
CINEMATOGRAPHY— Floyd Crtf
ART DIRECTION— Max Ree (Cimarron)
SOUND RECORDING — Paramount
(SCIENTIFIC ACHIEVEMENTS)
NOISE REDUCTION RECORDING EQUIPMENT— Elec-
trical Research Products, RCA Photophone and RKO
Radio Pictures
SUPER-SENSITIVE PANCHROMATIC FILM— Du Pont
Film Mfg. Co. and Eastman Kodak Co.
HONORABLE MENTION FOR SYNCHRO-PROJECTION
COMPOSITE PHOTOGRAPHY— Fox Film Co.
— 1931-1932
ITRESS— Helen Hayes (Sin of Madelon Claudet)
ETOR— Fredric March (Dr. Jekvll and Mr. Hyde)
<TR A AWARD— Wallace Beery (The Champ)
JJSTANDING PRODUCTION— Grand Hotel (M-G-M)
r[ION— Frank Borzage (Bad Girl)
^^^Kfc^STORY— Frances Marion (The Champ)
^^^^AN— Edwin Burke (Bad Girl)
PHOTOGRAPHY — Lee Garmes (Shanghai Express)
ART DIREP'ION— Gordon Wiles (Transatlantic)
SOUNOPjjRORDING— Paramount (Shanghai Express,
V|^^BH Lullaby One Hour With You, etc.)
■PPJECTS— Flowers and Trees (Walt Disney),
^Mng Swordfish (Mack Sennett), Laurel and
The Music Box (Hal Roach)
^AWARD — Walt Disney (for creation of
Mouse)
FlCATE OF HONORABLE MENTION— Techni-
HC
AC!
SABLE MENTION— Eastman Kodak Co.
— 1932-1933 —
IS — Katherine Hepburn (Morning Glory)
-Charles Laughton (Henry VIII)
'ION — Frank Lloyd (Cavalcade)
"ANDING PRODUCTION— Cavalcade (Fox)
INAL STORY— Robert Lord (One Way Passage)
'TATION — Sarah Y. Mason, Victor Heerman
ittle Women)
rOGRAPHY— Charles Lang (Farewell to Arms)
DIRECTION — William Darling (Cavalcade)
|D RECORDING— Harold C. Lewis (Farewell to
is)
SUBJECTS— Three Little Pigs (Walt Disney);
This Is Harris (RKO Radio); Krakatoa (Educa-
lal)
— 1933-1934 —
It Happened
One
TSTANDING PRODUCTION
Jight (Columbia)
TRESS — Claudette Colbert (It Happened One Night)
Gable (It Happened One Night)
■«Sgnk Capra (It Happened One Night)
Y — Arthur Caesar (Manhattan Melo-
ft Riskin (It Happened One Night)
The Merry Widow
-Victor Milner (Cleopatra)
ne Night of Love
"_^hnny Waters
!e and the Hare, La Cucara-
cha, City of Wax
SCORING— One Night of Love
MUSICAL COMPOSITION— The Continental
77
HENRY HATHAWAY
— 1934-1935 —
BEST PRODUCTION— Mutiny on the Bounty (M-G-M)
ACTRESS — Bette Davis (Dangerous)
ACTOR — Victor McLaglen (The Informer)
DIRECTION— John Ford (The Informer)
ORIGINAL STORY— Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur
The Scoundrel)
SCREENPLAY— Dudley Nichols (The Informer)
CINEMATOGRAPHY— Hal Mohr (A Midsummer Night's
Dream)
ART DIRECTION— Richard Day (The Dark Angel)
SOUND RECORDING— William Steinkampf (Naughty
Marietta)
MUSICAL COMPOSITION— Lullaby of Broadway from
Gold -Diggers of 1935; Music by Harry Warren,
Lyrics by Al Dubin
DANCE DIRECTION— Dave Gould (I've a Feelin'
You're Fool in' from Broadway Melody of 1936 and
Straw Hat number from Folies Bergere)
FILM EDITING — Ralph Dawson (A Midsummer Night's
Dream)
ASSISTANT DIRECTION— Clem Beauchamp (Lives of \i
a Bengal Lancer) j
SCORING— Max Steiner (The Informer) J
SHORT SUBJECTS— Cartoon Three Orphan KittejM^Hl
(Walt Disney); Comedy: How to Sleep, (M-G-M);
Novelty; Wings Over Mount Everest (Educational)
— . 1935-1936 —
OUTSTANDING PRODUCTION— The Creat
(M-C-M)
ACTRESS— Luise Rainer (The Great Ziegfeld)
ACTOR — Paul Muni (The Story of Louis Pasteur)
SUPPORTING ACTRESS— Oil Sondergaard (An
Adverse)
SUPPORTING ACTOR— Walter Brennan (Come
Get It)
DIRECTOR— Frank Capra (Mr
ASSISTANT DIRECTOR— Jack
of the Light Brigade)
ORIGINAL STORY— Sheridan Gibney
(The Story of Louis Pasteur)
SCREENPLAY— Sheridan Cibney, Pierre Callings <Th$
Story of Louis Pasteur)
CINEMATOGRArHY— Tony Gaudio (Anthony AdverseVl
ART DIRECTION— Richard Day (Dodsworth) V^H
SOUND RtCORDINC — M-G-M Sound DepartmentAl^B
headed by Douglas Shearer (San Francisco)
MUSICAL COMPOSITION— The Way You Look To-
night from Swing Time; music by Jerome Kern; I j —
lyrics by Dorothy Fields.
DANCE DIRECTOR— Seymour Felix (A Pretty Girl/:
Number from The Great Ziegfeld)
FILM EDITING — Ralph Dawson (Anthony Adverse)
SCORING— Leo Forbstein (Anthony Adverse)
SHORT SUBJECTS— One-reeler: Board of Education
(M-C-M-Hal Roach); Two-reeler: The Public Pays
M-C-M-Jack Chertok) ; Cartoon: Country Cousin
United Artists-Disney); Color Subject: Give Me
Liberty (Warner Bros.).
SPECIAL AWARD— The March of Time, as a distinct
novelty.
SCORING— 100 Men and a Girl (Universal)
SHORT SUBJECTS— One-reeler: The Private Life of
the Ganets (Educational); Two-reeler: Torture
Money (M-C-M); Cartoon: The Old Mill (Walt
Disney); Color Subject: Penny Wisdom (Pete
Smith-M-G-M)
THALBERC PLAQUE— Darryl F. Zanuck
SPECIAL AWARDS— Mack Sennett, Edgar Bergen,
W. Howard Green, Museum of Modern Art Film
Library.
— 1937-1938 —
BEST PRODUCTION— You Can't Take It With You
(Columbia )
ACTRESS— Bette Davis (Jezebel)
C_TOR — Spencer Tracy (Boys Town)
^ ORTING ACTRESS— Fay Bainter (Jezebel)
"RTINC ACTOR— Walter Brennan (Kentucky)
TION— Frank Copra (You Can't Take It With
)
NAL STORY— Dore Schary and Eleanore Griffin
ys Town)
ENPLAY — George Bernard Shaw (Pygmalion)
JATION— W. P. Lipscomb, Cecil Lewis, Ian Dal-
|^^Bj^(Pygmalion I
CINEMATOGRAPHY— Joseph Ruttenberg (The Great
Waltz)
ART DIRECTMN — Carl Weil (The Adventures of Robin
SOUND RECORDING — T. Moulton (The Cowboy and
the Lady)
MUSICAL CiMPOSITION— "Thanks for the Memory,"
by Ralph Hainger and Leo Robin (The Big Broadcast
of 1938)
>IG — Ralph Dawson (The Adventures of
Dbin
i)
SCORE
Deeds Coes to Town/
Sullivan (The Charge
Pierre Co II ings
?E— Eric Wolfgang Korngold (The Ad-
of Robin Hood)
-Alfred Newman (Alexander's Ragtime
lUBJECTS— One-reeler: That Mothers Might
■M-G-M); Two-reeler: The Declaration of
idence (Warner Bros.); Cartoon: Ferdinand
III (Walt Disney-RKO Radio)
tC MEMORIAL AWARD— Hal B. Wallis
AWARDS— H. M. Warner, Oliver Marsh and
Davies, Deanna Durbin and Mickey Rooney,
Disney, Gordon Jennings, Farciot Edouard and
Ryder, J. Arthur Ball.
1938-1939
V;
i
4
RODUCTION— Cone With the Wind (Selznick
ational— M-G-M)
S — Vivien Leigh (Cone With the Wind)
— Robert Donat (Goodbye, Mr. Chips)
"TING ACTRESS— Hattie McDaniel (Gone With
/ind)
TING ACTOR— Thomas Mitchell (Stagecoach)
ION— Victor Fleming (Cone With the Wind)
' STORY— Louis R. Foster (Mr. Smith Goes
— 1936-1937
)NAL
SCREENPLAY— Sictsey Howard (Cone With the Wind)
ORIGINAL MUSIC SCORE— Herbert Stothart (The
Wizard of Oz'
SCORING — RicharakUageman, Frank Harling, John
Leipold, Leo Skflen (Stagecoach)
SONG — I I n rb*L Harold Arlen ("Over the Rain-
bow" in The WizarjLof Oz)
ART DIRECTION-^^«|ttjccler iConc With the
BEST PRODUCTION— The Life of Emile Zola (Warns:
Bros.) i^fl
ACTRESS— Luise Rainer (The Good Ejrtl)
ACTOR — Spencer Tracy (Captains Courageous)
SUPPORTING ACTRESS— Alice Brady In Old Chicago,
SUPPORTING ACTOR— Joseph Sch.ldkraut (The Lite
of Emile Zola) /flfl
DIRECTION— Leo McCarey (Thf^wWWWrlr™ ^™
ASSISTANT DIRECTOR— Robert Webb (In Old Chi-
cago)
ORIGINAL STORY— William A. Wellman, Robert Car-
son (A Star Is Born)
SCREENPLAY— Norman Riley Raine, Heinz Herald.
Geza Herczeg (The Life of Emile Zola)
CINEMATOCRAPHY— Karl Freund (The Good Earth)
ART DIRECTOR— Stephen Cooson (The Lost Horizon)
SOUND RECORDING— Thomas Moulton (The Hurri-
cane)
MUSICAL COMPOSITION— "Sweet Leilani," by Harry
Owens (Waikiki Wedding)
DANCE DIRECTION— Hermes Pan (A Damsel in Dis-
tress)
FILM EDITING— Cene Havlick, Gene Melford (Lost
Horizon)
FILM EDITING— Hal Kern, James Newcom (Gone With
the Wind)
SOUND RECORDINC— Bernard B. Brown (When To-
morrow Comes)
BLACK AND WHITE CINEMATOCRAPHY — Gregg
Toland (Wuthering Heights)
COLOR CINEMATOGRAPHY— Ernest Haller, Ray Ren-
nahan (Gone With the Wind)
SPECIAL EFFECTS— E. H. Hansen (The Rains Came)
SHORT SUBJECTS— Cartoon: The Ugly Duckling (Walt
Disney); One-Reeler: Busy Little Bears (Paramount);
More Than One Reel; Sons of Liberty (Warner
Bros.)
THALBERC MEMORIAL AWARD— David 0. Selznick.
SPECIAL AWARDS— Douglas Fairbanks, Sr., Techni-
color, The Motion Picture Relief Fund, Judy Garland,
William Cameron Menzies.
79
MITCHELL LEISEN
ft
"MIDNIGHT"
"REMEMBER THE NIGHT"
it
In Preparation
"THE POLONAISE"
"ARISE MY LOVE"
"SKYLARK"
so
IIknt Film Selections
■"PHE BEST films of the year ending December 15 as selected by the National
Board of Review of Motion Pictures. Following choices of the Committee on
Exceptional Photoplays are made on the basis of artistic merit and importance.
English and American films are considered together as English-language films.
Best film of the year from any country: "Confessions of a Nazi Spy."
The Ten Best English-Language Films
Confessions of a Nazi Spy
Wuthering Heights
Stage Coach
Ninotchka
Young Mr. Lincoln
Crisis
Goodbye Mr. Chips
Mr. Chips Goes to Washington
The Roaring Twenties
U-Boat 29
Port of Shadows
Harvest
Alexander Nevsky
Five Foreign-Language Films
The End of a Day
Robert Koch
On the basis of popular appeal the Review Committees of the National
Board have chosen the following in order of preference:
Goodbye Mr. Chips
Mr. Smith Goes to Washington
Ninotchka
Pygmalion
The Old Maid
Wuthering Heights
Dark Victory
Juarez
The Wizard of Oz
Love Affair
The Committee on Exceptional Photoplays considers the following screen
performances worthy of special praise. These preferences are listed alpha-
betically.
lames Cagney in The Roaring Twenties
Bette Davis in Dark Victory and The Old
Maid
Geraldine Fitzgerald in Wuthering Heights
and Dark Victory
Henry Fonda in Young Mr. Lincoln
lean Gabin in Port of Shadows
Greta Garbo in Ninotchka
Francis Lederer in Confessions of a Nazi Spy
Paul Lukas in Confessions of a Nazi Spy
Thomas Mitchell in Stage Coach
Laurence Olivier in Wuthering Heights
Flora Robson in We Are Not Alone
Michel Simon in Port of Shadows and The
End of a Day
81
5
V
rp\k vt 1 Ik IPv
tUMUNU
GOULDING
1938:
1939:
WHITE BANNERS
DARK VICTORY
TMHX71VT DSTDrtT
DAWJN rAlnvJL
THE OLD MAID
WE ARE NOT ALONE
1940:
'TIL WE MEET AGAIN
82
THE FILM DAILY
Tei Best
Pictures
As Selected by 542
Representative American
Critics and Reviewers
ROWLAND V. LEE
Producer-Director
"THE TOWER OF LONDON"
"THE SON OF FRANKENSTEIN"
"SON OF MONTE CRISTO"
84
O THE NATION'S FILM CRITICS,
whose intelligence, integrity, perception,
keen appreciation of the cinematic art and
lively and friendly interest in the industry's
progress day by day is ever an inspiration,
we of THE FILM DAILY take generous
pleasure in dedicating this special section
chronicling the results of the ISth annual
Ten Best Pictures Poll.
Publisher
JOHN M. STAHL
Productions
&
"WHEN TOMORROW COMES"
"SEED" "ONLY YESTERDAY"
"IMITATION OF LIFE" "STRICTLY DISHONORABLE"
"LETTER OF INTRODUCTION" "MAGNIFICENT OBSESSION"
86
THE FILM mm
Ten Best Pictures oe 1939
Picture
Distributor
Votes
Goodbye. Mr. Chips M-G-M (England) 472
Mr. Smith Goes to Washington . .Columbia 433
Pygmalion M-G-M-Pascal (England) 349
Wuthering Heights UA-Goldwyn 283
Dark Victory Warner Bros. . . .
The Women M-G-M
The Wizard of Oz M-G-M
Juarez Warner Bros. . . .
Stanley and Livingstone 20lh Century-Fox
The Old Maid Warner Bros. . . .
280
254
244
216
213
166
THE HONOR ROLL
Picture and Distributor
Votes Picture and Distributor
Stagecoach — UA-Wanger 153
Young Mr. Lincoln — 20th Century-Fox. 152
Babes in Arms— M-G-M 135
Love Aflair — RKO Radio 128
Union Pacific — Paramount 112
On Borrowed Time — M-G-M Ill
Bachelor Mother — RKO Radio 93
Gunga Din — RKO Radio 82
Nurse Edith Cavell— RKO Radio 82
The Rains Came — 20th Century-Fox ... 77
Jesse James — 20th Century-Fox 69
The Story of Vernon and Irene Castle —
RKO Radio 68
The Beachcomber — Paramount-May-
flower (England) 67
Idiot's Delight— M-G-M 60
The Story of Alexander Graham Bell —
20th Century-Fox 59
The Great Waltz— M-G-M 56
Four Feathers — UA-Korda (England) . . 52
The Lady Vanishes — 20th Century-Fox
(England) 47
Only Angels Have Wings — Columbia. 46
Beau Geste — Paramount 40
Golden Boy — Columbia 38
Dodge City — Warner Bros 36
Kentucky — 20th Century-Fox 33
Hollywood Cavalcade — 20th Century
Fox
Votes
31
Daughters Courageous — Warner Bros.
Confessions of a Nazi Spy — Warner
Bros 30
Angels With Dirty Faces — Warner
Bros 29
Andy Hardy Gets Spring Fever —
M-G-M 28
Intermezzo: A Love Story — UA-Selznick 25
The Mikado — Universal (England). ... 25
They Shall Have Music — UA-Goldwyn 24
The Dawn Patrol — Warner Bros 22
Disputed Passage — Paramount 21
If I Were King — Paramount 19
A Christmas Carol — M-G-M 17
Jamaica Inn — Paramount-Mayflower
(England) 17
The Great Man Votes— RKO Radio 16
Honeymoon in Bali — Paramount 16
The Roaring Twenties — Warner Bros.. . 15
Sweethearts — M-G-M 15
Three Smart Girls Grow Up — Universal 15
The Man in the Iron Mask — UA-Small. . 14
Man of Conquest — Republic 14
The Real Glory — UA-Goldwyn 13
Dust Be My Destiny — Warner Bros.. . . 12
Five Came Back — RKO Radio 12
Made for Each Other — UA-Selznick .
11
Maisie— M-G-M 10
32 The Young in Heart — UA-Selznick. .
10
87
1934
"GAY DIVORCEE"
1935
"TOP HAT"
1936
"FOLLOW THE FLEET"
1937
"SHALL WE DANCE?"
1938
"CAREFREE"
1939
"MAN ABOUT TOWN"
1940
"BUCK BENNY RIDES AGAIN"
MARK SANDRICH
lm Daily Ten Best Pictur
I
OIIIIKVI, 111!. (illl'S
— A Mvtro-tioldwyn-Mauer Production —
roducer
iroctor .
tars .
eenplay
holographer .
Film Editi
roduction Manager,
tor
I
Special Music. .
Musical Director. . .
Victor Saville
Sam Wood
Robert Donat. Greer Garson
lames Hilton
R. C. Sherrifi. Claudine West. Eric Maschwitz
. F. A. Young
. .Charles Frend
Harold Boxall
Alfred Junge
A. W. Watkin. C. C. Stevens
Richard Addinsell
Louis Levy
I
Howard Dietz
Denham Studios. England
July 28. 1939
CAST
Robert Donat. Greer Garson. Terry Kilburn. John Mills. Paul von
Hemried. Judith Furse. Lyn Harding. Milton Rosmer. Frederick Liester,
Louise Hampton. Austin Trevor, David Tree. Edmond Breon. Jill Furse.
cott Sund'
Press Representative
duced at.
I Release Date
H
I
S
18th ANNUAL POLL OF THE CRITICS OF AMERICA
89
BOX OFFICE CHAMPIONS 1939
1935
1935
1934
EAST SIDE OF HEAVEN
(A Box Office Champion for June, 1939)
1929
1939
1939 KENTUCKY
(A Box Office Champion for January,
1939)
1938 KENTUCKY MOONSHINE
(A Box Office Champion for June, 1938)
1938 YOU'RE A SWEETHEART
(A Box Office Champion for January,
1938)
1937 PIGSKIN PARADE
(An Annual Box Office Champion for
1937)
1937 ALI BABA GOES TO TOWN
(A Box Office Champion for November
1937)
CAPTAIN JANUARY
(A Box Office Champion for April, 1936)
1936
1935 THE LITTLEST REBEL
IA Box Office Champion for January
1936)
DOUBTING THOMAS
!A Box Office Champion for March, 1935)
THE LITTLE COLONEL
(A Box Office Champion for March, 1935)
BRIGHT EYES
(A Box Office Champion for December,
1934)
1934 HANDY ANDY
(A Box Office Champion for August
1934)
1932 BUSINESS AND PLEASURE
(An Annual Bi
1932)
1932 DELICIOUS
(An Annual 6
1932)
1930 A CONNECTICUT YANKEE
(An Annual Box Office Champion for
1932)
(An Annual Box Office Champion for
1932)
(An Annual Box Office Champion for
1930-31)
1929 SUNNY SIDE UP
(Among All Time Best Films)
(Crossing $3,000,000).
PRODUCER-DIRECTOR
CURRENT RELEASE
"THAT'S RIGHT, YOU'RE
WRONG''
CURRENT PRODUCTION
"IF I HAD MY WAY"
(UNIVERSAL)
Coming during 1940
Two more features for RKO-Radio
Directed
by DAVID BUTLER
90
One of the Film Daily Ten Best Pictures of 1939
— A Columbia Production —
Producer-Director .
Stars
Photographer
Author
Screenplay
Montage Effects. .
Assistant Director
Gowns
Film Editors
Sound Engineer.
Musical Director.
Musical Score. . . .
Art Director
Frank Cap
Jean Arthur. lames Stewi
Joseph Walker
Lewis R. Foster
. . . .Sidney Buchman
Slavko Vorkapich
Arthur S. Black
Kalloch
Gene Havlick. Al Clark
Ed Bernds
M. W. Stolon*
Dmitri Riomldn
Lionel Banks
General Press Representative Maurice A. Bergman
Produced at Columbia Pictures Studios, Hollywood
Release Date October 19, 1939
CAST
Jean Arthur, James Stewart, Claude Rains. Edward Arnold, Guy
Kibbee, Thomas Mitchell, Eugene Pallette, Beulah BondL H. B.
Warner. Harry Carey, Astrid Allwyn, Ruth Donnelly, Grant Mitchell.
Porter Hall, Baby Dumpling, H. V. Kaltenborn, Pierre Watlrin. Charles
Lane, William Demarest. Dick Elliott. Billy Watson. Delmar Watson,
John Russell. Harry Watson, Gary Watson.
18th ANNUAL POLL OF THE CRITICS OF AMERICA
91
WESLEY NIGGLES
Producer-Director
"TOO MANY HUSBANDS'
In Preparation
'ARIZONA'
for
COLUMBIA
92
One of the Film Daily Ten Best Pictures of 1939
PYGMALION
— A Metro-doldwun-Mayer Production —
Producer ,
Directors
Stars -'.r,\
Photographer -«v^V
Screenplay and Dialogue.
Adaptation W. P.
Music
Additional Composition . . .
Sets
Film Editor. . . .
Gowns
Executed by. » ; l.'-^tt
Gabriel Pascal
. . . .Anthony Asquith, Leslie Howard
Leslie Howard. Wendy Hiller
Harry Stradling
Bernard She
Lipscombe. Cecil Lewis. Ian Dalrympl
Arthur Honegg
Dr. William A
. .Laurence Irving
David Lc
Professor L. Czettc
Worth and Schiaparelli
• ii< pi 1 Press Representative
Produced at
Release Date.
Howard Dietz
Pinewood Studios. England
March 3. 1939
CAST
Leslie Howard, Wendy Hiller, Wilirid Lawson. Marie Lohr. Scott
Sunderland. Jean Cadell, David Tree, Leukeen MacGrath, Esm
Percy, Everley Gregg. Violet Vanbrugh. O. B. Clarence, Irene Bro
Kate Cutler.
con
sine
wn
18th ANNUAL POLL OF THE CRITICS OF AMERICA
93
"ETERNALLY YOURS"
'SLIGHTLY HONORABLE'
Wanger-United Artists
Produced and Directed by
TAY GARNETT
"TRADE WINDS"
Produced and Directed by
TAY GARNETT
In Production
"WORLD CRUTSE"
for
Universal Release
With Backgrounds from
Garnett's Personal Library
94
One of the Film Daily Ten Best Pictures of 1939
I
I
Producer .
Director
Stare
Photographer
Screenplay .
Novel
Art Director.
Set Decorator.
Costumes ....
Film Editor
Sound Recorder. .
Assistant Director.
Special Makeups.
Musical Director. .
— A United Artists Release —
Samuel Goldwyn
William Wyler
.Merle Oberon, Laurence Olivier, David Niven
Gregg Toland
Ben Hecht, Charles Mac Arthur
Emily Bronte
. . .James Basevi
. .».;;.> Julia Heron
Omar Kiam
Daniel Mandell
Paul Neal
Walter Mayo
Blagoe StephanofJ
. . Alfred Newman
General Press Representative Lynn Farnol
I Produced at United Artists Studios, Hollywood
Release Date April 7. 1939
CAST
Merle Oberon, Laurence Olivier, David Niven, Flora Robson. Donald
Crisp. Hugh Williams. Geraldine Fitzgerald. Leo G. Carroll, Cecil
Humphreys. Miles Mander. Romaine Callender. Cecil Kellaway.
Rex Downing, Sarita Wooton. Douglas Scott.
18th ANNUAL POLL OF THE CRITICS OF AMERICA
95
JOHN CROMWELL
Director
"ALGIERS"
"MADE FOR EACH OTHER"-
"IN NAME ONLY"
"ABE LINCOLN IN ILLINOIS"
96
One of the Film Daily Ten Rest Pictures of 1939
III Ilk 111 Til in
— A Warner liroa. Production
large of Production Jack L. Warn
cecutive Producer Hal B. Wallls
Issociate Producer David Lewis
)irector Edmund Goulding
Star . Bette Davis
>hotographer Ernie Holler
'lay George Emerson Brewer. Jr., Bertram Bloch
Screenplay Casey Robinson
Lssistant Director Frank Heath
Art Director Robert Haas
towns Orry-Kelly
'ilm Editor. William Holmes
Sound Robert B. Lee
Musical Director Leo F. Forbstein
lusical Score Max Steiner
General Press Representative , S. Charles Einield
Produced at Warner Bros. Studios. Burbank
ase Date April 22. 1939
CAST
Bette Davis. George Brent, Humphrey Bogarl, Geraldine Fitzgerald.
Ronald Reagan. Henry Travers. Cora Witherspoon, Dorothy Peterson.
Virginia Brissac. Charles Richman, Herbert Rawiinson. Leonard
ludie. Fay Helm. Lottie Williams.
I
I
18th ANNUAL POLL OF THE CRITICS OF AMERICA
97
— A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayvr Production —
icer
Director
Stars Norma
Photographers
Play
Screenplay .
Musical Score
Recording Director
Art Director
Associate
Set Decorations
Gowns and Fashion Show
Hair Stylist
Film Editor
Hunt Strombe
George Cukor
Shearer. Joan Crawford. Rosalind Russell
Oliver T. Marsh. Joseph Ruttenberg
Clare Boothe
Anita Loos. Jane Murfin
Edward Ward. David Snell
Douglas Shearer
Cedric Gibbons
Wade B. Rubottom
Edwin B. Willis
Adrian
Sydney Guilaroti
Robert J. Kern
General Press Representative
Produced at
Release Date
Howard Diets
MGM Studios. Culver City
September 1, 1939
CAST
Norma Shearer. Joan Crawford, Rosalind Russell. Mary Boland,
Paulette Goddard, Phyllis Povah, Joan Fontaine. Virginia Weidler.
Lucille Watson, Florence Nash, Muriel Hutchison. Esther Dale. Ann
Morriss. Ruth Hussey, Dennie Moore, Mary Cecil, Mary Beth Hughes,
Virginia Grey, Marforie Main, Cora Witherspoon, Hedda Hopper.
18th ANNUAL POLL OF THE CRITICS OF AMERICA
99
100
WW'
ft v J
1 { j, ; g
ft ■,n< n
IE ** ' ■ ■
•
HI . j J
I ' & 4r Mm
the Film
Daily Ten
Best Pictures «
The Wizard iif Oz
— A Mvtro-Uoldwun-Mayt r Production —
Producer Mervyn LeRoy
Director Victor Fleming
Stars Judy Garland, Frank Morgan, Ray Bolger,
Photographer
Screenplay. .
Adaptation
Book
Musical Adaptation
Lyrics
Music
Associate Conductor
Musical Numbers Staged by
Technicolor Director
Recording Director
Art Director
Set Decorations
General Press Representative
Produced at
Release Date
Mervyn LeRoy
Victor Fleming
Judy Garland, Frank Morgan, Ray Bolger,
Bert Lahr. Jack Haley
Harold Rosson
Noel Langley, Florence Ryerson. Edgar Allan Wooli
Noel Langley
L. Frank Baum
Herbert Stothart
E. Y. Harburg
Harold Arlen
George Stoll
, Bobby Connolly
Natalie Kalmus
Douglas Shear*
Cedric Gibbor
Edwin B. Willis
Howard Dietz
M-G-M Studios, Culver City
August 25, 1939
(AST
Frank Morgan,
Ray Bolger, Bert Lahr,
p ,.
Jack Mult",
Judy Garland,
Billie Bui
Clara Blc
18th ANNUAL POLL OF THE CRITICS OF AMERICA
101
UOY PEL RUTH
Director
"ft
"HE MARRIED HIS WIFE"
20th Century-Fox
"HERE I AM A STRANGER"
20th Century-Fox
"THE STAR MAKER"
Paramount
Exclusive Representation
PHIL BERG-BERT ALLENBERG, INC.
9484 Wilshire Boulevard Beverly Hills, Calif.
102
One of the Film Daily Ten Best Pictures of 1939
J
Charge of Production. . . .
Executive Producer
Associate Producer
Director
Stars
Photographer
Play
Novel. "The Phantom Crown
Screenplay
Warner liron. Production
Jack L. Warn*
Hal B. Wallis
Henry Blanke
William Dieterle
Paul Muni. Bette Davis
Tony Gaudio
Franz Werlel
Bertita Harding
Huston,
Musical Director
Wolfgang Reinhardt.
John
Aeneas MacKenzie
. . .Leo F. Forbstei
General Press Representative .
Produced at
Release Date
S. Charles Einiel
Warner Bros. Studios. Burbank
June 10. 193
:
im
Paul Muni, Bette Davis, Brian Aherne, Claude Rains, John Gartiel
Donald Crisp, Joseph Calieia, Gale Sandergaard, Gilbert Rolan
Henry O'Neill, Pedro de Cordoba. Montagu Love. HaTry Davenport
Walter Fenner, Alex Leitwich, Georgia Caine, Robert Warwick, Gen
naro Curci. Bill Wilkerson. John Milian, Hugh Sothern, Fred Mala
testa, Carlos de Valdez. Irving Pichel. Frank Lackteen, Walter O
Stahl. Frank Reicher. Holmes Herbert, Walter Kingsford. Egon Brecher
Monte Blue, Louis Calhern, Manuel Diaz. Mickey Kuhn. Lillian Nichol
ladimir Sokoloti, Douglas
39
i
18th ANNUAL POLL OF THE CRITICS OF A
103
EDWARD F. CLINE
Director
MAE WEST W. C. FIELDS
in
MY LITTLE CHICKADEE"
"THE VILLAIN
STILL PURSUED HER
104
One of the Film Daily Ten Best Pictures of 1939
m\m no Livingstone
— 1 Twentieth Century-Fox Production —
In Charge oi Production Darryl F. Zanuck
Associate Producer . . Kenneth Macgowan
Director . . Henry King
Stars Spencer Tracy. Nancy Kelly, Richard Greene
Photographer George Barnes
Original Story Hal Long, Sam Hellman
Screenplay Philip Dunne, Tulien Josephson
Assistant Director Hobert Webb
Art Directors William Darling, George Dudley
Costumes ... Royer
Film Editor Barbara McLean
Sound . . Alired Bruzlin, Roger Heman
Musical Director Louis Silvers
General Press Representative Charles E. McCarthy
Produced at . . 20th Century Fox Studio. Beverly Hills
Release Date August 18, 1939
CAST
Spencer Tracy, Nancy Kelly, Richard Greene. Walter Brennan,
Charles Coburn, Sir Cedric Hardwicke. Henry Hull. Henry Travers,
Miles Manders, David Torrence, Paul Stanton. Holmes Herbert,
Montague Shaw, Brandon Hurst, Hasson Said, Paul Harvey, Russell
Hicks, Frank Dae, Joseph Crehan, Robert Middlemass, Frank Jaguet,
Clarence Derwent.
18th ANNUAL POLL OF THE CRITICS OF AMERICA
105
Photo by G. Maillard Kesslere
BORIS MORROS
Boris Morros Productions/ Inc.
106
One of the Film Daily Ten Best Pictures of 1939
Tie Oli Maid
— A Warner Itron. Production —
Charge of Production Jack L. Warn
Executive Producer Hal B. W
Associate Producer Henry Blank
Director Edmund Gouldin
Stan Bette Davis. Miriam Hoplrin
Photographer Tony Gaudio
Pulitzer Prize Play Zoe Alans
Novel Edith Wharton
Screenplay Casey Robinson
Assistant Director Jack Sulliva
Costumes Orry-Kell
Film Editor George Am
Sound C A. Rig
Musical Director Leo F. Forbstein
Music Max Steiner
Art Director Robert Haas
General Press Representative S. Charles FJnield
Produced at Warner Bros. Studios. Bur bunk
Release Date September 2. 1939
CAST £
Bette Davis, Miriam Hopkins, George Brent, Jane Bryan, Donald Crisp,
Louise Fazenda, James Stephenson, Jerome Cowan, William Lundi-
gan. Cecilia Loftus, Rand Brooks, Janet Shaw, DeWoli Hopper
18th ANNUAL POLL OF THE CRITICS OF AMERICA
107
Harold B. Franklin Ralph Blank
1040 North Las Palmas Blvd. Hollywood, Calif.
108
nsensus of Results of Regional Selections—
-
\J EWSPAPERS conducting lo-
*■ * cal polls in conjunction ivith
THE FILM DAILY national "Ten
Best" symposium increased approx-
imately 50 per cent to an all-time
high of about 60. Consensus of the
local results reported striking par-
allels with the selections of the 542
critics ivho cast ballots.
Not only does the consensus dis-
close "Goodbye, Mr. Chips" as the
No. One picture, but the other nine
pictures taking national poll honors
are included, although the order of
finish varies.
The consensus represents about
half of the daily and Sunday pa-
pers, large and small, throughout
CONSENSUS OF POLL RESULTS
THE FIRST TEN
Goodbye. Mr. Chips (M-G-M)-
England) 24
Stanley and Livingstone (20th
Century-Fox) 23
Mr. Smith Goes to Washington
(Columbia) 22
The Wizard of Oz (M-G-M) 22
Dark Victory (Warner Bros.) ... 20
Wuthering Heights (UA-Gold-
wyn)
Pygmalion (M-G-M-Pascal-Eng-
land)
The Women (M-G-M)
Juarez (Warner Bros.)
The Old Maid (Warner Bros.).
19
18
14
12
12
OTHER PICTURES CHOSEN
Babes in Arms (M-G-M) 9
Union Pacific (Paramount) 8
Young Mr. Lincoln (20th Century-
Fox) 7
Jesse James (20th Century-Fox). . 6
The Rains Came (20th Century-
Fox) 6
Gunga Din (RKO Radio) 5
Bachelor Mother (RKO Radio). . . 4
Love Affair (RKO Radio) 4
Dodge City (Warner Bros.) 3
Stagecoach (UA-Wanger) 3
Beau Geste (Paramount) 2
Nurse Edith Cavell (RKO Radio) 2
'The Private Lives of Elizabeth
and Essex (Warner Bros.). ... 2
The Story of Alexander Graham
Bell (20th Century-Fox) 2
Daughters Courageous (Warner
Bros.)
Devil's Island (Warner Bros.)...
Five Came Back (RKO Radio) . .
The Great Man Votes (RKO
Radio)
The Great Waltz (M-G-M)
Golden Boy (Columbia)
Here I Am a Stranger (20th Cen-
tury-Fox)
Man of Conquest (Republic). . . .
'Ninotchka (M-G-M)
The Story of Vernon and Irene
Castle (RKO Radio)
Three Smart Girls Grow Up
(Universal)
* Released too late to be eligible in
THE FILM DAILY national poll.
109
I UTIIIIU McGlME
Story and Screenplay
ZIEGFELD GIRL
M-G-M
Story and Screenplay
LILLIAN RUSSELL
20th Century-Fox
110
the country which placed the "Ten
Best" issue before their readers;
majority of others did not attempt
to tabulate the results, being con-
tent to select local poll winners by
checking against the national selec-
tions.
Twenty-six states had one or
more local polls, including :
Arizona
Douglas Daily Dispatch — James Logie.
California
Authenticated News Service — Vance Chandler.
Berkeley Daily Gazette — Hal Johnson.
Hollywood Screen World— Louis Jacobino.
Colorado
Boulder Daily Camera — Robert C. Looney.
Connecticut
Bridgeport Herald — Leo Miller.
Torrington Register — John H. Thompson.
Delaware
Wilmington Sunday Star — Joseph G. O'Keefe.
Florida
Daytona Beach News-Journal — Herbert M.
Davidson.
Georgia
Atlanta Constitution — Lee Rogers.
Illinois
Illinois State Journal. Springfield — W. F.
Dagon.
Indiana
Bedford Daily Mail — Camille Utter Meno.
Iowa
Iowa City Press-Citizen — Edwin B. Green.
Mason City Globe-Gazette — David B. Kaufman.
Kansas
Dodge City Daily Globe — Jay B. Baugh.
Kansas City Kansan — I. E. Kirkland.
Maine
Portland Sunday Telegram — Richard H. Wood-
bury.
Michigan
Cheboygan Daily Tribune — Myrton M. Riggs.
Detroit Fress Press — James S. Pooler.
Flint Journal — Dick Shappell.
Saginaw News — Frank G. Schmidt.
Minnesota
Minneapolis Times-Tribune — Merle Potter.
Rochester Post-Bulletin — Marguerite Schnorr.
Missouri
St. Louis Post-Dispatch — Colvin McPherson.
Nebraska
Lincoln Sunday Journal & Star — Barney Old-
field.
JVew? Jersey
New Brunswick Daily Home News & Sunday
Times— Will Balton.
Newark Sunday Call — Robert L. Moore.
Union City Hudson Dispatch — Channing R.
Pollock.
iVete Yorfc
Brooklyn Home Talk — Larry Mason.
Buffalo Courier-Express — W. E. J. Martin.
Poughkeepsie Eagle — News & Star.
Rochester Democrat & Chronicle — George L.
David.
White Plains Reporter — Norton Mockridge.
Oliio
Cleveland News — Arthur F. Spaeth.
Columbus Sunday Dispatch — Samuel T. Wil-
son.
Pennsylvania
Erie Dispatch-Herald — J. A. Wurzbach.
Harrisburg Patriot — Ralph E. Wallis.
Harrisburg Telegraph — Paul Walker.
Lewiston Daily Sentinel — Preston Rittenhouse.
Philadelphia Evening Public Ledger — Henry T.
Murdock.
Philadelphia Inquirer — Mildred Martin.
Wilkes-Barre Record — John M. Moore.
South Carolina
Rock Hill Evening Herald — Bob M. Ward.
Texas
Austin American-Statesman — Ruth Lewis.
Gladewater Daily Times-Tribune — Tommie
Randolph.
Gladewater Record — Pericles Alexander.
Kilgore Daily News — Calvin Starnes.
Kilgore Herald.
San Antonio Evening News— Mary Louise
Walliser.
Virginia
Lynchburg Advance — David Wayne Wright.
Washington
Tacoma Times — Hal S. Nelson.
Wisconsin
Madison Capital-Times — Sterling Sorensen.
Wyoming
Casper Tribune-Herald — Jack Sellers.
Ill
. . .proud of its roster of famous
directors, producers, writers
and players . . .sees in the new
season an opportunity to make
an even greater contribution
than it has in the past to the
industry' s tradition of memor-
able productions . . .
HOME OFFICE, 7 2 9 SEVENTH AVENUE, NEW YORK CITY
STUDIO, 1438 GOWER STREET, HOLLYWOOD, CALIFORNIA
Tin; Pmi II m
SKLEI'Tllf
— 1922
ORPHANS CF THE STORM— 81 votes; Dist.: United
Artists; Stars: Gish Siste.s, Monte Blue; Director:
D. W Griffith.
GRANDMA'S BOY— 29 votes; Dist.: Asso. Exhibitors;
Star: Harold Lloyd; Director: Fred Newmeyer.
BLOOD AND SAND — 28 votes: Dist.: Paramount;
Star: Rudolph Valentino; Director: Fred Niblo.
PRISONER OF ZENDA — 25 votes; Dist.: Metro; All
Star; Director: Rex Ingram.
WHEN KNIGHTHOOD WAS IN FLOWER— 22 votes;
Dist.: Paramount: Star, Marion Davies; Director:
Robert G. Vignola.
NANOOK OF THE NORTH— 21 votes; Dist.: Pathe;
Native cast; Director: R. J. Flaherty.
SMILIN' THROUGH— 20 votes; Dist.: First National;
Star: Norma Talmadge; Director: Sidney Franklin.
TOL'ABLE DAVID— 19 votes; Dist.: First National;
Star: Richard Barthelmess; Director: Henry King.
(•) ROBIN HOOD— 17 votes; Dist.: United Artists;
Star: Douglas Fairbanks: Director: Allan Dwan,
OLIVER TWIST— 13 votes; Dist.: First National; Star:
Jackie Coogan; Director: Frank Lloyd.
— 1923 —
COVERED WAGON — 53 votes; Dist.: Paramount;
Stars: Ernest Torrence, J. Warren Kerrigan, Lois
Wilson; Director: James Cruze.
MERRY-GO-ROUND— 26 votes; Dist.: Universal; Stars:
Mary Philbin, Norman Kerry; Director. Rupert
Julian.
HUNCHBACK OF NOTRE DAME— 25 votes; Dist.:
Universal; Star: Lon Chaney; Director: Wallace
Worsley.
(*) ROBIN HOOD— 25 votes; Dist.: United Artists;
Star: Douglas Fairbanks; Director. Allan Dwan.
GREEN GODDESS— 22 votes; Dist.: Goldwyn; Star:
George Arliss; Director: Sidney Olcott.
SCARAMOUCHE— 20 votes: Dist.: Metro; No star;
Director: Rex Ingram.
SAFETY LAST— 18 votes: Dist.: Pathe; Star: Harold
Lloyd; Directors: Fred Newmeyer, Sam Taylor.
ROSITA— 18 votes; Dist.: United Artists; Star: Mary
Pickford; Director: Ernst Lubitsch.
DOWN TO THE SEA IN SHIPS— 17 votes; Dist.:
Hodkinson; Star: Raymond McKee; Director: Elmer
Clifton.
LITTLE OLD NEW YORK— 17 votes; Dist.: Goldwyn-
Cosmo; Star: Marion Davies; Director: Sidney Ol-
cott.
Star: John Barrymore; Director: Harry Beaumont.
SECRETS— 33 votes; Dist.: First National; Star: Nor-
ma Talmadge; Director: Frank Borzage.
MARRIAGE CIRCLE— 32 votes; Dist.: Warner Bros.;
Stars: Monte Blue, Florence Vidor; Director: Ernst
Lubitsch.
TEN COMMANDMENTS— 30 votes; Dist.: Paramount:
No star; Director: Cecil B. De Mille.
GIRL SHY— 30 votes: Dist.: Pathe; Star: Harold
Lloyd; Directors: Fred Newmeyer, Sam Taylor.
ABRAHAM LINCOLN— 30 votes; Dist.: First National;
Stars: George Billings, Louise Fazenda; Director:
Philip Rosen.
AMERICA— 23 votes; Dist.: United Artists; Stars:
Carol Dempster, Lionel Barrymore; Director: D. W.
Griffith.
1925 —
GOLD RUSH— 63 votes; Dist.: United Artists; Star
and Director: Charles Chaplin.
UNHOLY THREE— 60 votes; Dist.; Metro-Goldwyn;
Star: Lon Chaney; Director: Tod Browning.
DON Q SON OF ZORRO— 57 votes: Dist.: United
Artists; Star: Douglas Fairbanks; Director: Donald
Crisp.
MERRY WIDOW— 57 votes; Dist.: Metro-Goldwyn;
Stars: Mae Murray, John Gilbert; Director: Erich
von Stroheim.
LAST LAUGH— 55 votes; Dist.: Universal; Star: Emil
Jannings; Director: F. W. Murnau.
THE FRESHMAN— 52 votes; Dist.: Pathe; Star:
Harold Lloyd; Director: Fred Newmeyer, Sam Tay-
lor.
PHANTOM OF THE OPERA— 38 votes; Dist.: Uni-
versal; Star: Lon Chaney; Director: Rupert Julian.
LOST WORLD— 36 votes; Dist.: First National; Stars:
Bessie Love, Lewis Stone; Director: Harry Hoyt.
<*) BIG PARADE— 30 votes; Dist.: Metro-Goldwyn;
Stars: John Gilbert, Renee Adoree; Director: King
Vidor.
KISS ME AGAIN— 29 votes; Dist.:
Stars: Marie Prevost, Monte Blue;
Lubitsch.
Warner Bros.;
Director: Ernst
— 1926 —
— 1924 —
VARIETY— 169 votes; Dist.: Paramount; Star: Emil
Jannings; Director: E. A. Dupont.
<»> BEN HUR— 114 votes; Dist.: M-G-M; Stars:
Ramon Novarro, Francis X. Bushman; Director:
Fred Niblo.
<•) BIG PARADE— 108 votes; Dist.: M-G-M; Stars:
John Gilbert, Renee Adoree; Director: King Vidor.
BLACK PIRATE— 108 votes; Dist.: United Artists;
Star: Douglas Fairbanks; Director: Albert Parker.
(*) BEAU GESTE— 100 votes; Dist.: Paramount; Stars:
Ronald Colman, Noah Beery; Director: Herbert
Brenon.
STELLA DALLAS— 95 votes; Dist.: United Artists;
Star: Belle Bennett: Director: Henry King.
VOLGA BOATMAN— 94 votes; Dist.: PDS; Star:
William Boyd: Director: Cecil B. De Mille.
(») WHAT PRICE GLORY? — 66 votes; Dist.: Fox;
* During the early singes of THE FILM DAILY polls, certain productions were selected twice. Voting system
has been altered so that critics now vote from a ballot supplied by THE FILM DAILY. This ballot includes
pictures actually released during the fiscal year.
113
THIEF OF BAGDAD— 52 votes; Dist.: United Artists;
Star: Douglas Fairbanks; Director: Raoul Walsh.
SEA HAWK— 51 votes: Dist.: First National; Stars:
Milton Sills, Enid Bennett, Wallace Beery; Director:
Frank Lloyd.
MONSIEUR BEAUCAIRE— 36 votes; Dist.: Paramount;
Star: Rudolph Valentino; Director: Sidney Olcott.
BEAU BRUMMEL— 35 votes; Dist.: Warner Bros.;
114
Stars: Victor McLaglen, Edmund Lowe; Director:
Raoul Walsh.
SEA BEAST— 62 votes; Dist.: Warner Bros.; Star:
John Barrymore; Director: Millard Webb.
LA BOHEME — 49 votes; Dist.: M-G-M; Stars: Lillian
Gish, John Gilbert; Director: King Vidor.
— 1927 —
l*) BEAU GESTE— 235 votes; Dist.: Paramount; Stars:
Ronald Colman, Noah Beery; Director: Herbert
Brennon.
(*) BIG PARADE— 205 votes; Dist.: M-G-M'; Stars:
John Gilbert, Renee Adoree; Director: King Vidor.
(*) WHAT PRICE GLORY? — 179 votes; Dist.: Fox;
Stars: Victor McLaglen, Edmund Lowe; Director:
Raoul Walsh.
WAY OF ALL FLESH— 167 votes; Dist.: Paramount;
Star: Emil Jannings; Director: Victor Fleming.
(*) BEN HUR— 164 votes; Dist.: M-G-M; Stars:
Ramon Novarro; Francis X. Bushman; Director:
Fred Niblo.
SEVENTH HEAVEN— 162 votes; Dist.: Fox; Stars:
Janet Gaynor, Charles Farrell; Director: Frank.
Borzage.
CHANG — 146 votes; Dist.: Paramount; No star;
Directors: Merian Cooper, Ernest Schoedsack.
UNDERWORLD— 97 votes; Dist.: Paramount; Stars:
George Bancroft, Clive Brook; Director: Josef von
Sternberg.
RESURRECTION— 91 votes; Dist.: United Artists;
Star: Rod La Rocque; Director, Edwin Carewe.
FLESH AND THE DEVIL— 77 votes; Dist.: M-G-M;
Star: John Gilbert; Director: Clarence Brown.
— 1928 —
THE PATRIOT— 210 votes; Dist.: Paramount; Star:
Emil Jannings; Director: Ernst Lubitsch.
SORRELL AND SON— 180 votes; Dist.: United Art-
ists; Stars: H. B. Warner, Alice Joyce; Director:
Herbert Brenon.
LAST COMMAND— 135 votes; Dist.: Paramount; Star:
Emil Jannings; Director; Josef von Sternberg.
FOUR SONS— 125 votes; Dist.: Fox; No Star; Direc-
tor: John Ford.
STREET ANGEL— 124 votes; Dist.: Fox; Stars: Janet
Gaynor, Charles Farrell; Director: Frank Borzage.
THE CIRCUS— 122 votes; Dist.; United Artists; Star
and Director: Charles Chaplin.
SUNRISE— 119 votes; Dist.: Fox; Stars: George
O'Brien, Janet Gaynor; Director: F. W. Murnau.
THE CROWD— 105 votes; Dist.: M-G-M; Stars: James
Murray, Elinor Boardman; Director: King Vidor.
KING OF KINGS — 99 votes: Dist.: Pathe; Stars: H. B.
Warner, Joseph and Rudolph Schildkraut; Director:
Cecil B. De Mille.
SADIE THOMPSON— 95 votes; Dist.: United Artists;
Star: Gloria Swanson; Director: Raoul Walsh.
— 1929 —
DISRAELI— 192 votes; Dist.: Warner Bros.; Star:
George Arliss; Director: Alfred E. Green.
BROADWAY MELODY— 163 votes; Dist.: M-G-M;
No star; Director: Harry Beaumont.
MADAME X— 161 votes: Dist.: M-G-M; Star: Ruth
Chatterton: Director: Lionel Barrymore.
RIO RITA— 158 votes; Dist.: Radio; Star: Bebe Dan-
iels; Director: Luther Reed.
GOLD DIGGERS OF BROADWAY— 139 votes; Dist.:
Warner Bros.; No Star; Director: Roy Del Ruth.
BULLDOG DRUMMOND— 125 votes; Dist.: United
Artists; Star: Ronald Colman; Director: F. Richard
Jones.
IN OLD ARIZONA— 121 votes; Dist.: Fox; No star;
Directors: Raoul Walsh and Irving Cummings.
COCK-EYED WORLD— 113 votes; Dist.: Fox; Stars:
Victor McLaglen, Edmund Lowe; Director: Raoul
Walsh.
LAST OF MRS. CHENEY— 110 votes; Dist.: M-G-M;
Star: Norma Shearer; Director: Sidney Franklin.
HALLELUJAH— 101 votes; Dist.: M-G-M; No Star;
Director: King Vidor.
— 1930 —
ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT— 271 votes;
Dist.: Universal; No star; Director: Lewis Milestone.
ABRAHAM LINCOLN— 167 votes; Dist.: United Art-
ists; No star; Director: D: W: Griffith.
HOLIDAY— 166 votes; Dist.: Pathe; Star: Ann Hard-
ing; Director: Edward H. Griffith.
JOURNEY'S END— 151 votes; Dist.: Tiffany; Star:
Colin Clive; Director: James Whale.
ANNA CHRISTIE— 141 votes; Dist.: M-G-M; Star
Greta Garbo; Director: Clarence Brown.
THE BIG HOUSE— 141 votes: Dist.: M-G-M; No
star; Director: George Hill.
WITH BYRD AT THE SOUTH POLE— 121 votes;
Dist.: Paramount; No star or director.
THE DIVORCEE— 94 votes; Dist.: M-G-M; Star:
Norma Shearer; Director: Robert Z. Leonard.
HELL'S ANGELS— 91 votes; Dist.: United Artists; No
star; Director: Howard Hughes.
OLD ENGLISH— 87 votes: Dist.: Warner Bros.; Star:
George Arliss; Director: Alfred E. Green.
— 1931 —
CIMARRON— 273 votes; Dist.: RKO Radio; Star:
Richard Dix; Director: Wesley Ruggles.
STREET SCENE— 200 votes; Dist.: United Artists; No
star; Director: King Vidor.
SKIPPY— 178 votes; Dist.: Paramount; Star: Jackie
Cooper; Director: Norman Taurog.
BAD GIRL— 172 votes; Dist.: Fox; Stars: James Dunn,
Sally Eilers; Director: Frank Borzage.
MIN AND BILL— 164 votes; Dist.: M-G-M; Stars:
Marie Dressier, Wallace Beery; Director: George
Hill.
FRONT PAGE— 162 votes; Dist.: United Artists; No
star; Director: Lewis Milestone.
FIVE STAR FINAL— 138 votes; Dist.: Warner Bros.;
Star: Edward G. Robinson; Director: Mervyn LeRoy.
CITY LIGHTS— 128 votes! Dist.: United Artists; Star
and Director: Charles Chaplin.
A FREE SOUL— 114 votes; Dist.: M-G-M; Star:
Norma Shearer; Director: Clarence Brown.
SIN OF MADELON CLAUDET— 99 votes; Dist.:
M-G-M; No star; Director: Edgar Selwyn.
— 1932 —
GRAND HOTEL— 296 votes; Dist.: M-G-M; Stars:
Greta Garbo, John Barrymore, Joan Crawford, Wall-
ace Beery, Lionel Barrymore, et al; Director,
Edmund Goulding.
THE CHAMP— 214 votes; Dist.: M-G-M; Stars: Wall-
ace Beery, Jackie Cooper; Director: King Vidor.
ARROWSM ITH — 1 92 votes; Dist.: United Artists;
Stars: Ronald Colman, Helen Hayes; Director: John
Ford.
THE GUARDSMAN— 170 votes; Dist.: M-G-M; Stars:
Alfred Lunt, Lynn Fontanne; Director: Sidney
Franklin.
SMILIN' THROUGH— 168 votes; Dist.: M-G-M; Star:
Norma Shearer; Director: Sidney Franklin.
DR. JEKYLL AND MR. HYDE— 161 votes; Dist.: Para-
mount; Star: Fredric March; Director: Rouben
Mamoulian.
EMMA — 154 votes; Dist.: M-G-M; Star: Marie Dress-
ier; Director: Clarence Brown.
BILL OF DIVORCEMENT— 141 votes; Dist.: RKO
Radio; Stars: John Barrymore, Katherine Hepburn;
Director: George Cukor.
BACK STREET— 136 votes; Dist.: Universal; Stars:
Irene Dunn, John Boles; Director: John M. Stahl.
SCARFACE— 135 votes; Dist.: United Artists; Star:
Paul Muni; Director: Howard Hawks.
— 1933 —
CAVALCADE— 304 votes; Dist.: Fox; Stars: Clive
Brook, Diana Wynyard; Director: Frank Lloyd.
42ND STREET— 209 votes; Dist.: Warner Bros.; Stars:
Warner Baxter, Bebe Daniels, Ruby Keeler, Dick
Powell; Director: Lloyd Bacon.
PRIVATE LIFE OF HENRY VIII— 187 votes; Dist.:
United Artists; Star: Charles Laughton; Director:
Alexander Korda.
LADY FOR A DAY— 173 votes; Dist.: Columbia; Di-
rector: Frank Capra.
STATE FAIR— 169 votes; Dist.: Fox; Stars: Will Rog-
ers, Janet Gaynor, Lew Ayres, Sally Eilers; Director:
Henry King.
A FAREWELL TO ARMS— 167 votes; Dist.: Paramount;
Stars: Helen Hayes, Gary Cooper; Director: Frank
Borzage.
115
Alfred Hitchcock's Production
of
★ * ★ ★
A Thrilling Successor to the Sensational "Stagecoach"
"SO GALLANTLY GLEAMING"
* ★ ★ ★
Taylor Caldwell's Best Seller
"DYNASTY OF DEATH"
★ ★ ★ ★
Jules Verne's Immortal Classic
"AROUND
THE WORLD IN
80 DAYS"
★ * * *
RELEASED THRU
UNITED ARTISTS
116
SHE DONE HIM WRONG — 158 votes; Dist.: Para-
mount; Star: Mae West; Director: Lowell Sherman.
I AM A FUGITIVE FROM A CHAIN GANG — 156
votes; Dist.: Warner Bros.; Star: Paul Muni; Direc-
tor: Mervyn LeRoy.
MAEDCHEN IN UNIFORM— 137 votes; Dist.: Film-
choice; Stars: Dorothea Wieck, Hertha Thiele; Di-
rector: Leontine Sagan.
RASPUTIN AND THE EMPRESS— 128 votes; Dist.:
M-G-M; Stars: John, Ethel, and Lionel Barrymore;
Director: Richard Boleslawski.
— 1934 —
THE BARRETTS OF WIMPOLE STREET— 348 votes;
Dist.: M-G-M; Stars: Norma Shearer, Fredric
March, Charles Laughton: Director: Sidney Frank-
lin.
THE HOUSE OF ROTHSCHILD— 338 votes; Dist.:
United Artists; Star: George Arliss; Director:
Alfred Werker.
IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT— 281 votes; Dist.: Co-
lumbia; Stars: Clark Gable, Claudette Colbert; Di-
rector: Frank Capra.
ONE NIGHT OF LOVE— 265 votes; Dist.: Columbia;
Star: Grace Moore; Director: Victor Schertzinger.
LITTLE WOMEN— 264 votes; Dist.: RKO Radio; Star:
Katharine Hepburn; Director: George Cukor.
THE THIN MAN— 249 votes; Dist.: M-G-M; Stars:
William Powell, Myrna Loy; Director: W. S. Van
Dyke.
VIVA, VILLA!— 188 votes; Dist.: M-G-M; Star: Wal-
lace Beery; Director: Jack Conway.
DINNER AT EIGHT— 172 votes; Dist.: M-G-M; Stars:
Marie Dressier, John Barrymore, Wallace Beery,
Jean Harlow, Lionel Barrymore, Lee Tracy, Edmund
Lowe; Director: George Cukor.
THE COUNT OF MONTE CRISTO— 145 votes; Dist.:
United Artists; Stars: Robert Donat, Elissa Landi;
Director: Rowland V. Lee.
BERKELEY SQUARE— 119 votes; Dist.: Fox; Stars:
Leslie Howard; Heather Angel; Director: Frank
Lloyd.
— 1935 —
DAVID COPPERFIELD— 339 votes; Dist.: M-G-M;
Stars: Freddie Bartholomew, W. C. Fields, Lionel
Barrymore; Director: George Cukor.
LIVES OF A BENGAL LANCER, THE— 278 votes; Dist.:
Paramount; Stars: Gary Cooper, Franchot Tone,
Richard Cromwell; Director: Henry Hathaway.
INFORMER, THE— 256 votes; Dist.: RKO Radio; Star:
Victor McLaglen; Director: John Ford.
NAUGHTY MARIETTA— 250 votes; Dist.: M-G-M;
Stars: Jeanette MacDonald, Nelson Eddy; Director:
W. S. Van Dyke.
LES MISERABLES— 235 votes- Dist.: United Artists,
(20th Century); Stars: Fredric March, Charles
Laughton, Cedric Hardwicke; Director: Richard
Boleslawski.
RUGGLES OF RED GAP— 222 votes; Dist.: Paramount;
Stars: Charles Laughton, Mary Boland, Charles
Ruggles; Director: Leo McCarey.
TOP HAT— 174 votes; Dist.: RKO Radio; Stars: Fred
Astaire, Ginger Rogers; Director: Mark Sandrich.
BROADWAY MELODY OF 1936—166 votes; Dist.:
M-G-M; Stars: Jack Benny, Eleanore Powell; Di-
rector: Roy Del Ruth.
ROBERTA— 155 votes; Dist.: RKO Radio- Stars: Irene
Dunne, Fred Astaire, Ginger Rogers; Director: Wil-
liam A. Seiter.
ANNA KARENINA— 129 votes; Dist.: M-G-M; Stars:
Greta Garbo, Fredric March; Director: Clarence
Brown.
— 1936 —
MUTINY ON THE BOUNTY— 416 votes; Dist.: M-C-M;
Stars: Charles Laughton, Clark Cable, Franchot Tone;
Director: Frank Lloyd.
MR. DEEDS GOES TO TOWN— 372 votes; Dist.: Col-
umbia; Stars: Gary Cooper; Director: Frank Capra.
THE GREAT ZIEGFELD— 345 votes; Dist.: M-G-M;
Stars: William Powell, Myrna Loy, Luise Rainer,
Frank Morgan; Director: Robert Z. Leonard.
SAN FRANCISCO— 264 votes; Dist.: M-G-M; Stars:
Clark Cable, Jeanette MacDonald, Spencer Tracy;
Director: W. S. Van Dyke.
DODSWORTH— 254 votes; Dist.: United Artists (Gold-
wyn); Stars: Walter Huston, Ruth Chatterton, Mary
Astor, Paul Lukas, David Niven; Director: William
Wyler.
THE STORY OF LOUIS PASTEUR— 250 votes; Dist.:
Warner Bros.; Star: Paul Muni; Director: William
Dieterle.
A TALE OF TWO CITIES— 235 votes; Dist.: M-C-M;
Star: Ronald Colman; Director: Jack Conway.
ANTHONY ADVERSE— 231 votes; Dist.: Warner Bros.;
Star: Fredric March; Director: Mervyn LeRoy.
THE CREEN PASTURES— 197 votes; Dist.: Warner
Bros.; Directors: Marc Connelly, William Keighley.
A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM— 166 votes; Dist.:
Warner Bros.; Stars: James Cagney, Joe E. Brown,
Dick Powell; Directors: Max Reinhardt, William
Dieterle.
— 1937 —
THE LIFE OF EMILE ZOLA— 453 votes; Dist.: Warner
Bros.; Star: Paul Muni; Director: William Dieterle.
THE GOOD EARTH— 424 votes: Dist.: M-C-M; Stars:
Paul Muni. Luise Rainer; Director: Sidney Franklin.
CAPTAINS COURAGEOUS — 380 votes; Dist.: M-G-M;
Stars: Freddie Bartholomew, Spencer Tracy, Lionel
Barrymore; Director: Victor Fleming.
LOST HORIZON— 325 votes; Dist.: Columbia; Star:
Ronald Colman- Director: Frank Capra.
A STAR IS BORN— 287 votes; Dist.: United Artists
(Selznick International); Stars: Janet Gaynor, Fred-
ric March; Director: William A. Weltman.
ROMEO AND JULIET— 251 votes; Dist.: M-G-M;
Stars: Norma Shearer, Leslie Howard; Director:
George Cukor.
STAGE DOOR — 235 votes; Dist.: RKO Radio; Stars:
Katharine Hepburn, Ginger Rogers, Adolphe Menjou;
Director: Gregory La Cava.
DEAD END— 197 votes; Dist.: United Artists (Samuel
Coldwyn); Stars: Sylvia Sidney, Joel McCrea; Di-
rector: William Wyler.
WINTERSET— 165 votes; Dist.: RKO Radio; Stars:
Burgess Meredith, Margo; Director: Alfred N.
Santell.
THE AWFUL TRUTH— 160 votes; Dist.: Columbia;
Stars: Irene Dunne, Cary Grant; Director: Leo
McCarey.
— 1938 —
SNOW WHITE AND THE SEVEN DWARFS— 419 votes;
Dist.: RKO Radio; Producer: Walt Disney.
YOU CAN T TAKE IT WITH YOU— 372 votes; Dist.:
Columbia; Stars: Jean Arthur, Lionel Barrymore.
James Stewart, Edward Arnold; Director: Frank
Capra.
ALEXANDER'S RAGTIME BAND— 324 votes; Dist.:
20th Century-Fox; Stars: Tyrone Power, Alice Faye,
Don Ameche; Director: Henry King.
BOYS TOWN— 313 votes; Dist.: M-C-M; Stars: Spen-
. cer Tracy, Mickey Rooney; Director: Norman
Taurog.
MARIE ANTOINETTE— 287 votes; Dist.: M-G-M;
Stars: Norma Shearer, Tyrone Power; Director: W.
S. Van Dyke, II.
IN OLD CHICAGO— 243 votes; Dist.: 20th Century-
Fox; Stars: Tyrone Power, Alice Faye, Don Ameche;
Director: Henry King.
THE ADVENTURES OF ROBIN HOOD— 218 votes;
Dist.: Warners; Star: Errol Flynn; Directors: Michael
Curtiz, William Keighley.
THE CITADEL— 210 votes; Dist.: M-G-M (Produced
in England); Stars: Robert Donat, Rosalind Rus-
sell; Director: King Vidor.
LOVE FINDS ANDY HARDY— 180 votes: Dist.: M-G-M;
Stars: Mickey Rooney, Lewis Stone, Judy Carland,
Cecilia Parker, Fay Holden; Director: Ceorge B.
Seitz.
THE HURRICANE— 172 votes; Dist.: United Artists
(Samuel Coldwyn); Stars: Dorothy Lamour, Jon
Hall, Mary Astor; Director: John Ford.
117
and no.w>,
jjQJi a biaae/i
and bettesi
A&llina <lea<La*t
EDWARD SMALL
THE SON OF MONTE CRISTO
SOUTH OF PAGO PAGO
KIT CARSON
TWO YEARS BEFORE THE MAST
MY OFFICIAL WIFE
THE LIFE OF RUDOLPH VALENTINO
RELEASED THRU UNITED ARTISTS
EDWARD SMALL PRODUCTIONS, INC.
1040 North Las Palmas Avenue 729 Seventh Avenue
Hollywood, Calif. New York City
118
■■■■■■■HBHnHnHi
Newspaper Film Critics
Of tain
ectiom
Critics voted for three choices, in order of their preferences, under each classification.
First place counted 75 votes, second place, 50 votes, third place, 25 votes. Nominations, by a
committee of 50, were limited to 10 in each classification.
Best Picture of the Year
"Goodbye, Mr. Chips" (M-G-M, England) 22,775 votes
"Mr. Smith Goes to Washington" (Columbia) 14,755 votes
"Wuthering Heights" (UA-Goldwyn) 6.950 votes
Best Performance By an Actor
Robert Donat in "Goodbye, Mr. Chips" 23,200 votes
James Stewart in "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington" 14.150 votes
Spencer Tracy in "Stanley and Livingstone" 7,825 votes
Best Performance By an Actress
Bette Davis in "Dark Victory" 23,175 votes
Greta Garbo in "Ninotchka" 9.750 votes
Rosalind Russell in "The Women" 9,725 votes
Best Performance By a Male Supporting Player
Thomas Mitchell in "Stagecoach" 14,125 votes
Brian Aherne in "Juarez" 12,125 votes
Akim Tamiroff in "Disputed Passage" 7.750 votes
Best Performance By a Female Supporting Player
Greer Garson in "Goodbye, Mr. Chips" 15,650 votes
Rosalind Russell in "The Women" 12.350 votes
Alice Brady in "Young Mr. Lincoln" 8.600 votes
Young Actor Most Likely to Win Greatest Fame in 1940
Jeffrey Lynn 15,825 votes
Eddie Albert 9.925 votes
John Howard 8.825 votes
Young Actress Most Likely to Win Greatest Fame in 1940
Maureen O'Hara 13,075 votes
Linda Darnell 12.575 votes
Lana Turner 10.925 votes
119
ERNST LUBITSCH
PRODUCTIONS
Preparing
Two Outstanding Productions
To Be
Produced and Directed by
ERNST LUBITSCH
(The hubitscb Touch)
SOL LESSER PRODUCTIONS
Presents
Thornton Wilder's
"©BJIR TOWN"
Directed by SAM WOOD ("Goodbye Mr. Chips")
Starring
WILLIAM HOLDEN and MARTHA SCOTT
with
Fay Bainter Beulah Bondi
Thomas Mitchell Guy Kibbee
Stuart Erwin and FRANK CRAVEN
Released Thru United Artists
120
li II L V T II I It \ 1 11 li I T S
TWENTY consecutive years of tradition will mark the 1940 Film Daily Golf Tournament whose
popularity over this long span has attained such proportions that it is regarded as the out-
standing inter-industry sports event in the East. More than that, the tournament is replete with
good-fellowship, not only in competition on the links, but at the evening banquet which brings the
awarding of prizes, together with speechmaking in the lightest and merriest of veins.
Annually, attendance at the tournament is capacity, having grown to that stature from the
initial event held at the Oak Ridge Country Club in Tuckahoe, N. Y., on September 27. 1921.
In 1928, the E. F. Albee Memorial Trophy was posted and team play introduced to compete
for this now famous silver cup. Thus the trophy has been in competition for 12 consecutive years.
In 1937, the base of two-team competition, which had been chiefly between foursomes representing
the Motion Picture Club, Lambs, Friars, and AMPA, was greatly broadened to bring together the
teams of several major film companies and those of several other industry organizations.
Last year's tournament feature was the annexation of the Albee Trophy by M-G-M's team.
Runners-up, in their respective order, were the teams representing Exhibitors, Warners, the Trade
Press and National Screen Service.
Annually, in addition to the Albee Trophy and the several team prizes, handsome awards are
donated by the industry's important companies, as well as by a number of individuals prominent
in filmland.
Team Standing
Where Played Contestants Won By
1928— Sound View M.P. Club vs. Lambs M.P. Club
1929— Glen Oaks M.P. Club vs. Lambs M.P. Club
1929— Gedney Farms M.P. Club vs. Friars M.P. Club
1930— Glen Oaks M.P. Club vs. Lambs M.P. Club
1931— Fenimore M.P. Club vs. AMPA M.P. Club
1932— Fenimore M.P. Club vs. AMPA AMPA
1933— Rye Country Club M.P. Club vs. AMPA M.P. Club
1934— Glen Oaks M.P. Club vs. AMPA M.P. Club
1935— Progress M.P. Club vs. AMPA AMPA
1936— Glen Oaks M.P. Club vs. AMPA AMPA
1937 — Elmsford Company Teams Warners
1938 — Glen Oaks Company Teams M-G-M
1939 — Rye Country Club Company Teams M-G-M
121
GEORGE BRUCE
NAVY BLUE AND GOLD
Original Screen Play
MGM
•
THE CROWD ROARS!
Original Screen Play*
MGM
THE DUKE OF WEST POINT
Original Screen Play
EDWARD SMALL PRODUCTIONS
for United Artists
KING OF THE TURF
Original Screen Play
EDWARD SMALL PRODUCTIONS
for United Artists
THE MAN IN THE IRON MASK
Screen Play
EDWARD SMALL PRODUCTIONS
for United Artists
NAVY 'NURSE
Original Screen Play
Paramount
KIT CARSON
Original Screen Play
EDWARD SMALL PRODUCTIONS
for United Artists
SOUTH Of PAGO-PAGO
Original Screen Play
EDWARD SMALL PRODUCTIONS
for United Artists
THE Lift Of RUDOLPH VfllEFilO
Original Screen Play
EDWARD SMALL PRODUCTIONS
for United Artists
•
* Screen Play in collaboration
Under contract to Management
Edward Small Productions Stanley Bergerman
122
1878 'n an at,empt ,0 Prove 'hat a
horse's four hoofs leave the ground
at one time while running. Leland Stanford,
California sportsman and railway magnate,
assigns John D. Isaacs, engineer, and Ead-
weard Muybridge, photographer, to set up a
row of cameras and take a series of pictures
of a horse in motion. Results prove Stan-
ford's contention, and are probably the first
picture analysis of motion.
| J581 Jean Louis Meissonnier acquires
some of the Muybridge photos and
arranges them on a projection zoetropic ma-
chine (modeled on an invention of Henry Ren-
no Heyl, Philadelphia engineer and inventor).
Projected pictures are used to support his
controversy with the French Academy over
animal postures.
1887 Thomas A. Edison, casting about
for a sight device to tie in with his
phonograph, starts William K. L. Dickson at
work on a machine to take and view pictures
in motion. Early attempts to achieve this goal
with a cylinder device, similar to his phono-
graph, are not successful and they begin ex-
periments with belt or tape devices.
1889 William Friese-Greene, of England,
who has been experimenting with
photographing motion pictures on paper, pat-
ents Kinematography — the taking of pictures
on celluloid, the basis for motion picture pho-
tography.
George Eastman, seeking a roll film for
his Kodak, begins manufacture of a photo-
graphic material with a nitrocellulose base.
Edison buys a sample to use in his motion
picture device.
By October, Edison and Dickson develop
their device and produce an experimental
peep-show machine through which one per-
son can view motion pictures.
| | Edison applies to patent the Kinet-
oscope and the Kinetographic
camera in the United States, but does not
think enough of the devices to spend about
SI 50 to cover them in foreign countries. (The
commercial Kinetoscope used the same width
film as that used today, but photographed
and showed pictures at the rate of 40-odd ex-
posures a second, compared with the present
24 a second rate.)
| OAQ The first motion picture studio, "The
Black Maria," is built in West
Orange, N. J. by Edison. Structure, built to
revolve on a circular rail so as to control the
rays of the sun for photographic purposes,
cost about $600.
Kinetoscope Co., formed by Norman C.
Raff, Thomas R. Lombard and Frank R. Gam-
mon, to exploit Edison's Kinetoscope.
I flQ/J. On April 14, the Kinetoscope makes
its first public appearance in a
peep-show parlor at 1155 Broadway, New
York. Machine is coin-operated and shows
pictures made in "The Black Maria."
Thomas Armat and C. Francis Jenkins begin
experiments with a machine to project motion
pictures. Their first effort, the Phantoscope,
is not entirely successful.
Lambda Co. formed by Professor Woodville
Latham to experiment in motion picture cam-
eras and projectors. (The "Latham loop," en-
abling longer pictures resulted.)
| 1MI X Louis and August Lumiere, photc-
graphic manufacturers of Lyons,
France, purchased one of Edison's Kinetoscopes
and, as it is not patented in France, from it
develop their own camera — the Cinemato-
graphe. By December they have developed
this apparatus so that it can be used to photo-
graph, print and project motion pictures. First
commercial projection with the Cinemato-
graphe in December, is at the Grand Cafe,
Paris.
The Lumieres, on perfecting their machine,
send several cameramen to travel through
Europe photographing and screening motion
pictures, thus building up a library of moving
picture subjects. (The Lumiere machine es-
tablished the photographic rate of 16 images
a second, which was standard until sound
made it necessary to increase the speed.)
Meanwhile, Armat, following the partial
123
failure of his and Jenkins' Phantoscope, goes
on with projection experiments alone. Mid-
year he discovers the principle of the modern
projector, the movement which gives each
picture a period of rest and illumination in
excess of the period of movement from image
to image, and is able to show motion pictures
in Atlanta during September.
1 ftQfi Pressure being brought on Edison
w to provide a projector for his
Kinematograph subjects; he has little interest
in the proposition, but finally agrees to market
the Armat machine under the Edison name.
Device, renamed the Vitascope, has its first
public showing at Koster & Bial's Music Hall,
Herald Square, New York, on the night of
April 23.
Dickson, in the meantime, has left the Edison
fold and after a stay with the Lathams join3
E. B. Koopman, H. N. Marvin and Herman
Casler of the K.M.C.D. Syndicate to develop
the photographic side of the Mutoscope, a
card wheel peep-show, and the American
Biograph, a projector using wider film than
the Edison devices. First public projection of
the Biograph is at Hammerstein's Music Hall
in November.
In London, Robert W. Paul demonstrates a
projector at the Royal Institute on Feb. 28.
With projection comes censorship. Delorita's
"Passion Dance" is banned in Atlantic City,
N. J.
George Melies, French magician, builds a
studio near Paris. (The French hail Melies
as the creator of the motion picture art be-
cause of his use of makeup, stage settings and
artificial lighting, and because his films were
the first to attempt a real story.)
1 SWT Utilizing ,ne "Latham loop," a
method to supply slack film to
the intermittent motion of the camera, Enoch
Rector is able to photograph an 11,000 foot
wide film version of the Corbett-Fitzsimmons
fight at Carson City, Nev. — by far the longest
picture made.
In Pittsburgh, John P. Harris and Harry
Davis open the first "Nickelodeon."
Legal wars (that for years retarded motion
picture development) are started in December
with Edison's series of patent infringement
suits. His chief adversary is the American
Mutoscope and Biograph Co., with Wall Street
backing.
Coney Island the night of Nov. 3, using a
bakery of 400 arc lamps.
1 QOO Blackton. Smith and Rock incorpo-
rate Vitagraph with $6,000 capital.
First "Electric Theater," charging
10 cents admission, opened in Los
Angeles by Thomas L. Talley.
Melies produces "A Trip to the Moon," later
duped by many U. S. distributors.
1903 ^P t0 ,'1'S 'ime mo,ion P'c,ure audi-
ences have been satisfied with
practically anything that would move on a
screen, but are especially pleased with thrill
scenes. Edwin S. Porter, an Edison camera-
man, noticing this reaction decides to stage
pictures for the screen. His first attempt at
realistic story telling is "The Life of an Ameri-
can Fireman," an instantaneous success. Fol-
lowing comes "The Great Train Robbery," a
one-reeler with a sustained suspenseful plot.
Film is a sensation. (On it were built the
careers of many of today's motion picture
greats.)
1905 The Warner bro'ners< Harry Albert.
Sam and Jack, buy a projector and
a print of "The Great Train Robbery" and go
into the roadshow exhibition field.
19S6 firing of undependable sunlight,
Biograph abandons roof-top pro-
duction and moves to a studio, at 11 E. 14th
St.. equipped with Cooper-Hewitt mercury
tubes. Other producers soon followed suit.
Carl Laemmle opens his first theater, in
Chicago.
William Fox, in association with Sol Brill,
buys his first arcade and film theater.
£ Exterior shots for Selig's "The
Count of Monte Cristo" are shot in
Los Angeles — first Coast production.
D. W. Griffith turns to the screen from the
stage. (His developments in technique, while
with Biograph, include the close-up, flashback,
fade-out and dissolve.)
Essanay Film Manufacturing Co. organized
in Chicago by George K. Spoor and G. M.
Anderson.
Kalem formed by George Kleine, Samuel
Long and Frank Marion.
1 Rich G' Hollaman' of ,he Eden
10*70 jyjusee produces the first staged
motion picture. In an attempt to beat out
Klaw & Erlanger who have authentic shots
of the Horitz Passion Play, Hollaman stages a
synthetic version on the roof of Grand Central
Palace. Although the hoax is exposed. Holla-
man has produced the first fictionized picture.
I SfcQQ Motion picture photography with
artificial light demonstrated as Bio-
graph shoots the Jeffries-Sharkey fight at
1908 °n Dec' 18, the 11 year war be
tween Edison and Biograph comes
to an end with both companies in equal posi-
tions of leadership. To insure their control of
the industry, Edison and Biograph, with
George Kleine, Vitagraph, Lubin, Selig,
Essanay, Pathe, Kalem and Melies, form the
Motion Picture Patents Company and insti-
tute a system of cross-licensing.
Bison Life Motion Pictures formed by Adam
Kessel, Charles Bauman, Fred Balshafer and
Louis Burston.
125
A LEADING COWBOY STAR
IN ALL EXHIBITOR POLLS!
f
^\ TEX
RITTER
V,
r J
r
NOW STARRING IN
ROLL WAGONS ROLL
WESTBOUND STAGE
★
COMING ATTRACTIONS
"RHYTHM the RIO GRANDE"
"THE COLORADO TRAIL"
"RIDERS OF SUNDOWN"
"MAN FROM HELL'S RIVER"
"KID FROM PANHANDLE"
"REDSKIN TRAIL"
★
Produced by
EDWARD FINNEY
SIGN UP FOU THIslERIES AT YOUR NEAREST MONOGRAM
126
EXCHANGE
1909 Kinemacolor, first color motion pic-
ture process, is introduced in Lon-
don by G. A. Smith and Charles Urban, and
later shown in New York.
Mary Pickiord joins Biograph.
National Board of Censorship of Motion
Pictures (later National Board of Review)
formed by the People's Institute.
George Melies, French magician, uses mo-
tion pictures in his exhibition of magic in
"Gulliver's Travels" and "A Trip to the
Moon."
1 Q 1 A The General Film Co., an out-
** V growth of the Patents Co.. is
formed by Jeremiah J. Kennedy, representing
the Empire Trust Co., holder of Biograph
mortgage bonds, and soon has control of
most of the 100 exchanges in the U. S. and
Canada.
D. W. Griffith starts a policy of producing
in Los Angeles during the Eastern cold months.
Watterson R. Rothacker starts production
of industrial films in Chicago.
Thanhouser formed to produce in New
Rochelle.
American Pathe starts production in Bound
Brook. N. J.
1 Q| O John R. Freuler and Harry E. Aitken
form Mutual Film Corp., taking in
a number of independent exchanges.
Universal Film Manufacturing Co. formed
by Carl Laemmle and associates, and ac-
quires an exchange system.
These companies, along with William Fox
and others, are the leaders in a strong fight
against the "trust" — the Patents Co. First
signal victory of the independents is in the
decision of Fox vs. the "trust," in which an
injunction forcing the Patents Co. to give film
to the Fox exchange is granted.
Adolph Zukor, operating theaters in New
York, imports "Queen Elizabeth," a four-reel
picture starring Sarah Bernhardt. Outcome of
this move is the formation of Famous Players
Film Co., which includes in its personnel:
Zukor, Edwin S. Porter, Elek I. Ludvigh, Daniel
Frohman and Al Lichtman. Famous dis-
tributes "Queen Elizabeth" as a road show,
then on a state rights basis, and then goes
into production for itself. Patent Co. members
object to Famous' long featrues and the com-
pany is forced to go "independent."
1 Ql Q Box Office Attractions is formed by
William Fox as a national dis-
tributor.
George Kleine imports "Quo Vadis," an
eight-reeler, from Italy and plays it at the
N. Y. Astor at $1.00.
George Loane Tucker, with the assistance
of Jack Cohn, Herbert Brenon. King Baggot
and Bob Daily, produces "Traffic in Souls" —
first "sex" picture — for Universal. Film costs
$5,700 and grosses about $450,000.
Jesse L. Lasky Feature Play Co., capital
$26,500, formed by Arthur Friend. Samuel
Goldwyn and Cecil B. DeMille. First film
produced by the new company is "The Squaw
Man," starring Dustin Famum, and produced
at the famous Lasky barn (which still stands
on the Paramount Coast lot).
D. W. Griffith joins Mutual Film Corp. with
the understanding he can do some producing
on his own account.
|J)|4 Under the leadership of W. W.
Hodkinson, Western exchangeman,
Paramount Pictures Corp. is formed by Hod-
kinson. Hiram Abrams of Boston, William L.
Sherry of New York, Raymond Pawley of Phil-
adelphia and James Steele of Pittsburgh. Com-
pany to advance funds for production and re-
lease the product of Famous Players, Lasky
and Bosworth.
Zukor signs Mary Pickford to a $2,000 a
week contract to make pictures for Famous.
Strand Theater. New York, first "deluxe"
house, opened.
Mack Sennett produces "Tillie s Punctured
Romance," with Charlie Chaplin and Marie
Dressier — first feature length comedy.
1 Q 1 "The Birth of a Nation," produced
I .7 I .J by D. W. Griffith, opens in Los
Angeles under title "The Clansman"; March
3. the film opens at the Liberty. N. Y., at $2.00.
William Fox starts production of his own
pictures, releasing through his Box Office At-
tractions; one of his early productions is "A
Fool There Was," starring Theda Bara in her
first film.
Adolph Zukor. through Waybroad Film Co..
leases the Broadway Theater as a "show
window" for his Famous pictures.
World Film Corp. formed, headed by Ar-
thur Spiegel with Lewis J. Selznick, former
Universal executive, as vice-president and
general manager.
Metro Pictures Corp. formed with Richard
Rowland as president, Joseph Engel, treasurer
and Louis B. Mayer, secretary.
V. L. S. E. formed to distribute pictures of
Vitagraph, Lubin, Selig and Essanay.
Courts order the Patents Co. to desist from
"unlawful acts."
John R. Freuler succeeds H. E. Aitken as
president of Mutual; Aitken withdraws Re-
liance-Majestic Pictures (including D. W. Grif-
fith), while Kessel and Bauman and Keystone
are withdrawn from the company.
Triangle Film Corp. formed with D. W.
Griffith, Thomas Ince and Mack Sennett as
producers. One of the early Griffith pictures
for this connection is "The Lamb," starring
Douglas Fairbanks of the stage.
| Ql I* John R. Freuler. of Mutual, signs
****** Charlie Chaplin to a contract at
$10,000 a week, plus a bonus of $150,000, out-
bidding several other companies.
Hiram Abrams succeeds W. W. Hodkinson
as president of Paramount.
127
FEATURES
6 W. RAY JOHNSTON ANNIVERSARY
SPECIALS
12 SHOWMEN'S SUCCESS SERIES
12 BOX OFFICE ATTRACTIONS
8 TEX RITTER MUSICAL WESTERNS
8 JACK RANDALL ACTION WESTERNS
8 JOHN WAYNE WESTERNS (RE-ISSUES)
128
Zukor re-signs Mary Pickiord to a Famous
contract for two years, with a guarantee of
$1,040,000. plus a bonus up to $300,000 based
on picture profits.
Famous Players-Lasky Corp.. a merger of
Famous Players, Lasky Feature Play Co.. Bos-
worth. Morosco and Pallas, formed with
Adolph Zukor as president, Jesse L. Lasky,
producer and Samuel Goldwyn, Coast studio
manager.
Artcrait Pictures Corp. formed to distribute
the Mary Pickford productions, with Walter E.
Greene as president and Al Lichtman, general
manager.
Paramount Pictures Corp. acquired by Fa-
mous Players-Lasky.
Samuel Goldwyn resigns from Famous Play-
ers-Lasky to form Goldwyn Pictures Corp.
Lewis J. Selznick forms Clara Kimball Young
Film Corp. to produce, and Lewis J. Selznick
Enterprises, Inc., to distribute.
1 OJ "T Hodkinson forms the W. W. Hodkin-
son Corp. to release through Gen-
eral Film Co. exchanges.
Zukor buys a half interest in the Selznick
company and the name is changed to Select
Pictures Corp.
Myron Selznick, son of Lewis J., forms an-
other Selznick Pictures.
Zukor forms Realart Pictures Corp.
Artcraft Pictures signs John Emerson, Anita
Loos, Douglas Fairbanks, Thomas Ince, D. W.
Griffith and Mack Sennett — all of the fading
Triangle company.
John D. Williams and Thomas L. Talley form
First National, an exhibitor franchise company.
Charlie Chaplin, Mary Pickford, Norma and
Constance Talmadge and Thomas H. Ince
sign with the new outfit.
Famous Players-Lasky starts acquisition of
theaters to insure product outlets.
Active career of the Patents Co. ended with
a U. S. Supreme Court decision.
| 4| | Walter E. Greene becomes head of
Paramount with Al Lichtman as
general manager.
Famous Players-Lasky absorbs Paramount
and Artcraft.
First issue of Wid's Daily, (now FILM
DAILY) May 8.
Robertson-Cole Co., exporters, to go into
production.
Future Hodkinson productions to be released
through Pathe.
Hiram Abrams and B. P. Schulberg resign
from Paramount.
1Q1Q United Artists Corp. formed by
Douglas Fairbanks, Mary Pickford,
Charlie Chaplin and D. W. Griffith. Oscar
Price is president, and William G. McAdoo,
general counsel.
D. W. Griffith signs three-picture pact with
First National.
Vitagraph secures Kalem and Lubin proper-
ties.
William R. Hearst forms Cosmopolitan Pro-
ductions; to release through Paramount.
Famous Players-Lasky to build studio and
laboratory in Astoria, L. I.
Lewis J. Selznick buys Zukor's interest in
Select.
Petition in bankruptcy filed against General
Film Co.; company to be liquidated.
Goldwyn buys Triangle studio in Culver
City.
Fox to build four story studio in New York.
Louis B. Mayer forms $5,000,000 production
concern in Los Angeles.
Famous Players-Lasky takes over Charles
Frohman, Inc.
Fox enters competitive field for theaters and
circuits.
Famous Players-Lasky buys Putnam Bldg.
as site for home offices and a theater.
Educational reorganizes and forms a $2,500.-
000 company with Hudson's Bay Co. as
backer.
Loew's planning $5,000,000 theater expan-
sion.
Robertson-Cole to distribute through own
exchanges.
Selznick secures control of World Film Co.
and forms Republic Pictures with the World
exchanges.
Capitol Theater, New York, opened.
Pathe to act as releasing agent for Associ-
ated Exhibitors, new cooperative organization.
Associated First National Pictures, capital
$6,000,000 and Associated First National The-
aters, capital $1,000,000 are incorporated.
1 Marcus Loew buys control of Metro
Pictures Corp.
Sydney Cohen, named president of the new-
ly formed Motion Picture Theater Owners of
America, with James J. Walker as counsel.
Robertson-Cole takes over Hallmark ex-
changes.
National Screen Service formed to produce
trailers; has exclusive contract with pro-
ducers.
Fox moves to new building on 55th Street
and Tenth Avenue, N. Y. C.
Educational opens exchanges in 26 key
cities.
Carl Laemmle and Robert H. Cochrane buy
out P. A. Powers' interest in Universal.
Goldwyn Pictures buys interest in N. Y.
Capitol; S. L. "Roxy" Rothafel to be in charge.
Selznick Enterprises incorporated with capi-
tal of $120,000,000.
C. B. C. Film Sales Co. formed by Jack and
Harry Cohn and Joe Brandt.
lQOl Al Lichtman resigns as general
manager of distribution for Famous
Players and is succeeded by S. R. Kent.
Associated Exhibitors reorganized with
$3,000,000 capital; to distribute Pathe features
129
SKOURAS THEATERS
CORPORATION
1501 Broadway New York City
130
while Pathe concentrates on short subject dis-
tribution.
Robertson Cole reorganizes and merges all
interests in R-C Pictures Corp.
Hodkinson and Pathe part; former to have
own exchanges.
Federal Trade Commission files formal com-
plaint against Famous PlayersLasky and
others, charging violation of the Sherman and
Clayton acts.
Richard A. Rowland resigns as president of
Metro.
First FILM DAILY Golf Tournament held at
Tuckahoe. N. Y.
1 Q22 Hays resigns as Postmaster
General to organize the Motion Pic-
ture Producers and Distributors of America.
Realart absorbed in Famous Players-Lasky.
P. A. Powers becomes managing director of
R-C Pictures, and Joseph I. Schnitzer, v-p and
general manager.
F. J. Godsol succeeds Samuel Goldwyn as
president of Goldwyn Pictures; latter remains
as a company director.
Film Booking Offices of America to be new
name of R-C Distributing Corp.
Technicolor Motion Picture Corp. demon-
strates new color process; Technicolor, Inc.
stock listed on N. Y. Curb.
DuPonts to start raw film manufacturing
company.
Sol Lesser and associates form Principal
Pictures.
J. D. Williams resigns as general manager
of First National and is succeeded by Richard
A. Rowland.
Famous Players takes over interest in Black
New England circuit.
1 Q2^$ Famous Players in $5,700,000 deal
to take over S. A. Lynch Southern
theater circuit.
Joseph M. Schenck buys 20 per cent interest
in West Coast Theaters which recently bought
the T & D circuit. First National franchises in
Northern California and New York, and the
Educational franchise.
Irving Thalberg leaves Universal for a vice-
presidency in Louis B. Mayer productions.
Future Hearst Cosmopolitan productions to
be distributed by Goldwyn Pictures.
Fox plans S2.000.000 Coast studio.
Lewis J. Selznick out of Selznick company as
court approves reorganization after bank-
ruptcy proceedings. New company, Selznick
Distributing Corp., not to produce.
Marcus Loew forms vaudeville booking
circuit.
Warner Bros, forms new Delaware corpora-
tion.
David O. Selznick, son of Lewis J., plans
to produce.
Samuel Goldwyn to release through First
National.
F. I. L. M. Clubs nationalized to function
with new arbitration system.
Principal Pictures buys out West Coast The-
aters interest in Principal.
Balaban & Katz form S9, 620. 000 Delaware
corporation.
1924 ^oew s- 'nc- in control of new com-
pany, Metro-Goldwyn, formed from
a merger of the Goldwyn, Metro and Louis B.
Mayer companies.
C. B. C. name changed to Columbia Pictures
Corp.
Rayart formed by W. Ray Johnston.
Lee De Forest makes a two-reel talking pic-
ture of Abraham Lincoln, highlighting the
Gettysburg address.
P. A. Powers and Oscar A. Price purchase
Triangle assets, including about 2,000 stories,
from Frank W. Severn.
Consolidated Film Industries, Inc. formed
in merger of Republic, Erbograph and Crafts-
men laboratories; later takes over Standard
plant in Los Angeles.
Stanley Company of America opens offices
in New York, reported ambitious to develop
a national circuit.
Admission tax lifted on tickets under 50
cents.
Hodkinson changes name to Producers Dis-
tributing Corp.
Walter Wanger becomes general manager
of Famous Players production.
Joseph M. Schenck sells his interest in West
Coast Theaters.
UFA, of Germany, opens office in New York.
Selznick Distributing Corp., in involuntary
bankruptcy, ordered to cease business; assets
bought by Universal.
Joseph M. Schenck joins United Artists.
I 5125 Molion Picture Relief Fund char-
tered in Hollywood.
Cecil B. DeMille leaves Paramount and joins
Producers Distributing Corp.; in return for his
interest in the Ince studio, DeMille is to re-
ceive a block of PDC common stock.
Universal adds Sparks, Schine and Hostet-
tler circuits to its growing circuit.
A. H. Blank circuit becomes affiliated with
Balaban & Katz; over 100 houses involved.
Educational buys Principal studio from Sol
Lesser.
James R. Grainger leaves M-G to join Fox
as sales manager.
Warner Bros, buys Vitagraph. including 50
exchanges, two studios, stories and contracts.
Famous Players takes over Gordon circuit
of 38 houses; First National franchise not in-
cluded.
Samuel Goldwyn joins United Artists.
Fox buys West Coast circuit interest; Sol
Lesser still in control.
B. P. Schulberg joins Paramount, taking with
him Clara Bow and other players.
Fox organizes S20. 000.000 company to han-
dle theater expansion.
International Projector Corp. takes over Pre-
131
Established 1898
WILLIAM MORRIS AGENCY
INC.
"The Agency of Show Business!"
£incere representation is the first principle of the Agency — a
principle established by the founder, WILLIAM MORRIS
— a principle to which the entire organization has always
adhered.
£ntertainment is one field in which human relationship is an
important factor, personal integrity is essential and a
mutual respect for judgment is paramount in successful
operation.
|^adio, motion pictures and television may have altered the frame-
work of the amusement structure, but the principles of
entertainment remain the same, as does the relation be-
tween Artist and Agent.
yariety is the essence of showmanship — on the air — on the
screen — on the stage. Knowledge born of long experience
enables the Agency to provide intelligent guidance for the
careers of its Artists.
|n more than forty years the WILLIAM MORRIS AGENCY
has developed more talent from novice to established star
than any other agency in show business, and its trade-mark
has become a symbol of service.
£afes, hotels, clubs and ballrooms, which for years have been
supplied with singing, dancing and comedy talent by the
Agency, now obtain their music as well from an impressive
list of name orchestras.
Cvery form of public amusement enterprise, including executives,
sponsors, advertising directors and performers, is encom-
passed in the far-reaching activities of the oldest agency
in the field.
NEW YORK LONDON CHICAGO HOLLYWOOD
132
cision Machise Co., Nicholas Power Co. and
Acme Picture Projector Corp.
Paramount buys Balaban & Katz and organ-
izes Publix Theaters.
1926 '* P* Kennedy talces control of
P. A. Powers takes over old Selig studio
for Associated Exhibitors.
First National to build a studio in Burbank,
Calif.
Sol Lesser's 30 per cent interest in West
Coast Theaters purchased by Richard Hoyt
Syndicate. Hayden, Stone & Co.
Joseph "Danny" Dannenberg. editor of THE
FILM DAILY, dies.
Bond issue of $6,000,000 to finance new B. F.
Keith Corp. quickly subscribed.
Consolidated takes over Rothacker labora-
tory in Chicago.
Warner Bros, and Western Electric develop
Vitaphone.
Stanley Co. acquires $80,000,000 in theater
properties, including Mark Strand, Fabian, and
Rowland & Clark circuits.
Keith acquires 50 per cent interest in Cinema
Corp. of America which owns PDC.
Pathe takes over distribution of Associated
Exhibitors' product.
Production started at new Du-Pont-Pathe
Film Manufacturing Corp. plant.
Warner Bros, reveals Vitaphone at show-
ing of "Don Juan" at the Warner Theater,
N. Y.
Keith-Albee interests to spend $20,000,000
on new houses; $6,000,000 issue listed on
Stock Exchange.
RCA perfecting a sound device.
Fox-Case Corp. to market Movietone sound
device.
National Theater Supply Co. to consolidate
50 stores into 32 branches.
Blair & Co. purchases control of Pathe.
Hiram Abrams, UA president, dies.
Paramount Theater, N. Y., opened.
Jules E. Mastbaum, president of Stanley
Co., dies.
United Artists Theater Circuit formed.
Columbia buys its own studio for future
production.
1927 ^ox-Case and Vitaphone in cross-
licensing agreement.
Stanley Co. and West Coast Theaters secure
control of First National.
Fanchon & Marco plans national presenta-
tion circuit.
Pathe and PDC amalgamated with J. J.
Murdock, president, and Elmer Pearson and
John C. Flinn, vice-presidents.
Sol Lesser returns to the production field.
Opposition of Mary Pickford and Douglas
Fairbanks to merger of UA and M-G-M termi-
nates negotiations.
Paramount-Famous Lasky Corp., new name
of Famous Players.
Joseph M. Schenck elected president of
United Artists.
Warner Bros, buys out Walter J. Rich's
interest in Vitaphone Corp.; control now 100
per cent.
Fox to use Movietone in newsreel.
Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences
formed in Hollywood.
Federal Trade Commission declares block
booking illegal in Famous Players case.
Marcus Loew dies.
Sam Warner dies.
Commissioner Abram F. Myers presides at
Federal Trade Commission-Trade Practice
Conferences.
Brookhart anti-block booking bill introduced
in Senate.
"The Jazz Singer," starring Al Jolson singing
and speaking one line of dialogue, and pro-
duced by Warner Bros., premieres at the
Warner, N. Y., Oct. 6 and is a sensational
success all over the country.
Roxy Theater, seating 6,200, opened in
New York.
1928 RCA General Eleclric ana West-
inghouse acquire interest in FBO.
Fox takes control of Wesco Holding Co.
(West Coast Theaters) capital stock, giving
him control of 300 theaters, and, with the
Stanley Co., control of First National.
Conspiracy charged by D of J in suit against
distributors, MPPDA and Film Boards of Trade.
Keith-Albee-Orpheum buys into FBO.
Paramount, M-G-M and United Artists li-
censed for Western Electric sound.
Western Electric concedes exhibs may use
sound equipment interchangeably; RCA and
Western Electric using same width sound
track.
Richard A. Rowland retires from First Na-
tional.
Warner Bros, buys Stanley Co. control, in-
cluding interest in First National; later buys
19.000 FN shares at $200 a share.
RCA buys control of Keith-Albee-Orpheum
and FBO; J. P. Kennedy retires under deal.
Radio-Keith-Orpheum Corp. name of new
company.
Abram F. Myers, former Trade Commis-
sioner, heads Allied States as organization
movement gains impetus.
1 Fox Theaters Corp. buys control of
Loew's, Inc., M-G-M, paying $125
a share to edge out Warners strong competi-
tion.
Fox drops production of silent films.
While admitting the Standard Exhibition
Contract was "fair," Federal Judge T. J.
Thacher in a U. S. District Court decision,
declared that the compulsory arbitration sec-
tion violated the Sherman anti-trust law; Judge
Thacher upheld the credit system in another
decision in the D of J suits.
Warner Bros, buys Fox holdings in First
National.
Columbia completes own exchange setup.
133
A COMPLETE LABORATORY SERVICE
BOTH IN
16 M.M. AND 35 M.M.
FOR THE DISCRIMINATING BUYER OF
QUALITY PRODUCT
134
1 Q^lft William Fox retires from Fox Film
Corp. and Fox Theaters Corp.
Warner Bros.-First National swing to sound-
on-film instead of discs; companies combined
with production to be centered at the Bur-
bank plant.
Supreme Court upholds Thacher decision
on compulsory arbitration; reverses him on
credit system.
RKO-Pathe merger on way with signing of
preliminary papers.
Monogram Pictures formed by W. Ray
Johnston.
1Q91 Fox shares in Loew's, Inc. trans-
ferred to Film Securities Corp.
RKO buys Pathe assets; exchange systems
consolidated.
1 Q^12 Jesse Lasky leaves Paramount.
Joe Brandt retires from Columbia.
Radio City Music Hall and Center theaters
opened.
I QQQ Industry goes under NRA code.
Receivers appointed for Paramount-
Publix, RKO and Fox Theaters.
Darryl F. Zanuck resigns from Warner
Bros., and. with Joseph M. Schenck. forms
20th Century Pictures, releasing through
United Artists.
JQQ^ William Fox upheld on Tri-Ergon
sound patents; industry awaits Su-
preme Court ruling.
Legion of Decency campaign results in Pro-
duction Code Administration, headed by Jo-
seph I. Breen.
Gaumont British establishes national sales
organization in U. S.
Hearst moves Cosmopolitan from M-G-M to
Warner Bros.
1 20th Century and Fox merged
with Joseph M. Schenck resigning
from UA to become chairman of 20th Century-
Fox Film Corp. board, and Darryl F. Zanuck
becoming production chief.
Adolph Zukor becomes chairman of Para-
mount board as John E. Otterson is made
president.
Atlas Corp. buys into RKO.
NRA held unconstitutional by Supreme
Court.
Supreme Court finds Fox Tri-Ergon patents
invalid.
Republic Pictures formed by Consolidated
Film Industries, with W. Ray Johnston as
president and the Monogram exchanges as
the distribution outlet.
Paramount reorganization is approved by
court.
1 Q^ifi Barney Balaban becomes president
of Paramount.
Irving Thalberg dies.
Group, headed by J. Cheever Cowdin, buys
Universal control from Carl Laemmle.
Samuel L. "Roxy" Rothafel dies.
W. Ray Johnston resigns from Republic to
revive Monogram Pictures.
The 2000-foot reel is adopted.
Grand National Films formed under Pathe
auspices.
1 Q^?7 Nathan J. Blumberg becomes pres-
1 1?0 § iden, oi Universai.
M. H. Aylesworth resigns from RKO board:
Leo Spitz is successor.
1 Q^S5fc Major distributors move to effect
trade reforms through negotiations
with exhibitor groups.
Industry in publicity campaign with Motion
Pictures Greatest Year.
D of J files anti-trust action in N. Y., against
majors; suit asks trade reforms, divorcement
of theaters.
Dr. A. H. Gianini resigns as UA president;
Murray Silverstone becomes top executive.
George J. Schaefer resigns from UA to be-
come president of RKO Radio.
Educational and Grand National merged.
James R. Grainger becomes president of
Republic.
1939 Majors quit Italy as Fascist decree
establishing distribution monopoly
becomes operative.
Memorandum decision okays RKO's reor-
ganization plan.
Paramount owns all of Allan B. DuMont
Laboratories outstanding B Stock, prospectus
reveals.
North Dakota Governor signs theater di-
vorcement repeal bill.
Joe Brandt, co-founder of Columbia, dies.
George Schaefer becomes RKO president.
Warner Bros, shifts Eastern production to
the Coasts.
RCA-NBC give U. S. television industry its
send-off.
Baird large screen television demonstrated
in New York.
Will H. Hays announces $10,000,000 in
shorts are available for school use.
Frank Capra announces new production
company with Robert Riskin as associate.
Senate passes Neely anti-block booking
measure.
U. S. producers to keep present product
schedules despite war.
Carl Laemmle, founder of Universal, dies.
Limited commercial television recommended
by FCC.
Minimum 10 per cent profit pledge linked
with M-G-M's 70 per cent terms for "Gone
With the Wind."
Douglas Fairbanks, Sr., dies.
Equity suit trial set ior May I, 1940.
Samuel Goldwyn notifies United Artists his
contract is terminated.
Trade reforms, evolved through distributor-
exhibitor consultation, are doomed by D of J
warning that the proposed Code is an in-
vitation to further Government litigation.
135
The Only Show
Paper In The World
CJovering All Of
The Show Business
Of The World—
Published Weekly In New York
Internationally Circulated
Published Daily
In Hollywood
136
137
anniversary
ROSS FEDERAL SERVICE, INC
18 EAST 48TH STREET, NEW YORK
FEATURE
RELEASES
CREDITS
Production Credits on American and Foreign-made
Motion Pictures Released During the Past Year
Other title lists in this volume are: A list of productions released
since 1915; a separate list of foreign films during 1939, and a list
of serials released since 1920.
A Brivele der Mamen (Yiddish)
DISTRIBUTOR: Sphinx Films; RUNNING
TIME: 106 mins.; REVIEWED: 9-21-39.
CAST: Lucy Gehrman, Max Bozyk, Alexander
Stein: PRODUCER: Joseph Green; DIRECTOR:
Joseph Green.
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, The
DISTRIBUTOR: Loew s. Inc.: RUNNING TIME:
90 mins.: REVIEWED: 2-17-39 (Reviewed as
"Huckleberry Finn"); RELEASED: 2-10-39.
CAST: Mickey Rooney, Walter Connolly. Wil-
liam Frawley, Rex Ingram, Lynne Carver, Jo Ann
Sayers. Minor Watson, Elizabeth Risdon. Victor
Kilian. Clara Blandick.
PRODUCER: Joseph Mankiewicz; DIRECTOR:
Richard Thorpe: AUTHOR: Mark Twain; SCREEN-
PLAY: Huso Butler: CAMERAMAN: John Seitz;
EDITOR: Frank E. Hull.
Adventures of Sherlock Holmes. The
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century-Fox; RUNNING
TIME: 85 mins.; REVIEWED: 8-28-39: RE
LEASED: 9-1-39.
CAST: Basil Rathbone. Nisei Bruce. Ida Lu-
pino, Alan Marshall. Terry Kilhurn, George Zucco.
Henry Stephenson. E. E. Clive, Arthur Hohl, May
Beatty. Peter Wiles, Mary Gordon. Holmes Her-
bert, George Regas, Mary Forbes, Frank Dawson.
William Austin. Anthony Kemble Cooper.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Gene Markey: DI-
RECTOR: Alfred Werker: ART DIRECTORS:
Richard Day. Hans Peters: MUSICAL DIRECTOR:
Cyril J. Moekridge; CAMERAMAN: Leon Sham-
roy; EDITOR: Robert Bischoff.
Affair Lafont, The (French)
DISTRIBUTOR: Transatlantic Films: RUN-
NING TIME: 84 mins.; REVIEWED: 10 24-39;
Produced in France.
CAST: Corinne Luchaire, Annie Deceits. Ray-
mond Rouleau: DIRECTOR: Leonid Moguy.
Alexander Nevsky (Russian)
DISTRIBUTOR: Amkino; RUNNING TIME:
92 mins.; REVIEWED: 3-29-39: Produced in Rus-
sia.
CAST: Nikolai Cherkassov, N. P. Okhlopkov, A.
L. Abrikossov; DIRECTORS: Sergei Eisenstein.
D. I. Vassiliev.
Allegheny Uprising
DISTRIBUTOR: RKO Radio; RUNNING TIME:
81 mins.; REVIEWED: 10-24-39: RELEASED:
11-10-39.
CAST: Claire Trevor, John Wayne. George San-
ders, Brian Donlevy. Wilfrid Lawson. Robert Bar-
rat. John F. Hamilton. Moroni Olsen. Eddie
Qnillan, Chill Wills. Ian Wolfe. Wallis Clark, Monte
Montague. Olaf Hytten, Eddie Waller, Clay Clement.
PRODUCER: P. J. Wolfson: DIRECTOR: Wil-
liam A. Switer; AUTHOR: Neil H. Swanson (from
"The First Rebel"); SCREENPLAY: P. J. Wolf-
son; ART DIRECTOR: Van Nest Polglase; DANCE
DIRECTOR: David Robel: MUSICAL DIRECTOR:
Anthony Collins; CAMERAMAN: Nicholas Mu-
suraca; EDITOR: George Crone.
Allergi Masnadieri (Italian)
DISTRIBUTOR: Pullini Films; RUNNING TIME:
72 mins.; REVIEWED: 10-20-39; Produced in
Italy.
CAST: Assia Noris, Nimo d'Oro, C. Pilioot; DI-
RECTOR: Marco Elter.
Amazing Mr. Williams, The
DISTRIBUTOR: Columbia: RUNNING TIME.
80 mins.; REVIEWED: 11-22-39: RELEASED:
11-23-39.
139
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
CAST: Melvyn Douglas, Joan Blondell, Clarence
Kolb. Ruth Donnelly, Edward S. Borphy, Donald
MacBride. Don Beddoe, Jonathan Hale, John
Wray.
PRODUCER: Everett Riskin; DIRECTOR:
Alexander Hall: AUTHOR: Sy Bartlett: SCREEN-
PLAY: Dwight Taylor, Sy Bartlett, Richard Mai-
baum: ART DIRECTOR: Lionel Banks; MUSI-
CAL DIRECTOR: M. W. Stoloff: CAMERAMAN:
Arthur Todd: EDITOR: Viola Lawrence.
Ambush
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount: RUNNING TIME:
62 mins.; REVIEWED: 1-18-39; RELEASED:
1-20-39.
CAST: Lloyd Nolan. Gladys Swarthout, Ernest
Truex, Broderick Crawford, Hartley Tufts, Wil-
liam Henry. William Frawley, Rufe Davis, Ray-
mond Hatton. Antonio Moreno. Harry Fleischmann.
Clem Bevans. Polly Moran, Wade Boteler, Robert
Greig.
DIRECTOR: Kurt Neumann: AUTHOR: Robert
Ray: SCREENPLAY: Laura and S. J. Perelman:
CAMERAMAN: William Mellor; EDITOR: Stuart
Gilmore.
Andy Hardy Gets Spring Fever
DISTRIBUTOR: Loew's. Inc.; RUNNING TIME:
85 mins.: REVIEWED: 7-12-39: RELEASED:
7- 21-39.
CAST: Lewis Stone. Mickey Rooney, Cecelia
Parker. Fay Holden. Ann Rutherford. Sara Haden.
Helen Gilbert. Terry Kilburn. John T. Murray,
George Breakston. Charley Peck. Sidney Miller.
Addiscn Richards. Olaf Hytten. Erville Alderson.
Robert Kent.
DIRECTOR: W. S. Van Dyke. II; SCREEN-
PLAY: Kay Van Riper: CAMERAMAN: Lester
White: EDITOR: Ben Lewis.
Angels Wash Their Faces
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners: RUNNING TIME:
76 mins.; REVIEWED: 9-8-39; RELEASED:
8- 26-39.
CAST: Ann Sheridan. Billy Halop. Bernard
Punsley. Leo Gorcey, Huntz Hall, Gabriel Dell.
Bobby Jordan, Ronald Reagan, Bonita Granville.
Frankie Thomas, Henry O'Neill, Eduardo Cianelli.
Berton Churchill, Bernard Nedell. Dick Rush, Jackie
Searl. Margaret Hamilton, Marjorie Main. Minor
Watson. Cyrus Kendall. Grady Sutton. Aldrich
Bowker, Robert Strange, Egon Brecher. Sarah
Padden.
DIRECTOR: Ray Enright: AUTHOR: Jonathan
Finn: SCREENPLAY: Michael Fessier, Niven
Busch. Robert Buckner: CAMERAMAN: Arthur
L. Todd: Editor: James Gibbon.
Another Thin Man
DISTRIBUTOR: Loew's. Inc.; RUNNING TIME:
105 mins.; REVIEWED: 11-14-39: RELEASED:
11-17-39.
CAST: William Powell, Myrna Loy, Virginia
Grey. Otto Kruger, C. Aubrey Smith, Ruth Hussey,
Nat Pendleton, Patric Knowles. Tom Neal. Phyllis
Gordon. Sheldon Leonard. Don Costello. Harry
Bellaver. William A. Poulsen, Muriel Hutchinson.
Abner Biberman. Marjorie Main, Asta, Renee and
Stella.
PRODUCER: Hunt Stromberg; DIRECTOR: W.
S. Van Dyke, H; AUTHOR: Dashiell Hammett:
SCREENPLAY: Frances Goodrich, Albert Hackett:
ART DIRECTOR: Cedric Gibbons: MUSICAL
SCORE: Edward Ward: CAMERAMEN: Oliver T.
Marsh. William Daniels; EDITOR: Frederick Y.
Smith.
Arizona Kid, The
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic: RUNNING TIME :
61 mins.: REVIEWED: 10-3-39; RELEASED:
9-29-39.
CAST: Roy Rogers. George "Gabby" Hayee.
Stuart Hamblen. David Kerwin. Dorothy Sebastian.
Sally March. Earl Dwire. Peter Fargo, Fred Burns.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Joseph Kane; DIREC-
TOR: Joseph Kane; AUTHOR: Luci Ward;
SCREENPLAY: Luci Ward. Gerald Geraghty;
CAMERAMAN: William Nobles; EDITOR: Lester
Orlebeck.
Arrest Bulldog Drummond
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount; RUNNING TTME:
57 mins.: REVIEWED: 1-17-39.
CAST: John Howard, Heather Angel, H. B.
Warner. Reginald Denny. E. E. Clive, Jean Fen-
wick. ZefRe Tilbury, George Zucco, Leonard Mudie,
Evan Thomas. Clyde Cook. George Regas. Neil
Fitzgerald, Claude Allister, John Sutton, Ferdinand
Munier, John Rogers, Frank Baker, John David-
son.
DIRECTOR: James Hogan: AUTHOR: H. C.
"Sapper" McNeile: SCREENPLAY: Stuart Pal-
mer; ART DIRECTORS: Hans Dreier, Franz
Bachelin: CAMERAMAN: Ted Tetzlalf: EDITOR:
Stewart Gilmore.
At the Circus
DISTRIBUTOR: Loew's. Inc.; RUNNING TIME:
87 mins.: REVIEWED: 11-17-39: RELEASED:
10-20-39.
CAST: Groucho. Chico and Harpo Marx. Mar-
garet Dumont. Florence Rice. Kenny Baker. Eve
Arden. Nat Pendleton. Fritz Feld. James Burke.
Jerry Marenghi. Barnett Parker.
PRODUCER: Mervyn LeRoy: DIRECTOR: Ed-
ward Buzzell: SCREENPLAY: Irving Brecher:
CAMERAMAN: Leonard M. Smith; EDITOR: Wil-
liam H. Terhune.
Avec Le Souriere (French)
(With a Smile)
DISTRIBUTOR: Malmar Pictures: RUNNING
TIME: 79 mins.; REVIEWED: 2-9-39; Produced
in France.
CAST: Maurice Chevalier, Andre Lefaur. Marie
Glory; DIRECTOR: Maurice Tourneur.
Babes in Arms
DISTRIBUTOR: Loew's, Inc.: RUNNING TIME :
96 mins.; REVIEWED: 9-19-39: RELEASED:
10-13-39.
CAST: Mickey Rooney, Judy Garland, Charles
Winninger, Guy Kibbee, June Pressor, Grace Hayes,
Betty Jaynes, Douglas MePhail, Rand Books, Leni
Lynn, John Sheffield, Henry Hull, Barnett Parker,
Ann Shoemaker. Margaret Hamilton, Joseph Cre-
han, George McKay, Henry Roquemore, Lelah
Tyler.
PRODUCER: Arthur Freed; DIRECTOR: Busby
Berkeley: AUTHORS: Richard Rodgrers. Lorentz
Hart; SCREENPLAY: Jack McGowan, Kay Van
Riper; MUSICAL DIRECTOR: George Stoll; ART
DIRECTOR: Cedric Gibbons; CAMERAMAN: Ray
June; EDITOR: Frank Sullivan.
Bachelor Mother
DISTRIBUTOR: RKO Radio; RUNNING TIME:
81 mins.; REVIEWED: 7-3-39; RELEASED:
8-4-39,
CAST: Ginger Rogers, David Niven, Charles
Coburn, Frank Albertson, E. E. Clive, Elbert
Coplen, Jr., Ferike Boros, Ernest Truex, Leon-
ard Penn, Paul Stanton, Gerald Oliver-Smith,
Leona Roberts, Donnie Moore, June Wilkins.
Frank M. Thomas, Edna Holland.
PRODUCER: B. G. DeSylva; DIRECTOR: Gar-
son Kanin; AUTHOR: Felix Jackson; SCREEN-
PLAY: Norman Krasna; CAMERAMAN: Robert
de Grasse; EDITORS: Henry Berman, Robert Wiss.
Back Door to Heaven
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount; RUNNING TIME:
85 mins.: REVIEWED:: 4-12-39; RELEASED:
4-21-39.
CAST: Wallace Ford, Aline McMahon, Stuart
Erwin, Patricia Ellis. Bert Frohman, Kent Smith,
Bruce Evans, George Lewis, Doug McMullen,
Helen Christian, Robert Vivian, Hugh Cameron,
Iris Adrian, Georgette Harvey, Jimmy Lyond,
Anita Magee, William Harrigan, Jane Seymour,
Robert Wildhack, Billy Redfield, Kenneth LeRoy,
Raymond Roe, Al Webster, Joe Garry.
PRODUCER: William K. Howard: ASSOCIATE
PRODUCER: Johnnie Walker; DIRECTOR: Wil-
liam K. Howard; ATHOR: William K. Howard:
SCREENPLAY: John Bright. Robert Tasker;
ART DIRECTORS :Gordon Wiles, William Saulter;
CAMERAMEN: Hal Mohr, Bill Kelly; EDITOR:
Jack Murray.
Bad Boy
DISTRIBUTOR: Gateway Productions: RE-
VIEWED: 7-10-39.
CAST: Johnny Downs, Rosalind Keith, Helen
MacKellar, James Robbins, Holmes Herbert, Matt
Moore. Bobby Clark, Jr., Clem Wileneheck, Spen-
cer Williams, Jr., Clarence Brooks.
DIRECTOR: Herbert Meyer; AUTHOR: Richard
C. Kahn; SCREENPLAY: Richard C. Kahn; CAM-
ERAMAN: Jack Greenhalgh.
Bad Lands
DISTRIBUTOR: RKO Radio; RUNNING TIME:
70 mins.: REVIEWED: 8-28-39; RELEASED-
8-28-39.
CAST: Robert Barrat, Addison Richards. Andy
Clyde, Robert Coote. Guinn Williams, Frances
Ford, Noah Beery, Jr., Paul Hurst, Francis
McDonald, Jack Payne.
PRODUCER: Robert Sisk; DIRECTOR: Lew
Landers; AUTHOR: Clarence Upson Young;
SCREENPLAY: Clarence Upson Young: CAM-
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
ERAMAN: Frank Redman; EDITOR: George
Hively.
Bad Little Angel
DISTRIBUTOR: Loew's, Inc.; RUNNING TIME:
77 mins.: REVIEWED: 11-14-39; RELEASED:
10-27-39.
CAST: Virginia Weidler. Gene Reynolds. Guy
Kibbee, Ian Hunter. Elizabeth Patterson. Reginald
Owen. Henry Hull, Lois Wilson.
PRODUCER: Albert E. Levoy; DIRECTOR:
William Thiele; AUTHOR: Margaret Turnbull
(from "Looking After Sandy"): SCREENPLAY:
Dorothy Yost: ART DIRECTOR: Cedric Gibbons:
MUSICAL SCORE: Edward Ward: CAMERAMAN:
John Seitz; EDITOR: Frank Sullivan.
Balalaika
DISTRIBUTOR: Loew's, Inc.; RUNNING TIME:
102 mins.; REVIEWED: 12-15-39; RELEASED:
12-29-39.
CAST: Nelson Eddy, Ilona Massey, Charles
Ruggles, Frank Morgan, Joyce Compton, Walter
Woolf King, Lionel Atwill. C. Aubrey Smith, Philip
Terry, Frederic Worlock, Abner Biberman. Arthur
W. Cernitz, Roland Varno. George Tobias, Paul
Sutton. Willy Costello, Paul Irving, Mildred Shay.
Alma Kruger, Zeffie Tilbury.
PRODUCER: Lawrence Weingarten; DIREC-
TOR: Reinhold Schunzel; AUTHORS: Eric Wasch-
witz. George Posford. Bernard Grun; SCREEN
PLAY: Leon Gordon, Charles Bennett, Jacques
Deval: CAMERAMEN: Joseph Ruttenberg, Karl
Freund: EDITOR: George Boemler.
Baldevins Brollop (Swedish)
(Baldevin's Wedding)
DISTRIBUTOR: Scandinavian Talking Pictures;
REVIEWED: 1-23-39: Produced in Sweden.
CAST: Edvard Persson, Arthur Fischer, Dag-
mar Ebbesen; DIRECTOR: Emil A. Pehrson.
Barricade
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century-Fox; RUNNING
TIME: 71 mins.; REVIEWED: 12-14-39.
CAST: Alice Faye, Warner Baxter, Charles Win-
ninger, Arthur Treacher. Keye Luke, Willie Fung.
Doris Lloyd, Moroni Olsen, Eily Malyon, Joan
Carol, Loenid Snegoff, Philip Ahn, Jonathan Hale.
Harry Hayden.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Edward Kaufman:
DIRECTOR: Gregory Ratoff; AUTHOR: Granville
Walker; SCREENPLAY: Granville Walker: CAM-
ERAMAN: Karl Freund: EDITOR: Jack Dennis.
Beau Geste
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount; RUNNING TIME:
120 mins.: REVIEWED: 7-24-39: RELEASED-
7-24-39.
CAST: Gary Cooper. Ray Milland, Robert Pres-
ton, Brian Donlevy, Susan Hayward, J. Carrol
Naish, Albert Dekker, Broderick Crawford, Charles
Barton, James Stephenson, Heather Thatcher, G.
P. Huntley, Jr., James Burke, Arthur Aylesworth,
Harry Woods, Harold Huber, Stanley Andrews,
Donald O'Connor, Billy Cook, Martin Spellman,
141
HARRY SKERM
ANNC
Next Season s P
THE PARSON
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And I
"THE Rl
A £i*p&i. Special
142
I PRODUCTIONS
luction Schedule
1CASSIDY"
f *
F PANAMINT"
STRIP"
IND-UP"
M A Qlecd GaAi
143
A
LARRY DARMOUR
HOLLYWOOD, CALIF.
T
144
David Holt, Ann Gillis, Harvey Stephens, Henry
Branden, Barry Macollum, Ronnie Rondell.
PRODUCER: William A. Wellman: DIRECTOR:
William A. Wellman; AUTHOR: Percival Chris-
topher Wren; SCREENPLAY: David Carson; ART
DIRECTORS: Hans Dreier, Robert Odell; MUSICAL,
SCORE: Alfred Newman; CAMERAMAN: Theo-
dor Sparkuhl; EDITOR: Thomas Scott.
Beauty for the Asking
DISTRIBUTOR: RKO Radio; RUNNING TIME:
68 mins.: REVIEWED: 2-16-39; RELEASED:
2-24-39.
CAST: Lucille Ball, Patric Knowles, Donald
Woods. Frieda Inescort, Inez Courtney. Leona
Maricle, Frances Mercer, Whitney Bourne, Ann
Evers, G. A. Beranger.
PRODUCER: B. F. Fineman; DIRECTOR:
Glenn Tryon; AUTHOR: Edmund L. Hartmann;
SCREENPLAY: Doris Anderson. Paul Jarrico:
CAMERAMAN: Frank Redman; EDITOR: George
Crone.
Behind Prison Gates
DISTRIBUTOR: Columbia: RUNNING TIME:
61 mins.; REVIEWED: 9-8-39; RELEASED:
7-28-39.
CAST: Brian Donlevy, Jacqueline Wells. Joseph
Crehan, Paul Fix, George Lloyd, Dick Curtis,
Richard Fiske.
DIRECTOR: Charles Barton; AUTHORS: Charles
T. Horman, Leslie T. White; SCREENPLAY:
Charles T. Horman, Leslie T. White; CAMERA-
MAN: Allen G. Siegler; EDITOR: Richard Fantl.
Betrayal (French)
DISTRIBUTOR: World Pictures: RUNNING
TIME: 85 mins.: REVIEWED: 9-21-39; Produced
in France.
CAST: Suzy Prim, Pierre Richard- Wilm, Annie
Verhay; DIRECTOR: Fedor Ozep.
Beware, Spooks!
DISTRIBUTOR: Columbia: RUNNING TIME:
68 mins.: REVIEWED: 11-9-39: RELEASED:
10-24-39.
CAST: Joe E. Brown, Mary Carlisle, Clarence
Kolb, Marc Lawrence, Don Beddoe, George J.
Lewis.
DIRECTOR: Edward Sedge wick; AUTHOR:
Richard Flournoy (from "Spook House");
SCREENPLAY: Richard Flournoy, Albert Duffy.
Brian Marlow; CAMERAMAN: Allen G. Siegler;
EDITOR: James Sweeney.
Big Town Czar
DISTRIBUTOR: Universal; RUNNING TIME:
66 mins.: REVIEWED: 5-11-39: RELEASED:
4 21-39.
CAST: Barton MacLane, Tom Brown, Evo
Arden, Ed Sullivan, Jack LaRue, Frank Jenks,
Walter Woolf King:, Oscar O'Shea, Esther Dale.
Horace MacMahon.
PRODUCER: Ken Goldsmith; DIRECTOR: Ar-
thur Lubin; AUTHOR: Ed Sullivan; SCREEN-
PLAY: Edmund L. Hartmann; CAMERAMAN:
Elwood Bredell.
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
Bizarre Bizzarre (French)
DISTRIBUTOR: Lenauer International: RUN-
NING TIME: 64 mins.; REVIEWED: 4-14-39;
Produced in France.
CAST: Louis Jouvet, Francoise Rosay, Michel
Simon; DIRECTOR: Marcel Came.
Black Limelight
DISTRIBUTOR: Alliance Films; RUNNING
TIME: 63 mins.; REVIEWED: 7-6-39; Produced
in England.
CAST: Raymond Massey, Joan Marion. Walter
Hudd, Henry Oscar, Elliot Mason, Dan Tobin,
Coral Brown, Leslie Brady, Dian Beaumont.
DIRECTOR: Walter Mycroft; AUTHOR: Dud-
ley Leslie; SCREENPLAY: Dudley Leslie; CAM-
ERAMAN : Claude Friese-Greene.
Blackmail
DISTRIBUTOR: Loew's, Inc.; RUNNING TIME.
81 mins.; REVIEWED: 9-15-39; RELEASED:
9-8-39.
CAST: Edward G. Robinson, Gene Lockhart;
Guinn Williams, Bobs Watson, Ruth Hussey, Ar-
thur Hohl, John Wray, Esther Dale, Charles
Middleton.
PRODUCER: John Considine, Jr.; DIRECTOR:
H. C. Potter; AUTHORS: Andre Bohem, Dorothy
Yost: SCREENPLAY: David Hertz, William Lud-
wig; CAMERAMAN: Clyde De Vinna: EDITOR:
Howard O'Neill.
Blackwell's Island
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners: RUNNING TIME:
71 mins.; REVIEWED: 3-2-39; RELEASED:
3-25-39.
CAST: John Garfield, Rosemary Lane, Dick
Purcell, Victor Jory, Stanley Fields, Morgan Con-
way, Granville Bates, Anthony Averill, Peggy
Shannon, Charles Foy, Norman Willis, Joe Cun-
ningham.
DIRECTOR: William McGann; AUTHORS:
Crane Wilbur, Lee Katz; SCREENPLAY: Crane
Wilbur.
Blind Alibi
DISTRIBUTOR: Columbia: RUNNING TIME:
61 mins.: REVIEWED: 5-29-39: RELEASED:
6-11-39.
CAST: Chester Morris, Ralph Bellamy, Ann
Dvorak, Joan Perry, Melville Cooper, Rose Strad-
ner, John Eldridge, Ann Doran, Marc Lawrence,
Stanley Brown, Scotty Beckett, Milburn Stone,
Marie Blake.
DIRECTOR: Charles Vidor; AUTHOR: James
Warwick; SCREENPLAY: Philip MacDonald, Mi-
chael Blankfort, Albert Duffy; CAMERAMAN:
Lucien Ballard; EDITOR: Otto Meyer.
Blondie Brings Up Baby
DISTRIBUTOR: Columbia; RUNNING TIME:
67 mins.; REVIEWED: 11-8-39; RELEASED:
11-9-39.
CAST: Penny Singleton, Arthur Lake, Larry
Simms, Daisy, Danny Mummert, Jonathan Hale,
HOLLYWOOD PRODS.
Specializing in
Production of All-Colored Cast Pictures
"Two Gun-Man From Harlem"
"The Bronze Buekaroo"
"Harlem Rides The Range"
Current Release
"SON OF IXCAGI"
(Distributed by Sack Amusement Enterprises)
RICHARD C. KAHN SPENCER WILLIAMS, Jr.
Producer-Director Scenario Editor
EARL J. MORSE, Publicity Director
GATEWAY PRODUCTIONS, INC.
Hollywood
Release:
1939
"BAD BOY"
with Johnny Downs. Rosalind Keith, Helen MacKellar
The Film Daily wrote:
"This is a mother-love story that is better than the usual
independent output. It has fine performances by Johnny Downs,
who surprises with his dramatic work in the title role, and by
Helen MacKellar as his doting, sacrificing mother. Herbert
Meyer turned in an excellent job of directing." — "Richard C.
Kahn supplied a human and realistic screenplay, based on his
original story."
Release:
1940
Two Exceptional Stories:
"MAGIC MELODY"
"FOOLS Wi LNIFOBM"
Quality That Sells
146
Robert Middlemass, Olin Howland, Fay Helm,
Peggy Ann Garner, Roy Gordon, Grace Stafford.
Helen Jerome Eddy, Irving Bacon.
PRODUCER: Robert Sparks; DIRECTOR: Frank
R. Strayer; AUTHORS: Robert Chapin. Karen
DeWolf. Richard Flournoy; SCREENPLAY : Gladys
Lehman. Richard Flournoy: ART DIRECTOR:
Lionel Banks; MUSICAL DIRECTOR: M. W.
Stoloff; CAMERAMAN: Henry Freulich: EDITOR:
Otto Meyer.
Blondie Meets the Boss
DISTRIBUTOR: Columbia: RUNNING TIME:
58 mins.; REVIEWED: 5-1-39: RELEASED:
3 8-39.
CAST: Penny Singleton, Arthur Lake. Larry
Simms, Dorothy Moore, Jonathan Hale, Don Bed-
doe, Linda Winters, Denny Mummert, Stanley
Brown, Joel Dean, Richard Fiske, Inez Courtney.
DIRECTOR: Frank Strayer; AUTHOR: Chick
Young; SCREENPLAY: Richard Flournoy.
Blondie Takes a Vacation
DISTRIBUTOR: Columbia; RUNNING TIME:
<il mins.: REVIEWED: 9-14-39: RELEASED:
7-20-39.
CAST: Penny Singleton, Arthur Lake, Larry
Simms, Daisy, Danny Mummert. Donald Meek,
Donald MeBride, Thomas W. Ross. Elizabeth
Dunne. Robert Wilcox, Harlan Briggs, Irving
Bacon.
DIRECTOR: Frank Strayer; AUTHORS: Karen
DeWolf. Robert Chapin, Richard Flournoy;
SCREENPLAY: Richard Flournoy; CAMERA-
MAN: Henry Freulich: EDITOR: Viola Lawrence.
Blue Montana Skies
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic; RUNNING TIME:
59 mins.; REVIEWED: 5-4-39; RELEASED:
5-4-39.
CAST: Gene Autry, Smiley Burnette, June
Storey, Harry Woods, Tully Marshall, Al Bridge,
Glenn Strange. Dorothy Grainger, Edmund Cobb,
Robert Winkler, Jack Ingram, John Beach.
PRODUCER: Harry Grey; DIRECTOR: B.
Reeves Eason; AUTHORS: Norman S. Hall, Paul
Franklin: SCREENPLAY: Gerald Geraghty; CAM-
ERAMAN: Jack Marta; EDITOR: Lester Orle-
beck.
Bombs Over London
DISTRIBUTOR: Film Alliance; RUNNING
TIME: 77 mins.; REVIEWED: 9-18-39; Produced
in England.
CAST : Charles Farrell, Margaret Vyner, Fritz
Kortner. Danny Green, Wallace Evenett, Monte
De Lyle, Dino Galvani, Arthur Finn, Lawrence
Hanray.
DIRECTOR: Sinclair Hill: SCREENPLAY: G.
H. Moresby White; CAMERAMAN: Paul Barralet.
Borcsa Amerikaban (Hungarian)
I Barbara in America)
DISTRIBUTOR: Hungarian Talking Pictures:
RUNNING TIME: 92 mins.; REVIEWED: 3-6-39:
Produced in Hungary.
CAST: Maly Gero, Margit Dayka, Imre Ham-
ory; DIRECTOR: Martin Keleti.
Bor Borson, Jr. (Norwegian)
DISTRIBUTOR: Ernst Mattsson; RUNNING
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
TIME: 92 mins.; REVIEWED: 11-10-39; Pro-
duced in Norway.
CAST: Toralf Sando, Edvard Drablso. Emmy
Worm-Muller; DIRECTOR: Toralf Sando.
Bouguets from Nicholas (French)
DISTRIBUTOR: Walch Film Corp.: RUNNING
TIME: 75 mins.: REVIEWED: 3-0-39; Produced
in France.
CAST: Noel Noel, Jacques Varenne, Paul Amoit;
DIRECTOR: Maurice Cammage.
Boy Friend
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century-Fox; RUNNING
TIME: 72 mins.; REVIEWED: 6-27-39; RE-
LEASED: 5-19-39.
CAST: Jane Withers, Arleen Whelan, Richard
Bond, Douglas Fowley, Warren Hymer, George
Ernest, Robert Kellard, Minor Watson, Robert
Shaw, Ted Pearson, William H. Conselman. Jr.,
Myra Marsh, Harold Goodwin.
PRODUCER: John Stone; DIRECTOR: James
Tinling; AUTHORS: Lester Ziflren, Louis Moore:
SCREENPLAY: Joseph Hoffman, Barry Trivers;
CAMERAMAN: Lucien Andriot; EDITOR: Nor-
man Colbert.
Boy Slaves
DISTRIBUTOR: RKO Radio; RUNNING TIME:
72 mins.; REVIEWED: 1-18 39; RELEASED-
2-10-39.
CAST: Anne Shirley, Roger Daniel. James Mc-
Callion, Alan Baxter, Johnny Fitzgerald, Walter
Ward, Charles Powers, Walter Tetley. Frank Malo,
Paul White, Arthur Hohl, Charles Lane, Norman
Willis, Roy Gordon.
PRODUCER: Pandro S. Berman: ASSOCIATE
PRODUCER: P. J. WoIIson; DIRECTOR: P. J.
Wolf son: AUTHOR: Albert Bein: SCREENPLAY:
Albert Bein, Ben Orkow; CAMERAMAN: J. Roy
Hunt; EDITOR: Desmond Marquette.
Boys' Reformatory
DISTRIBUTOR: Monogram; RUNNING TIME:
(il mins.; REVIEWED: 5-17-39: RELEASED-
5-1-39.
CAST: Frankie Darro. Grant Withers. Lillian
Elliott, Frank Coghlan, Jr., David Durrand, Ben
Welden, Warren McColIum, Albert Hill. Jr., Bob
McClung, George Offerman, Jr., Tempe Pigott,
John St. Polis, Jack McHugh, Roberta Smith.
PRODUCER: Scott Dunlap; DIRECTOR: How-
ard Bretherton; AUTHORS: Ray Trampe, Nor-
man S. Hill: SCREENPLAY: Ray Trampe, Wellyn
Totman; CAMERAMAN: Harry Newman.
Boys' School (French)
DISTRIBUTOR: Columbia: RUNNING TIME:
90 mins.: REVIEWED: 6-29-39; Produced in
France.
CAST: Eric von Stroheim, Michel Simon, Serge
Grave; DIRECTOR: Christian Jaque.
Bridal Suite
DISTRIBUTOR: Loew's, Inc.; RUNNING
TIME: 69 mins.: REVIEWED: 5-29-39; RE
LEASED: 6-26-39.
147
BERT GOLDBERG & PORT, INC.
9171 Sunset Blvd. Hollywood, California
BERT GOLDBERG GEORGE RANDOL
President Chiel of production
M- PORT JAMES ASONDIO
Vice President Publicity Director
GEORGE RANDOL PRODUCTIONS
TALISMAN STUDIOS
4516 Sunset Blvd. Hollywood. California
GEORGE RANDOL CHAS. WM. HESTER
President Treasurer
H. COLLEY JAMES ASONDIO
Secretary Publicity
PRODUCERS OF
THE FINEST ALL COLORED CAST PICTURES
Now Releasing 15 Features
DOUBLE DEAL MYSTERY IN SWING
BROKEN STRINGS
DARK TOWN STRUTTER'S BALL
Directed by Arthur David Hilton
DISTRIBUTOR
INTERNATIONAL ROAD SHOWS
630 NINTH AVE.. NEW YORK
OFFICES IN
NEW YORK CHICAGO ATLANTA LOS ANGELES
148
CAST: Annabella, Robert Young, Walter Con-
nolly, Reginald Owen, Gene Lockhart, Arthur
Treacher, Billie Burke, Virginia Field, Felix
Bressart.
PRODUCER: Edgar Welwyn: DIRECTOR: Wil-
liam Thiele; AUTHORS: Gottfried Reinhardt, Vir-
ginia Faulkner; SCREENPLAY: Samuel Hoffen-
stein; CAMERAMAN: Clyde DeVinna; EDITOR:
Frank Hull.
Broadway Serenade
DISTRIBUTOR: Loew's, Inc.; RUNNING TIME:
114 mins.; REVIEWED: 4-4-39; RELEASED ;
4-7-39.
CAST: Jeanette MacDonald, Lew Ayres, Ian
Hunter, Frank Morgan, Wally Vernon, Rita John-
son. Virginia Grey, William Gargan. Katharine
Alexander, Al Shean. Esther Dale. Franklin Pang-
born, E. Allwyn Warren, Paul Hurst. Frank
Orth, Esther Howard. Leon Belasco, Kitty Mc-
Hugh, Kenneth Stevens.
PRODUCER: Robert Z. Leonard; DIRECTOR:
Robert Z. Leonard: AUTHORS: Lew Lipton. John
Taintor Foote, Hans Kraly: SCREENPLAY:
Charles Lederer; ART DIRECTOR: Cedric Gib-
bons: MUSICAL DIRECTOR: Herbert Stothart:
MUSIC AND LYRICS: Herbert Stothart, Edward
Ward. Gus Kahn, Bob Wright, Chet Forrest. Wal-
ter Donaldson: CAMERAMAN: Oliver T. Marsh:
MONTAGE: John Hoffman: EDITOR: Harold F.
Kress.
Bronze Buckaroo, The
DISTRIBUTOR: Sack Amusement Co.: RE-
VIEWED: 1-23-39.
CAST: Herbert Jeffrey, Artie Young, Rellie
Hardin. Clarence Brooks. Four Tones, F. E. Mil-
ler, Lucius Brooks, Spencer Williams.
PRODUCER: Richard Kahn: DIRECTOR: Rich-
ard Kahn: AUTHOR: Richard Kahn: SCREEN-
PLAY: Richard Kahn: CAMERAMAN: Roland
Price.
Bulldog Drummond's Bride
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount: RUNNING TIME:
55 mins.; REVIEWED: 7-6-39; RELEASED:
6-30-39.
CAST: John Howard. Heather Angel. H. B.
Warner. Reginald Denny, E. E. Clive, Elizabeth
Patterson, Eduardo Ciannelli. Gerald Hamer, John
Sutton, Neil Fitzgerald. Louis Mercier. Adia
Kuznetzoff, Adrienne D'Ambricourt.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Stuart Walker; DI-
RECTOR: James Hogan: AUTHOR: H. C. "Sap-
per" McNeile (from "Bulldog Drummcnd and
the Oriental Mind"): SCREENPLAY: Stuart
Palmer, Garnett Weston; ART DIRECTORS: Hans
Dreier, Franz Bachelin; CAMERAMAN: Harry
Fischbeck; EDITOR: Chandler House.
Bulldog Drummond's Secret Police
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount: RUNNING TIME:
56 mins.: REVIEWED: 4-12-39; RELEASED:
4-14-39.
CAST: John Howard, Heather Angel, H. B.
Warner. Reginald Denny. E. E. Clive, Elizabeth
Patterson. Leo Carroll, Forrester Harvey, Clyde
Cook, David Clyde, Neil Fitzgerald. Elspeth
Dudgeon, Gerald Rogers, Wyndham Standing.
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
DIRECTOR: James Hogan: AUTHOR: H. C.
"Sapper" McNeile: SCREENPLAY: Garnett Wes-
ton; CAMERAMAN: Merritt Gerstad; EDITOR:
Arthur Schmidt.
Bum 'Em Up O'Connor
DISTRIBUTOR: Loew's, Inc.: RUNNING
TIME: 67 mins.; REVIEWED: 1-12-39: RE-
LEASED: 1-13-39.
CAST: Dennis O'Keefe, Cecilia Parker, Nat
Pendleton, Harry Carey, Addison Richards.
Charley Grapewin, Alan Curtis, Tom Neal, Tom
Collins, Frank Orth.
PRODUCER: Harry Rapf; DIRECTOR: Edward
Sedgwick; AUTHOR: Sir Malcolm Campbell;
SCREENPLAY: Milton Merlin, Byron Morgan;
ART DIRECTOR: Cedric Gibons; MUSICAL DI-
RECTOR: David Snell; CAMERAMAN: Lester
White; EDITOR: Ben Lewis.
Cafe Society
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount; RUNNING TIME:
83 mins.; REVIEWED: 2-8 39: RELEASED:
3-3-39.
CAST: Madeline Carroll, Fred MacMurray, Shir-
ley Ross, Claude Gillingwater, Jessie Ralph. All-
wyn Joslyn, Paul Hurst, Don Alvarado, Cupid
Ainsworth, Mary Parker, Robert Emmett Keane.
Hilda Plowright.
PRODUCER: Jeff Lazarus; DIRECTOR: Ed-
ward H. Griffith; AUTHOR: Virginia Van Upp:
SCREENPLAY: Virginia Van Upp: ART DIREC-
TORS: Hans Dreier, Ernst Fegte; MUSICAL DI-
RECTOR: Boris Morros: SONG: Burton Lane,
Frank Loesser; CAMERAMAN: Ted Tetzlaff;
PROCESS PHOTOGRAPHY: Farciot Edouart;
EDITOR: Paul Weatherwax.
Calling All Marines
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic; RUNNING TIME:
66 mins.; REVIEWED 9-22-39; RELEASED:
9-20-39.
CAST: Donald Barry, Helen Mack, Warren Hy-
mer, Robert Kent, Cy Kendall, Leon Ames, Sel-
mer Jackson, Janet McLeay, Walter McGrail, Joy
Novello, George Chandler.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Armand Schaefer:
DIRECTOR: John H. Auer; AUTHOR: Harrison
Carter; SCREENPLAY: Earl Felton: CAMERA-
MAN: Ernest Miller; EDITOR: Ernest Nims.
Call a Messenger
DISTRIBUTOR: Universal: RUNNING TIME:
65 mins.; REVIEWED: 11-16-39; RELEASED:
11-3-39.
CAST: Billy Halop, Huntz Hall. Robert Arm-
strong. Mary Carlisle. Anne Nagel, Larry Crabbe,
Victor Jory, El Brendel, Jimmy Butler, George
Offerman, Jr., Hally Chester. William Benedict,
David Gorcey. Harris Berger.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Kenneth Goldsmith;
DIRECTOR: Arthur Lubin; AUTHORS: Sally
Sandlin, Michel Kraike: SCREENPLAY: Arthur
T. Horman; CAMERAMAN: Elwood Bredell.
149
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FEATURE RELE ASE CREDITS
Calling Dt. Eildare
DISTRIBUTOR: Loews. Inc.; RUNNING
TIME: 86 mins.: REVIEWED: 4-25-39; RE
LEASED: 4-28-39.
CAST: Lew Ayres, Lionel Barrymore, Laraine
Day. Nat Pendleton. Lana Turner, Samuel S.
Hinds, Lynne Carver, Emma Dunn. Walter Kings-
ford. Alma Kruger. Bobs Watson, Harlan Briggs.
Henry Hunter, Marie Blake, Phillip Terry, Roger
Converse, Donald Barry, Reed Hadley, Nell Craig.
George Offerman, Jr.. Clinton Rosemond, Johnny
Walsh.
DIRECTOR: Harold S. Bucquet; AUTHOR:
Max Brand: SCREENPLAY: Harry Ruskin. Willis
Goldbeck; ART DIRECTOR: Cedric Gibbons; MU-
SICAL SCORE: David Snell; CAMERAMEN: Al-
fred Gilks, Lester White: EDITOR: Robert J.
Kern.
Captain Fury
DISTRIBUTOR: United Artists; RUNNING
TIME: 91 mins.; REVIEWED: 5-8-39: RE-
LEASED: 5-26-39.
CAST: Brian Aherne, Victor McLaglen. Paul
Lukas, June Lang, John Carradine, George Zucco,
Douglas Dumbrille. Virginia Field. Charles Mid-
dleton. Lawrence Grosmith, Lumsden Hare, Mary
Gordon, John Warburton, Claude Allister, Will
Stanton, Edgar Norton, Margaret Roach, Billy
Bevan, Edwin Brian.
PRODUCER: Hal Roach; DIRECTOR: Hal
Roach; AUTHORS: Grover Jones. Jack Jevne,
William DeMille; SCREENPLAY: Grover Jones.
Jack Jevne. William DeMille: ART DIRECTOR:
Charles D. Hall: MUSICAL SCORE: Marvin Hat-
ley; CAMERAMAN: Norbert Brodine; EDITOR:
William Ziegler.
Captain Grant's Children (Russian)
DISTRIBUTOR: Amkino; RUNNING TIME: 80
mins.; REVIEWED: 1-23-39; Produced in Russia.
CAST: N. Cherkassof. N. Vitavtofl. M. Strel-
kova; DIRECTOR: A. Ptushko.
Career
DISTRIBUTOR: RKO Radio; RUNNING TIME:
79 mins.; REVIEWED: 7-12-39: RELEASED.
7-7-39.
CAST: Anne Shirley, Edward Ellis. Samuel S.
Hinds. Janet Beecher, Leon Errol, Alice Eden,
John Archer, Raymond Hatton, Maurice Murphy.
Harrison Greene.
PRODUCER: Robert Sisk; DIRECTOR: Leigh
Jason: AUTHOR: Phil Strong: SCREENPLAY:
Dalton Trumbo. Bert Granet; CAMERAMAN:
Frand Redman; EDITOR: Arthur E. Roberts.
Cat and the Canary, The
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount: RUNNING TIME :
72 mins.: REVIEWED: 10-31-39; RELEASED:
11-10-39.
CAST: Bob Hope. Paulette Goddard. John Beal.
Douglass Montgomery, Gale Sondergaard, Eliz-
abeth Patterson, Nydia Westman, George Zucco.
John Wray. George Regas.
PRODUCER: Arthur Hornblow. Jr.: DIREC-
TOR: Elliott Nugent: AUTHOR: John Willard
SCREENPLAY: Walter De Leon. Lynn Starling
ART DIRECTORS: Hans Dreier, Robert Usher;
MUSICAL SCORE: Dr. Ernst Toch; MUSICAL
ADVISOR: Andrea Setaro; CAMERAMAN: Charles
Lang; EDITOR: Archie Marshek.
Challenge, The
DISTRIBUTOR: Film Alliance of the U. S.:
REVIEWED: 10-5-39; Produced in England.
CAST: Robert Douglas. Luis Trenker. Mary
Clare, Fred Groves, Joan Gardner, Frank Birch.
Geoffrey Wardwell, Cyril Smith, Moran Capiat:
DIRECTOR: Milton Rosmer.
Champs-FJysees (French)
DISTRIBUTOR: Tri - National; RUNNING
TIME: 89 mins.; REVIEWED: 3-2-39; Pro-
duced in France.
CAST: Sacha Guitry, Raymond Galle. Arianne
Pathe; DIRECTOR: Sacha Guitry.
Charlie Chan at Treasure Island
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century-Fox; RUNNING
TIME: 59 mins.: REVIEWED: 9-11-39; RE
LEASED: 9-8-39.
CAST: Sidney Toler. Cesar Romero. Pauline
Moore, Sen Yung. Douglas Fowley, June Gale,
Douglas Dumbrille. Sally Blane. Billie Deward.
Wally Vernon. Donald MacGridge. Charles Hal-
ton, Trevor, Bardette, Louis Jean Heydt.
PRODUCER: Edward Kaufman; DIRECTOR:
Norman Foster: AUTHOR: John Larkin;
SCREENPLAY: John Larkin; CAMERAMAN: Vir-
gil Miller: EDITOR: Norman Colbert.
Charlie Chan in City in Darkness
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century-Fox: RUNNING
TIME: 75 mins.; REVIEWED: 12-20-39; RE
LEASED: 12-1-39.
CAST: Sidney Toler, Harold Huber, Lynn Bari.
Richard Clarke. Pedro de Cordoba. Dorothy Tree.
C. Henry Gordon, Douglas Dumbrille. Noel Madi-
son, Leo Carroll, Lon Chaney, Jr., Louise Mercier,
George Davis, Barbara Leonard. Adrienne d'Am-
bricourt, Fredrik Vogeding.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: John Stone; DIREC-
TOR: Herbert I. Leeds: SCREENPLAY: Robert El-
lis. Helen Logan; CAMERAMAN: Virgil Miller:
EDITOR: Harry Reynolds.
Charlie Chan in Reno
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century-Fox; RUNNING
TIME: 70 mins.: REVIEWED: 6-5 39: RE-
LEASED: 6-16-39.
CAST: Sidney Toler. Ricardo Cortez. Phyllis
Brooks, Slim Summerville. Kane Richmond. Sen
Yung, Pauline Moore Eddie Collins, Kay Linaker.
Louise Henry. Robert Lowery. Charles D. Brown.
Iris Wong. Morgan Conway. Hamilton MacFadden.
PRODUCER: John Stone; DIRECTOR: Norman
Foster; AUTHOR: Philip Wylie; SCREENPLAY:
Frances Hyland. Albert Ray. Robert E. Kent:
CAMERMAN: Virgil Miller; EDITOR: Fred Al-
len.
Charlie McCarthy, Detective
DISTRIBUTOR: Universal: RUNNING TIME:
77 mins.: REVIEWED: 12-20-39: RELEASED:
12-22-39.
CAST: Edgar Bergen, Robert Cummings, Con-
stance Moore, John Sutton, Louis Calhern, Edgar
Kennedy, Warren Hymer. Samuel S. Hinds, Harold
Hubert, Kay Turner, Granville Bates, G. Pat Col-
lins, Anne Gwynne, Milburn Stone, Charles Wil-
liams, Eddie Dunn, Alec Craig, John Harmon,
Glen Wilenshick.
PRODUCER: Frank Tuttle: ASSOCIATE PRO-
DUCER: Jerry Sackheim; DIRECTOR: Frank Tut-
tle: AUTHORS: Robertson White, Darrell Ware:
SCREENPLAY: Edward Eliscu, Harold Shumate,
Richard Mack; ART DIRECTOR: Jack Otterson;
MUSICAL DIRECTOR: Charles Previn; CAMERA-
MAN: George Robinson: EDITOR: Bernard Burton.
Chasing Danger
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century-Fox; RUNNING
TIME: 60 mins.; REVIEWED: 5-29-39; RE-
LEASED: 6-5-39.
CAST: Preston Foster, Lynn Bari, Wally Ver-
non, Henry Wilcoxon, Joan Woodbury, Harold
Huber, Jody Gilbert, Pedro de Cordoba, Stanley
Fields, Roy D'Arcy.
DIRECTOR: Ricardo Cortez; AUTHOR: Leon-
ardo Bercovici; SCREENPLAY: Robert Ellis.
Helen Logan: CAMERAMAN: Virgil Miller; EDI-
TOR; Norman Colbert.
Chicken Wagon Family
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century -Fox; RUNNING
TIME: 64 mins.; REVIEWED: 9-28-39; RE-
LEASED: 8-11-39.
CAST: Jane Withers, Leo Carrillo, Spring By-
ington, Marjorie Weaver, Kane Richmond, Hobart
Cavanaugh, Hamilton MacFadden, Inez Palange.
DIRECTOR: Herbert I. Leeds: AUTHOR: Bar-
ry Benefield; SCREENPLAY: Viola Brothers
Shore; CAMERAMAN: Edward Cronjager; EDI-
TOR: Fred Allen.
Climbing High
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century -Fox; RUNNING
TIME: 67 mins.: REVIEWED: 6-7-39; Produced
in England; RELEASED: 4-28-39.
CAST: Jessie Matthews, Michael Redgrave, Noel
Madison, Margaret Vyner, Alistair Sim, Tucker
McGuire, Torin Thatcher, Francis L. Sullivan,
Mary Clare, Enid Taylor, Leo Pokorny, Basil
Radforce.
DIRECTOR: Carol Reed: AUTHORS: Lesser
Samuels, Marion Dix; CAMERAMAN: Mutz
Greenbaum.
Clouds Over Europe
DISTRIBUTOR: Columbia; RUNNING TIME:
78 mins.: REVIEWED: 6-19-39: Produced in
England; RELEASED: 6-20-39.
CAST: Laurence Olivier, Ralph Richardson.
Valerie Hobson, George Curzon, George Merritt,
Gus McNaughton, David Tree, Sandra Storme.
Hay Petrie.
PRODUCER: Irving Asher; DIRECTOR: Tim
Whelan: AUTHORS: Brock Williams, Jack Whit-
tingham, Arthur Wimperis: SCREENPLAY: Ian
Dalrymple: CAMERAMAN: Harry Stradling; ED-
ITOR: Hugh Stewart.
Coast Guard
DISTRIBUTOR: Columbia; RUNNING TIME:
71 mins.; REVIEWED: 9-7-39: RELEASED:
8-4-39.
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
CAST: Randolph Scott, Frances Dee, Ralph
Bellamy, Walter Connolly, Warren Hymer, Rob-
ert Middlemass, Stanley Andrews, Edmund Mac-
Donald.
DIRECTOR: Edward Ludwig; SCREENPLAY:
Richard Maibaum, Albert Duffy, Harry Segall;
CAMERAMAN: Lucien Ballard: EDITOR: Gene
Milford.
Code of the Fearless
DISTRIBUTOR: Spectrum: RUNNING TIME:
56 mins.; REVIEWED: 1-16-39.
CAST: Fred Scott, John Merton. Claire Rochelle,
Walter MeGrail, George Sherwood. Harry Harvey,
Gene Howard. William Woods, Frank Laurie, Don
Gallaher, Carl Matthews, James Kelly.
PRODUCER: C. C. Burr; DIRECTOR: R. K.
Johnston; SCREENPLAY: Fred Myton; CAM-
ERAMAN: Elmer Dyer; EDITOR: Charles Hinkle.
Code of the Secret Service
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners: RUNNING TIME:
58 mins.; REVIEWED: 6-23-39: RELEASED:
5-27-39.
CAST: Ronald Reagan, Rosella Towne, Eddie
Foy, Jr., Moroni Olsen, Edgar Edwards, Jack
Mower, John Gallaudet, Joseph King, Stevan
Darrell, George Regas, Frank Puglia, Rafael
Corio, Antonio Filauri.
DIRECTOR: Noel Smlfth; AUTHORS: Lee
Katz, Dean Franklin: SCREENPLAY: Lee Katr.
Dean Franklin: CAMERAMAN: Ted McCord: ED-
ITOR: Frederick Richards.
Colorado Sunset
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic: RUNNING TIME.
61 mins.; REVIEWED: 8-2-39; RELEASED:
7-31-39.
CAST: Gene Autry. Smiley Burnette, June
Storey, Barbara Pepper, Larry Crabbe, Robert
Barrat, Patsy Montana, Purnell Pratt, William
Farnum, Kermit Maynard, Jack Ingram, Elmo
Lincoln, Frankie Marvin.
PRODUCER: William Berke: DIRECTOR:
George Sherman; AUTHORS: Luci Ward, Jack
Natteford; SCREENPLAY: Betty Burbridge.
Stanley Roberts: CAMERAMAN: William Nobles:
EDITOR: Lester Orlebeck.
Concentration Camp (Russian)
DISTRIBUTOR: Amkino; RUNNING TIME:
66 mins.: REVIEWED: 4-6-39; Produced in Rus-
sia.
CAST: O. Jakov, S. Mezhinsky, S. Skirokova:
DIRECTOR: A. Macharet.
Confessions of a Nazi Spy
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners; RUNNING TIME:
102 mins.; REVIEWED: 4-28-39: RELEASED:
5-6-39.
CAST: Edward G. Robinson, Francis Lederer,
George Sanders, Paul Lukas. Henry O'Neill. Lya
Lys, Grace Stafford, James Stephenson, Sig Ru-
mann, Fred Tozere, Dorothy Tree, Celia Sibelius,
Joe Sawyer, Lionel Royce. Hans von Tivardowsky,
Henry Victor, Frederick Vogeding, George Ro6ener.
153
154
GABRIEL PASCAL
PRODUCER
In Production:
"MAJOR BARBARA"
Starring:
WENDY HILLER
ROBERT MORLEY
In Preparation:
"DOCTOR'S DILEMMA"
"DEVIL'S DISCIPLE"
"CANDIDA"
"THE MILLIONAIRESS"
155
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
Robert Davis, John Voigt, Willy Kaufman, Wil-
liam Vaughn, Jack Mower, Robert Emmet Keane,
Ely Malyon, Frank Mayo, Alec Craig, Jean Brook.
Lucien Privalk Niccolai Yoshkin. Bodil Rosing,
Charles Sherlock. Frederick Burton.
DIRECTOR: Anatole Litvak: SCREENPLAY:
Milton Krims, Jack Westley.
Conspiracy
DISTRIBUTOR: RKO Radio; RUNNING TIME:
58 mins.: REVIEWED: 9-5-39: RELEASED:
9-1-39.
CAST: Allan Lane, Linda Hayes, Robert Bar-
rat, Charley Foy, Lionel Royce. J. Farrell Mac-
Donald, Lester Matthews, Henry Brandon, Wil-
liam von Brincken.
PRODUCER: Lee Marcus: AUTHORS: John Mc-
Carthy, Faith Thomas: SCREENPLAY: Jerome
Chodorov; CAMERAMAN: Frank Redman: EDI-
TOR: George Hively.
Cossacks in Exile (Ukrainian)
DISTRIBUTOR: Avramenko: RUNNING TIME:
83 mins.; REVIEWED: 2-2-39.
CAST: Maria Sokil. Michael Shvetz, Alexis
Teherkassey: PRODUCER: A. V. Avramenko:
DIRECTOR: E. G. Ullmer.
Covered Trailer, The
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic; RUNNING TIME:
63 mins.; REVIEWED: 11-16-39; RELEASED:
11-10-39.
CAST: James Gleason. Lucile Gleason. Russell
Gleason, Harry Davenport, Mary Beth Hughes.
Tommy Ryan. Maurice Murphy. Maude Eburne.
Spencer Charters. Tom Kennedy. Hobart Cava-
naugh, Pierre Watkin. Frank Dae, Richard Tucker.
Willie Best, Walter Penner.
DIRECTOR: Gus Meins; AUTHORS: Jack Town-
ley, M. Coates Webster: SCREENPLAY: Jack
Townley; ART DIRECTOR: John Victor Mackay:
MUSICAL DIRECTOR: Cy Fcuer: CAMERAMAN:
Arthur Martinelli; EDITOR: Murray Seldeen.
Cowboy Quarterback
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners: RUNNING TIME: 56
mins.: REVIEWED: 12-15-39: RELEASED:
7-29-39.
CAST: Bert Wheeler. Marie Wilson, Gloria Dick-
son, DeWolf Hopper, William Demarest. Eddie
Foy, Jr., William Gould, Charles Wilson. Frederic
Tozere. John Harron. John Ridgeley, Eddie Acuff,
Clem Bevans, Sol Gross, Don Turner.
DIRECTOR: Noel Smith; AUTHORS: Ring Lard-
ner, George M. Cohan: CAMERAMAN: Ted Mc-
Cord: EDITOR: Doug Gould.
Cowboys from Texas
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic; RUNNING TIME:
57 mins.; REVIEWED: 12-5-39: RELEASED:
11-29-39.
CAST: Bob Livingston, Raymond Hatton. Dun-
can Renaldo. Carole Landis, Ivan Miller, Charles
Middleton, Betty Compson, Ethan Laidlaw, Yakima
Canutt, Walter Wills, Edward Cassidy.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Harry Grey; DIREC-
TOR: George Sherman; SCREENPLAY: Oliver
Drake: CAMERAMAN: Ernest Miller: EDITOR:
Tony Martinelli.
Crashing Thru
DISTRIBUTOR: Monogram: RUNNING TIME:
65 mins.: REVIEWED: 12-28-39: RELEASED:
10- 1-39.
CAST: James Newill, Jean Carmen. Warren Hull,
Iron Eyes Cody, Milburn Stone. Walter Byron,
Stanley Blystone. Robert Frazier, Joseph Girard.
David O'Brien, Earl Douglas, Ted Adams. Roy
Bancroft.
PRODUCER: Philip N. Krasna: DIRECTOR:
Elmer Clifton; AUTHOR: Laurie York Erskine
(from "Renfew Rides the Range"): SCREEN-
PLAY: Sherman Lowe: CAMERAMAN: Eddie
Linden: EDITOR: Roy Luby.
Crisis
DISTRIBUTOR: Mayer-Burstyn : RUNNING
TIME: 94 mins.: REVIEWED: 3-20-39.
PRODUCER: Herbert Kline: DIRECTOR: Her-
bert Kline: COMMENTATOR: Vincent Sheenan ;
NARRATOR: Leif Erickson: CAMERAMAN:
Alexander Hackenschmid.
Crossroads (French)
DISTRIBUTOR: Tri-National : RUNNING TIME:
77 mins.; REVIEWED: .3-21-39: Produced In
France.
CAST: Charles Vanel, Suzy Prim, Jules Berry:
DIRECTOR: Kurt Bernhardt.
Cuando Canta La Ley (Spanish)
(The Singing Charro)
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount: RUNNING TIME:
67 mins.: REVIEWED: 6-5-39.
CAST: Tito Guizar. Tana. Martin Garralaga,
Paul Ellis: PRODUCER: Dario Faralla: DIREC-
TOR: Richard Harlan.
Dancing Co-Ed
DISTRIBUTOR: Loew's. Inc.: RUNNING TIME:
80 mins.; REVIEWED: 10-13-39: RELEASED
9-29-39.
CAST: Lana Turner, Richard Carlson, Artie
Shaw. Ann Rutherford, Lee Bowman, Leon Errol.
Thurston Hall, Roscoe Karns, Mary Field. Wal-
ter Kingsford, June Presser, Mary Beth Hughes.
Monty Wooley, Chester Clute. Mary Field.
PRODUCER: Edgar Selwyn: DIRECTOR: S.
Sylvan Simon; AUTHOR: Albert Treynor:
SCREENPLAY: Albert Manheimer; CAMERA-
MAN: Alfred Gilks; EDITOR: W. Donn Hayes.
Danger Flight
DISTRIBUTOR: Monogram: RUNNING TIME:
63 mins.: REVIEWED: 11-10-39: RELEASED:
11- 1-39.
CAST: John Trent, Marjorie Reynolds, Milburn
Stone, Jason Robards, Tommie Baker, Dennis
Moore, Julius Tannen, Edwin Parker, Joe Bernard.
Harry Harvey, Jr., Walter Wills.
PRODUCER: Paul Malvern; DIRECTOR: How-
ard Bretherton; SCREENPLAY: Byron Morgan. E.
C. Parsons: CAMERAMAN: Fred Jackman. Jr.:
EDITOR: Edward Schroeder.
156
Dark Victory
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners; RUNNING TIME:
106 mins.; REVIEWED: 3-17-39; RELEASED:
4-22-39.
CAST: Bette Davis, George Brent, Humphrey
Bogart, Geraldine Fitzgerald. Ronald Reagan,
Henry Travers, Cora Witherspoon, Dorothy Peter-
son, Virginia Brissac, Charles Richman, Herbert
Rawlinson. Leonard Mudie, Fay Helm, Lottie
Williams.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: David Lewis; DI
RECTOR: Edmund Goulding: AUTHORS: George
Brewer. Jr.. Bertram Bloch; SCREENPLAY: Casey
Robinson: CAMERAMAN: Ernest Haller; EDI-
TOR: William Holmes.
Daughter of the Tong
DISTRIBUTOR: Times Pictures; RUNNING
TIME: 56 mins.; REVIEWED: 8-28-39.
CAST: Evelyn Brent, Grant Withers, Dorothy
Short. Dave O'Brien, Dirk Thane, James Coleman,
Harry Harvey, Budd Buster. Richard Loo. Hal
Haliaferro. Robert Frazer.
DIRECTOR: Raymond K. Johnson; SCREEN-
PLAY: George H. Plympton.
Daughters Courageous
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners; RUNNING TIME:
107 mins.; REVIEWED: 6-16-39; RELEASED
7-22 39.
CAST: John Garfield, Claude Rains, Jeffrey
Lynn, Fay Bainter, Priscilla Lane, Rosemary-
Lane, Lola Lane. Gale Page, Donald Crisp, May
Robson, Frank McHugh, Dick Foran, George
Humbert, Berton Churchill.
PRODUCER: Hal B. Wallis; ASSOCIATE PRO-
DUCER: Henry Blanke; DIRECTOR: Michael
Curtiz; AUTHORS: Dorothy Bennett. Irving
White; SCREENPLAY: Julius Epstein. Phillip
Epstein; CAMERAMAN: James Wong Howe;
EDITOR: Ralph Dawson.
Day the Bookies Wept, The
DISTRIBUTOR: RKO Radio; RUNNING TIME :
64 mins.: REVIEWED: 9-18-39; RELEASED
9-15-39.
CAST: Joe Penner, Betty Grable, Tom Kenne-
dy, Richard Lane, Thurston Hall, Bernadene
Hayes, Carol Hughes, Jack Arnold.
PRODUCER: Robert Sisk; DIRECTOR: Leslie
Goodwins: AUTHOR: Daniel Fuchs; SCREEN-
PLAY: Bert Granet, George Jeske: CAMERA-
MAN: Jack MacKenzie; EDITOR: Desmond Mar-
quette.
Day-Time Wife
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century -Fox: RUNNING
TIME: 71 mins.; REVIEWED: 11-16-39: RE-
LEASED: 11-24-39.
CAST: Tyrone Power, Linda Darnell, Warren
William, Binnie Barnes, Wendy Barrie, Joan Da-
vis, Joan Valerie, Leonid Kinskey, Mildred Grover.
Renie Riano.
PRODUCER: Darryl F. Zanuck; ASSOCIATE
PRODUCER: Raymond Griffith; DIRECTOR: Greg-
ory Ratoff; AUTHOR: Rex Taylor; SCREEN-
PLAY: Art Arthur, Robert Harari; ART DIREC-
TORS: Richard Day. Joseph C. Wright: MUSICAL
DIRECTOR: Cyril J. Mockridge: CAMERAMAN:
Peverell Marley; EDITOR: Francis Lyons.
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
Days of Jesse James
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic; RUNNING TIME:
63 mins.: REVIEWED: 12-15-39; RELEASED:
12-20-39.
CAST: Roy Rogers, George "Gabby" Hayes.
Pauline Moore, Donald Barry, Harry Woods. Wade
Boteler, Ethel Wales, Scotty Beckett, Michael
Worth, Glenn Strange, Olin Howland, Monte Blue,
Jack Rockwell. Fred Burns.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Joseph Kane; DI
RECTOR: Joseph Kane; AUTHOR: Jack Natte-
ford: SCREENPLAY: Earl Snell; CAMERAMAN:
R. Lanning; EDITOR: Tony Martinelli.
Dead Men Tell No Tales
DISTRIBUTOR: Alliance; RUNNING TIME:
70 mins.; REVIEWED: 8-3-39; Produced in
England.
CAST: Emlyn Williams, Sara Seegar, Hugh
Williams, Marius Goring, Lesley Brook, Christine
Silver, Clive Morton, Anne Wilton, Jack Vivian.
Marjorie Dale.
DIRECTOR: David MacDonald: AUTHOR:
Francis Beeding; SCREENPLAY: Walter Sum
mers, Stafford Dickins: CAMERAMAN: Bryan
Langley.
Death Goes North
DISTRIBUTOR: Warwick; RUNNING TIME:
63 mins.; REVIEWED: 7-27-39.
CAST: Edgar Edwards, Sheila Bromley. Jame-
son Thomas. Dorothy Bradshaw, Walter Byron.
Rin-Tin-Tin, Jr.
DIRECTOR: Frank McDonald: AUTHOR: Ed-
ward R. Austin: SCREENPLAY: Edward R. Aus-
tin: CAMERAMAN: Harry Forbes; EDITOR:
William Austin.
Death of a Champion
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount; RUNNING TIME:
67 mins.; REVIEWED: 9-7-39; RELEASED:
9-1 39.
CAST: Lynne Overman, Virginia Dale, Joseph
Allen, Jr., Donald O'Connor, Susan Paley, Harry
Davenport, Robert Paige, May Boley, Hal Brazeale.
Frank M. Thomas, David Clyde, Walter Soderling.
Pierre Watkin, Bob McKenzie.
DIRECTOR: Robert Florey; AUTHOR: Frank
Gruber; SCREENPLAY: Stuart Palmer. Cortland
Fitzsimmons: CAMERAMAN: Stuart Thompson:
EDITOR: Archie Marshek.
Demon Barber of Fleet Street, The
DISTRIBUTOR: Select Attractions; RUNNING
TIME: 67 mins.; REVIEWED: 10-11-39; Pro-
duced in England.
CAST: Tod Slaughter, Eve Lister. Bruce Seton,
Davina Craig, D. J. Williams, Jerry Verno. Stella
Rho, Johnny Singer, Ben Souten, Billy Holland.
Norman Pierce; DIRECTOR: George King.
Desperate Trails
DISTRIBUTOR: Universal: RUNNING TIME:
r>8 mins.; REVIEWED: 10-24-39.
CAST: Johnny Mack Brown, Frances Robinson,
Fuzzy Knight, Russell Simpson, Bill Cody, Jr.,
157
158
159
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
Bob Baker, Charles H. Wilson, Ed Cassidy,
Charles Stevens, Ralph Dunn.
PRODUCER: Albert Ray; DIRECTOR: Albert
Ray: SCREENPLAY: Andrew Bennison: CAM-
ERAMAN: Jerry Ash; EDITOR: Louis Sackin.
Destry Rides Again
DISTRIBUTOR: Universal; RUNNING TIME:
!>4 mine.; REVIEWED: 11-30-39; RELEASED:
12-29-39.
CAST: James Stewart, Charles Winninger, Brian
Donlevy, Marlene Dietrich, Una Merkel, Irene
Hervey, Jack Carson, Warren Hymer, Allen Jen-
kins, Samuel Hinds, Joe King, Mischa Auer, Billy
Gilbert, Tom Fadden, Lillian Yarboe, Dickie Jones,
Ann Todd.
PRODUCER: Joseph Pasternak; DIRECTOR:
George Marshall; AUTHOR: Max Brand; SCREEN-
PLAY: Felix Jackson, Gertrude Purcell, Henry
Myers: CAMERAMAN: Hal Mohr; EDITOR: Mil-
ton Carruth.
Devil is an Empress, The (French)
DISTRIBUTOR: Columbia; RUNNING TIME:
70 mins.; REVIEWED: 12-15-39; Produced in
France.
CAST: Conrad Veidt, Francoise Rosay. Micheline
Francey: DIRECTOR: Jean Dreville.
Disbarred
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount; RUNNING TIME:
58 nuns.; REVIEWED: 1-10-39; RELEASED:
1-6-39.
CAST: Gail Patrick, Robert Preston, Otto
Kruger, Sidney Toler, Helen MacKellar, Virginia
Dabney, Edward Marr. Charles D. Brown. Clay
Clement, Frank M. Thomas, Harry Worthy. John
Hart.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Stuart Walker; DI-
RECTOR: Robert Florey: AUTHOR: Harry Sau-
ber; SCREENPLAY: Lillie Hay ward, Robert
Presnell: ART DIRECTORS: Hans Dreier, W.
Flannery; MUSICAL DIRECTOR: Boris Morros;
CAMERAMAN: Harry Fischbeck; EDITOR: Ar-
thur Schmidt.
Disputed Passage
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount; RUNNING TIME :
87 mins.; REVIEWED: 10-20-39; RELEASED-
10-27-39.
CAST: Dorothy Lamour, Akim Tamiroff, John
Howard. Judith Barrett, William Collier, Sr.,
Victor Varconi, Gordon Jones, Keye Luke, Eliz-
abeth Risdon, Gaylord Pendleton, Billy Cook.
William Pawley, Henie Riano. Z. T. Nyi, Philson
Ahn. Dr. E. Y. Chung, Philip Ahn. Lee Ya-Ching.
PRODUCER: Harlan Thompson: DIRECTOR:
Frank Borzage; AUTHOR: Lloyd C. Douglas;
SCREENPLAY: Anthony Veiller. Sheridan Gib
ney; ART DIRECTORS: Hans Dreier, Ronald An-
derson: MUSICAL SCORE: Frederick Hollander.
John Leopold: CAMERAMAN: William C. Mel-
lor; EDITOR: James Smith.
Dodge City
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners; RUNNING TIME
105 mins.: REVIEWED: 4-5-39: RELEASED:
4-8-39.
CAST: Errol Flynn. Olivia de Havilland. Ann
Sheridan, Bruce Cabot, Frank McHugh. Alan
Hale, John Litel, Henry Travers, Henry O'Neill.
Victor Jory, William Lundigan, Guinn "Big Boy"
Williams, Bobs Watson, Gloria Holden, Douglas
Fowley, George Caine, Charles Halton. Ward
Bond, Cora Witherspoon, Russell Simpson. Monte
Blue.
PRODUCER: Robert Lord: DIRECTOR: Michael
Curtiz; AUTHOR: Robert Buckner; SCREEN-
PLAY: Robert Buckner: CAMERAMAN: Sol Po
lito: EDITOR: George Amy.
Double Crime in the Maginot Line
(French)
DISTRIBUTOR: Tower Pictures: RUNNING
TIME : 83 mins.: REVIEWED: 4-13-39: Produced
in France.
CAST: Victor Francen. Vera Korene. Jacques
Baumer: DIRECTOR: Felix Gandera.
Double Deal
DISTRIBUTOR: International Roadshows; RUN-
NING TIME: 60 mins.; REVIEWED: 12-14-39.
CAST: Monte Hawley, Jeni LeGon, Eddie
Thompson, Florence O'Brien. Freddie Jackson.
Buck Woods, Maceo Sheffield. Charles Hawkins.
Jack Clissby. Tommy Southern, Vernon McCalla.
Charles Gordon, Arthur Ray, F. E. Miller, Shelton
Brooks.
PRODUCER: Dixon R. Merwin ; DIRECTOR:
Arthur Dreifuss; SCREENPLAY: Arthur Hoerl:
SONGS: Shelton Brooks. Peter Tinturin. Harry
Tobias: CAMERAMAN: Mack Stengler.
Down on the Farm
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century-Fox: RUNNING
TIME: 54 mins.: REVIEWED: 1-6-39.
CAST: Jed Prouty, Spring Byington, Louise
Fazenda. Russell Gleason. Ken Howell, George
Ernest. June Carlson, Florence Roberts, Billy
Mahan, Eddie Collins, Doris Bowdon, Roberta
Smith, Marvin Stephens. William Haade. John
T. Murray, William Irving.
PRODUCER: John Stone. DIRECTOR: Mal-
colm St. Clair: AUTHORS: Homer Croy, Frank
Fenton, Lynn Root: SCREENPLAY: Robert Ellis.
Helen Logan; CAMERAMAN: Edward Snyder:
EDITOR: Harry Reynolds.
Down the Wyoming Trail
DISTRIBUTOR: Monogram: RUNNING TIME:
56 mins.: REVIEWED: 6-14-39: RELEASED:
5-18-39.
CAST: Tex Ritter. Horace Murphy, Mary
Brodel, Bobby Lawson, Charles King. Bob Terry.
Jack Ingram, Earl Douglas, Frank LaRue. Ernie
Adams, Ed Coxen, Jean Sothern. Charles Sargent.
Merle Scobee. A. J. Brier, Wilson D. Rasch, Ray
Scobee, Charles Davis.
PRODUCER: Edward F. Finney; DIRECTOR:
Al Herman: AUTHORS: Peter Dixon. Roger Mer-
ton: SCREENPLAY: Peter Dixon, Roger Merten:
MUSICAL SCORE AND DIRECTION: Frank Sa-
nucci; CAMERAMAN: Marcel A. LePicaxd: EDI-
TOR: Holbrook Todd.
160
Druga Mlodosc (Polish)
DISTRIBUTOR: Polish American Film Co.;
RUNNING TIME: 91 mins.; REVIEWED:
11-1-39: Produced in Poland.
CAST: Maria Gorczynska, Witold Zacharewicz,
Junosza Stepowski; DIRECTOR: Michael Waszyn-
ski.
Drums Along the Mohawk
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century-Fox; RUNNING
TIME: 103 mins.; REVIEWED: 11-6-39; RE-
LEASED: 11-10-39.
CAST: Henry Fonda, Claudette Colbert, Edna
May Oliver, Eddie Collins, John Carradine, Doris
Bowdon, Jessie Ralph, Arthur Shields, Robert
Lowery, Roger Imhof, Francis Ford, Ward Bond,
Kay Linaker, Russell Simpson, Spencer Charters,
Si Jenks, J. Ronald Pennick, Arthur Aylesworth,
Chief Bigtree, Charles Tannen, Paul McVey, Eliz-
abeth Jones, Beulah Hall Jones, Clarence H. Wil-
son, Lionel Pape, Edwin Maxwell, Robert Greif,
Clara Blandick.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Raymond Griffith;
DIRECTOR: John Ford; AUTHOR: Walter D. Ed-
monds; SCREENPLAY: Lamar Trotti, Sonya Le-
vien; CAMERAMAN: Bert Glennon; EDITOR:
Robert Simpson.
Du Gamla, du Fria (Swedish)
(Thou Old, Thou Free)
DISTRIBUTOR: Scandinavian Talking Pictures;
RUNNING TIME: 86 mins.; REVIEWED: 4-6-39;
Produced in Sweden.
CAST: Sigurd Wallen. Karin Ekelund. Karl-
Arne Holmsten; DIRECTOR: Gunnar Olsson.
Dust Be My Destiny
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners; RUNNING TIME:
88 mins.; REVIEWED: 10-10-39; RELEASED:
9-16-39.
CAST: John Garfield, Priscilla Lane, Alan
Hale, Frank McHugh, John Litel, Charles Grape-
win, Bobby Jordan, Billy Halop, Henry Armetta,
Stanley Ridges, Moroni Olsen, Victor Killian,
Frank Jaquet, Ferike Boros, Marc Lawrence,
George Irving.
DIRECTOR: Lewis Seiler; AUTHOR: Jerome
Odium; SCREENPLAY: Robert Rosson; CAM-
ERAMAN: James Wong Howe; EDITOR: Warren
Low.
Each Dawn I Die
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners; RUNNING TIME:
92 mins.; REVIEWED: 7-18-39; RELEASED:
8-19-39.
CAST: James Cagney, George Raft, Jane Bryan,
George Bancroft, Maxie Rosenbloom, Stanley
Ridges, Alan Baxter, Victor Jory, John Wray,
Edward Pawley, Willard Robertson, Emma Dunn,
Paul Hurst, Louis Jean Heydt, Joe Downing,
Thurston Hall.
DIRECTOR: William Keighley; AUTHOR: Je-
rome Odium; SCREENPLAY: Norman Reilly
Raine, Warren Duff, Charles Perry; CAMERA-
MAN: Arthur Edeson; EDITOR: Thomas Rich-
ards.
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
East Side of Heaven
DISTRIBUTOR: Universal; RUNNING TIME:
90 mins.; REVIEWED: 4-10-39; RELEASED:
4 7-39.
CAST: Bing Crosby, Joan Blondell, Mischa
Auer, Irene Harvey, C. Aubrey Smith, Robert
Kent, Jerome Cowan. Sandy, Jane Jones, Rose
Valyda, Helen Warner, Jack Powell, The Music
Maids, Matty Malneck & Orchestra.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Herbert Polesie; DI-
RECTOR: David Butler; AUTHORS: David But-
ler, Herbert Polesie; SCREENPLAY: William
Conselman; ART DIRECTOR: Jack Otterson;
MUSICAL DIRECTOR: Charles Previn; ORCHES-
TRATIONS: Frank Skinner, John Scott Trotter;
SONGS: Johnny Burke, James V. Monaco; CAM-
ERAMAN: George Robinson; EDITOR: Irene
Morra.
El Capitan Adventurero (Spanish)
DISTRIBUTOR: Jose Guererro; RUNNING
TIME: 93 mins.; REVIEWED: 10 12-39; Pro-
duced in Mexico.
CAST: Jose Mojica, Manolita Saval, Carlos
Orellana; DIRECTOR: Arcady Boytler.
El Diablo Rides
DISTRIBUTOR: Metropolitan; RUNNING TIME:
57 mins.; REVIEWED: 12-5-39.
CAST: Bob Steele, Claire Rochelle, Ted Adams.
Carleton Young, Kit Guard, Bob Walker, Hal
Carey.
PRODUCER: Harry Webb; DIRECTOR: Ira
Webb; AUTHOR: Harry Gordon; SCREENPLAY:
Carl Krusada; CAMERAMAN: Eddie Kull.
En Kvinnas Ansikte (Swedish)
DISTRIBUTOR: Scandinavian Talking Pictures;
RUNNING TIME: 90 mins.; REVIEWED: 9-18-39;
Produced in Sweden.
CAST: Ingrid Bergman. Anders Henrikson.
Georg Rydeberg; DIRECTOR: Gustaf Molander.
End of a Day, The (French)
DISTRIBUTOR: Pax Film; RUNNING TIME:
94 mins.; REVIEWED: 9-18-39; Produced in
France; RELEASED: 9-12-39.
CAST: Victor Frances, Louis Jouvet, Michel
Simon.
Eravama Sette Sorella (Italian)
(We Were Seven Sisters)
DISTRIBUTOR: Erperia Film Co.; RUNNING
TIME: 90 mins.; REVIEWED: 3-14-39; Produced
in Italy; RELEASED: 3-1-39.
CAST: Nino Besozzi, Paloa Barbara, Antonio
Gandusio. Pergio Tofano; DIRECTOR: Nunzio
Malasomma.
Erik a Buxakalasz (Hungarian)
DISTRIBUTOR: Danubia ; RUNNING TIME:
83 mins.; REVIEWED: 9-18-39; Produced in
Hungary.
CAST: Sari Fedak, Mici Erdelyi, Maria Egry;
DIRECTOR: Bela Gaal,
161
IF IT'S PICTURES
(Ziegjeld of the camera)
PUCTCGCAPtiEC TC STARS CP THE
STAGE, Sk P4DIC
701 SEVENTH AVENUE
New York City
BRyant 9-4791
162
Escape, The
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century -Fox; RUNNING
TIME: 62 mins.; REVIEWED: 11-9 39; RE-
LEASED: 10-6-39.
CAST: Kane Richmond. Amanda Duff, June
Gale. Edward Norris, Henry Armetta, Leona Rob-
erts, Frank Reicher, Scotty Beckett, Rex Downing,
Jimmy Butler, Roger McGee. Richard Lane.
PRODUCER: Sol M. Wurtzel: DIRECTOR: Ri-
cardo Cortez; SCREENPLAY: Robert Ellis, Helen
Logan: CAMERAMAN: Edward Cronjager; EDI-
TOR: Fred Allen.
Escape from Yesterday (French)
DISTRIBUTOR: J. H. Hoffberg; RUNNING
TIME: 88 mins.; REVIEWED: 5-11-39; Produced
m France.
CAST: Annabella. Jean Gabin, Robert Le Vigan:
DIRECTOR: Julien Divivier.
Espionage Agent
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners; RUNNING TIME:
83 mins.; REVIEWED: 9 25-39; RELEASED:
9-30-39.
CAST: Joel McCrea, Brenda Marshall, George
Bancroft, Jeffrey Lynn, Stanley Ridges. James
Stephenson, Howard Hickman, Martin Kosleck,
Nana Bryant, Robert O. Davis, Hans von Twar-
dowsky, Lucien Prival. Addison Richards. Ed-
win Stanley, Egon Brecher.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Louis F. Edelman:
DIRECTOR: Lloyd Bacon; AUTHOR: R. H. Buck-
ner; SCREENPLAY: Warren Duff, Michael Fes-
sier, Frank Donaghue: CAMERAMAN: Charles
Rosher; EDITOR: Ralph Dawson.
Eternally Yours
DISTRIBUTOR: United Artists: RUNNING
TIME: 95 mins.: REVIEWED: 10-3-39: RE
LEASED: 10-12-39.
CAST: Lorctta Young. David Niven. Hugh
Herbert. C. Aubrey Smith, Billie Burke, Broderick
Crawford, Raymond Walburn, ZaSu Pitts, Vir-
ginia Field. Ralph Graves, Eve Arden, Lionel
Pape, Dennie Moore.
PRODUCER: Walter Wanger: DIRECTOR: Tay
Garnett; AUTHORS: Gene Towne. Graham Baker;
SCREENPLAY: Gene Towne. Graham Baker;
CAMERAMAN: Merrit Gerstad; EDITOR: Doro-
thy Spencer.
Everybody's Hobby
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners; RUNNING TIME:
54 mins.: REVIEWED: 9-20 39: RELEASED:
8-26-39.
CAST: Irene Rich. Henry O'Neil, Aldrich Bow-
ker, Jane Sharon, Jackie Moran, John Ridgely.
Perry Stewart. Jackie Morrow, Fredric Tozere,
Albert Morin, Nat Carr, Sidney Bracy, Jack
Mower, Don Rowan.
DIRECTOR: William McCann; AUTHOR: W. W.
Brockway; SCREENPLAY: Kenneth Garnet, W.
W. Brockway; CAMERAMAN: Sid Hickox; EDI-
TOR : Frank Magee.
Everything Happens at Night
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century-Fox; RUNNING
TIME: 77 mins.; REVIEWED: 12-18-39; RE-
LEASED: 12-22-39.
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
CAST: Sonja Henie, Ray Milland, Robert Cum-
mings, Maurice Moscovich, Leonid Kinsky, Alan
Dinehart, Fritz Feld, Jody Gilbert, Victor Var-
coni, Eleanor Wesselmoeft, Lester Mathews.
Christian Rub, Ferdinand Munier. Holmes Her-
bert, Roger Imhof, Rolfe Sedan, Frank Reicher,
John Bliefer.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Joe E. Brown; DI-
RECTOR: Irving Cummings; SCREENPLAY: Art
Arthur, Robert Herari: CAMERAMAN: Edward
Cronjager; EDITOR: Walter Thompson.
Everything's On Ice
DISTRIBUTOR: RKO Radio: RUNNING TIME:
65 mins.; REVIEWED: 9-7-39: RELEASED:
10-6-39.
CAST: Irene Dare, Roscoe Karns. Edgar Kenne-
dy, Lynne Roberts, Eric Linden. Mary Hart, Bob-
by Watson. George Meeker, Mary Currier, Maxine
Stewart, Wade Boteler.
PRODUCER: Sol Lesser; DIRECTOR: Erie C.
Kenton; SCREENPLAY: Adrian Landis, Sherman
Lowe: MUSICAL DIRECTOR: Lud Gluskin;
DANCE AND ICE NUMBERS: Dave Gould; OR-
CHESTRATIONS: Amedeo de Fillippi; EDITOR:
Arthur Hilton.
Ex-Champ
DISTRIBUTOR: Universal; RUNNING TIME:
72 mins.; REVIEWED: 5-17-39; RELEASED:
5-19-39.
CAST: Victor McLaglen. Tom Brown, Nan
Grey, Constance Moore, William Frawley, Donald
Briggs. Samuel S. Hinds, Marc Lawrence, Kid
Chissell.
PRODUCER: Burt Kelly: DIRECTOR: Phil
Rosen; AUTHOR: Gordon Kahn: CAMERAMAN:
Edward Bredell; EDITOR: Bernard Burton.
Exile Express
DISTRIBUTOR: Grand National; REVIEWED:
2 8-39.
CAST: Anna Sten. Alan Marshal, Jerome Cow-
an, Jed Prouty, Walter Catlett, Stanley Fields,
Leonid Kinsky. Irving Pichel, Harry Davenport.
Addison Richards, Feodor Chaliapin, Spencer
Charters, Byron Foulger, Etienne Girardot, Fon
Brodie. Henry Roquemore, Vince Barnett, Maude
Eburne, Charles Richmand, George Chandler.
PRODUCER: Eugene Frenke; DIRECTOR: OtU
Garrett; AUTHOR: Edwin Justis Mayer; SCREEN-
PLAY: Ethel LaBlanche; ART DIRECTOR: Ralph
Berger; MUSICAL SCORE: George Perisch ;
DANCE DIRECTOR: Buddy Harak: CAMERA-
MAN: John Mescall; EDITOR: Robert Bishoff.
Familjen Andersson (Swedish)
DISTRIBUTOR: Scandinavian Talking Pictures:
REVIEWED: 1-26-39; Produced in Sweden.
CAST: Sigurd Wallen. Elsa Carlsson. Inga-
Bodil Veterlund; DIRECTOR: Sigurd Wallen.
Family Next Door, The
DISTRIBUTOR: Universal: RUNNING TIME:
60 mins.; REVIEWED: 4-14-39: RELEASED:
3 31 39.
163
shorts
INC.
Producers of
"MELODY PUZZLES"
A contest unlike any other devised — either on or
off the screen. Ten Minutes of clever, amusing
fun ... a new, stimulating contest that will make
your audiences think, feel and talk!
There is NO GAMBLING. The element of chance
is not involved. The contest is based on a knowl-
edge of music.
A short, full reel film, combining a fast, entertain-
ing screen story with popular and classic music
and prize awards.
Also producers of outstanding
musical films and short subjects.
SHORTS,,
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164
CAST: Hugh Herbert, Joy Hodges, Eddie Quil-
ian, Ruth Donnelly, Bennie Bartlett, Juanita
Quigley, Thomas Beck, Cecil Cunningham, James
Bush, Frances Robinson.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Max Golden: DIREC-
TOR: Joseph Stanley: AUTHOR: Mortimer Offner:
SCREENPLAY: Mortimer Offner: ART DIREC-
TOR: Jack Otterson: MUSICAL DIRECTOR:
Charles Previn: CAMERAMAN: Milton Krasner:
EDITOR: Frank Gross.
Fast and Furious
DISTRIBUTOR: Loew's. Inc.: RUNNING TIME:
73 mins.: REVIEWED: 10-20-39: RELEASED-
10-6 39.
CAST: Franchot Tone, Ann Sothern, Ruth Hus-
sey, John Miljan, Allyn Joslyn, Bernard Nedell.
Mary Beth Hughes. Cliff Clark, James Burke.
Frank Orth, Margaret Roach, Gladys Blake, Gran-
ville Kurnitz.
PRODUCER: Frederick Stephani: DIRECTOR:
Busby Berkeley: SCREENPLAY: Harry Kurnitz;
CAMERAMAN: Ray June: EDITOR: Elmo Ver-
non.
Fast and Loose
DISTRIBUTOR: Loew's, Inc.: RUNNING TIME:
SO mins.: REVIEWED: 2-17-39; RELEASED:
2-17-39.
CAST: Robert Montgomery, Rosalind Russell.
Reginald Owen. Ralph Morgan, Etienne Girardot,
Alan Dinehart, Joe Ann Sayers, Joan Marsh, An-
thony Allan, Tom Collins, Sidney Blackmer, Don-
ald Douglas, Ian Wolfe, Mary Forbes. Leonard
Carey .
PRODUCER: Frederick Stephani; DIRECTOR:
Edwin L. Marin: AUTHOR: Harry Kurnitz:
SCREENPLAY: Harry Kurnitz: CAMERAMAN:
George Folsey: EDITOR: Elmo Vernon.
Father O'Flynn
DISTRIBUTOR: J. H. Hoffberg; RUNNING
TIME: 67 mins.; REVIEWED: 1-3-39; Produced
in Ireland.
CAST: Tom Burke, Jean Andrienne, Robert
Chisholm, Henry Oscar, Ralph Truman, Denis
O'Neil, Dorothy Vernon: DIRECTOR: Wilfred
Noy.
Federal Man-Hunt
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic; RUNNING TIME:
64 mins.: REVIEWED: 1-10-39.
CAST: Robert Livingston, June Travis, John
Gallaudet, Ben Welden, Charles Halton, Horace
McMahon, Gene Morgan, Matt McHugh. Sibyl
Harris, Jerry Tucker, Margaret Mann, Frank
Conklin.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Armand Shaefer; DI-
RECTOR: Nick Grinde; AUTHORS: Sam Fuller.
William Lively: SCREENPLAY: Maxwell Shane:
CAMERAMAN: Ernest Miller: EDITOR: Edward
Mann.
Fehervari Husxarok (Hungarian)
DISTRIBUTOR: Danubia Pictures: RUNNING
TIME: 72 mins.: REVIEWED: 9-21-39; Pro-
duced in Hungary.
CAST: Antal Pager, Maria Egry, Julius Kaboa:
DIRECTOR : Martin Keleti.
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
Fifth Avenue Girl
DISTRIBUTOR: RKO Radio; RUNNING TIME:
S3 mins.: REVIEWED: 8-22-39: RELEASED:
9-22-39.
CAST: Ginger Rogers, Walter Connolly, Verree
Teasdale, Kathryn Adams, Tim Holt, James El-
lison, Franklin Pangborn, Louis Calhern, Ferike
Boros, Theodore von Eltz, Alexander D'Arcy.
PRODUCER: Gregory LaCava; DIRECTOR:
Gregory LaCava; SCREENPLAY: Allan Scott;
CAMERAMAN: Robert de Grasse: EDITORS:
William Hamilton. Robert Wise.
Fighting Gringo, The
DISTRIBUTOR: RKO Radio: RUNNING TIME:
59 mins.: REVIEWED: 11-28-39: RELEASED:
8-8-39.
CAST: George O'Brien, Lupita Tovar, Lucio
Villegas, William Royle, Glenn Strange, Slim
Whittaker, LeRoy Mason, Mary Field, Martin
Garralaga, Dick Botiller, Bill Cody, Sr., Cactus
Mack, Chris-Pin Martin.
PRODUCER: Bert Gilroy: DIRECTOR: David
Howard: AUTHOR: Oliver Drake; SCREENPLAY:
Oliver Drake; CAMERAMAN: Harry Wild:
EDITOR: Frederic Knudtson.
Fighting Thoroughbreds
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic: RUNNING TIME:
03 mins.; REVIEWED: 1-16 39: RELEASED:
1- 6-39.
CAST: Ralph Byrd, Mary Carlisle. Robert Al-
len, George Hayes. Marvin Stephens, Charles Wil-
son, Kenneth Duncan, Victor Killian, Eddie Brian.
PRODUCER: Armand Schaefer; DIRECTOR:
Sidney Salkow; AUTHORS: Clarence E. Marks.
Robert Wyler; SCREENPLAY: Wellyn Totman;
CAMERAMAN: Jack Marta: EDITOR: Ernest
Nims.
Fisherman's Wharf
DISTRIBUTOR: RKO Radio; RUNNING TIME:
72 mins.; REVIEWED: 3-1-39; RELEASED:
2- 3-39.
CAST: Bobby Breen, Leo Carrillo. Henry Ar-
metta, Lee Patrick. Rosina Galli, Tommy Bupp.
George Humbert. Leon Belasco.
PRODUCER: Sol Lesser: DIRECTOR: Bernard
Vorhaus: SCREENPLAY: Bernard Schubert. Ian
Hunter. Herbert Clyde Lewis; CAMERAMAN:
Charles Schoenbaum; EDITOR: Arthur Hilton.
First Love
DISTRIBUTOR: Universal: RUNNING TIME:
84 mins.; REVIEWED: 11-3-39; RELEASED:
11-10-39.
CAST: Deanna Durbin. Robert Stack. Helen
Parrish, Eugene Pallette, Lewis Howard, Leatrice
Joy, Marcia Mae Jones, June Storey, Frank Jenks,
Kathleen Howard, Thurston Hall, Samuel S.
Hinds, Doris Lloyd, Charles Coleman, Jack Mul-
hall, Mary Treen, Dorothy Vaughan. Lucille Ward.
PRODUCER: Joe Pasternak: DIRECTOR: Hen-
ry Koster: SCREENPLAY: Bruce Manning, Lionel
Houser: ART DIRECTOR: Jack Otterson: MU-
SICAL DIRECTOR: Charles Previn; ORCHESTRA-
TIONS: Frank Skinner; CAMERAMAN: Joseph
Valentine; EDITOR: Bernard Burton.
165
SELECl Attractions That ore SELECT
Michael Bartlett, June Knight
in
'LILAC DOMINO'
Sir Harry Lauder
in
'SONG OF THE ROAD"
Ruth Chatterton
in
"A ROYAL
DIVORCE"
Harry Bauer
Anthony Bushell
Joan Gardner
in
'THE REBEL
SON"
Neil Hamilton
Gina Malo
in
SOUTHERN
"ROSES"
Patrick Knowles
Fay Compton
Barbara Greene
in
"WRATH OF JEALOUSY'
Ignace Jan Paderewski
in
•MOONLIGHT SONATA'
WORLDS GREATEST HORROR SHOW
"RETURN OF THE FROG"
DEMON BARBER OF FLEET STREET"
Paul Cavanagh — Greta Nissen
in
"DANGER IN PARIS"
SELECT ATTRACTIONS, INC.
New York City paramount building 15qi Broadway
Branch Offices in all Key Cities
166
Five Came Back
DISTRIBUTOR: RKO Radio; RUNNING TIME:
74 mins.: REVIEWED: 6-12-39; RELEASED:
6-23-39.
CAST: Chester Morris, Lucille Ball, Wendy Bar-
rie, John Carradine. Allen Jenkins, Joseph Calleia,
C. Aubrey Smith, Kent Taylor, Patric Knowles,
Elizabeth Risdon. Casey Johnson, Duck Hogan.
PRODUCER: Robert Sisk: DIRECTOR: John
Farrow: AUTHOR: Richard Carroll: SCREEN-
PLAY: Jerry Cady, Dalton Trumbo, Nathaniel
West; ART DIRECTOR: Van Nest Polglase; MU-
SICAL SCORE: Roy Webb; CAMERAMAN: Nich-
olas Musuraca; SPECIAL EFFECTS: Vernon
Walker; EDITOR: Harry Marker.
Five Little Peppers and How They
Grew
DISTRIBUTOR: Columbia: RUNNING TIME:
60 mins.; REVIEWED: 11-28-39: RELEASED:
8-22-39.
CAST: Edith Fellows. Dorothy Peterson, Clar-
ence Kolb, Tommy Bond, Ronald Sinclair, Charles
Peck, Jimmie Leake, Dorothy Seese, Leonard
Carey.
DIRECTOR: Charles Bolton; AUTHOR: Mar-
garet Sidney; SCREENPLAY: Nathalie Bucknall.
Jefferson Parker; CAMERAMAN: Henry Freulich:
EDITOR: James Sweeney.
Fixer Dugan
DISTRIBUTOR: RKO Radio: RUNNING TIME:
61 mins.: REVIEWED: 5-29-39: RELEASED:
4-21 39.
CAST: Lee Tracy, Virginia Weidler. Peggy
Shannon. Bradley Page, William Edmunds, Ed-
ward Gargan. Jack Arnold, Rita LaRoy, Irene
Franklin, John Dilson. Edith Elliott.
PRODUCER: Cliff Reid; DIRECTOR: Lew Lan-
ders; AUTHOR: H. C. Potter; SCREENPLAY:
Bert Granet, Paul Yawitz.
Flight at Midnight
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic: RUNNING TIME:
66 mins.: REVIEWED: 8-28-39: RELEASED:
8-28-39.
CAST: Jean Parker. Phil Regan. Robert Arm
strong, Noah Beery, Jr., Roscoe Turner, Harlan
Briggs, Helen Lynd. Barbara Pepper. Harry Hay-
den. Raymond Bailey.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Armand Sehaefer:
DIRECTOR: Sidney Salkow; AUTHORS: Daniel
Moore. Hugh King; SCREENPLAY: Eliot Gibbons;
CAMERAMAN: Ernest Miller: EDITOR: William
Morgan.
Flying Deuces, The
DISTRIBUTOR: RKO Radio: RUNNING TIME:
65 mins.: REVIEWED: 10-10-39: RELEASED:
11-3-39.
CAST: Stan Laurel. Oliver Hardy. Jean Parker.
Reginald Gardiner. Charles Middleton. Jean Del
Val, Clem Wilenchick, James Finlayson.
PRODUCER: Boris Morros: DIRECTOR: A. Ed-
ward Sutherland: AUTHORS: Ralph Spence. Alfred
Schiller. Charles Rogers, Harry Langdon: SCREEN
PLAY: Ralph Spence. Alfred Schiller. Charles
Rogers. Harry Langdon: ART DIRECTOR: Boris
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
Leven; MUSICAL DIRECTOR: Edward Pau; MU-
SIC: John Leopold, Leo Shuken; CAMERAMAN:
Art Lloyd: SPECIAL EFFECTS: Howard Ander-
son: AERIAL PHOTOGRAPHY: Elmer Dyer:
EDITOR: Jack Dennis.
Flying Irishman, The
DISTRIBUTOR: RKO Radio; RUNNING TIME
72 mins.; REVIEWED: 3-17-39; RELEASED:
4-7-39.
CAST: Douglas Corrigan, Paul Kelly, Robert
Armstrong, Gene Reynolds, Donald MacBridge,
Eddie Quillan, J. M. Kerrigan, Dorothy Peterson.
Scotty Beckett, Joyce Compton, Dorothy Appleby.
Minor Watson, Spencer Charters, Peggy Ryan.
PRODUCER: Pandro S. Berman: DIRECTOR:
Leigh Jason; SCREENPLAY: Ernest Pagano, Dal-
ton Trumbo: CAMERAMAN: J. Roy Hunt: EDI
TOR: Arthur E. Roberts.
For Love or Money
DISTRIBUTOR: Universal: RUNNING TIME:
67 mins.; REVIEWED: 5-8 39: RELEASED:
4-28-39.
CAST: June Lang, Robert Kent, Cora Wither-
spoon, Etienne Girardot, Edward Brophy, Richard
Lane, Horace MacMahon, Edward Gargan.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Max Golden: DIREC-
TOR: Albert S. Rogell: AUTHORS: Julian Blau-
stein, Daniel Taradash. Bernard Feins: SCREEN-
PLAY: Charles Grayson. Arthur T. Horman: ART
DIRECTOR: Jack Otterson; MUSICAL DIRECTOR:
Charles Previn: CAMERAMAN: Stanley Cortez;
EDITOR: Maurice Wright.
Forged Passport
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic: RUNNING TIME
04 mins.: REVIEWED: 2-8-39; RELEASED:
4-24-39.
CAST: Paul Kelly, June Lang, Lyle Talbot, Billy
Gilbert, Cliff Nazarro, Maurice Murphy, Christian
Rub, John Hamilton. Dewey Robinson. Bruce Mac
Farlane. Ivan Miller. Frank Puglia.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: John H. Auer; AU-
THORS: James Webb. Lee Loeb; SCREENPLAY:
Franklin Coen, Lee Loeb: ART DIRECTOR: John
Victor Mackay; MUSICAL DIRECTOR: Cy Feuer:
CAMERAMAN: Jack Marta: EDITOR: Edward
Mann.
Forgotten Woman, The
DISTRIBUTOR: Universal: RUNNING TIME:
63 mins.: REVIEWED: 7-6-39: RELEASED:
7-7-39.
CAST: Sigrid Gurie. William Lundigan. Eve
Arden. Donald Briggs. Donnie Dunagan. Elizabeth
Rifdon. Paul Harvey, Ray Walker, Virginia Brissae.
Joseph Downing, Norman Willis, George Walcott.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Edmund Grainger.
DIRECTOR: Harold Young; AUTHOR: John Kob-
ler; SCREENPLAY: Lionel Houser, Harold Buch-
man; ART DIRECTOR: Jack Otterson: MUSICAL
DIRECTOR: Charles Previn: CAMERAMAN: Stan-
ley Cortez: EDITOR: Charles Maynnrd.
167
A WORD ABOUT SKY ADVERTISING
1. How many kinds of sky
advertising are there?
There are many kinds, includ-
ing:
sky writing
sign towing — plane
sign towing — blimp
tandem sign towing
illuminated night display
sky broadcasting
2. Is sky advertising expen-
sive?
Sky advertising, based on num-
ber of visual impressions, can
be one of the most inexpensive
forms of advertising, if handled
right, properly merchandised,
etc.
3. Can "circulation" be deter-
mined in sky advertising?
Yes, with a surprising degree
of accuracy!
4. Do I have to go to different
companies to get the dif-
ferent types of sky adver-
tising?
No. You can get any type of
sky advertising you want from
the S. S. Pike Company.
5. What are the advantages
of dealing with S. S. Pike
Company?
One principal advantage, dis-
counting the years of experience
of S. S. Pike, is that every flight
executed by them is covered in
the amount of $50,000 Propertv
Damage and $100.000/$500.000
Public Liability, with a separate
certificate issued in the name of
the advertiser.
6. Isn't sky advertising prin-
cipally a "stunt"?
If it is handled simply on the
grounds of its being spectacu-
lar, yes — it is. But if you will
allow us to weld it to your mer-
chandising plans, no — it isn't a
stunt. It's one of the most
profitable investments you can
make.
7. Where can I get sky adver-
tising through the S. S.
Pike Company?
Services can be rendered in all
sections of the United States
and Canada, for coverage of
cities, special events, seasonal
advertising at beaches, etc.
8. Is there perhaps a particu-
lar kind of sky advertising
most suited to my needs?
Undoubtedly. This can best be
determined by discussing your
sales objectives with a repre-
sentative of the S. S. Pike Com-
pany.
9. How can I learn more
about sky advertising in
general and the S. S. Pike
Company in particular?
Simply send for the FREE,
spectacularly illustrated. 16-
page booklet. "A WOMAN
RAN SHRIEKING." Please
make this request on your letter-
head.
S. S. PIKE COMPANY, INC., 50 E. 42 ST., N.Y. C.
168
Four Feathers
DISTRIBUTORS: United Artists; RUNNING
TIME: 115 mins.; REVIEWED: 7-24-39: Pro-
duced in England: RELEASED: 8-4-39.
CAST: Ralph Richardson, C. Aubrey Smith.
John Clements. June Duprez, Jack Allen, Donald
Gray, Robert Rendell, Archibald Batty, John
Laurie. Derek Elphinstone, Frederick Culley. Hay
Petrie, Henry Oscar, Clive Baxter, Allan Jeayes.
Major John Knott.
PRODUCER: Alexander Korda: DIRECTOR:
Zoltan Korda: AUTHOR: A. W. E. Mason;
SCREENPLAY: R. C. Sherriff. Oliver H. P.
Garrett.
Four Girls in White
DISTRIBUTOR: Loew's. Inc.; RUNNING TIME:
70 mins.; REVIEWED: 1-24 39; RELEASED:
1-27-39.
PRODUCER: Nat Levine: DIRECTOR: S. Sylvan
Simon; AUTHORS: Nathalie Bucknall. Endre
Bohem; SCREENPLAY: Dorothy Yost; ART DI-
RECTOR: Cedric Gibbons: MONTAGE: Peter Ball-
busch; CAMERAMAN: Leonard Smith; EDITOR:
George Boemler.
Four Wives
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners; RUNNING TIME:
110 mins.; REVIEWED: 11-28-39; RELEASED:
12 25-39.
CAST: Claude Rains, Jeffrey Lynn, Eddie Al-
bert. May Robson, Frank MeHugrh, Dick Foran,
Henry O'Neill. Vera Lewis, John Qualen, Priscilla
Lane, Rosemary Lane, Lola Lane. Gale Page,
John Garfield.
PRODUCER: Hal B. Wallis: ASSOCIATE PRO-
DUCER: Henry Blanke; DIRECTOR: Michael
Curtiz; AUTHOR: Fannie Hurst (from "Sister
Act"); SCREENPLAY: Julius J. Epstein. Philip
G. Epstein, Maurice Hanline; ART DIRECTOR:
John Hugrhes; MUSICAL DIRECTOR: Leo F.
Forbstein: CAMERAMAN: Sol Pelito: EDITOR:
Ralph Dawson.
400 Million, The
DISTRIBUTOR: Garrison Films; RUNNING
TIME: 60 mins.; REVIEWED: 3-9-39.
PRODUCERS: Joris Ivens, John Ferno; COM
MENTARY: Dudley Nichols: NARRATOR: Fred-
ric March: MUSIC CONDUCTOR: Dr. Fritz Stiedy.
Friends (Russian)
DISTRIBUTOR: Amkino: RUNNING TIME: 85
mins.; REVIEWED: 1-23-39; Produced in Russia.
CAST: Boris Babochkin. I. Zerubina, Nikolai
Cherkassov.
Frog, The
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century-Fox; RUNNING
TIME: 60 mins.: REVIEWED: 12-11-39: Pro-
duced in England.
CAST: Noah Beery, Jack Hawkins. Richard
Ainley, Vivian Gaye. Gordon Harker. Esme Percy.
Felix Aylmer, Carol Goodner. Cyril Smith, Harold
Franklin, Gordon McLeod, Julien Mitchell.
DIRECTOR: Jack Raymond; AUTHOR: Edgar
Wallace; SCREENPLAY: Gerald Elliott: CAMERA-
MAN: F. A. Young; EDITORS: Fred Wilson, Mer-
rill White.
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
Frontier Marshal
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century-Fox ; RUNNING
TIME: 71 mins.: REVIEWED: 7-31-39; RE-
LEASED: 7-28-39.
CAST: Randolph Scott, Nancy Kelly, Cesar
Romero, Binnie Barnes. John Carradine, Edward
Norris. Eddie Foy. Jr., Ward Bond. Lon Chaney,
Jr.. Tom Tyler, Joe Sawyer. Del Henderson, Harry
Hayden.
PRODUCER: Sol Wurtzel; DIRECTOR: Allan
Dwan; AUTHOR: Stuart Lake; SCREENPLAY:
Sam Hellman: CAMERAMAN: Charles Clarke:
EDITOR: Robert Bischoff.
Frontier Pony Express
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic; RUNNING TIME:
58 mins.; REVIEWED: 4-12-39; RELEASED:
4-20-39.
CAST: Roy Rogers. Mary Hart. Raymond Hat-
ton. Edward Keane. Monte Blue. Donald Dillaway.
Noble Johnson. William Royale. Ethel Weiss.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Joseph Kane: DIREC
TOR: Joseph Kane: SCREENPLAY: Norman Hall:
CAMERAMAN: William Nobles: EDITOR: Gene
Milford.
Fugitive at Large
DISTRIBUTOR: Columbia; RUNNING TIME:
63 mins.; REVIEWED: 8-2-39: RELEASED:
12-7-39
CAST: Jack Holt, Patricia Ellis, Stanley Fields.
Guinn Williams, Arthur Hohl, Cy Kendall, Jona-
than Hale, Leon Ames, Don Douglas, Weldon Hey-
burn. Ben Welden. Leon Beaumont.
PRODUCER: Larry Darmour: ASSOCIATE PRO
DUCER; Rudolph Flothow; DIRECTOR: Lewis D.
Collins: AUTHOR: Eric Taylor; SCREENPLAY:
Eric Taylor, Harvey Gates: SONG: Hall Johnson:
CAMERAMAN: James S. Brown, Jr.: EDITOR:
Dwight Caldwell.
Full Confession
DISTRIBUTOR: RKO Radio; RUNNING TIME:
75 mins.: REVIEWED: 9-11-39: RELEASED:
9-8-39.
CAST: Victor McLaglen. Sally Eilers. Joseph
Calleia, Barry Fitzgerald. Elisabeth Risdon.. Adele
Pearce, Malcolm McTaggart, John Bleifer. William
Haade. George Humbert.
PRODUCER: Robert Sisk; DIRECTOR: John
Farrow: AUTHOR: Leo Birinski; SCREENPLAY:
Jerry Cady: CAMERAMAN: J. Roy Hunt; EDI-
TOR: Harry Marker.
Gentleman from Arizona, The
DISTRIBUTOR: Monogram; RUNNING TIME:
-1 mins.; REVIEWED: 12-14-39; RELEASED:
12-25-39.
CAST: J. Farrell MaeDonald. Joan Barclay.
John King. Craig Reynolds. Ruthie Reece. Johnny
Morris. Nora Lane. Doc Pardee.
PRODUCER: Charles Goetz; DIRECTOR: Earl
Haley; AUTHOR: Earl Haley; SCREENPLAY:
Earl Haley, Jack O'Donnell; CAMERAMAN: John
Boyle.
169
LLOYDS FILM STORAGE
1914
CORPORATION
OVER 25 YEARS
194C
Of Continuous Service to the Motion Picture Industry and maintaining
that high standard which it established over 25 years ago for—
SAFETY
SECURITY
STORAGE BY REEL OR VAULT
IN 10O°o FIRE-PROOF VAULTS
Approved by
N. Y. Fire Dep't and N. Y. Fire Underwriters
LOWEST INSURANCE RATES
SERVICE
THE
MILES
PROJECTION
FAMOUS " THEATRES
Acknowledged the Finest Public Screening
Rooms in the East.
2 PRIVATE THEATRES — AIR CONDI-
TIONED — MOST MODERN PROJECTION
EQUIPMENT — NIGHT SCREENING —
AMPLE SEATING CAPACITY.
CUTTING ROOMS fH^MaU^^piieinB DELIVERY & SHIPPING SERVICE
The Industry's Most
Notable Collection
S Miles of Stock Shots from the Miles
TOCK SHOT LIBRAR
Great Pictures Made Greater
The Greatest Ever Assembled —
Indexed for Ready Selection
In 4// Departments. Personal and Efficient Service Rendered .
with Courtesy the Passu-ord and the Last Word.
LLOYDS FILM STORAGE CORP.
MILES PROJECTION THEATRES PROGRESS FILM LIBRARY
F. E. MILES, President
Telephone: BRyant 9-5600-1-2-3-4 /
Cable Address: LOYFILSTOR
729 Seventh Avenue
New York City
170
Geronimo
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount; RUNNING TIME:
89 mins.: REVIEWED: 11-21-39.
CAST: Preston Foster, Ellen Drew, Andy De-
vine, Gene Lockhart, William Henry, Ralph Mor-
gan. Marjorie Gateson, Kitty Kelly. Chief Thunder-
cloud, Pierre Watkin, Addison Richards, Monte
Blue. Joseph Crehan, Hank Bell, Prank Cordell.
DIRECTOR: Paul H. Sloane; SCREENPLAY:
Paul H. Sloane; ART DIRECTORS: Hans Dreier.
Earl Hendrick; MUSIC: Gerald Carbonara. John
Leopold; CAMERAMAN: Henry Shapp: SPECIAL
EFFECTS: Farciot Edouart; EDITOR: John Link.
Girl Downstairs, The
DISTRIBUTOR: Loew's, Inc.; RUNNING TIME:
76 mins.; REVIEWED: 1-31-39.
CAST: Franciska Gaal, Franchot Tone, Walter
Connolly. Reginald Gardiner, Rita Johnson, Regi
nald Owen. Franklin Pangborn, Robert Coote.
Barnett Parker, James B. Carson, Billy Gilbert.
DIRECTOR: Norman Taurog; AUTHOR: Sandor
Hunvady; SCREENPLAY: Harold Goldman. Felix
Jackson. Karl Noti; CAMERAMAN: Cylde De
Vinna: EDITOR: Elmo Vernon.
Girl from Mexico. The
DISTRIBUTOR: RKO Radio; RUNNING TIME:
69 mins.; REVIEWED: 5-17-39; RELEASED:
6-2-39.
CAST: Lupe Velez, Donald Woods. Leon Errol.
Linda Hayes, Donald MacBridge, Edward Raquello,
Elizabeth Risdon, Ward Bond.
PRODUCER: Robert Sisk; DIRECTOR: Leslie
Goodwins: AUTHOR: Lionel Houser; SCREEN-
PLAY: Lionel Houser, Joseph A. Fields; ART
DIRECTOR: Van Nest Polglase; MUSICAL DI-
RECTOR: Roy Webb; CAMERAMAN: Jack Mac
Kenzie: EDITOR: Desmond Marquette.
Girl from Rio, The
DISTRIBUTOR: Monogram; RUNNING TIME:
63 mins.; REVIEWED: 9-11-39; RELEASED:
8-15-39.
CAST: Movita, Warren Hull, Alan Baldwin, Kay
Liuaker, Clay Clement, Adele Pearce, Soledad
Jiminez, Richard Tucker, Dennis Moore, Byron
Foulger.
DIRECTOR: Lambert Hfflyer; AUTHORS: Mil-
ton Raison, John T. Neville; SCREENPLAY: Mil-
ton Raison, John T. Neville; CAMERAMAN: Paul
Ivano; EDITOR: Russell Schoengarth.
Golden Boy
DISTRIBUTOR: Columbia; RUNNING TIME:
99 mins.; REVIEWED: 8-21-39; RELEASED:
9 5-39.
CAST: Barbara Stanwyck. Adolphe Menjou.
William Holden, Lee J. Cobb. Joseph Calleia, Sam
Levene, Edward S. Brophy, Beatrice Blinn, William
H. Strauss, Don Beddoe.
PRODUCER: William Perlberg; DIRECTOR:
Rouben Mamoulian; AUTHOR: Clifford Odets:
SCREENPLAY: Lewis Meltzer, Daniel Taradash.
Sarah Y. Mason, Victor Heerman; ART DIREC-
TOR: Lionel Banks; MUSICAL SCORE: Victor
Young: MUSICAL DIRECTOR: M. W. Stoloff;
CAMERAMEN: Nick Musuraca, Karl Freund:
MONTAGE: Donald W. Starling; EDITOR: Otto
Meyer.
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
Golden Key, The (Russian)
DISTRIBUTOR: Amkino; RUNNING TIME:
70 mins.: REVIEWED: 12-28-39; Produced in
Russia; RELEASED: 12-20-39.
CAST: A. Shagin, S. Martinson. G. Uvarov;
DIRECTOR: Alexander Ptushko.
Good Girls Go to Paris
DISTRIBUTOR: Columbia; RUNNING TIME:
75 mins.; REVIEWED: 6-20-39; RELEASED:
6- 30-39.
CAST: Melvyn Douglas, Joan Blondell, Walter
Connolly. Alan Curtis, Joan Perry, Isabel Jeans.
Stanley Brown, Alexander D'Arcy, Henry Hunter,
Clarence Kolb, Howard Hickman.
PRODUCER: William Perlberg; DIRECTOR:
Alexander Hall; AUTHORS: Lenore Coffee, William
Joyce Cowen; SCREENPLAY: Gladys Lehman,
Ken Englund; ART DIRECTOR: Lionel Banks;
MUSICAL DIRECTOR: M. W. Stoloff: CAMERA-
MAN: Henry Freulich; EDITOR: AI Clark.
Goodbye, Mr. Chips
DISTRIBUTOR: Loew's. Inc.: RUNNING TIME
114 mins.; REVIEWED: 6-16-39; RELEASED:
7- 28-39.
CAST: Robert Donat. Greer Garson, Terry Kil-
burn, John Mills, Paul Von Hernried, Judith Furse,
Lyn Harding, Milton Rosmer, Frederick Liester.
Louise Hampton. Austin Trevor, David Tree, Ed-
mond Breon, Jill Furse, Scott Sunderland.
PRODUCER: Victor Saville; DIRECTOR: Sam
Wood; AUTHOR: James Hilton: SCREENPLAY:
R. C. Sherriff, Claudine West, Eric Maschwitz:
CAMERAMAN: F. A. Young: EDITOR: Charles
Frond.
Gone With the Wind
DISTRIBUTOR: Loew's, Inc.; RUNNING TIME:
220 mins.; REVIEWED: 12-13-39.
CAST: Clark Gable. Leslie Howard, Olivia de
Havilland. Vivian Leigh, George Reeves. Fred
Crane. Hattie McDaniel. Everett Brown. Zack
Williams. Thomas Mitchell, Oscar Polk, Barbara
O'Neill. Victor Jory, Evelyn Keyes, Ann Ruther-
ford. Butterfly McQueen. Howard Hickman. Alicia
Rhett. Rand Brooks. Carroll Nye, Marcella Mar-
tin, Laura Hope Crews, Harry Davenport, Leona
Roberts, Jane Darwell, Albert Morin, Mary Ander-
son, Terry Shero, William McClain. Eddie Ander-
son, Jackie Moran. Cliff Edwards, Ona Munson.
Ed Chandler, George Hackathorne. Roscoe Ates,
Eric Linden, John Arledge, Tom Tyler, William
Bakewell, Lee Phelps, Paul Hurst, Ernest Whit-
man, William Stelling, Louis Jean Heydt, Isabel
Jewell, Robert Elliott, George Meeker. Wallis
Clark, Irving Bacon. Adrian Morris, J. M. Ker-
rigan, Olin Howland, Yakima Canutt. Blue Wash-
ington. Ward Bond, Cammie King, Mickey Kuhn.
Lillian Kemble Cooper.
PRODUCER: David O. Selznick (Selznick In-
ternational Pictures); DIRECTOR: Victor Flem-
ing; AUTHOR: Margaret Mitchell; SCREENPLAY:
Sidney Howard; ART DIRECTOR: Lyle Wheeler;
MUSICAL SCORE: Max Steiner; DANCE DI-
RECTORS: Frank Floyd, Eddie Prinz; CAMERA-
MAN: Ernest Haller: SPECIAL EFFECTS: Jack
Cosgrove. Lee Zavitz: EDITORS: Hal C. Kern.
James E. Newcom.
Gorilla, The
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century Fox: RUNNING
TIME: 59 mins.: REVIEWED: 5-24-39: RE-
LEASED: 5-26-39.
CAST: Ritz Brothers. Anita Louise. Patsy
Kelly. Lionel Atwill, Bela Lusrosi. Joseph Calleia.
Edward Norris. Wally Vernon. Paul Harvey. Art
Miles.
PRODUCER: Harry Joe Brown: DIRECTOR:
Allan Dwan; AUTHOR: Ralph Spence; SCREEN-
PLAY: Rian James, Sid Silvers: ART DIREC-
TORS: Richard Day, Lewis Creber: MUSICAL
DIRECTOR: David Butolph: CAMERAMAN: Ed-
ward Cronjager: EDITOR: Allen McNeil.
Gracie Allen Murder Case, The
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount: RUNNING TIME
74 mins.; REVIEWED: 5-17 39; RELEASED:
6-2-39.
CAST: Gracie Allen. Warren Wililam. Ellen
Drew. Kent Taylor. Jed Prouty, Jerome Cowan.
Donald MacBride. H. B. Warner, William Dema-
rest, Judith Barrett, Horace MacMahon, Al Shaw,
Sam Lee.
PRODUCER: George Arthur; DIRECTOR: Al-
fred E. Green; AUTHOR: S. S. Van Dine:
SCREENPLAY: Nat Perrin ; ART DIRECTORS:
Hans Dreier, Earl Hedrick; SONG: Matty Malneck.
Fred Loesser; CAMERAMAN: Charles Lang: EDI-
TOR: Paul Weatherwax.
Goose Step
DISTRIBUTOR: Producers Distributing Corp.:
RUNNING TIME: 84 mins.: REVIEWED: 11-22-39
(Reviewed as "Beasts of Berlin").
CAST: Ronald Drew. Steffi Duna, Allan Ladd,
Vernon Dent, Greta Granstcdt, Lucien Prival.
John Ellis, George Rosener, Bodil Rosing, Hans
von Twardowski, Willie Kaufman, Hans Joby,
Frederick Gierman, Henry von Zynda, John Voigt,
Hans Shumm, John Peters, Hans von Morhart,
Walter Stahl, Josef Forte, Francisco Moran, Fred
Mellinger, Dick Wessel. A. Palasthy, Walter
Thiele, Paul Panzer, Fred Vogeding, Abe Dino-
vitch. Bob Btevenson, Anna Lisa.
DIRECTOR: Sherman Scott: AUTHOR: Stepard
Traube; CAMERAMAN: Jack Greenhalgh:
EDITORS: Robert Crandall, Holbrook Todd.
Grand Jury Secrets
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount: RUNNING TIME:
02 mins.: REVIEWED: 6-7-39: RELEASED:
6-23-39.
CAST: John Howard, Gail Patrick. William
Frawley, Jane Darwell, Porter Hall. Harvey Step-
hens, John Hartley. Elisha Cook, Jr., Kitty Kelly,
Morgan Conway, Jack Norton, Richard Denning.
Frank M. Thomas, Edward Marr.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Sam Engel; DIREC-
TOR : James Hogan; AUTHORS: Irving Reis.
Maxwell Shane: SCREENPLAY: Irving Reis, Rob-
ert Yost: ART DIRECTORS: Hans Dreier. Franz
Bachelin; CAMERAMAN: Harry Fischbeck; EDI-
TOR: Hugh Bennett.
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
Great Commandment, The
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century -Fox: RUNNING
TIME: 85 mins.: REVIEWED: 10-5-39.
CAST: John Beal, Maurice Moscovich. Albert
Dekkcr, Marjorie Cooley. Warren MeCullum, Lloyd
Corrigan. Ian Wolfe, Olaf Hytten. Anthony Mar
lowe, Lester Scharff. Albert Spehr. Marc Loebell.
Harold Minjir, Earl Gunn, George Rosener. John
Mcrton, Perry Evans, Stanley Price, D'Arcy Cor
rigan. Max Davidson.
PRODUCER: John T. Coyle; ASSOCIATE PRO
DUCER: Rev. James K. Friedrich: DIRECTOR:
Irving Pichel: AUTHOR: Dana Burnet: ART DI-
RECTOR: Edward Jewell: MUSIC: Hans Salter,
Walter Jurman; CAMERAMAN: Charles Boyle;
EDITOR: Ralph Dixon.
Great Citizen, The (Russian)
DISTRIBUTOR: Amkino; RUNNING TIME: 114
mins.: REVIEWED: 1-20-39; Produced in Russia.
CAST: N. Bogoliubov, I. Berenov, O. Zhakov :
DIRECTOR: Friederick Ermler.
Great Man Votes, The
DISTRIBUTOR: RKO Radio: RUNNING TIME:
70 mins.; REVIEWED: 1-11-39; RELEASED:
1-13-39.
CAST: John Barrymore, Peter Holden. Virginia
Weidler, Katharine Alexander, Donald McBride.
Bennie Bartlett, Brandon Tynan, Elizabeth Risdon,
Granville Bates, Luis Alberni, J. M. Kerrigan,
William Demarest. Roy Gordon.
PRODUCER: Cliff Reid: DIRECTOR: Garson
Kanin; AUTHOR: Gordon Malherbe Hillman;
SCREENPLAY: John Twist; ART DIRECTOR:
Van Nest Polg-lase; MONTAGE: Douglas Travers;
MUSICAL SCORE: Roy Webb; CAMERAMAN:
Russell Metty; EDITOR: Jack Hively.
Great Victor Herbert, The
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount: RUNNING TIME:
84 mins.; REVIEWED: 12-1-39; RELEASED:
12-29-39.
CAST: Allan Jones, Mary Martin, Walter Con-
nolly, Lee Bowman, Susanna Foster, Judith Bar-
rett, Jerome Cowan, John Garrick, Pierre Watkin.
Richard Tucker, Hal K. Dawson, Emmet Vogan,
Mary Currier, James Finlayson.
PRODUCER: Andrew L. Stone; DIRECTOR:
Andrew L. Stone; AUTHORS: Robert Lively.
Andrew L. Stone: SCREENPLAY: Russell Crouse.
Robert Lively: ART DIRECTORS: Hans Dreier.
Ernst Fegte: MUSIC SUPERVISOR: Phil Boutelje:
CAMERAMAN: Victor Milner: EDITOR: James
Smith.
Gulliver's Travels
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount; RUNNING TIME:
74 mins.: REVIEWED: 12-21-39; RELEASED:
12-22-39.
PRODUCER: Max Fleischer: Based on Jona-
than Swift's tale: DIRECTOR: Dave Fleischer:
SCREENPLAY: Dan Gordon. Cal Howard, Ted
Pierce, Izzy Sparber, Edmond Deward: STORY
ADAPTATION: Edmond Deward; SONG: Sam
173
IOE ROCK
Producer-Director
London
174
Timbers, Al Neiburd. Winston Sharpies: MUSIC
AND LYRICS: Ralph Rainger. Leo Robin: SING-
ING VOICE OF PRINCESS GLORY: Jessica
Dragonette: SINGING VOICE OF PRINCE
DAVID: Lanny Ross: ATMOSPHERIC MUSIC
COMPOSER AND CONDUCTOR: Victor Young-;
CAMERAMAN: Charles Schettler; DIRECTORS
OF ANIMATION: Seymour Kneitel, Willard Bow-
sky, Tom Palmer. Grim Natwick, William Ban-
ning, Roland Crandall, Tom Johnson, Robert
Leflingwell, Frank Kelling, Winfield Hoskins,
Orestes Calpini.
Gunga Din
DISTRIBUTOR: RKO Radio; RUNNING TIME:
117 mins.; REVIEWED: 1-25-39; RELEASED:
2 17-39.
CAST: Cary Grant, Victor McLaglen, Douglas
Fairbanks, Jr., Sam Jaffe, Eduardo Ciannelli, Joan
Fontaine, Montague Love, Robert Coote, Abner
Biberman, Lumsden Hare.
PRODUCER: George Stevens; DIRECTOR:
George Stevens; AUTHOR: Rudyard Kipling;
SCREENPLAY: Ben Hecht. Charles MacArthur.
Joel Sayre, Fred Guiol; ART DIRECTOR: Van
Nest Polglase; MUSICAL DIRECTOR: Alfred New-
man: CAMERAMAN: Joseph H. August; SPECIAL
EFFECTS: Vernon L. Walker; EDITOR: Henry
Berman, John Loekert.
Gyimesi Vadvirag (Hungarian)
DISTRIBUTOR: Hungaria Pictures; RUNNING
TIME: 85 mins.: REVIEWED: 11-1-39; Pro-
duced in Hungary.
■■ CAST: Klari Tolney. Zoltan Greguss, Zsoka Ul-
vedy; DIRECTORS: Akos Rathonyi.
Harapos Ferj (Hungarian)
(The Biting Husband)
DISTRIBUTOR: Hungaria Pictures; RUNNING
TIME: 82 mins.; REVIEWED: 2-1-39; Produced
m Hungary.
CAST: Gabor Rajnay, Guula Kabos, Margit
Dayka; DIRECTOR: Marton Keleti.
Hardys Ride High, The
DISTRIBUTOR: Loew's, Inc.; RUNNING TIME:
80 mins.; REVIEWED: 4-14-39; RELEASED:
4-21-39.
CAST: Lewis Stone. Mickey Rooney, Cecilia
Parker, Fay Holden. Ann Rutherford, Sara Haden,
Virginia Grey, Minor Watson, John King, John T.
Murray, Halliwell Hobbes, George Irving, Aileen
Pringle, Marsha Hunt, Donald Briggs, William Orr,
Truman Bradley.
DIRECTOR: George B. Seitz; SCREENPLAY:
Agnes Christine Johnson, Kay Van Riper, William
Ludwig; CAMERAMAN: Lester White; EDITOR:
Ben Lewis.
Harlem Rides the Range
DISTRIBUTOR: Hollywood Productions: RUN-
NING TIME: 68 mins.; REVIEWED: 6-20-39.
CAST: Herbert Jeffrey, Lucius Brooks, F. E.
Miller, Artie Young, Spencer Williams, Clarence
Brooks, Tom Southern, John Thomas, Wade Du-
mas, Leonard Christmas. The Four Tones.
PRODUCER: Richard C. Kahn: DIRECTOR:
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
Richard C. Kahn; AUTHORS: Spencer Williams,
Jr., F. E. Miller; ART DIRECTOR: Vin Taylor;
MUSIC: Lew Porter: CAMERAMEN: Roland Price.
Clark Ramsey.
Harvest (French)
DISTRIBUTOR: French Cinema Center: RUN
NING TIME: 80 mins.: REVIEWED: 7-25-39:
Produced in France.
CAST: Gabriel Gabrio, Edouardo Delmont, Fer-
nandel: DIRECTOR: Marcel Pagnol.
Hawaiian Nights
DISTRIBUTOR: Universal; RUNNING TIME:
05 mins.; REVIEWED: 10-3-39; RELEASED:
9-8-39.
CAST: Johnny Downs. Constance Moore, Mary
Carlisle, Eddie Quillan, Etienne Girardot, Samuel
S. Hinds, Princess Luana, Thurston Hall, Robert
Emmett Keane.
PRODUCER: Max H. Golden: DIRECTOR: Al
bert Rogell ; AUTHOR : John Grey ; SCREENPLAY :
Charles Grayson, Lee Loeb; CAMERAMAN: Stan-
ley Cortez.
Heart of Paris (French)
DISTRIBUTOR: Tri-National ; RUNNING TIME:
85 mins.; REVIEWED: 1-18-39: Produced in
France.
CAST: Raimu, Miehele Morgan. Gilbert Gil;
DIRECTOR: Marc Allegret.
Heartbeat (French)
DISTRIBUTOR: French Motion Picture Corp.
REVIEWED: 9-14-39; Produced in France.
CAST: Orane Domazis, Fcrnandel. Henri Poupon:
DIRECTOR: Marcel Pagnol.
Hell's Kitchen
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners; RUNNING TIME
81 mins.: REVIEWED: 7-12-39; RELEASED:
7-8-39.
CAST: Dead End Kids, Stanley Fields, Grant
Mitchell. Margaret Lindsay, Ronald Reagan,
Frankie Burke, Fred Tozere, Arthur Loft, Vera
Lewis, Robert Homans. Charley Foy, Robert
Strange. Raymond Bailey.
PRODUCERS: Mark Bellinger, Byron Foy; DI
RECTORS: Lewis Seiler, E. A. Dupont; AUTHOR:
Crane Wilbur: SCREENPLAY: Crane .Wilbur
Fred Niblo. Jr.
Here I Am a Stranger
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century -Fox; RUNNING
TIME: 83 mins.; REVIEWED: 10-3-39; RE
LEASED: 9-29-39.
CAST: Richard Greene. Richard Dix, Gladys
George, George Zucco, Brenda Joyce, Roland
Young, Edward Norris, Katherine Aldridge, Henry
Kolker, Russell Gleason, Richard Bond.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Harry Joe Brown;
DIRECTOR: Roy Del Ruth: AUTHOR: Gordon
Malherbe Hillman; SCREENPLAY: Milton Sper
ling, Sam Hellman; CAMERAMAN: Arthur Miller;
EDITOR: Louis Loeffler.
175
Don Hancock
▼
Producer-Director
T
CASTLE FILMS
R C. A. BUILDING N. Y. C.
176
Heritage of the Desert
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount; RUNNING TIME:
73 mins.: REVIEWED: 3-17-39; RELEASED:
6-23-39.
CAST: Donald Woods, Evelyn Venable. Russell
Hayden, Robert Barrat, Sidney Toler, C. Henry
Gordon, Willard Robertson. Paul Guilfoyle, Paul
Fix. John Miller. Reginald Barlow.
PRODUCER: Harry Sherman: ASSOCIATE PRO
DUCER: J. D. Trop: DIRECTOR: Lesley Selander;
AUTHOR: Zane Grey: SCREENPLAY: Norman
Houston: ART DIRECTOR: Lewis J. Rachmil:
MUSICAL DIRECTOR: Louis R. Lipton: MU-
SICAL SCORE: Victor Young; SONG: Victor
Young. Frank Loesser: CAMERAMAN: Russell
Harlan; EDITOR: Sherman Rose.
Hero for a Day
DISTRIBUTOR: Universal; RUNNING TIME:
66 mins.; REVIEWED: 11-16-39; RELEASED:
10- 6-39.
CAST: Charles Grapewin, Anita Louise, Dick
Foran, Emma Dunn. David Holt. Berton Churchill.
Samuel S. Hinds, Richard Lane, Jerry Marlowe,
Frances Robinson, Dorothy Arnold, John Gal-
laudet.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Kenneth Goldsmith;
DIRECTOR: Harold Young: AUTHOR: Matt Tay-
lor (from "Old Grad") : SCREENPLAY: Harold
Buchman; CAMERAMAN: John W. Boyle:
EDITOR: Charles Maynard.
Heroes in Blue
DISTRIBUTOR: Monogram; RUNNING TIME:
59 mins.; REVIEWED: 11-20-39: RELEASED:
11- 7-39.
CAST: Dick Purnell, Bernadene Hayes, Charles
Quigley, Frank Sheridan, Edward Keane, Julie
Warren, Lillian Elliott.
PRODUCER: T. R. Williams; DIRECTOR: Wil-
liam Watson; AUTHORS: Charles Curran. C. B.
Williams; SCREENPLAY: C. B. Williams:
CAMERAMXN: Harry Neumann.
Heroes of the Marne (French)
DISTRIBUTOR: Spectrum; RUNNING TIME:
68 mins.; REVIEWED: 4-26-39; Produced in
France.
CAST: Raimu. Jacqueline Porel, Germaine Der
moz; DIRECTOR: Andre Hugon.
Hidden Power
DISTRIBUTOR: Columbia; RUNNING TIME
59 mins.; REVIEWED: 5-24-39; RELEASED:
9-7-39.
CAST: Jack Holt, Gertrude Michael, Dickie
Moore, William B. Davidson, Henry Kolker, Helen
Brown, Marilyn Knowlden. Harry Hayden, Regis
Toomey, Holmes Herbert, Christian Rub.
PRODUCER: Larry Darmour: ASSOCIATE PRO-
DUCER; Rudolph Flothow; DIRECTOR: Lewis D.
Collins; AUTHOR: Gordon Rigby: SCREENPLAY:
Gordon Rigby: MUSIC: Lee Zahler; CAMERA-
MAN: James S. Brown. Jr.; EDITOR: Dwight
Caldwell.
Hollywood Cavalcade
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century-Fox; RUNNING
TIME: 96 mins.; REVIEWED: 10-4-39; RE
LEASED: 10-13-39.
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
CAST: Alice Faye. Don Ameche, J. Edward
Bromberg, Alan Curtis, Stuart Erwin, Jed Prouty,
Buster Keaton, Donald Meek, George Givot, Eddie
Collins, Hank Mann, Heinie Conklin, James Finlay-
son. Chick Chandler, Robert Lowery, Russell
Hicks, Ben Welden, Willie Fung, Paul Stanton.
Mary Forbes. Joseph Crehan, Irving Bacon. Ben
Turpin. Chester Conklin, Marjorie Beebe, Frederick
Burton, Lee Duncan, Rin-Tin-Tin, Jr., Al Jolson,
Mack Sennett.
PRODUCER: Darryl F. Zanuck; ASSOCIATE
PRODUCER: Harry Joe Brown; DIRECTOR: Irv-
ing Cummings; AUTHORS: Hilary Lynn, Brown
Holmes; SCREENPLAY: Ernest Pascal; ART DI-
RECTORS: Richard Day, Wiard B. Ihnen; MUSI-
CAL DIRECTOR: Louis Silvers; CAMERAMEN:
Allen M. Davey, Ernest Palmer; EDITOR: Walter
Thompson.
Home on the Prairie
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic: RUNNING TIME:
58 mins.: REVIEWED; 2-6-39; RELEASED:
2-3-39.
CAST: Gene Autry, Smiley Burnette, June
Storey, George Cleveland, Jack Mulhall, Walter
Miller, Gordon Hart, Hal Price, Earle Hodgins.
Ethan Laidlaw, John Beach, Jack Ingram, Bob
Woodward, Sherven Brothers.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Harry Grey; DIREC-
TOR: Jack Townley; SCREENPLAY: Arthur
Powell, Paul Franklin: CAMERAMAN: Reg Lan-
ning; EDITOR: Lester Orlebeck.
Honeymoon's Over, The
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century-Fox; RUNNING
TIME: 70 mins.; REVIEWED: 12-20-39; RE-
LEASED: 12-15-39.
CAST: Stuart Erwin, Marjorie Weaver, Patric
Knowles, Russell Hicks, Hobart Cavanaugh, Jack
Carson, June Gale, E. E. Clive, Renie Riano.
PRODUCER: Sol M. Wurtzel; DIRECTOR:
Eugene Ford: AUTHOR: William Anthony Mc-
Guire; SCREENPLAY: Hamilton MacFadden.
Clay Adams. Leonard Hoffman; CAMERAMAN:
Virgil Miller: EDITOR: Nick De Maggio.
Ho Perduto Mio Marito (Italian)
DISTRIBUTOR: Espiera Films; RUNNING
TIME: 86 mins.; REVIEWED: 11-1-39; Produced
in Italy; RELEASED: 10-19-39.
CAST: Nino Besozzi, Paola Borboni, Enrico
Viarisio; DIRECTOR: Giovanni Cenzato.
Homicide Bureau
DISTRIBUTOR: Columbia: RUNNING TIME:
58 mins.; REVIEWED: 2-2-39: RELEASED:
1-5-39.
CAST: Bruce Cabot. Rita Hay worth. Marc Law-
rence, Richard Fiske. Moroni Olson, Norman
Willis, Gene Morgan, Robert Paige, Lee Prather,
Eddie Featherstone, Stanley Andrews.
DIRECTOR: C. C. Coleman, Jr.; AUTHOR: Earle
Snell; SCREENPLAY: Earle Snell; CAMERAMAN:
Benjamin Kline: Editor: James Sweeney.
177
II ill 111! PRODUCTIONS,
JULES LEVEY, President
Producing
"THE BOYS FROM SYRACUSE"
for
UNIVERSAL RELEASE
JACK OTTERSON
UNIVERSAL
178
Honeymoon in Bali
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount: RUNNING TIME:
95 mins.: REVIEWED: 9-13-39; RELEASED:
9 29-39.
CAST: Fred MacMurray, Madeleine Carroll.
Allan Jones, Akim Tamiroff, Helen Broderick, Oso
Massen. Carolyn Lee, Astrid Allwyn, Georgia
Caine. John Qualen, Fritzie Brunette, William B.
Davidson, Bennie Bartlett.
PRODUCER: Jeff Lazarus: DIRECTOR: Edward
H. Griffith: AUTHORS: Grace Sartwell Mason.
Katharine Brush: SCREENPLAY: Virginia Van
Upp; CAMERAMAN: Ted Tetzlaff.
Honolulu
DISTRIBUTOR: Loew's, Inc.: RUNNING TIME:
83 mins.: REVIEWED: 2-3-39: RELEASED:
2-3-39.
CAST: Eleanor Powell, Robert Young, George
Burns, Gracie Allen, Rita Johnson, Clarence Kolb,
Jo Ann Sawyers, Ann Morriss, Willie Fung-, Cliff
Clark, Edward Gargan, Eddie Anderson, Sig
Rumann, Ruth Hussey. Edgar Dearing, Keoloha
Holt.
PRODUCER: Jack Cummings; DIRECTOR: Ed-
ward Buzzell; AUTHORS: Herbert Fields, Frank
Partos; SCREENPLAY: Herbert Fields. Frank
Partos: CAMERAMAN: Ray June: EDITOR: Con-
rad Nervig.
Hotel for Women
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century-Fox: RUNNING
TIME: 83 mins.: REVIEWED: 8-28-39; RE-
LEASED: 8-14-39.
CAST: Linda Darnell, James Ellison, Elsa Max-
well, Ann Sothern, John Halliday, Alan Dinehart.
Lynn Bari, Jean Rogers, June Gale, Joyce Comp-
ton, Katherine Aldredge, Sidney Blackmer, Mary
Healy, Amanda Duff, Chick Chandler, Gregory
Gaye, Charles Wilson, Herbert Ashley, Ivan Lebo-
deff, Helen Ericson, Barnett Parker.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Raymond Griffith:
DIRECTOR: Gregory Ratoff: AUTHORS: Elsa
Maxwell. Katherine Seola; SCREENPLAY: Kath-
erine Seola, Darrell Ware; CAMERAMAN: Peverell
Marley; EDITOR: Louis Loeffler.
Hotel Imperial
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount: RUNNING TIME:
67 mins.: REVIEWED: 5-17-39: RELEASED:
5-12-39.
CAST: Isa Miranda, Ray Milland. Reginald
Owen, Gene Lockhart, J. Carroll Naish, Curt Bois,
Henry Victor, Albert Dekker.
DIRECTOR: Robert Florey; AUTHOR: Lajos
Biro: SCREENPLAY: Gilbert Gabriel, Robert
Thoeren; CAMERAMAN: William Mellor; EDI-
TOR: Chandler House.
Hound of the Baskervilles, The
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century-Fox: RUNNING
TIME : 80 mins.: REVIEWED: 3-27-39: RE-
LEASED: 3-31-39.
CAST: Richard Greene, Basil Rathbone, Wendy
Barrie, Nigel Bruce, Lionel Atwill, John Carradine.
Barlowe Borland, Beryl Mercer, Morton Lowry,
Ralph Forbes, E. E. Clive, Eily Malyon, Nigel De
Brulier, Mary Gordon, Peter Willes. Ivan Simp-
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
son, Ian MacLaren, John Burton, Dennis Green.
Evan Thomas.
PRODUCER: Gene Markey: DIRECTOR: Sidney
Lanfield; AUTHOR: Conan Doyle: SCREENPLAY:
Ernest Pascal: CAMERAMAN: Peverell Marley;
EDITOR: Robert Simpson.
House of Fear, The
DISTRIBUTOR: Universal: RUNNING TIME
67 mins.; REVIEWED: 6-5-39; RELEASED:
6-30-39.
CAST: William Gargan, Irene Hervey, Alan
Dinehart, Walter Woolf King, Dorothy Arnol.d
El Brendel, Harvey Stephens, Robert Coote, Jan
Duggan, Tom Dugan, Ben Lewis, Stanley Hughes,
Don Douglas, Raymond Parker.
PRODUCER: Edmund Grainger: DIRECTOR:
Joe May; AUTHORS: Thomas Fallon, Wadsworth
Camp: SCREENPLAY: Peter Milne: CAMERA
MAN: Milton Krasner.
Housekeeper's Daughter, The
DISTRIBUTOR: United Artists: RUNNING
TIME: 71 mins.; REVIEWED: 9-14-39; RE-
LEASED: 10-26-39.
CAST: Joan Bennett, Adolphe Menjou, John
Hubbard. William Gargan, George E. Stone, Peggy
Wood, Donald Meek. Marc Lawrence, Lillian Bond,
Victor Mature, John Hyams, Leila Mclntyre, Luis
Alberni, Rosina Galli.
PRODUCER: Hal Roach; DIRECTOR: Hal
Roach; AUTHOR: Donald Henderson Clarke:
SCREENPLAY: Rian James, Gordon Douglas; ART
DIRECTOR: Charles D. Hall; MUSICAL DIREC-
TOR: Lud Gluskin; ORCHESTRAL SCORE: Ame-
deo de Filippi; CAMERAMAN: Norbert Nordine:
EDITOR: William Ziegler.
Hunchback of Notre Dame, The
DISTRIBUTOR: RKO Radio; RUNNING TIME:
117 mins.; REVIEWED: 12-15-39; RELEASED:
12-29-39.
CAST: Charles Laughton. Sir Cedrie Hard-
wicke, Thomas Mitchell, Maureen O'Hara, Ed-
mond O'Brien, Alan Marshal, Walter Hampden,
Katharine Alexander, Harry Davenport, George
Zucco, Fritz Leiber, Etienne Girardot, Helene
Whitney, Minna Gombell, Arthur Hohl, George
Tobias, Rod LaRocque. Spencer Charters.
PRODUCER: Pandro S. Berman: DIRECTOR:
William Dieterle; AUTHOR: Victor Hugo;
SCREENPLAY: Sonya Levien, Bruno Frank;
MUSICAL ADAPTOR: Alfred Newman: ART
DIRECTOR: Van Nest Polglase: DANCE DI-
RECTOR: Ernst Matray; CAMERAMAN: Joseph
H. August; SPECIAL EFFECTS: Vernon L.
Walker; EDITORS: William Hamilton. Robert
Wise.
I Met a Murderer
DISTRIBUTOR: York Pictures: RUNNING
TIME: 78 mins.; REVIEWED: 9-28-39.
CAST: James Mason, Pamela Kellino. Sylvia
Coleridge, William Devlin, Peter Coke, Esma Can-
non, Sheila Morgan, James Harcourt.
DIRECTOR: Roy Kellino: AUTHORS: Pamela
Kellino, James Mason: SCREENPLAY: Roy Kel-
lino: CAMERAMAN: Roy Kellino.
179
Radio City
Music Hall
Rockefeller Center
New York City
JOSEPH SANTLEY
Director
"Music In My Heart"
COLUMBIA
In Preparation
"Dance, Little Lady"
(Working Title)
PARAMOUNT
180
I Stole a Million
DISTRIBUTOR: Universal; RUNNING TIME:
80 mins.; REVIEWED: 8-22-39; RELEASED:
7-21-39.
CAST: George Raft, Claire Trevor, Dick Foran,
Henry Armetta, Victor Jory, George Chandler, Irv-
ing' Bacon, Tom Faddon, Robert Elliott, Joe
Sawyer.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Burt Kelly; DIREC-
TOR: Frank Tuttle; AUTHOR: Lester Cole;
SCREENPLAY: Nathaniel West; CAMERAMAN:
M. Krasner; EDITOR: E. Curtis.
I Was a Convict
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic; RUNNING TIME:
(il mins.; REVIEWED: 3-6-39; RELEASED-
3- 6-39.
CAST: Barton MacLane, Beverly Roberts, Clar-
ence Kolb, Janet Beecher, Horace MacMahon, Ben
Welden, Leon Ames, Clara Blandick, Russell Hicks,
John Harmon, Chester Clute, Craufurd Kent, Ed-
win Stanley, Harry Holman.
PRODUCER: Herman Schlom; DIRECTOR: Au-
brey Scotto; AUTHOR: Robert D. Andrews;
SCREENPLAY: Ben Markson, Robert Andrews;
CAMERAMAN: Edward Snyder; EDITOR: Gene
Milford. ,
I'm from Missouri
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount; RUNNING TIME:
80 mins.; REVIEWED: 3-23-39: RELEASED:
4- 7-39.
CAST: Bob Burns, Gladys George, Gene Lock-
hart, William Henry, George P. Huntley, Judith
Barrett. Patricia Morrison. Tom Dugan, E. E.
Clive, Doris Lloyd, Lawrence Grossmith, Melville
Cooper, Dennis Moore, Ethel Griffies, James Burke,
Spencer Charters, Raymond Hatton, Eddy Waller,
William Collier, Sr., Charles Halton, Richard
Denning.
PRODUCER: Paul Jones: DIRECTOR: Theodore
Reed; AUTHORS: Homer Croy, Julian Street (from
"Sixteen Hands"); SCREENPLAY: John C. Mol-
fltt, Duke Atterberry; CAMERAMAN: Merritt
Gerstad: EDITOR: Archie Marshek.
Ice Follies of 1939, The
DISTRIBUTOR: Loew's, Inc.; RUNNING TIME:
83 mins.: REVIEWED: 3-7-39; RELEASED:
3-10-39.
CAST: Joan Crawford. James Stewart, Lew
Ayres, Lewis Stone, Bess Ehrhardt, Lionel Stander,
Charles D. Brown, Roy Shipstad, Eddie Shipstad,
Oscar Johnson.
PRODUCER: Harry Rapf; DIRECTOR: Rein-
hold Schunzel; AUTHOR: Leonard Praskins:
SCREENPLAY: Leonard Praskins, Florence Ryer-
son, Edgar Allan Woolf; MUSICAL SCORE:
Roger Edens; SCENIC EFFECTS: Merril Pye;
CAMERAMEN: Joseph Ruttenberg, Oliver T.
Marsh; EDITOR: W. Donn Hayes.
Idiot's Delight
DISTRIBUTOR: Loew's, Inc.; RUNNING TIME:
105 mins.; REVIEWED: 1-31-39; RELEASED:
1-27-39.
CAST: Norma Shearer, Clark Gable, Edward
Arnold, Charles Coburn, Joseph Schildkraut, Bur-
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
gess Meredith, Laura Hope Crews, Skeets Galla-
gher. Peter Willes, Pat Patterson, William Ed-
munds, Fritz Feld.
PRODUCER: Hunt Stromberg; DIRECTOR:
Clarence Brown; AUTHOR: Robert E. Sherwood;
SCREENPLAY: Robert E. Sherwood; CAMERA-
MAN: William Daniels; EDITOR: Robert J. Kern.
II Corsaro Nero (Italian)
(The Black Pirate)
DISTRIBUTOR: Esperia Films: RUNNING
TIME: 95 mins.; REVIEWED: 5-11-39; Produced
in Italy.
CAST: Ciro Verrati, Silvana Jachino, Nerio
Varnardi: DIRECTOR: Amelto Palmeri.
II Dotter Antonio (Italian)
DISTRIBUTOR: Itala Films; RUNNING TIME:
103 mins.; REVIEWED: 12-15-39; Produced in
Italy.
CAST: Ennio Cerlesi, Maria Gambarelli, Lam-
betto Pizasso: DIRECTOR: Enrico Gauzzoni.
I Due Sergenti (Italian)
DISTRIBUTOR: Ernest Zergani; RUNNING
TIME: 98 mins.; REVIEWED: 11-29-39; Pro-
duced in Italy.
CAST: Gino Cervi, Mino Doro. Luisa Ferida:
DIRECTOR: Valentino Brucki.
II Signor Max (Italian)
DISTRIBUTOR: Esperia Films; RUNNING
TIME: 84 mins.; REVIEWED: 10-20-39; Pro-
duced in Italy; RELEASED: 10-5-39.
CAST: Vittorio De Sica, Assia Noris, Rubi
Da'ma; DIRECTOR: Mario Camerini.
In Name Only
DISTRIBUTOR: RKO Radio: RUNNING TIME:
102 mins; REVIEWED: 8-3-39; RELEASED:
8-18-39.
CAST: Carole Lombard, Cary Grant. Kay Fran-
cis, Charles Coburn, Helen Vinson. Katharine
Alexander, Jonathan Hale, Maurice Moscovich,
Nella Walker, Peggy Ann Garner, Spencer Char-
ters.
PRODUCER: George Haight; DIRECTOR: John
Cromwell; AUTHOR: Bessie Breuer: SCREEN-
PLAY: Richard Sherman; CAMERAMAN: J. Roy
Hunt; EDITOR: William Hamilton.
In Old Caliente
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic; RUNNING TIME.
57 mins.: REVIEWED: 7-14-39: RELEASED:
6-19-39.
CAST: Roy Rogers. Mary Hart, George Hayes.
Jack LaRue, Katherine DeMille, Frank Puglia,
Harry Woods, Paul Marian, Ethel Wales, Merrill
McCormick.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Joseph Kane; DIREC-
TOR: Joseph Kane; AUTHORS: Norman Houston,
Gerald Geraghty; SCREENPLAY: Norman Hous-
ton, Gerold Geraghty; MUSICAL DIRECTOR: Cy
Feuer; CAMERAMAN: William Nobles; EDITOR:
Edward Mann.
181
ALOIS HAVRILLA
Announce*. GatHSHe+UcU&i
ON THE AIR
"STRANGE
AS IT SEEMS"
CBS
ON THE SCREEN
Universal
"STRANGER
THAN FICTION"
Paramount
PICTORIALS
'JluxU'uccU CduccMcuud OncUibiicd
1816 RCA Bldg.
Circle 6-1738
Englewood, N. J.
Telephone 3-5086
EMER/ON yClRI^E
STUDIO
— Scrip f to Screen —
• THEATRICAL Black and White • INFORMATIVE
• EDUCATIONAL Color • INDUSTRIAL
35 mm. 16 mm. 8 mm.
Produced many distinctive theatrical and Informative films during fiscal
year 1938-39 including co-production on series shorts for TJ. S. Golden
Gate International Exposition Commission: "Winter Wonderland" lor U. S.
Forest Service: "The Ninth State" (color) for State of New Hampshire:
originated sponsorship of the outstanding picture of the N. Y. World's
Fair, the third dimensional film. "In Tune With Tomorrow."
Guaranteed Professional
DISTRIBUTION * PRODUCTION
245 West 55th St. Telephone:
NEW YORK CITY Circle 6-3688
In Old Montana
DISTRIBUTOR: Spectrum: RUNNING TIME:
59 mins.: REVIEWED: 4-6-39.
CAST: Fred Scott. Jean Carmen. John Merton.
Harry Harvey. Walter McGrail. Wheeler Oakman,
Frank LaRue, Allan Cavan. Jane Keckley. Richard
Cramer.
PRODUCER: C. C. Burr: DIRECTOR: Raymond
Johnson: AUTHORS: Jackson Parks. Homer Gor-
don. Raymond Johnson: CAMERAMEN: Marcel
Picard. Harvey Gould: EDITOR: Charles Henkel.
In Old Monterey
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic: RUNNING TIME:
72 mins.: REVIEWED: 8-7 39: RELEASED:
8-14-39.
CAST: Gene Autry. Smiley Burnette. Jane
Storey. George Hayes. Stuart Hamblen. The Ranch
Boys. Billy Lee. Jonathan Hale. The Hoosier Hot
Shots, Robert Warwick. William Hall. Eddy Con-
rad. Sarie & Sallic.
PRODUCER: Armand Schaefer: DIRECTOR:
Joseph Kane: AUTHORS: Gerald Geraghty. George
Sherman: SCREENPLAY: Gerald Geraghty. Dorrell
McGowan. Stuart McGowan: CAMERAMAN:
Ernest Miller: EDITOR: Edward Mann.
Indianapolis Speedway
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners: RUNNING TIME: 85
mins.; REVIEWED: 7-26-39: RELEASED: 8-5-39.
CAST: Ann Sheridan. Pat O'Brien, John Payne.
Gale Page. Frank McHugh. Grace Stafford, Gran-
ville Bates. John Ridge'ey, Regis Tocmey, John
Harron. William Davidson. Ed McWade.
DIRECTOR: Lloyd Bacon: AUTHOR: Howard
Hawks: SCREENPLAY: Si? Herzig. Wally Klein;
CAMERAMAN: Sid Hickox: EDITOR: William
Holmes.
Inside Information
DISTRIBUTOR: Universal: RUNNING TIME:
61 mins.; REVIEWED: 6-23-39: RELEASED:
6-2-39.
CAST: June Lang, Dick Fcran, Harry Carey,
Mary Carlisle. Addison Richards, Joseph Sawyer.
Grant Richards, Paul McVey. Selmer Jackson.
Frederick Burton. John Harmon.
PRODUCER: Irving Starr: DIRECTOR: Charles
Lamont: AUTHORS: Martin Mooncy. Burnet
Her3hey; SCREENPLAY: Alex Gottlieb: CAM-
ERAMAN: Arthur Martinelli.
Inspector Hornleigh
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century-Fox: RUNNING
TIME: 59 mins.: REVIEWED: 6-19-39; Produced
in England: RELEASED: 4-21-39.
CAST: Gordon Harker, Alastair Sim. Miki Hood,
Wally Patch, Steve Geray, Edward Underdown,
Hugh Williams, Gibb McLaughlin, Donald Adam.
Eliot Makeham.
DIRECTOR: Eugene Ford: AUTHOR: Byron
Wallace; SCREENPLAY: Byron Wallace.
Intermezzo: A Love Story
DISTRIBUTOR: United Artists; RUNNING
TIME: 66 mins.; REVIEWED: 10-4 39; RE-
LEASED: 9-22-39.
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
CAST: Leslie Howard. Ingrid Bergman, Edna
Best, John Halliday, Cecil Kelaway, Enid Bennett,
Ann Todd. Douglas Scott, Eleanor Wellelhoeft.
Maria Flynn.
PRODUCER: David O. Selznick; DIRECTOR:
Gregory Ratoff: AUTHORS: Gosta Stevens, Gus-
tav Molander: SCREENPLAY: George O'Neil:
ART DIRECTOR: Lyle Wheeler; MUSICAL DI-
RECTOR: Lou Forbes: CAMERAMAN: Gregg To-
land; SPECIAL EFFECTS: Jack Cosgrove; EDI-
TOR: Hal C. Kern.
Invitation to Happiness
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount; RUNNING TIME:
95 mins.; REVIEWED: 5-9-39: RELEASED:
6- 16-39.
CAST: Irene Dunne. Fred MacMurray. Charles
Ruggles. William Collier, Sr.. Billy Cook, Marion
Martin. Oscar O'Shea. Burr Caruth, Eddie Hogan.
PRODUCER: Wesley Ruggles: DIRECTOR:
Wesley Ruggles: AUTHOR: Mark Jerome;
SCREENPLAY: Claude Binyon: ART DIREC-
TORS: Hand Dreier. Ernest Fegte: MUSICAL
SCORE: Frederick Hollander; CAMERAMAN: Leo
Tover: PROCESS PHOTOGRAPHY: Farciot
Edouart: EDITOR: Almo Macrorie.
Ireland's Border Line
DISTRIBUTOR: William Alexander: RUNNING
TIME: 65 mins.: REVIEWED: 10-24-39: Pro-
duced in Ireland.
CAST: Jimmy O'Dea. Myrette Morven. J. H.
Edwin. Hazel Hughes. Ronald Maloomson. Neal
Pureell, Ken Warrington, Julie Swedo. Jimmy
Wildman. Ton Dunne.
PRODUCER: Harry O'Donovan: DIRECTOR:
Harry O'Donovan.
Irish Luck
DISTRIBUTOR: Monogram: RUNNING TIME
58 mins.; REVIEWED: 9-29-39; RELEASED:
8-22-39.
CAST: Frankie Darro, Dick Pureell, Lillian
Elliott. Sheila Darcy, Dennis Moore, Mantan
Moreland. Howard Mitchell.
PRODUCER: Scott R. Dunlap: ASSOCIATE
PRODUCER: Grant Withers: DIRECTOR: How-
ard Bretherton: AUTHOR: Charles Molyneaux
Brown I From "Death Hops the Bells"): SCREEN-
PLAY : Mary C. McCarthy: CAMERAMAN: Harry
Neumann: EDITOR: Russell Sehoengarth.
Island of Lost Men
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount: RUNNING TIME
63 mins.; REVIEWED: 9-7-39; RELEASED:
7- 28 39.
CAST: Anna May Wong, J. Carrol Naish. Eric
Blore, Ernest Truex, Anthony Quinn, William
Haade. Broderick Crawford, Rudolf Forster, Rich-
ard Loo.
PRODUCER: Eugene Zukor; DIRECTOR: Kurt
Neumann; AUTHORS: Norman Reilly Raine,
Frank Butler: SCREENPLAY: William R. Lip-
man, Horace McCoy: CAMERAMAN: Karl Struss:
EDITOR: Ellsworth Haogland.
183
RAY FOSTER
A S C
^binectan, afj P Uatacyiafilnf,
Made more than 300 one and two reel
shorts in the past four years
AlaueUi&L ^ItruU&ii
FOR WARNER BROS.
Edgar Bergen Floyd Gibbons Series
Bob Hope Series Ken Murray Series
FOR RKO PATHE
"INFORMATION PLEASE"
Ten and One-Hal^ Years with
Warner Bros. Vitatohone Studios.
NEW YORK
Address
THE FILM DAILY
HOLLYWOOD
FILM EDITOR
444 West 56th Street New York. N. Y.
184
It Could Happen to You
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century-Fox: RUNNING
TIME: 72 mins.: REVIEWED: 6-12-39; RE-
LEASED: 6-30-39.
CAST: Stuart Erwin, Gloria Stuart. Raymond
W album, Douglas Fowley. June Gale. Clarence
Kolb. Paul Hurst. Richard Lane, Robert Greig.
DIRECTOR: Alfred Werker; AUTHOR: Charles
Hoffman: SCREENPLAY: Allen Rivkin. Lou
Breslow.
It's a Wonderful World
DISTRIBUTOR: Loew's. Inc.; RUNNING TIME:
86 mins.; REVIEWED: 5-4-39; RELEASED:
5-19-39.
CAST: Claudette Colbert, James Stewart, Guy
Kibbee, Nat Pendleton, Frances Drake, Edgar
Kennedy. Ernest Truex. Richard Carle, Cecilia
Callejo, Sidney Blackmer, Andy Clyde, Cecil Cun-
ningham. Leonard Kibrick. Hans Conried, Grady
Sutton.
PRODUCER: Frank Davis; DIRECTOR: W. S.
Van Dyke. H; AUTHORS: Ben Hecht, Herman J.
Mankiewicz; SCREENPLAY: Ben Hecht; CAM-
ERAMAN: Oliver Marsh; EDITOR: Harold F.
Kress.
Jamaica Inn
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount; RUNNING TIME;
98 mins.: REVIEWED: 10-12-39; Produced in
England: RELEASED: 10-13-39.
CAST: Charles Laughton. Maureen O'Hara, Les-
lie Banks. Emlyn Williams. Robert Newton, Marie
Ney, Mylie Watson, Morland Graham, Edwin
Greenwood. Mervyn Johns. Stephen Haggard.
Horace Hodges. Hay Petrie. Frederick Piper. Her-
bert Lomas, Clare Greet. Jeane de Casalis, Brom-
ley Davenport. Mabel Terry Lewis. George Curzon.
Basil Redford.
PRODUCER: Erich Pommer; DIRECTOR: Al-
fred Hitchcock; AUTHOR: Deaphne Du Maurier;
SCREENPLAY: Sidney Gilliat. Joan Harrison;
CAMERAMEN: Harry Stradling, Bernard Knowles:
EDITOR: Robert Hamer.
Jeepers Creepers
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic; RUNNING TIME:
69 mins.: REVIEWED: 11-1-39; RELEASED:
10-27-39.
CAST: Leon Weaver, Roy Rogers. Frank Weaver,
Elviry, Loretta Weaver, Maria Wrixon. Billy
Lee, Lucien Littlefield, Thurston Hall, John
Arthur.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Armand Schaefer;
DIRECTOR: Frank McDonald; SCREENPLAY:
Dorrell and Stuart McGowan; CAMERAMAN:
Ernest Miller: EDITOR: Ernest Nims.
Jesse James
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century-Fox: RUNNING
TIME: 105 mins.; REVIEWED: 1-13-39; RE
LEASED: 1-27-39.
CAST: Tyrone Power, Henry Fonda, Nancy
Kelly. Randolph Scott. Henry Hull. Slim Sum-
merville. J. Edward Bromberg. Brian Donlevy.
John Carradine. Donald Meek. John Russell, Jane
Darwell, George Chandler. Charles Tannen, Claire
DuBrey. Willard Robertson. Harold Goodwin.
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
Ernest Whitman. Eddy Waller, Paul Burns. Spen-
cer Charters, Arthur Aylesworth. Charles Middle
ton, Charles Halton. Harry Tyler, Virginia Brissac,
Ed LeSaint. John Elliott. Erville Alderson, George
Breakston. Lon Chaney. Jr.
PRODUCER: Darryl F. Zanuck; ASSOCIATE
PRODUCER: Nunnally Johnson; DIRECTOR
Henry King; AUTHOR: Nunnally Johnson:
SCREENPLAY: Nunnally Johnson; TECHNICOL-
OR DIRECTOR: Natalie Kalmus: ART DIREC-
TORS: William Darling. George Dudley; MUSI-
CAL DIRECTOR: Louis Silvers: CAMERAMAN:
George Barnes: TECHNICOLOR PHOTOGRAPHY:
W. H. Greene; EDITOR: Barbara McLean.
Joe and Ethel Turp Call on the
President
DISTRIBUTOR: Loew's. Inc.; RUNNING
TIME: 70 mins.: REVIEWED: 12-7-39; RE
LEASED: 12-1-39.
CAST: Ann Sothern. Lewis Stone. Walter Bren-
nan, William Gargan. Marsha Hunt, Tom Neal.
James Bush, Don Costello, Muriel Hutchison.
Jack Norton. Aldrich Bowker, Frederick Burton.
Al Shean, R. E. O'Connor, Russell Hicks.
PRODUCER: Edgar Selwyn; DIRECTOR: Rob-
ert B. Sinclair: AUTHOR: Damon Runyondrom
"A Call on the President"): SCREENPLAY: Mel-
ville Baker: CAMERAMAN: Leonard Smith;
EDITOR: Gene Ruggiero.
Juarez
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners; RUNNING TIME:
132 mins.; REVIEWED: 4-26-39; RELEASED:
6-10-39.
CAST: Paul Muni. Bette Davis, Brian Aherne.
Claude Rains. John Garfield. Donald Crisp, Joseph
Calleia. Gale Sondergard. Gilbert Roland, Henry
O'Neil, Pedro de Cordoba. Montagu Love. Harry
Davenport. Walter Fenner. Alex Leftwich, Georgia
Caine, Robert Warwick. Gennaro Curci, Bill Wil-
kerson, John Miljan, Hugh Sothern. Fred Malates-
ta, Carlos de Valdez. Irving Pichel, Frank Lack-
teen. Walter O. Stahl. Frank Reicher, Holmes
Herbert, Walter Kingsford, Egon Brecher, Monte
Blue, Louis Calhern. Manuel Diaz, Mickey Kuhn.
Lillian Nicholson. Nobel Johnson. Martin Gar-
ralaga, Vladimir Sokoloff, Douglas Wood. Grant
Mitchell, Charles Halton. William Edmunds. Gil-
bert Emory.
PRODUCER: Hal B. Wallis; ASSOCIATE PRO
DUCER: Henry Blanke: DIRECTOR: William
Dieterle: AUTHORS: Franz Worfel. Betito Hard-
ing (from "Phantom Crown"): SCREENPLAY:
John Huston, Wolfgang Reinhardt, Aeneas Mac-
Kenzie; ART DIRECTOR: Anton Grot; MUSIC:
Erich Wolfgang Kornhold: MUSICAL DIRECTOR:
Leo F. Forbstein; CAMERAMAN: Tony Gaudio:
EDITOR: Warren Low.
Judge Hardy and Son
DISTRIBUTOR: Loew's. Inc.: RUNNING
TIME: 87 mins.: REVIEWED: 12-15-39; RE-
LEASED: 12-22-39.
CAST: Lewis Stone, Cecilia Parker. Mickey
Rooney, Fay Holden. Ann Rutherford. Sara
185
SID BLAKE
Producing for
JEWISH ART PICTURES, II.
"MONKEY BUSINESS"
Starring Louis Weiss and Shirley Gross
"THE PRICE OF LOVE"
"SHULAMUTH"
"FOR BUSINESS REASONS"
Yiddish Dialogue with English Titles
and ior
Di li ART PICTURES, II.
"THE LIFE ol FLORENCE MILLS"
"THE LIFE OF GEORGE WASHINGTON CARVER"
"THE LIFE OF BOOKER T. WASHINGTON"
with All-Negro Casts
ATLAS FILM EXCHANGE
INCORPORATED
Distributors of
American • French • Spanish • English
Features - Shorts
Pictures of Outstanding Merit
obtainable through
ATLAS FILM EXCHANGE, INC.
WALTER BIBO— President
723 Seventh Ave. Tel.: BRyant 9-0581 New York, N. Y.
186
Haden. June Preisser, Marie Ouspenskaya, Henry
Hull, Martha O'Driscoll, Leona Maricle, Mar-
garet Early, George Breakston, Egon Brecher.
Edna Holland, Marie Blake.
DIRECTOR: George B. Seitz; AUTHOR: Carey
Wilson: SCREENPLAY: Carey Wilson: ART DI-
RECTOR: Cedric Gibbons; MUSICAL SCORE:
David Snell: CAMERAMAN. Lester White:
EDITOR: Ben Lewis.
Kansas Terrors. The
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic; RUNNING TIME:
57 mins.; REVIEWED: 10-19-39; RELEASED:
10- 6-39.
CAST: Robert Livingston, Raymond Hatton.
Duncan Renaldo, Jacqueline Wells, Howard Hick-
man, George Douglas, Frank Lackteen, Myra
Marsh, Yakima Canutt.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Harry Grey: DI-
RECTOR: George Sherman: AUTHOR: Luci
Ward; SCREENPLAY: Jack Natteford. Betty Bur-
bridge: CAMERMAN: Ernest Miller: EDITOR:
Tony Martinelli.
Keseru Kezeshetsk (Hungarian)
DISTRIBUTOR: Danubia Pictures: RUNNING
TIME : 76 mins.; REVIEWED: 10-25-39: Pro-
duced in Hungary.
CAST: Antal Pager. Zita Szeleckzky, Klari Tol-
nay; DIRECTOR: Bela Balogh.
Ket Kgoly (Hungarian)
DISTRIBUTOR: Hungarian Pictures, Inc.; RE-
VIEWED: 1-19-39; Produced in Hungary.
CAST: Paul Javor. Gizi Bajor, Gabor Rajnay:
DIRECTOR: Stephen Szekely.
Kid from Kokomo, The
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners; RUNNING TIME:
95 mins.; REVIEWED: 5-23-39: RELEASED:
6 24-39.
CAST: Pat O'Brien, Wayne Morris, Joan Blon-
dell. May Robson, Jane Wyman, Stanley Fields.
Maxie Rosenbloom, Sidney Toler, Ed Brophy,
Winifred Harris.
DIRECTOR: Lewis Seiler: AUTHOR: Dalton
Trumbo; SCREENPLAY: Jerry Wald, Richard
Macaulay; CAMERAMAN: Di9 Hickox: EDITOR:
Jack Killifer.
Kid Nightingale
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners: RUNNING TIME :
57 mins.; REVIEWED: 12-11-39: RELEASED:
11- 4-39.
CAST: John Payne, Jane Wyman, Harry Burns,
Walter Catlett, Ed Brophy. Charles Brown, Max
Hoffman, John Ridgely, William Haade, Helen
Troy, Winifred Harris, Lee Phelps, Frankie Van.
DIRECTOR: George Amy: AUTHOR: Lee
Katz; SCREENPLAY: Charles Belden. Raymond
Sehrock: CAMERAMAN: Arthur Edeson: EDITOR:
Frederick Richards.
Kid from Texas, The
DISTRIBUTOR I Loew's, Inc. ; RUNNING TIME :
70 mins.: REVIEWED: 4-4-39; RELEASED:
4-14-39.
CAST: Dennis O'Keefe. Florence Rice, Anthony
Allan, Jessie Ralph, Buddy Ebsen, Virginia Dale,
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
Robert Wilcox, Jack Carson, Helen Lynd, J. M.
Kerrigan, Tully Marshall.
PRODUCER: Edgar Selwyn; DIRECTOR: S.
Sylvan Simon; AUTHORS: Milton Merlin. Byron
Morgan; SCREENPLAY: Florence Ryerson, Ed-
gar Allan Woolf, Albert Mannheimer; ART DI-
RECTOR: Cedric Gibbons; SCORE: Dr. William
Axt; SONG: Ormand Ruthven, Milton Merlin, Al-
bert Mannheimer; CAMERAMAN: Sidney Wag-
ner; MONTAGE: Peter Ballbusch: EDITOR: Fred-
erick Y. Smith.
King of Chinatown
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount; RUNNING TIME:
60 mins.; REVIEWED: 3-21-39; RELEASED:
3-17-39. „
CAST: Anna May Wong, Akim Tamiroff, J.
Carrol Naish, Sidney Toler, Philip Ahn, Anthony
Quinn, Bernadene Hayes, Roscoe Karns, Ray
Mayer, Richard Denning, Archie Twitchell, Ed-
ward Marr, George Anderson, Charles B. Wood,
George Magrill, Charles Trowbridge. Lily King,
Pat West, Guy Usher.
DIRECTOR: Nick Grinde; AUTHOR: Herbert
Biberman; SCREENPLAY: Lillie Hayward. Irv-
ing Reis; CAMERAMAN: Leo Tover: EDITOR:
Edna Warren.
King of the Turf
DISTRIBUTOR: United Artists; RUNNING
TIME: 88 mins.; REVIEWED: 2-9-39; RE-
LEASED: 2-17-39.
CAST: Adolphe Menjou, Roger Daniel. Dolores
Costello. Walter Abel, Alan Dinehart, William
Demarest. Harold Huber, George McKay, Lee
M. Moore, Oscar O'Shea, Cliff Nazarro, George
Chandler, Milburne Stone, Charles McAvoy, Wil-
liam Bakewell, Harry Semels. Donald Kerr, Tom-
my Quinn, Barlow Borland, Charles Sherlock.
PRODUCER: Edward Small: DIRECTOR: Al-
fred E. Green; AUTHOR: George Bruce: SCREEN-
PLAY: George Bruce; CAMERAMAN: Robert
Planck; EDITOR: Grant Whytock.
King of the Underworld
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners; RUNNING TIME:
69 mins.: REVIEWED: 1-13-39; RELEASED:
1-14-39.
CAST: Humphrey Bogart, Kay Francis, James
Stephenson, John Eldredge, Jessie Busley, Arthur
Aylesworth, Raymond Brown. Harland Tucker.
Charles Trowbridge. Ralph Remley, Charles Foy,
Murray Alper, Joe Devlin, Elliott Sullivan, Alan
Davis.
DIRECTOR: Lewis Seiler; AUTHOR: W. R.
Burnette; SCREENPLAY: George Bricker, Vin-
cent Sherman.
Kustens Glada Kavaljerer (Swedish)
(The Happy Cavaliers)
DISTRIBUTOR: Scandinavian Talking Pictures;
RUNNING TIME: 85 mins.; REVIEWED:
7-13-39; Produced in Sweden.
CAST: Carl Bracklind, Inga Vetterlund, Fritiof
Billquist; DIRECTOR: Ragnar Arvedson.
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"Mayerling"
EMIL ZOLA'S
"Human Beast"
with
GEAN GABIN— SIMONE SIMON
"Edge of the W or Id**
Directed by
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*
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President
Tel. MEdalLon 3-3248 Cable Address: Lopefilm
729 Seventh Avenue New York City
188
L' Alibi (French)
DISTRIBUTOR: Columbia; RUNNING TIME:
82 mins.; REVIEWED: 4-14-39: Produced in
France.
CAST: Eric von Stroheim. Jany Holt, Louis
Jouvet; DIRECTOR: Pierre Chenal.
La Inmaculada (Spanish)
DISTRIBUTOR: United Artists; REVIEWED:
7-19-39.
CAST: Fortunio Bonanova, Andrea Palma,
Milissa Sierra; PRODUCERS: Maurice M. Cohen.
Fortunio Bonanova; DIRECTOR: Louis Gasnier.
La Vierge Folle (French)
(The Foolish Virgin)
DISTRIBUTOR: Walch Film Corp.; RUNNING
TIME: 80 mins.; REVIEWED: 1-18-39; Pro-
duced in France.
CAST: Annie Ducaux, Victor Francen. Juliette
Farber; DIRECTOR: Henri Diamant-Berger.
La Wally (Italian)
DISTRIBUTOR: Amerital Films: RUNNING
TIME: 82 mins.; REVIEWED: 1-24-39; Produced
in Italy.
CAST: Germana Paolieri, Isa Pola, Carlo
Ninchi; DIRECTOR: Guido Brignone.
Lady and the Mob, The
DISTRIBUTOR: Columbia; RUNNING TIME:
66 mins.; REVIEWED: 4-13 39; RELEASED:
4-3-39.
CAST: Fay Bainter, Ida Lupino, Lee Bowman.
Henry Armetta. Warren Hymer, Harold Huber.
Forbes Murray, Joseph Sawyer, Tom Dugan, Jo-
seph Caits, Jim Toney, Tommy Mack, Brandon
Tynan, George Meeker.
DIRECTOR: Ben Stoloff: AUTHORS: George
Bradshaw, Price Day; SCREENPLAY: Richard
Maiaum, Gertrude Percell; CAMERMAN: John
Stumar; EDITOR: Otto Mayer.
Lady of the Tropics
DISTRIBUTOR: Loew's, Inc.; RUNNING TIME:
92 mins.; REVIEWED: 8-15-39; RELEASED:
8-11-39.
CAST: Robert Taylor, Hedy Lamarr. Joseph
Schildkraut. Gloria Franklin, Ernest Cossart.
Mary Taylor, Charles Trowbridge, Frederick Wor-
lock, Paul Porcasi. Margaret Padula, Cecil Cun-
ningham, Natalie Moorhead.
PRODUCER: Sam Zimbalist: DIRECTOR: Jack
Conway: AUTHOR: Ben Hecht: SCREENPLAY:
Ben Hecht; CAMERAMAN: George Folsey; EDI-
TOR: Elmo Vernon.
Lady's from Kentucky, The
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount: RUNNING TIME:
67 mins.; REVIEWED: 5-1-39; RELEASED:
4-28-39.
CAST: George Raft. Ellen Drew, Hugh Herbert.
ZaSu Pitts, Louise Beavers. Lew Payton, For-
rester Harvey, Harry Tyler, Edward J. Pawley,
Gilbert Emery, Eugene Jackson, Jimmy Bristow,
George Anderson, Stanley Andrews, Carol Hollo-
way.
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
PRODUCER: Jeff Lazarus; DIRECTOR: Alex-
ander Hall; AUTHOR: Rowland Brown; SCREEN-
PLAY: Malcolm Stuart Boylan; CAMERAMAN:
Theodore Sparkuhl; EDITOR: Harvey Johnson.
Land of Liberty
DISTRIBUTOR: Motion Picture Producers &
Distributors of America; RUNNING TIME: 137
mins.; REVIEWED: 6-14-39.
Last Desire (French)
DISTRIBUTOR: Transatlantic; RUNNING
TIME: 80 mins.; REVIEWED: 12-28-39: Pro-
duced in France.
CAST: Raimu, Jacqueline Delubac, Pierre
Brasseur; DIRECTOR: Jeff Musso.
Laugh It Off
DISTRIBUTOR: Universal; RUNNING TIME:
63 mins.; REVIEWED: 12-21-39; RELEASED:
12-1-39.
CAST: Johnny Downs, Constance Moore. Mar-
jorie Rambeau, Hedda Hopper, Janet Beecher,
Cecil Cunningham, Horace McMahon, Edgar Ken-
nedy, Tom Dugan, William Demarest, Chester
Clute, Paula Stone.
PRODUCER: Albert S. Rogell; DIRECTOR:
Albert S. Rogell: AUTHORS: Lee Loeb. Mort
Braus (from "Listen Kids"); SCREENPLAY:
Harry Clork, Lee Loeb; CAMERMAN: S. Cortez.
Law of the Pampas
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount; RUNNING TIME:
72 mins.: REVIEWED: 10-17-39; RELEASED:
11-3 39.
CAST: William Boyd, Russell Hayden, Sidney
Toler, Steffi Duna, Sidney Blaekmer, Pedro de
Cordoba, William Duncan, Ann Demetrio, Eddie
Dean, Glenn Strange, Jo Jo La Savio, The King's
Men.
PRODUCER: Harry Sherman: ASSOCIATE
PRODUCER: Joseph W. Engel; DIRECTOR: Nate
Watt; SCREENPLAY: Harrison Jacobs: ART DI-
RECTOR: Lewis J. Rachmil; CAMERAMAN:
Russell Harlan: EDITOR: Carroll Lewis.
Le Quai Brumes (French)
DISTRIBUTOR: Film Alliance of the U. S.:
RUNNING TIME: 90 mins.; REVIEWED: 11-1-39:
Produced in France.
CAST: Jean Gabin, Miehele Morgan, Michael
Simon; DIRECTOR: Marcel Carne.
Le Sorprese di un Matrimonio (Italian)
DISTRIBUTOR: Columbo Film Co.; RUNNING
TIME: 79 mins.; REVIEWED: 10-20-39. Pro-
duced in Italy.
CAST: Vittorio de Sica, Elisa Cegani, Umberto
Melnati; DIRECTOR: Mario Camerini.
Leanyvari Boszorkany (Hungarian)
DISTRIBUTOR: Hungaria Pictures; RUNNING
TIME: 85 mins.; REVIEWED: 11-29-39; Pro-
duced in Hungary.
CAST: Eva Szorenyi, Imre Hamory, Blanka
Szombathelyi ; DIRECTOR: Viktor Gertler.
PICTORIAL FILMS, INC.
1650 Broadway • New York City
16 MM.
Quality
PRODUCERS— DISTRIBUTORS
STATE RIGHT DISTRIBUTORS
Of Proven Success Programs and
ROADSHOW ATTRACTIONS
With a
NOW READY
With a
Cast of
"WAR ANGELS"
Cast of
ALL
Adopted from "THE MAD PARADE"
ALL
WOMEN
A Real Shourman's Special tcith a Cast of All U omen
WOMEN
TIM McCOY
THRILL-O-DRAMAS
fl ^ WESTERNS
^W Among the Best
Action Stories
He Ever Produced
Crashing Titles
TO BE SOLD ON A ROADSHOW BASIS
"GIRLS IN UNIFORM"
One of the Most Remarkable Screen Plays Ever Offered to the Public
COMING SOON
PAUL ROBESON
JAN KIEPURA
in Eugene O'XeilV s
EMPEROR JONES
"MY HEART IS CALLING"
with DUDLEY DIGGES and
The Greatest Singer in the World
an Outstanding Cast
in a Great Musical
SCREENCRAFT PICTURES, INC.
J. S. BERKSOX B. H. MILLS
723 Seventh Avenue New York City
190
Legion of Lost Flyers
DISTRIBUTOR: Universal; RUNNING TIME:
63 mins.: REVIEWED: 11-9-39: RELEASED:
11-3-39.
CAST: Richard Arlen, Andy Devine. Anne
Nagrel, William Lundigan, Guinn "Big: Boy" Wil-
liams, Ona Munson, Jerry Marlowe, Leon Ames,
Theodor von Eltz, Leon Belasco, David Willock,
Jack Carson. Edith Mills, Pat Flaherty. Eddie
Waller.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Ben Pivar; SCREEN-
PLAY: Maurice Tombragel; CAMERMAN: Jerome
Ash.
Lenin in 1918 (Russian)
DISTRIBUTOR: Amkino: RUNNING TIME:
130 mins.; REVIEWED: 7-13-39; Produced in
Russia: RELEASED: 6-26-39.
CAST: B. V. Schchukin, Nikolai Cherkasov, M.
G. Gelovani; DIRECTOR: Mikhail Romm.
Let Freedom Ring
DISTRIBUTOR: Loew's, Inc.; RUNNING TIME:
100 mins.; REVIEWED: 2-20-39; RELEASED:
2-24-39.
CAST: Nelson Eddy, Virginia Bruce. Victor Mc-
Laglen, Lionel Barrymore, Edward Arnold, Guy
Kibbee, Charles Butterworth, H. B. Warner. Ray-
mond Walburn, Dick Rich, Trevor Bardette,
George F. Hayes. Louis Jean Heydt, Sarah Pad-
den, Eddie Dunn, C. E. Anderson .
PRODUCER: Harry Rapf: DIRECTOR: Jack
Conway; AUTHOR: Ben Hecht: SCREENPLAY:
Ben Hecht; CAMERAMAN: Sidney Wagner; ED-
ITOR: Frederick Y. Smith.
Let Us Live
DISTRIBUTOR: Columbia; RUNNING TIME:
68 mins.; REVIEWED: 2-20-39; RELEASED:
2-29-39.
CAST: Maureen O'Sullivan, Henry Fonda,
Ralph Bellamy, Alan Baxter, Stanley Ridges,
Henry Kolker, Peter Lynn, George Douglas, Philip
Trent, Martin Spellman.
PRODUCER: William Perlberg; DIRECTOR:
John Brahm; AUTHOR: Joseph F. Dinneen;
SCREENPLAY: Anthony Veiller, Allen Rivkin;
ART DIRECTOR: Lionel Banks; MUSICAL DI-
RECTOR: M. W. Stoloff; MUSIC: Karol Rathaus;
CAMERAMAN: Lucien Ballard: EDITOR: Al
Clark.
Light Ahead (Yiddish)
DISTRIBUTOR: Ultra Films; RUNNING TIME:
110 mins.: REVIEWED: 10-12-39.
CAST: Izidore Casher. Helen Beverly, David
Opatushu; DIRECTOR: Edgar G. Ulmer.
Light That Failed, The
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount: RUNNING TIME:
97 mins.: REVIEWED: 12-26-39.
CAST: Ronald Colman. Walter Huston. Muriel
Angelus. Ida Lupino, Dudley Digges, Ernest Cos-
sart, Ferike Boros, Pedro de Cordoba, Colin Tap-
ley, Fay Helm, Ronald Sinclair, Sarita Wooton.
Halliwell Hobbes. Charles Irwin, Francis Mc-
Donald. George Regas, Wilfred Roberts.
PRODUCER: William A. Wellman; DIRECTOR:
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
William A. Wellman; AUTHOR: Rudyard Kip-
ling; SCREENPLAY: Robert Carson: ART DI-
RECTORS: Hans Dreier, Robert Odell: MUSICAL
SCORE: Victor Young: CAMERAMAN: Theodor
Sparkuhl; EDITOR: Thomas Scott.
Little Accident
DISTRIBUTOR: Universal; RUNNING TIME:
65 mins.; REVIEWED: 10-31-39: RELEASED:
10-27-39.
CAST: Hugh Herbert, Baby Sandy, Florence
Rice, Richard Carlson, Ernest Truex, Joy Hodges,
Fritz Fcld, Kathleen Howard. Howard Hickman.
Edgar Kennedy, Etienne Girardot, Charles D.
Brown.
PRODUCER: Charles Lamont; DIRECTOR:
Charles Lamont: AUTHORS: Floyn Dell, Thomas
Mitchell, Paul Yawitz, Eve Green; SCREEN-
PLAY: Paul Yawitz, Eve Greene: ART DI-
RECTOR: Jack Otterson; MUSICAL DIRECTOR:
Charles Previn: CAMERAMAN: Milton Krasner;
EDITOR: Frank Gross.
Little Princess, The
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century -Fox; RUNNING
TIME: 91 mins.; REVIEWED: 2-24-39; RE-
LEASED: 3 17-39.
CAST: Shirley Temple. Richard Greene. Anita
Louise, Ian Hunter, Cesar Romero, Arthur
Treacher, Mary Nash, Sybil Jason, Miles Mander,
Marcia Mae Jones, Beryl Mercer. Deidre Gale, Ira
Stevens, E. E. Clive. Eily Malyon, Clyde Cook.
Keith Kenneth. Will Stanton. Harry Allen. Holmes
Herbert. Evan Thomas, Guy Bellis. Kenneth Hunt-
er, Lionel Braham.
PRODUCER: Darryl F. Zanuck; ASSOCIATE
PRODUCER: Gene Markey; DIRECTOR: Walter
Lang; AUTHOR: Frances Hodgson Burnett (from
"The Fantasy"); SCREENPLAY: Ethel Hill, Wal-
ter Ferris; ART DIRECTORS: Bernard Herzbrun.
Hans Peters: MUSICAL DIRECTOR: Louis Sil-
vers: MUSIC & LYRICS: Walter Bullock, Sam-
uel Pokrass: CAMERAMEN: Arthur Miller, Wil-
liam Skall: EDITOR: Louis Loeffler.
Livet Paa Hegnesgaard (Danish)
DISTRIBUTOR: Scandinavian Talking Pictures;
RUNNING TIME: 102 mins.: REVIEWED:
11- 29-39: Produced in Denmark.
CAST: Holger Reenberg, Willy Bille, Karin
Nellemose: DIRECTOR: Arne Weel.
Llano Kid, The
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount; RUNNING TIME:
69 mins.: REVIEWED: 11-8-39; RELEASED:
12- 8-39.
CAST: Tito Guizar, Gale Sondergaard, Alan
Mowbray, Jane Clayton, Emma Dunn, Minor Wat-
son. Chris-Pin Martin, Carlos de Valdez, Ann
Demetrio, iiienn Strange, Tony Roux.
PRODUCER: Harry Sherman: DIRECTOR: E.
D. Venturini; AUTHOR: O'Henry (from "The
Double Dyed Deceiver"); SCREENPLAY: Wanda
Tuchock: ART DIRECTOR: Lewis J. Rachmil;
CAMERAMAN: Russell Harlan; EDITOR: Sher-
man A. Rose.
191
KATHERINE
YORK
THIS SPACE IS PAID FOR BY A
PIONEER THEATER OPERATOR
IN APPRECIATION OF SERVICE
RENDERED THROUGH CONSTANT
REFERENCE TO "THE FILM DAILY
YEAR BOOK OF MOTION PICTURES"
•i .
Lo Squadrone Bianco (Italian)
DISTRIBUTOR: Esperia Films; RUNNING
TIME: 102 mins.: REVIEWED: 12-15-39: RE-
LEASED: 11-30-39: Produced in Italy.
CAST: Antonio Centa, Fosco Fiachetti. Fulva
Lanzi; DIRECTOR: Aug-usto Genina.
Lone Wolf Spy Hunt. The
DISTRIBUTOR: Columbia; RUNNING TIME:
67 mins.; REVIEWED: 1-24-39: RELEASED:
1-27-39.
CAST: Warren William, Ida Lupiuo. Rita Hey-
worth, Virginia Weidler, Ralph Morgan. Tom
Dugan, Don Beddos, Leonard Carey, Ben Welden,
Brandon Tynan, Helen Lynd.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Joseph Sistrom; DI-
RECTOR: Peter Godfrey; AUTHOR: Louis Joseph
Vance: SCREENPLAY: Jonathan Latimer; ART
DIRECTOR: Lionel Banks; MUSICAL DIREC-
TOR: M. W. Stolon*; CAMERAMAN: Allen G.
Siegler: EDITOR: Otto Meyer.
Love Affair
DISTRIBUTOR: RKO Radio; RUNNING TIME:
87 mins.; REVIEWED: 3-13-39: RELEASED:
4- 7-39.
CAST: Irene Dunne. Charles Boyer. Maria
Ouspenskaya, Lee Bowman, Astrid Allwyn, Mau-
rice Moscovich.
PRODUCER: Leo McCarey: DIRECTOR: Leo
MeCarey: AUTHORS: Mildred Kram, Leo Mc-
Carey: SCREENPLAY: Delmar Daves, Donald
Ogden Stewart: CAMERAMAN: Rudolph Mate:
EDITORS: Edward Dmytryk, George Hively.
Lucky Night
DISTRIBUTOR: Loew's, Inc.: RUNNING TIME:
!>0 mins.: REVIEWED: 5-1-39; RELEASED:
5- 5-39.
CAST: Myrna Loy, Robert Taylor, Joseph Al-
len, Henry O'Neill. Douglas Fowley. Bernard
Nedell, Charles Lane. Bernadene Hayes. Gladys
Blake, Marjorie Main, Edward Gargan, Irving
Bacon, Oscar O'Shea.
PRODUCER: Louis D. Lighton ; DIRECTOR:
Norman Taurog: AUTHOR: Oliver Claxton:
SCREENPLAY: Vincent Lawrence. Grover Jones;
CAMERAMAN: Ray June; EDITOR: Elmo Ver-
non.
Mada for Each Other
DISTRIBUTOR: United Artists: RUNNING
TIME: 85 mins.; REVIEWED: 2-6-39: RE-
LEASED: 2-10-39.
CAST: Carole Lombard. James Stewart. Charles
Coburn, Lucile Watson, Eddie Quillan, Alma
Kruger. Ruth Weston, Donald Briggs, Harry Dav-
enport, Esther Dale, Renee Orsell. Louise Beavers.
Ward Bond. Olin Howland. Fern Emmet t. Jackie
Taylor. Mickey Rentsehler. Ivan Simpson.
PRODUCER: David O. Selznick: DIRECTOR:
John Cromwell: SCREENPLAY: Jo Swerling:
ART DIRECTOR: Lyle Wheeler: MUSICAL DI-
RECTOR: Lou Forbes; CAMERAMAN: Leon
Shamroy; SPECIAL EFFECTS: Jack Cosgrove;
EDITORS: Hal C. Kern. James E. Newcom.
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
Mademoiselle Ma Mere (French)
DISTRIBUTOR: J. H. Hoffbcrg; RUNNING
TIME: 77 mins.: REVIEWED: 9-21-39; Pro-
duced in France.
CAST: Danielle Darrieux, Alerme, Marcel Si-
mon; DIRECTOR: Henri Decoin.
Mad Empress, The
DISTRIBUTOR: Warner Bros.; RUNNING
TIME: 95 mins.; REVIEWED: 5-4-39; (Re-
viewed as "Juarez and Maximilian").
CAST: Medea Novara. Lionel Atwill, Conrad
Nagel, Guy Bates Post, Jason Robnrds, Frank
McGlynn, Sr.. Evelyn Brent, Claudia Dell, Gus-
tave von Seyffertitz, Martin Garralaga, Julian
Rivero. Duncan Renaldo. Rene de Luguro, Marin
Sais. Edgar Norton. Franklin Murrel, Rudolf
Amendt. Negel de Brulier, Rolfe Sedan. Charles
Bobett, Robert Frazier, Michael Visaroff, George
Regas, Kort Von Fuberg, Gracilla Romero.
PRODUCER: Miguel G. Torres: DIRECTOR:
Miguel G. Torres: AUTHOR: Mimiel G. Torres;
SCREENPLAY: Jean Bart. Jerome Chodorov.
Miguel G. Torres: ART DIRECTOR: F. Paul
Sylos; CAMERAMEN: Alex Phillips, Arthur
Martiuelli.
Magnificent Fraud. The
DISTRIBUTOR : Paramount; RUNNING TIME:
78 mins.; REVIEWED: 7-20-39; RELEASED:
7-21-39.
CAST: Akim Tamiroff. Lloyd Nolan, Mary Bo-
land, Patricia Morrison. George Zucco, Steffi
Duna. Robert Warwick. Frank Rcicher. Donald
Gallaher, Ernest Verebes. Robert Middlcmass,
Ernest Cossart. Ralph Forbes. Barbara Pepper.
PRODUCER: Harlan Thompson: DIRECTOR:
Robert Florey : AUTHOR : Charles Booth:
SCREENPLAY: Gilbert Gabriel. Wnlter Ferris:
CAMERAMAN: William Mellor: EDITOR: James
Smith.
Main Street Lawyer
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic: RUNNING TIME:
72 mins.; REVIEWED: 11-8-39: RELEASED:
11-3-39.
CAST: Edward Ellis, Anita Louise, Harold
Huber, Margaret Hamilton, Robert Baldwin, Clem
Hevans, Henry Kolker, Beverly Roberts, Willard
Robertson, Richard Lane, Ferris Taylor, Wallis
Clark.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Robert North; DI-
RECTOR: Dudley Murphy: AUTHOR: Harry Hamil-
ton: SCREENPLAY: Joseph Krumgold: CAMERA-
MAN: Jack Marta: EDITOR: William Morgan.
Maisie
DISTRIBUTOR: Loew's, Inc.: RUNNING TIME:
74 mins; REVIEWED: 6-7 39: RELEASED:
6-23-39.
CAST: Robert Young. Ann Sothern, Ruth Hus
sey, Ian Hunter, Cliff Edwards, Anthony Allen.
Art Mix, George Tobias. Richard Carle. Minor
Watson. Harlan Briggs, Paul Everton, Joseph
Crehan, Frank Puglia, Willie Fung.
193
s> isr ® & a @ a snr
Picture Campaigns and
Exploitation
Theater Exploitation
Personal Publicity
General Publicity
and Public Relations
Competent Staff for
Every Type of Work
ARNOLD VAN LEER
521 FIFTH AVENUE
NEW YORE
Telephone VAnderbilt 6-5240
194
PRODUCER: J. Walter Ruben; DIRECTOR:
Edwin L. Marin; AUTHOR: Wilson Collison:
SCREENPLAY: Mary C. McCall, Jr.: ART DIREC-
TOR: Cedric Gibbons; CAMERAMAN: Leonard
Smith: EDITOR: Frederick Y. Smith.
Mamele (Yiddish)
DISTRIBUTOR: Sphinx Films; RUNNING
TIME: 100 mins.: REVIEWED: 1-18-39.
CAST: Molly Pieon, Edmund Zayenda. Max
Bozyk; DIRECTOR: Joseph Green.
Man About Town
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount; RUNNING TIME:
85 mins.: REVIEWED: 6-13-39: RELEASED:
7 7-39.
CAST: Jack Benny. Dorothy Lamour. Edward
Arnold, Binnie Barnes, Phil Harris. Betty Grable.
E. E. Clive, Monty Wooley. Isabel Jeans. Eddie
I Rochester) Anderson, Merreil Abbott Dancers.
Matty Nalneck's Orchestra, The Pina Troupe.
PRODUCER: Arthur Hornblow, Pr.: DIREC-
TOR: Mark Sandrich; AUTHORS: Morrie Rys-
klnd, Allan Scott. Zion Myers: SCREENPLAY:
Morrie Ryskind; ART DIRECTORS: Hans Dreier.
Robert Usher; MUSICAL DIRECTOR: Victor
Young; MUSICAL ADVISOR: Troy Sanders: CAM-
ERAMAN: Ted Tetzlaff; EDITOR: LeRoy Stone.
Man from Sundown
DISTRIBUTOR: Columbia: RUNNING TIME:
58 mins.: REVIEWED: 8-28-39; RELEASED:
7-15-39.
CAST: Charles Starrett, Iris Meredith. Richard
Fiske, Jack Rockwell. Alan Bridge, Richard Bot-
tllier, Ernie Adams, Bob Nolan, Pat Brady.
DIRECTOR: Sam Nelson: SCREENPLAY: Paul
Franklin: CAMERAMAN: Benjamin Kline: EDI-
TOR: William Lyon.
Man in the Iron Mask, The
DISTRIBUTOR: United Artists; RUNNING
TIME: 110 mins.: REVIEWED: 6-30-39; RE-
LEASED: 8-11-39.
CAST: Louis Hayward, Joan Bennett. Warren
William, Joseph Schildkraut. Alan Hale, Walter
Kingsford, Miles Mander, Bert Roach, Marian
Martin, Montagu Love, Doris Keyon, Albert
Dekker. Nigel de Brulier, William Royle, Boyd
Irwin, Howard Brooks, Reginald Barlow, Lane
Chandler, Wyndham Standing, Dorothy Vaughan.
Sheila Darcy, Robert Milasch. D'Arcy Corrigan,
Harry Woods. Peter Cushing. Emmett King.
PRODUCER: Edward Small: DIRECTOR: James
Whale: AUTHOR: Alexandre Dumas; SCREEN-
PLAY: George Bruce: ART DIRECTOR: John
DuCasse Schulze: MUSICAL DIRECTOR: Lud
Gluskin: MUSIC: Lucien Moraweck: CAMERA-
MAN: Robert Planck; SPECIAL EFFECTS: How-
ard Anderson: EDITOR: Grant Whytoek.
Man of Conquest
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic; RUNNING TIME.
105 mins.: REVIEWED: 4-10-39: RELEASED:
5-15-39.
CAST: Richard Dix, Gail Patrick, Edward El-
lis, Joan Fontaine, Victor Jory, Robert Barrat,
George Hayes, Ralph Morgan, Robert Armstrong,
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
c. Henry Gordon. Janet Beecher. Pedro de Cordoba,
Max Terhune, Kathleen Lockhart, Ferris Taylor.
Leon Ames.
PRODUCER: Sol C. Siegel; DIRECTOR: George
Nichols, Jr.; AUTHORS: Harold Shumate. Wells
Root; SCREENPLAY: Wells Root, E. E. Para-
more. Jr., Jan Fortune; CAMERAMAN: Joseph
H. August; EDITOR: Murray Seldeen.
Man They Could Not Hang, The
DISTRIBUTOR: Columbia; RUNNING TIME:
72 mins.: REVIEWED: 9-28-39: RELEASED:
8-17-39.
CAST: Boris Karloff, Lorna Gray, Robert Wil-
cox. Roger Pry or, Don Beddoe, Ann Doran, Jo-
seph De Stafani, Charles Trowbridge, Byron
Foulger. Dick Curtis. James Craig. John Tyrrell.
DIRECTOR: Nick Grinde: SCREENPLAY: Karl
Brown: MUSICAL DIRECTOR: M. W. Stoloff:
CAMERAMAN: Benjamin Kline: EDITOR: Wil-
liam Lyon.
Man Who Dared, The
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners: RUNNING TIME:
60 mins.: REVIEWED: 9-28-39: RELEASED:
6-3-39.
CAST: Charles Grapewin. Henry O'Neil, Dickie
Jones. Jane Bryan, Elizabeth Risdon, James Mc-
Callion, John Russell. Fred Tomzere, John Qal-
laudet, Grace Stafford. Emmett Vogan.
DIRECTOR: Crane Wilburn; AUTHOR: Lucien
Hubbard: SCREENPLAY: Lee Katz: CAMERA-
MAN: Arthur L. Todd: EDITOR: H. MeLernon.
Man With the Gun, The (Russian)
DISTRIBUTOR: Anikino: RUNNING TIME:
88 mins.: REVIEWED: 2-1-39; Produced in Rus-
sia: RELEASED: 1-28-39.
CAST: Boris Tenin, M. Shtraukh, M. Gelovani;
DIRECTOR : Sergei Yutkevich.
Manhattan Shakedown
DISTRIBUTOR: Syndicate Exchange: RUN-
NING TIME: 56 mins.; REVIEWED: 10-27-39.
CAST: John Gallaudet, Rosalind Keith, George
McKay, Reginald Hincks. Bob Rideout, Phyllis
Claire, Donald Douglas. Micael Heppell.
PRODUCER: Kenneth Bishop: DIRECTOR:
Leon Barsha; AUTHOR: Theodore Tinsley;
SCREENPLAY: Edgar Edwards: CAMERAMAN:
George Median: EDITOR: William Austin.
Marseillaise (French)
DISTRIBUTOR: World Pictures; RUNNING
TIME: 80 mins.; REVIEWED: 11-10-39.
CAST: Pierre Renoir. Lise Delamere, Louis
Jouvet; DIRECTOR: Jean Renoir.
Matrimonio Ideale (Italian)
DISTRIBUTOR: Esperia Films: RUNNING
TIME: 84 mins.; REVIEWED: 12-21-39; Pro-
duced in Italy: RELEASED: 12-14-39.
CAST: Assia Noris, Umberto Melnati, Gino
Cervi; DIRECTOR: Camillo Mastroeinque.
195
Members Press Photographers Ass')/
MOE LEFTOFF— —JOE HEPPNER
JJGa1^uoLuA, ^alJz ^aa Much"
Metropolitan Photo Service
Pictures Speak for Then/selves
1564 Broadway, N. Y. C. Telephone BRyanr 9-8213
196
Med Folket for Fosterlandet (Swedish)
(We the People for the Fatherland)
DISTRIBUTOR : Scandinavian Talking Pictures;
RUNNING TIME: 105 mins. ; Produced in Sweden.
CAST: Sigurd Wallen, Linnea Hilberg Ake
Johansson: DIRECTOR : Sigurd Wallen.
Meet Dr. Christian
DISTRIBUTOR: RKO Radio: RUNNING TIME:
03 mins.: REVIEWED: 10-19-39; RELEASED:
11-17-39.
("AST: Jean Hersholt, Dorothy Lovett, Robert
Baldwin, Enid Bennett, Paul Harvey, Marcia Mae
Jones, Jackie Moran, Maude Eburne. Frank Cogh-
lan. Jr.. Patsy Lee Parsons. Sarah Edwards. John
Kelly. Eddie Acufl.
PRODUCER: William Stephens; ASSOCIATE
PRODUCER: Monroe Shaft; DIRECTOR: Bernard
Vorhaus: AUTHOR: Harvey Gates; SCREEN-
PLAY: Ian McLellen Hunter. Ring: Lardner, Jr..
Harvey Gates: ART DIRECTOR: Bernard Herz-
brun; MUSICAL DIRECTOR: Constantin Bake
leinikoff: CAMERAMAN: Robert Pittack: EDI-
TOR: Edward Mann.
Megvedtem Egy Asszonyt
(Hungarian)
DISTRIBUTOR: Danubia: RUNNING TIME:
TO mins.: REVIEWED: 11-1-39; Produced in
Hungary.
CAST: Antal Paper, Maria Lazar. Bela Mi-
halyffy: DIRECTOR: Akes Ratkonyi.
Mexicali Rose
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic: RUNNING TIME:
(10 mins.; REVIEWED: 3-20-39: RELEASED:
3-27-39.
CAST: Gene Autry, Smiley Burnette, Noah
Beery, Luana Walters, William Earnum. William
Royle. LeRoy Mason. Wally Albright, Kathryn
Fi ve. Roy Barcroft, Dick Botillcr, Vic Demourelle.
John Beach. Henry Ortho.
PRODUCER: Harry Grey: DIRECTOR: George
Sherman: AUTHORS: Luci Ward. Connie Lee:
SCREENPLAY: Gerald Goraghty: CAMERAMAN:
William Nobles: EDITOR: Tony Martinelli.
Mexican Spitfire
DISTRIBUTOR: RKO Radio; RUNNING TIME:
07 mins.; REVIEWED: 12-14-39.
CAST: Lupe Velez, Leon Errol. Donald Woods.
Elizabeth Risdon, Cecil Kellaway, Charles Cole-
man.
PRODUCER: Cliff Reid; DIRECTOR: Leslie
Goodwins: AUTHOR: Joseph A. Fields: SCREEN-
PLAY: Joseph A. Fields, Charles E. Roberts;
ART DIRECTOR: Van Nest Polglase; MUSICAL
DIRECTOR: Paul Sawtell: CAMERAMAN: Jack
Mackenzie; EDITOR: Desmond Marquette.
Mickey, the Kid
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic: RUNNING TIME:
66 mins.; REVIEWED: 6-27-39: RELEASED:
7-3-39.
CAST: Bruce Cabot, Ralph Byrd. ZaSu Pitts.
Tommy Ryan. Jessie Ralph, Jane Storey, J. Far-
rell MacDonald. John Qualen, Robert Elliott.
Scotty Beckett, James Flavin, Archie Twitchell.
EE ATE RE RELEASE CREDITS
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Herman Schlom: DI-
RECTOR: Arthur Lubin: AUTHOR: Alice Alt
echulcr; SCREENPLAY: Doris M alloy, Gordon
Kahn; ART DIRECTOR: John Victor Mackay:
MUSICAL DIRECTOR: Cy Feuer; CAMERAMAN:
Jack Marta: EDITOR: William Morgan.
Midnight
DISTRIBUTOR : Paramount; RUNNING TIME:
04 mins.: REVIEWED; 3-15-39; RELEASED:
3-24-39.
CAST: Claudette Colbert, Don Ameche. Fran-
cis Lederer, John Barrymore. Mary Astor. Elaine
Barrie, Hedda Hopper.
PRODUCER: Arthur HornblOW, Jr.; DIREC-
TOR: Mitchell Leisen; AUTHORS: Edwin Justus
Mayer, Franz Schulz: SCREENPLAY: Charles
Braekett, Billy Wilder: CAMERAMAN: Charles
Lang.
Mikado, The
DISTRIBUTOR: Universal; RUNNING TIME:
!<0 nuns.; REVIEWED: 5-16-39; Produced in
England: RELEASED: 9-8-39.
CAST: Kenny Baker, John Barclay, Martyn
Green, Sydney Granville, Gregory Stroud. Jean
Colin. Elisabeth Paynter, Kathleen Naylor, Con-
stance Willis.
PRODUCER: Geoffrey Toye; ASSOCIATE PRO-
DUCER: Josef Somlo; DIRECTOR: Victor
Schertzinger: AUTHORS: Gilbert and Sullivan.
Million Dollar Legs
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount; RUNNING TIME:
59 mins.; REVIEWED: 9-14-39; RELEASED:
7- 14-39.
CAST: Betty Grable. John Hartley, Donald
O'Connor. Jackie Coogan. Larry Crabbe, Peter
Hayes, Dorothea Kent, Richard Denning, Philip
Warren, Edward Arnold. Jr., Thurston Hall, Roy
Gordon, Matty Kemp. William Tracy, Joyce
Mathews, Russ Clark.
DIRECTOR: Nick Grinde: AUTHOR: Lewis
Foster; SCREENPLAY: Lewis Foster. Richard
English; CAMERAMAN: Harry Fishbeck: EDI-
TOR: Stuart Gilmore.
Mill on the Floss, The
DISTRIBUTOR: Standard Pictures: RUNNING
TIME: 82 mins.: REVIEWED: 11-16-39; Pro-
duced in England.
CAST: Geraldine Fitzgerald. Frank Lawton,
Victoria Hopper, Fay Compton, James Mason,
Griffith Jones, Sam Livesey, Pauline de Chalus.
Mary Clare, Athene Seyler. Marita Hunt, James
Roberts, Phillip Front. Amy Veness, Felix Ayl-
mer, Eliot Wakeham. William Devlin, A. W.
Payne. William Holloway, Ivor Barnard. Eldon
Gorst.
PRODUCER: John Cloin; DIRECTOR: Tim
Whelan: AUTHOR: George Eliot; SCREENPLAY:
Garnest Weston. Austin Melford. Tim Whelan:
DIALOGUE: John Drinkwater; CAMERAMAN:
John Stumar.
Miracles for Sale
DISTRIBUTOR: Loew's. Inc.; RUNNING TIME:
71 mins.; REVIEWED: 8-11-39: RELEASED:
8- 14-39.
197
II. L BLAKE
PRODUCER - DIRECTOR
of Outstanding Industrial, Educational,
and Theatrical Motion Pictures for over
20 years in Black and White and Color.
B. K. BLAKE PRODUCTIONS
RKO BLDG., RADIO CITY NEW YORK
198
CAST: Robert Young. Florence Rice, Frank
Craven. Henry Hull, Astrid Allwyn. Walter Kings-
ford, Lee Bowman, Cliff Clark, Frederic Worlock.
Gloria Holden, W. Demarest.
DIRECTOR: Tod Browning: AUTHOR: Clayton
Kawson. SCREENPLAY: Harry Ruskin, Marion
Parsonnet, James E. Grant: CAMERAMAN:
Charles Lawton; EDITOR: Frederick Y. Smith.
Mirele Efros (Yiddish)
DISTRIBUTOR: Credo Pictures: RUNNING
TIME: 87 mins.: REVIEWED: 11-1-39.
CAST: Berta Gersten, Ruth Elbaum, Michael
Rosenberg-. Mische Feder, Paul Walter, Jerry
Rosenberg. Sarah Krohner.
PRODUCER: Roman Rebush: DIRECTOR:
Josef Berne.
Missing Daughters
DISTRIBUTOR: Columbia: RUNNING TIME
63 mins.; REVIEWED: 6-20-39; RELEASED:
5-22-39.
CAST: Richard Arlen. Rochelle Hudson, Marian
Marsh, Isabel Jewell, Edward Raquello, Dick
Wessel, Eddie Kane, Wade Boteler, Don Beddoe.
Claire Rochelle.
DIRECTOR: C. C. Coleman. Jr.; AUTHORS
Michael Simmons, George Bricker: SCREENPLAY:
Michael Simmons, George Bricker; CAMERAMAN:
Henry Freulich; EDITOR: Gene Havlick.
Missing Evidence
DISTRIBUTOR: Universal: RUNNING TIME:
64 mins.: REVIEWED: 11-20-39: RELEACED:
12-15-39.
CAST: Preston Foster. Chick Chandler, Irene
Hervey, Inez Courtney, Noel Madison, Joseph
Downing, Oscar O'Shea, Tom Dugan, Ray Walker.
Cliff Clark.
PRODUCER: Phil Rosen; DIRECTOR; Phil
Rosen; AUTHORS: Dorrell and Stuart McGowan;
SCREENPLAY: Arthur T. Horman; CAMERA-
MAN : Milton Krasner.
Mr. Moto in Danger Island
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century-Fox: RUNNING
TIME: 63 mins.: REVIEWED: 3-29-39: RE-
LEASED: 4-7-39.
CAST Peter Lorre, Jean Hersholt, Amanda Duff.
Warren Hymer, Richard Lane, Leon Ames, Doug
las Dumbrille, Charles D. Brown, Paul Harvey.
Robert Lowery, Eddie Marr, Harry Woods.
PRODUCER: John Stone; DIRECTOR: Herbert
Leeds; AUTHORS: J. P. Marquand, John W.
Vandercook, John Reinhardt, George Bricker;
SCREENPLAY: Peter Milne: CAMERAMAN:
Lucien Andriot ; EDITOR : Harry Reynolds.
Mr. Moto Takes a Vacation
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century-Fox; RUNNING
TIME: 61 mins.; REVIEWED: 7-25-39; RE-
LEASED: 7-7-39.
CAST: Peter Lorre, Joseph Sehildkraut, Lionel
Atwill, Virginia Field, John King, Iva Stewart.
George P. Huntley, Jr., Victor Varconi, John
Bleifer, Anthony Warde, Harry Strang, John
Davidson.
PRODUCER: Sol M. Wurtzel; DIRECTOR:
Norman Foster; SCREENPLAY: Philip Mac-
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
Donald, Norman Foster; CAMERAMAN: Charles
Clarke; EDITOR: Norman Colbert.
Mr. Moto's Last Warning
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century -Fox : RUNNING
TIME: 71 mins.; REVIEWED: 1-31-39; RE-
LEASED; 1-20-39.
CAST Peter Lorre. Ricardo Cortez, Virginia
Field, John Carradine, George Sanders, Joan Carol,
Robert Coote, Margaret Irving, Leyland Hodgson,
John Davidson.
PRODUCER: Sol M. Wurtzel: DIRECTOR:
Norman Foster; AUTHORS: Philip MaeDonalU.
Norman Foster; CAMERAMAN Virgil Miller;
EDITOR: Norman Colbert.
Mr. Smith Goes to Washington
DISTRIBUTOR: Columbia: RUNNING TIME:
125 mins.; REVIEWED: 10-6-39; RELEASED:
10-19-39.
CAST: Jean Arthur, James Stewart, Claude
Rains, Edward Arnold, Guy Kibbee, Thomas
Mitchell, Eugene Pallette, Beulah Bondi, H. B.
Warner, Harry Carey, Astrid Allwyn, Ruth Don-
nelly, Grant Mitchell, Porter Hall, Baby Dumpling.
H. V. Kaltenborn, Piette Watkin, Charles Lane,
William Demarest, Dick Elliott, Billy Watson,
Deimer Watson, John Russell. Harry Watson. Gary
Watson.
PRODUCER: Frank Capra; DIRECTOR: Frank
Capra: AUTHOR: Lewis R. Foster; SCREEN-
PLAY: Sidney Buchman: ART DIRECTOR: Lionel
Banks; MUSICAL DIRECTOR: H. W. Stoloff;
SCORE Dimitri Tiomkin; CAMERAMAN: Joseph
Walker; MONTAGE EFFECTS: Slavko Vorkapich;
EDITORS : Gene Havlick, Al Clark.
Mr. Wong in Chinatown
DISTRIBUTOR: Monogram: RUNNING TIME:
68 mins.: REVIEWED: 7-19-39; RELEASED:
8-1-39.
CAST: Boris Karloff, Grant Withers, Marjorie
Reynolds, William Royle, Peter Lynn, Huntley
Gordon, James Flavin, Lotus Long, Bessie Lee,
Lee Tong Foo, Little Angelo, Richard Loo, Guy
Usher.
PRODUCER: Scott R. Dunlap; SUPERVISOR:
William T. Lackey; DIRECTOR: William Nigh;
AUTHOR: Hugh Wiley; SCREENPLAY: Scott
Darling; CAMERAMAN: Harry Neumann; EDI-
TOR: Russell Schoengarth.
Mothers of Today (Yiddish)
DISTRIBUTOR: Apex; RUNNING TIME: 95
mins.; REVIEWED: 3-14-39.
CAST: Esther Field, Max Rosenblatt, Gertie
Krause, Simon Wolf, Leon Seidenberg, Paula
Lubelsak, Vera Lubov, Arthur Winters, Louis
Goldstein, Jack Shargel: DIRECTOR: Henry Lynn.
Mountain Rhythm
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic; RUNNING TIME:
01 mins.: REVIEWED: 6-29-39; RELEASED:
0-9-39.
CAST: Gene Autry, Smiley Burnett, June
Storey, Maude Eburne. Ferris Taylor. Walter
COMERFORD THEATERS
200
Fcnner, Jack Penniek, Hooper Atchley. Bernard
Suss, Edward Cassidy, Jack Ingraham, Tom Lon-
ilon, Roger Williams, Frankie Marvin.
PRODUCER: Harry Grey: DIRECTOR: B.
Reeves Eason; AUTHOR: Connie Lee: SCREEN
PLAY: Gerald Geraghty; CAMERAMAN: Ernest
Miller; EDITOR: Lester Orlebeek.
Mutiny in the Big House
DISTRIBUTOR: Monogram; RUNNING TIME
83 mins.; REVIEWED: 10-11-30: RELEASED:
10-25-39.
CAST: Charles Biekford, Barton MacLane, Pat
Moriarity, Dennis Moore, William Boyle, George
Cleveland, Charlie Foy, Russell Hopton, Jeffrey
Sayre. Eddie Foster, Jack Daley, Dave O'Brien.
Wheeler Oakman. Charles King, Nisei de Brulier,
Merrill MeCormick.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Grant Withers; Dl
RECTOR: William Nigh; AUTHOR: Martin
Mooney: SCREENPLAY: Robert D. Andrews;
CAMERAMAN: Harry Neumann: EDITOR: Rn~
sell Schoengarth.
Mutiny on the Blackhawk
DISTRIBUTOR: Universal' RUNNING TIME:
67 mins.: REVIEWED: 8-3-39: RELEASED:
9-1-39.
CAST: Richard Arlen, Andy Devine, Constance
Moore, Noah Beery. Guinn Williams, Thurston
Hall. Sandra Kane, Paul Fix, Richard Lane, Mabel
Albertson, Charles Trowbridge. Bill Moore. Byron
Foulger, Francisco Maran. Eddy Waller.
PRODUCER: Ben Pi van DIRECTOR: Christy
Cabanne: AUTHOR: Ben Pivar; SCREENPLAY:
Michael Simmons.
Mutiny of the Elsinore, The
DISTRIBUTOR: Regal Distributing Corp.; RE
VIEWED: 2-17-39; Produced in England.
CAST: Paul Lukas. Lyn Harding. Kathleen
Kelly, Clifford Evans, Michael Martin-Harvey,
William Devlin. Benn Soutten. Conway Dixon.
Pat Noonan, Tony Sympson, Hamilton Keene.
Alec Fraser, Jiro Soneya.
DIRECTOR: Roy Lock wood: AUTHOR: Jack
London: SCREENPLAY: Beaufoy Milton: CAM-
ERAMAN: Byron Langley; EDITOR : F. H. Bick-
erton.
My Son Is a Criminal
PRODUCER: Columbia: RUNNING TIME: 59
mins.: REVIEWED: 3-21-39; RELEASED:
2-22-39.
CAST: Alan Baxter, Jacimeline Wells, Gordon
Oliver, Willard Robertson, Joseph King, Eddie
Laughton, John Tyrrell.
DIRECTOR: C. C. Coleman, Jr.; AUTHOR:
Arthur T. Horman; SCREENPLAY: Arthur T
Horman; CAMERAMAN: Allen G. Siegler; EDI-
TOR: Gene Havliek.
My Wife's Relatives
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic; RUNNING TIME:
66 mins.; REVIEWED: 3-13-39; RELEASED:
5-20-39.
CAST: James Gleason. Lucille Gleason, Rus-
sell Gleason, Harry Davenport. Mary Hart, Pur-
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
neU Pratt. Maude Eburne, Marjorie Gateson,
Tommy Ryan. Henry Arthur. Sally Payne. Ed-
ward Keene.
PRODUCER: Sol C. Siesrel: DIRECTOR: Gus
Meins: AUTHORS : Dorrell and Stuart MacGowan:
SCREENPLAY: Jack Townley: CAMERMAN:
Jaek Marta: EDITOR: Ernest Nims.
Mysterious Miss X, The
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic: RUNNING TIME:
02 mins.: REVIEWED: 1-23-39: RELEASED:
1-10-39.
CAST: Michael Whalen. Mary Hart. Chick
Chandler, Mabel Todd. Frank M. Thomas. Regis
Toomey, Don Douglas, Wade Boteler, Dorothy
Tree. Eddie Acuff. Pierre Watkin. Harlan Brisrfrs.
PRODUCER: Herman Schlom; DIRECTOR: Gus
Meins; AUTHOR: George Yates. Jr.; SCREEN-
PLAY: Olive Cooper; CAMERAMAN: Ernest Mil
ler; EDITOR: Lester Orlebeck.
Mystery of Mr. Wong, The
DISTRIBUTOR: Monogram; RUNNING TIME:
(17 mins.: REVIEWED: 3-20-39; RELEASED:
3-8-39.
CAST: Boris Karloff, Dorothy Tree, Grant
Withers. Lotus Long, Morgan Wallace, Holmes
Herbert, Craig Reynolds. Ivan Lebedeff. Hooper
Atchley.
PRODUCER: William T. Lackey; DIRECTOR:
William Nigh: AUTHOR: Hugh Wiley: SCREEN-
PLAY: Scott Darlina-; EDITOR: Russell Schoen-
gartb.
Mystery of the White Room
DISTRIBUTOR : Universal: RUNNING TIME
58 mins.: REVIEWED: 3-29-30: RELEASED:
3-17-39.
CAST: Bruce Cabot. Helen Mack. Constance
Worth. Joan Woodbury. Mabel Todd. Tom Dugan.
Roland Frew, Addison Richards, Tommy Jackson.
Frank Reicher.
PRODUCER: Irvine- Starr: DIRECTOR: Otis
Garrett: AUTHOR: James G. Edwards; SCREEN-
PLAY: Alex Gottlieb: CAMERAMAN: John Boyle.
Mystery Plane
DISTRIBUTOR: Monogram; RUNNING TIME:
00 mins.; REVIEWED: 2-27-39; RELEASED:
3-8-39.
CAST: John Trent, Milburn Stone, Marjorie
Reynolds. Jason Robards, Peter George Lynn,
Lueien Littlefield, Polly Ann Young. Sayre Deer-
ing. John Peters. Tommy Bupp. Betsy Gay.
PRODUCER: Scott R. Dunlap; ASSOCIATE
PRODUCER: Paul Malvern: DIRECTOR: George
Waggner: SCREENPLAY: Paul Schofield. Joseph
West; MUSICAL SCORE AND DIRECTION:
Frank Sanucci: CAMERAMAN: Archie Stout:
SPECIAL EFFECTS: Fred Jaekman; EDITOR:
( arl Pierson.
Mystic Circle Murder
DISTRIBUTOR: Merit Pictures: RUNNING
TIME: 69 mins.: REVIEWED: 10-13-39.
FABIAN THEATRES
CORPORATION
202
CAST: Betty Compson, Robert Fiske, Helene
Le Berthon, Arthur Gardner. David Kenman.
Robert Fraza.
DIRECTOR: Frank O'Connor: AUTHOR
SCREENPLAY: Frank O'Connor.
Nancy Drew and the Hidden
Staircase
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners: RUNNING TIME:
60 mins.; REVIEWED: 11-2-39: RELEASED:
9-9-39.
CAST: Bonita Granville, Frankie Thomas, John
Litel, Frank Orth, Renie Riano, Vera Lewis,
Louise Carter, William Gould, George Guhl, John
Ridgely. De Wolf Hopper, Creighton Hale, Frank
Mayo. Fred Tozere. Don Rowan, Dick Elliott.
DIRECTOR: William Clemens; SCREENPLAY:
Kenneth Garnet: CAMERAMAN: L. W. O'Connell:
EDITOR: Louis Hesse.
Nancy Drew — Trouble Shooter
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners: RUNNING TIME:
G9 mins.: REVIEWED: 9-18-39; RELEASED:
0-17-39.
CAST: Bonita Granville. Frankie Thomas, John
Litel, Aldrich Bowker, Chariot E. Wynters, Edgar
Edwards, Renie Riano, Roger Imhof, Erville An-
derson, Willie Best.
DIRECTOR: William Clemens: SCREENPLAY:
Kenneth Garnet.
Naughty But Nice
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners: RUNNING TIME:
90 mins.; REVIEWED: 6-29-39: RELEASED:
7-1-39.
CAST: Ann Sheridan, Dick Powell, Gale Page,
Helen Broderick, Ronald Reagan, Allen Jenkins.
ZaSu Pitts, Maxie Rosenbloom. Jerry Colnnna,
Luis Alberni, Vera Lewis, Elizabeth Dunne. Bill
Davidson. Granville Bates. Halliwell Hobbes.
DIRECTOR: Ray Enright; SCREENPLAY;
Richard Macaulay, Jerry Wald: MUSIC AND
LYRICS: Harry Warren, Johnny Mercer; CAM
ERAMAN: Arthur L. Todd; EDITOR: Thomas
Richards.
Navy Secrets
DISTRIBUTOR: Monogram: RUNNING TIME:
60 mins.; REVIEWED: 2-15-39: RELEASED:
3- 1-39.
CAST: Grant Withers, Fay Wray, Dewey Robiu-
son. Andre Cheron, Robert Frazer, Craig Rey-
nolds, George Sorell, W. von Brincken, Joseph
Crehan, Duke York.
SUPERVISOR: William Lackey: DIRECTOR:
Howard Bretherton; AUTHOR: Steve Fisher;
SCREENPLAY: Harvey Gates; CAMERAMAN:
Harry Neumann; EDITOR: Russell Schoengarlh.
Never Say Die
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount; RUNNING TIME
80 mins.; REVIEWED: 3-7-39; RELEASED:
4- 14-39.
CAST: Martha Raye, Bob Hope. Andy Devine.
Alan Mowbray. Gale Sondergaard, Sig Rumann,
Ernest Cossart, Paul Harvey, Frances Arms, Ivan
Simpson, Monty Woolley, Foy Van Dolsen, Chris-
tian Rub.
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
PRODUCER: Paul Jones; DIRECTOR: Elliott
Nugent; AUTHOR: William H. Post; SCREEN-
PLAY: Don Hartman, Frank Butler, Preston, Stur-
ges; ART DIRECTORS: Hans Dreier, Ernst Fegte:
MUSICAL DIRECTOR: Boris Morros: SONG:
Ralph Rainger, Leo Robin; CAMERAMAN: Leo
Tover; SPECIAL EFFECTS: Farciot Edouart:
EDITOR: James Smith.
New Frontier
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic; RUNNING TIME:
56 mins.; REVIEWED: 9-7-39: RELEASED:
8-10-39.
CAST: John Wayne. Ray Corrigan, Raymond
Hatton, Phyllis Isley, Eddy Waller. Sammy Mc-
Kim, LeRoy Mason. Harrison Greene, Reginald
Barlow, Burr Caruth, Dave O'Brien, Hal Price,
Jack Ingram, Bud Osborne, Charles Whitaker.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: William Berke; DI
RECTOR: George Sherman: SCREENPLAY: Betty
Burbridge, Luci Ward; MUSICAL SCORE: William
Lava: CAMERAMAN: Reggie Lanning; EDITOR
Tony Martinelli.
New Horizons (Russian)
DISTRIBUTOR: Amkino; RUNNING TIME: 92
mins.; REVIEWED: 5-19-39; Produced in Russia:
RELEASED: 5-11-39.
CAST: Boris Chirkov, Vera Kibardina. M.
Zharov; DIRECTOR: Gregory Kozintsev.
News Is Made at Night
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century-Fox: RUNNING
TIME: 71 mins.; REVIEWED: 7-17-39: RE-
LEASED: 7-21-39.
CAST: Preston Foster. Lynn Bari, Russell Glea-
son, George Barbier. Eddie Collins, Minor Watson.
Charles Halton, Paul Harvey, Richard Lane. Charles
Lane. Betty Compson, Paul Fix, Paul Guilfoylc.
PRODUCER: Edward Kaufman: DIRECTOR:
Alfred Werker; AUTHOR: John Larkin; CAMERA-
MAN: Ernest Palmer: EDITOR: Nick De Maggio.
Newsboys' Home
DISTRIBUTOR: Universal: RUNNING TIME:
73 mins.: REVIEWED: 1-24-39.
CAST: Jackie Cooper. Edmund Lowe, Wendy
Barrie, Edward Norris. Samuel S. Hinds, Irving
Piehel, Elisha Cook, Jr.. Harris Berger. Hally
Chester, Charles Duncan. David Gorcey, William
Benedict.
DIRECTOR: Harold Young: AUTHORS: Gordon
Kahn, Charles Grayson: SCREENPLAY: Gordon
Kahn; CAMERAMAN: Milton Krasner.
Nick Carter — Master Detective
DISTRIBUTOR: Loew's. Inc.; RUNNING
TIME: 60 mins.; REVIEWED: 12-14-39; RE-
LEASED: 12-15-39.
CAST: Walter Pidgeon. Rita Johnson. Henry
Hull, Stanley Ridges, Donald Meek, Addison
Richards, Henry Victor, Milburn Stone, Martin
Kosleck, Frank Faylen, Sterling Hollway, Wally
Maher, Edgar Deering.
PRODUCER: Lucien Hubbard; DIRECTOR:
Jacques Tourneur; AUTHORS: Bertram Mill-
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B R
y a n t
9-8195 —
8 19 5
204
hauser. Harold Buckley- SCREENPLAY: Bertram
Millhauser: CAMERAMAN: Charles) Lawton:
EDITOR : Elmo Vernon.
Night Riders. The
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic; RUNNING TIME
58 nuns.: REVIEWED: 4-4-30; RELEASED:
4- 12-39.
CAST: John Wayne, Ray Corrigan, Max Ter-
liune. Doreen McKay. Ruth Rogers, George Doug-
las. Tom Tyler, Kormit Maynard. Sammy McKim.
Waller Wills, Ethan Laidlaw, Edward Pcil, Sr..
Tom London. Jack Ingram. William Nestell.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: William Berke; DI
RECTOR: George Sherman; SCREENPLAY: Betty
Burbridge. Stanley Roberts; CAMERAMAN: Jack
Mart a; EDITOR: Lester Orlebeck,
Night Work
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount; RUNNING TIME:
62 mills.; REVIEWED: 9-21-39; RELEASED:
5- 4-39.
CAST: Charlie Rugglcs, Mary Bolaud, Joyce
Mathews. Donald O'Connor. Billy Lee, John Hart
ley, Clem Bevans, William Haade, Ed Gargan.
DIRECTOR: George Archainbaud; SCREEN-
PLAY: Monte Bruce. Lloyd Corrigan, L. R. Poster;
CAMERAMAN: Harry Hallengerber; EDITOR:
stuait Gilmore.
Nincsenek Veletlenek (Hungarian)
(Everything Has a Reason)
DISTRIBUTOR: Hungaria Pictures; RUNNING
'UME: 87 mins.; REVIEWED: 9-29-39; Produced
in Hungary.
CAST: Ida Turay, Laszlo Szilassy, Joz.-ef
Johasz; DIRECTOR: Istvai) Bekeffy.
Ninotchka
DISTRIBUTOR: Loews, Inc.; RUNNING TIME:
11(1 nuns.: REVIEWED: 10-10-39; RELEASED:
11-3-39.
CAST: Greta Garbo, Melvyn Douglas. Ina Claire,
Bela Lugosi. Sig Sum arm, Felix Bressart, Alexander
Granach, Gregory Gaye, Kolfe Sedan. Edwin Max-
well, Richard Carle.
PRODUCER: Ernst Lubitsch; DIRECTOR:
Ernst Lubitsch; AUTHOR : Melehior Lengyel;
SCREENPLAY: Charles Brackett. Billy Wilder,
Walter Reisch : ART DIRECTOR: Cedric Gibbons:
MUSICAL SCORE: Werner R. Hiymann; CAM-
ERAMAN: William Daniels; EDITOR: Gene Rug-
giero .
No Place to Go
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners; RUNNING TIME:
57 mins.; REVIEWED: 11-29-39; RELEASED:
9-23-39.
CAST: Fred Stone. Dennis Morgan, Gloria
Dickson, Sonny Bupp, Aldrich Bowker, Charles
Hilton. Georgia Came, Frank Faylen, Dennie
Moore. Alan Bridge, Greta Meyer, Bernice Pilot,
Joe Devlin Christian Rub.
DIRECTOR: Terry Morse; AUTHORS: George
S. Kaufman, Edna Ferber; SCREENPLAY: Lee
Katz, Lawrence Kimble, Fred Niblo, Jr.; CAMERA-
MAN: Arthur Edeson; EDITOR: Benjamin Liss.
FEATURE RELEASE CREDiTS
Nurse Edith Cavell
DISTRIBUTOR: RKO Radio; RUNNING TIME:
95 mins.; REVIEWED: 8-22-39; RELEASED:
9-29-39.
CAST: Anna Neagle. Edna May Oliver. George
Sanders, May Robson, ZaSu Pitts, H. B. Warner.
Sophie Stewart. Mary Howard, Robert Coote,
Martin Kosleck, Gui Ignon. Lionel Koyce, Jimmy
Butler, Rex Downing, Henry Brandon, Fritz
Leiber, Gilbert Emery, Lueien Prival, Richard
Deane, Bert Roach, Halliwell Hobbes, Ernst
Deutsch, Egon Breeher, Will Kaufman, Gustav
von Seyffertitz.
PRODUCER : Herbert Wilcox; ASSOCIATE PRO
DUCER: Merrill G. White; DIRECTOR: Herbert
Wilcox; AUTHOR: Capt. Reginald Berkeley (from
"Dawn"); SCREENPLAY: Michael Hogan; MU-
SICAL DIRECTOR: Anthony Collins; ART DIREC
TOR: L. P. Williams; CAMERAMEN: F. A. Young.
Joseph H. August; SPECIAL EFFECTS: Vernon
L. Walker; MONTAGE: Douglas Travers; EDI
TOR: Elmo Williams.
Of Mice and Men
DISTRIBUTOR: United Artists; RUNNING
TIME: 107 mins.; REVIEWED: 12-27-39.
CAST: Burgess Meredith, Betty Field, Lon
Chaney, Jr., Charles Bickford, Roman Bohnen,
Bob Steele, Noah Beery, Jr., Granville Bates,
Oscar O'Shea, Leigh Whipper.
PRODUCER: Lewis Milestone; ASSOCIATE
PRODUCER: Frank Ross; DIRECTOR: Lewis
Milestone; AUTHOR: John Steinbeck: SCREEN-
PLAY: Eugene Solow; ART DIRECTOR: Nicolai
Remisofl; MUSICAL SCORE: Aaron Copland;
CAMERAMAN: Norbert Brodine; PHOTO-
GRAPHIC EFFECTS: Roy Seawright; EDITOR:
Bert Jordan.
Off the Record
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners; RUNNING TIME: 62
nuns.: REVIEWED: 2-23-39: RELEASED:
1-21-39.
CAST: Pat O'Brien. Joan Blondell, Bobby Jor-
dan, Alan Baxter, William Davidson, Morgan
Conway, Clay Clement, Selmer Jackson, Addison
Richards, Pierre Watkins, Joe King, Douglas Wood,
Armand Kaliz.
DIRECTOR: James Flood; AUTHORS: Saul
Elkms, Sally Sandlin; SCREENPLAY: Niven
Busch, Lawrence Kimble, Earl Baldwin; CAM-
ERAMAN: Charles Kosher; EDITOR: Thomas
Richards.
Oklahoma Frontier
DISTRIBUTOR: Universal; RUNNING TIME:
58 mins.; REVIEWED: 12-5-39.
CAST: John Mack Brown, Fuzzy Knight, Anne
Gwynne. Bob Baker, James Blaine, Robert Kort-
man, Charles King, Harry Tenbrook.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Albert Ray; DI-
RECTOR: Ford Beebe: SCREENPLAY: Ford
Beebe; CAMERAMAN: Jerome Ash.
Oklahoma Kid, The
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners; RUNNING TIME: 85
mins.: REVIEWED: 3-15-39; RELEASED:
3-11-30.
205
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
PRODUCER: Harry It. Popkin. DIRECTOR
Deo C. Popkin.
CAST: James Cagney, Humphrey Bogart. Rose-
mary Dane. Donald Crisp. Harvey Stephens. Hugh
Sothern. Charles Middleton. Edward Pawley. Ward
Bond. Dew Harvey, Trevor Bardette. John Miljan.
Arthur Aylesworlh.
DIRECTOR: Lloyd Bacon: AUTHORS: Edward
Paramore, Wally Kline; SCREENPLAY: Warren
Duff. Robert Buefcner, Edward Paramore: CAM
KKAMAN : James Worn.' Howe: EDITOR: Owen
Marks.
Old Maid, The
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners; RUNNING TIME: 95
mins.: REVIEWED: 8-1-39: REDEASED: 9-2-39.
CAST: Betty Davis, Miriam Hopkins, George
Brent, Donald Crisp, Jane Bryan, Douise Fazenda.
James Stephenson, Jerome Cowan, William Dundi-
gan, Cecilia Doltus, Rand Brooks, Janet Shaw.
DeWolf Hopper.
PRODUCER: Hal B. Wallis: ASSOCIATE PRO
DUCER: Henry Blanke; DIRECTOR: Edmund
Goulding: AUTHORS: Zoe Atkins, Edith Wharton;
SCREENPLAY : Casey Robinson; ART DIREC-
TOR: Robert Haas: MUSIC: Max Steiner: OR-
CHESTRAD ARRANGEMENTS: Hugo Friedhofer:
MUSICAL DIRECTOR: Le a F. Forbstein; CAM-
ERAMAN: Tony Gaudio; EDITOR: George Amy.
On Borrowed Time
DISTRIBUTOR: Loews. Inc.; RUNNING TIME:
99 mins.: REVIEWED: li "JK .SLI : RELEASED:
7-7-39.
CAST: Lionel Barrymore, Sir Cedric Hardwicke.
Betilah Bondi, Una Merkel, Bobs Watson, Nat
Pendleton. Henry Travels. Grant Mitchell, Eily
Malyon, James Burke, Charles Waldrou. Ian
Wolfe, Phillip Terry, Truman Bradley.
PRODUCER: Sidney Franklin: DIRECTOR:
Harold S. Bucquet; AUTHORS: Paul Osborne.
Lawrence Edward Watkin ; SCREENPLAY: Alice
D. G. Miller. Frank O'Neill. Claudine West; CAM-
ERAMAN: Joseph Ruttenberg; EDITOR: George
Boemler.
On Dress Parade
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners: RUNNING TIME:
02 mins.: REVIEWED: 11-1-39; RELEASED:
11-18-39.
CAST: Billy Hallop. Bobby Jordan. Hunt/
Hall, Gabriel Dell, Deo Gorcey, Bernard Punsley.
John Ditel. Frankie Thomas, Cissie Doftus, Selniar
Jackson, Aldrich Bowker, Douglas Meins, Wil-
liam Gould. Don Douglas.
IN CHARGE OF PRODUCTION: Jack D. War-
ner; EXECUTIVE PRODUCER: Hal B. Wallis:
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Bryan Foy; DIRECTOR:
William Clemens: SCREENPLAY: Charles Belden.
Tom Reed; ART DIRECTOR: Esdras Hartley:
CAMERAMAN: Arthur D. Todd: EDITOR: Doug
Gould.
One Dark Night /
DISTRIBUTOR: Sack Amusement Enterprises:
RUNNING TIME: 81 mins.: REVIEWED: 12-1-39.
CAST: Mahtan Moreland. Betty Treadville.
Josephine Pearson, Bob Simmons, Lawrence
Criner, Ruby Logan. Monte Hawley, The Four
Tones.
One Hour to Live
DISTRIBUTOR: Universal: RUNNING TIME
.">!! nuns.: REVIEWED: 11-8-39: RELEASED
11-10-39.
CAST: Charles Bickford, Doris Nolan. John
Litel, Samuel S. Hinds. Paul Guilfoyle. Robert
E. Keene. Jack Carr. John Gallaudet. Emory
Parnell, Olin Howland.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: George Yohalem:
DIRECTOR : Harold Schuster: SCREENPDAY:
Roy Chanslor: CAMERAMAN: George Robinson.
On His Own (Russian)
DISTRIBUTOR: Amkino: RUNNING TIME: 9U
mins.: REVIEWED: 9-18-39: Produced in Russia
REDEASED: 9-12-39.
CAST: Alexei Dyarsky, V. O. Massalitinova
M. Troyanovsky; DIRECTOR: Mark Donskoi.
On Trial
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners: RUNNING TIME: 61
nuns.: REVIEWED: 4-12-39; RELEASED: 4-1-39.
CAST: Margaret Dindsay, John Ditel, Edward
Norris, Janet Chapman, James Stephenson. Larry
Williams. William Davidson. Earl Swire. Gordon
Hart. Charles Trowbridge. Sidney Bracy. Kenneth
Harlan, Vera Dewis. Nat Carr. Stuart Holmes.
Cliff Saum.
DIRECTOR: Terry Morse: AUTHOR: Elmer
Rice: SCREENPDAY: Don Ryan; CAMERAMAN
L. William O'Connell; EDITOR: James Gibbon.
On Your Toes
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners; RUNNING TIME:
:>4 mins.: REVIEWED: 1 0-24-39: RELEASED
10-14-39.
CAST: Zorina. Eddie Albert. James Glea60n.
Alan Hale. Frank McHugh. Deonid Kinsky, Gloria
Dickson, Queenie Smith. Erik Rhodes, Berton
Churchill, Sarita Wooten, Donald O'Connor.
DIRECTOR: Ray Enright: AUTHORS: Richard
Rodgers. Lorenz Hart; SCREENPLAY: Jerry
Wald, Richard Macaulay: CAMERAMAN: James
Wong Howe: EDITOR: Clarence Kolster.
. . . one third of a nation . . .
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount: RUNNING TIME:
79 mms.: REVIEWED: 2 15-39: RELEASED:
2-24-39.
CAST: Sylvia Sidney. Leif Erikson. Myron Me
Cormick, Hiram Sherman. Sidney Lumet. Murial
Hutchison. Percy Waram, Otto Hulitt, Horace
Sinclair, Iris Adrian, Charles Dingle. Edmonia
Nolley. Hugh Cameron, Julia Fassett. Baruch
Lumet, Byron Russell, Robert George, Wayne
Nunn.
PRODUCER: Dudley Murphy: DIRECTOR: Dud-
ley Murphy: AUTHOR: Arthur Arent: SCREEN-
PDAY: Dudley Murphy. Oliver H. P. Garrett:
CAMERAMAN : William Miller; EDITOR: Duncan
Mansfield.
$1,000 a Touchdown
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount; RUNNING TIME
71 mins.: REVIEWED: 9-28-39: RELEASED
9' 22-39.
•jlie Consi
ConststentW
Sttong ^dttCl-
GERONIMO!
wilh
Preston Foster • Ellen Drew
Andy Devine • William Henry
Ralph Morgan • Gene Lockhart
Marjorie Gateson • Kitty Kelly
Monte Blue • Directed by Paul H. Sloane
RONALD COLMAN
In RUDYARD KIPLING'S
THE LIGHT
THAT FAILED
with Walter Huston • Ida lupino
Muriel Angelus • Dudley Digges
Produced and Directed by William A. Wellman
Jackie COOPER -Betty FIELD
in BOOTH TAR KINGTON'S*
SEVENTEEN
* Bated on the Story by Booth Tarkington and
the Play by Stuart Walker, Hugh Stanislavi
Slonge and Stannord Mean
Directed by Louis King
BARBARA
STANWYCK
FRED
MacMURRAY
REMEMBER
THE NIGHT
with BEULAH BON Dl
Elizabeth Patterson • Sterling
Holloway • Directed by Mitchell Leisen
CHARLES LAUGHTON
VIVIEN LEIGH ■.
SIDEWALKS
OF LONDON
with REX HARRISON
A Pommer-Laughton "Moyflower" Production
A Paramount Releoie • Directed by Tim Whelan
Produced by ERICH POMMER
GEORGE BRENT
ISA MIRANDA
ADVENTURE IN
DIAMONDS
Directed by George Fitrmaurice
BING CROSBY
DOROTHY LAMOUR
BOB HOPE i«
ROAD TO
SINGAPORE
Directed by Victor Schertzinger
THE FARMER'S
DAUGHTER
with
MARTHA RAYE
CHARLIE RUGGLES
Directed by Jomei Hogan
The Picture That Was Made Behind
Locked Doors
DR. CYCLOPS
In Technicolor
with
Albert Dekker • Janice Logan
Directed by Ernest Schoedtock
RAY MILLANO and
ELLEN DREW
FRENCH
WITHOUT TEARS
Directed by Anthony Atqulth
THE BISCUIT
EATER"
Billy Lee • Cordell Hickman
Directed by Stuart Heliler
THE WAY OF
ALL FLESH
A kirn Tamiroff • Gladys George
Directed by Louis King
TYPHOON"
In Technicolor
with
DOROTHY LAMOUR
ROBERT PRESTON
LYNNE OVERMAN
J. CARROL NAISH • Dir.ct.d by louit King
JACK BENNY
BUCK BENNY
RIDES AGAIN
with Ellen Drew • Andy Devine
Phil Harris • Rochester
Produced and Directed by Mark Sandrich
DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS, Jr.
MADELEINE CARROLL
SAFARI"
Directed by Edward H. Griffith
THOSE WERE
THE DAYS"
with William Holden * Bonita Granville
Ezra Stone (courtesy of George Abbott)
Produced and Directed by Jay Theodore Reed
RAY MILLAND
PATRICIA MORISON
AKIM TAMIROFF
UNTAMED
In Technicolor
Directed by George Archainbaud
BARBARA STANWYCK
DON AMECHE
THE NIGHT
OF JAN. 16
Produced and Directed by Mitchell leiien
DOWN WENT
McGINTY"
Smashing, action-packed drama of
fighting men . . . with
Brian Donlevy
Akim TamiroflF
Written and Directed by Preston Sturges
GARY MADELEINE
COOPER • CARROLL
PAULETTE ROBERT
GODDARD • PRESTON
in Cecil 8. DeMille's Technicolor Production
'NORTH WEST
MOUNTED POLICE''
Produced and Directed by Cecil 6. DeMille
CAST: Joe E. Brown. Martha Raye, Eric Blorc.
Susan Hayward. John Hartley, Syd Saylor, Joyce
Mathews, George McKay. Tom Dugan, Matt
MeHugh.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: William C. Thomas:
DIRECTOR: James Hogan; SCREENPLAY: Del-
mrr Daves: ART DIRECTORS: Hans Dreier,
William Flannery; CAMERAMAN: William Mellor:
EDITOR: Chandler House.
Only Angels Have Wings
DISTRIBUTOR: Columbia; RUNNING TIME
L21 nuns.: REVIEWED: 5-15-39: RELEASED:
5-25-39.
CAST: Cary Grant. Jean Arthur, Richard Bar-
thelmess, Rita Hayworth, Thomas Mitchell. Sig
Kumann, Victor Kilian, John Carroll, Allyn Jos-
lyn, Donald Barry, Noah Beery, Jr., Melissa Sierra,
Lucio Villegas.
DIRECTOR: Howard Hawks; AUTHOR: How-
ard Hawks: SCREENPLAY: Jules Purthman:
CAMERAMAN: Elmer Dyer, Joseph Walker; EDI
TOR: Viola Lawrence.
Our Leading Citizen
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount: RUNNING TIME:
89 mills.; REVIEWED: 8-11-39: RELEASED:
8- 11-39.
CAST: Bob Burns, Susan Hayward, Joseph
Allen, Elizabeth Patterson, Gene Lockhart, Char-
les Bicklord, Otto Hoffman, Clarence Kolb. Paul
Guilfoyle, Fay Helm. Kathleen Lockhart. Hattie
Noel, Kathryn Sheldon. Monte Blue. Jim Kelso.
PRODUCER: George Arthur: DIRECTOR: Al
Santell; AUTHOR: Irvin S. Cobb; SCREENPLAY:
John C. Moffitt; CAMERAMAN: Victor Milner.
Our Neighbors, the Carters
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount; RUNNING TIME:
83 mins.; REVIEWED: 11-3-39; RELEASED:
11-24-39.
CAST: Fay Bainter, Frank Craven, Edmund
Lowe. Genevieve Tobin. Mary Thomas, Gloria
Carter. Scotty Beckett, Bennie Bartlett, Donald
Brennan, Nana Bryant. Thurston Hall, Granville
Bates, Edward McWade, Norman Phillips, Frank
Reicher, John Conte, Martha Meers, Olaf Hytten.
Richard Clayton.
PRODUCER: Charles R. Rogers; DIRECTOR:
Ralph Murphy; AUTHOR: Renaud Hoffman;
SCREENPLAY: S. K. Lauren: ART DIRECTORS:
Hans Dreier. Earl Hedrick; MUSICAL DIRECTOR:
Sigmund Krumgold; CAMERAMAN: George
Barnes; EDITOR: William Shea.
Outpost of the Mounties
DISTRIBUTOR: Columbia; RUNNING TIME:
63 mins.: REVIEWED: 11-28-39; RELEASED:
9- 14-39.
CAST: Charles Starrett. Iris Meredith, Stanley
Brown. Kenneth MacDonald. Edmund Cobb. Bob
Nolan, Lane Chandler. Dick Curtis. Albert Morin.
Hal Taliaferro, Pat O'Hara, Sons of the Pioneers.
DIRECTOR: C. C. Coleman; SCREENPLAY:
Charles Francis Royal; CAMERAMAN: George
Meehan; EDITOR: Charles Nelson.
Overland Mail
DISTRIBUTOR: Monogram; RUNNING TIME:
51 mins.: REVIEWED: 11-16-39: RELEASED:
10- 31-39.
FEATURE RELEASE CREDiTS
CAST: Jack Randall. Vince Barnett. Jean Joyce.
Tristam Coffin. Glen Strange. George Cleveland.
Harry Semels. Dennis Moore. Merrill McCormiek.
Joe Garcia. Maxine Leslie, James Sheridan. Hal
Price.
PRODUCER: Robert Tanscy: DIRECTOR:
Robert Hill; AUTHOR: Robert Emmett; SCREEN
PLAY: Robert Emmett: CAMERAMAN: Bert
Longeneeker: EDITOR: Robert Golden.
Pacific Liner
DISTRIBUTOR: RKO Radio: RUNNING TIME
Tii nuns.: REVIEWED: 1-6-39: RELEASED:
1-6-39.
CAST: Victor McLaglen, Chester Morris. Wendy
Barrie, Alan Hale, Barry Fitzgerald, Allan Lane.
Halliwell Hobbes, Cyrus W. Kendall, Paul Guil-
foyle, John Wray, Emory Parnell, Aida Kuznetzoff,
John Bleifer.
PRODUCER: Robert Sisk ; PRODUCTION EX
ECUTIVE: Lee Marcus; DIRECTOR: Lew Landers:
AUTHORS: Anthony Coldeway. Henry Roberts
Symonds: SCREENPLAY: John Twist: CAMERA
MAN: Nicholas Musuraca; EDITOR: Harry
Marker.
Pack Up Your Troubles
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century-Fox; RUNNING
TIME: 75 nuns.: REVIEWED: 10-10-39; RE
LEASED: 10 20-39.
CAST: Jane Withers, Ritz Brothers, Lynn Bari,
Joseph Schildkraut. Stanley Fields, Fritz Leiber.
Lionel Royce. Georges Renavent. Adrienne d'Ambri
court, Leon Ames. William von Brincken. Ed
Gargan. Robert Emmett Keane, Henry Victor^
PRODUCER: Sol M. Wurtzel; DIRECTOR: H.
Bruce Humberstone: AUTHORS: Lou Breslow,
Owen Frances: SCREENPLAY: Lou Breslow:
Owen Frances: ART DIRECTORS: Richard Day,
Albert Hogsett: MUSICAL DIRECTOR: Samuel
Kaylin; SONG: Sidney Clare, Jule Styne: CAM-
ERAMAN: Lucien Andriot: EDITOR: Nick De
Maggio.
Panama Lady
DISTRIBUTOR: RKO Radio; RUNNING TIME:
ii4 mins.: REVIEWED: 5-9 39: RELEASED:
5-12-39.
CAST: Lucille Ball. Allan Lane. Steffi Duna.
Evelyn Brent, Donald Briggs. Bernadene Hayes.
Abner Biberman. William Pawley. Earle Hodgins.
PRODUCER: Cliff Reid; DIRECTOR: Jack Hive
ly: AUTHOR: Garrett Fort: SCREENPLAY:
Michael Kanin; ART DIRECTOR: Van Nest
Polgla-e: MUSICAL DIRECTOR: Roy Webb;
CAMERAMAN: J. Roy Hunt: SPECIAL EFFECTS:
Vernon L. Walker: EDITOR: Theron Warth.
Panama Patrol
DISTRIBUTOR: Grand National; RUNNING
TIME: 67 mins.; REVIEWED: 2-24-39.
CAST: Leon Ames. Charlotte Wynters. Adrienne
Ames, Weldon Heyburn. Abner Biberman. Sidney
Miller. John Smart, Donald Barry, Hugh Mc-
Arthur, William von Brincken, Frank Darien,
Paul McVey.
211
HAROLD HURLEY
PRODUCER: Franklyn Warner; ASSOCIATE
PRODUCER: Charles Lamont; DIRECTOR: Char-
les Lamont; AUTHOR: Arthur Hoerl; SCREEN-
PLAY: Arthur Hoerl: ART DIRECTOR: Ralph
Berber: MUSICAL DIRECTOR: David Chudnow:
CAMERAMAN: Arthur Martiuelli; EDITOR: Ber-
nard Loftus.
Papacito Lindo (Spanish)
DISTRIBUTOR: Azteca Film Distributing Co.:
RUNNING TIME: 114 mins.: REVIEWED:
11-29-39; Produced in Mexico.
CAST: Fernando Soler. Manolita Savel. Julian
Soler; DIRECTOR: Fernando De Fuentes.
Parents On Trial
DISTRIBUTOR: Columbia. RUNNING TIME:
58 mins.; REVIEWED: 9-21-39: RELEASED:
6-29-39.
CAST: Jean Parker, Johnny Downs. Linda
Terry, Noah Beery. Jr., Henry Kolker. Virginia
Brissac, Nana Bryant, Richard Fiske, Mary Gordon.
DIRECTOR: Sam Nelson: AUTHORS: Lambert
Hillyer. J. R. Bren; SCREENPLAY: J. R. Bren,
Gladys Atwater. Lambert Hillyer; CAMERAMAN:
John Sttimar: EDITOR: James Sweeney.
Paris Honeymoon
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount: RUNNING TIME:
92 mins.: REVIEWED: 1-20-39; RELEASED:
1- 27-39.
CAST: Bing Crosby. Franeiska Gaal. Akim
Tamiroff, Shirley Ross. Edward Everett Horton,
Ben Blue. Gregory Gaye, Rafael Ottiano, Alex
Melesh, Victor Kilian. Michael Vi6aroff. Keith
Kenneth, Raymond Hatton. Konstantin Shayne.
PRODUCER: Harlan Thompson: DIRECTOR:
Frank Tuttle: AUTHOR: Angela Sherwood:
SCREENPLAY: Frank Butler. Don Hartman:
CAMERAMAN: Karl Struss; EDITOR: Archie
Marshek.
Per Uomini Soli (Italian)
(For Men Only)
DISTRIBUTOR: Esperia: RUNNING TIME: 68
mins.: REVIEWED: 4-26-39; Produced in Italy:
HKLEASED: 5-20-39.
CAST: Carlo Buti, Antonio Gandusio, Paola
Barbara; DIRECTOR: Guido Brigonne.
Perfidia (Spanish)
DISTRIBUTOR: RKO Radio: RUNNING TIME:
110 mins.; REVIEWED: 4-21-39: Produced In
Mexico.
CAST: Maria Terese Montoya. Marino Tamayo.
Domingo Soler. Magda Haller; PRODUCER-DIREC
TOR: William Rowland.
Persons in Hiding
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount: RUNNING TIME:
09 mins.; REVIEWED: 1-24-39: RELEASED:
2- 10-39.
CAST: Lynne Overman. Patricia Morison, J.
Carrol Naish, William Henry. Helen Twelvetrees,
William Frawley, Judith Barrett, William Collier,
Sr., May Boley, Richard Stanley, Dorothy Howe.
John Hartley, Janet Waldo, Richard Denning.
Leona Roberts, Philip Warren, John Eldredge,
Richard Carle, Roy Gordon, John Hart, Lillian
Varbo.
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Edward T. Lowe:
DIRECTOR: Louis King; AUTHOR: J. Edgar
Hoover: SCREENPLAY: William R. Lipman.
Horace McCoy: ART DIRECTORS: Hans Dreier,
W. Flannery; MUSICAL DIRECTOR: Boris Mor
ros: CAMERAMAN: Harry Fisehbeck: EDITOR
Hugh Bennett.
Phantom Strikes, The
DISTRIBUTOR: Monogram: RUNNING TIME:
58 mins.: REVIEWED: 11-17-39: RELEASED:
11-15-39: Produced in England.
CAST: Wilfred Lawson. Sonnie Hale, Alexander
Knox, Louise Henry, Patrick Barr, John Longden.
Patricia Roc. Peter Croft, Charles Eaton, George
Merritt, Arthur Hambling.
PRODUCER: Michael Baleon : DIRECTOR:
Walter Forde: AUTHOR: Edgar Wallace (from
"The Ringer"): SCREENPLAY: Sidney Gilliat;
CAMERAMAN: Ronald Neame: EDITOR: Charles
Saunders.
Poncomania
DISTRIBUTOR: Lenwal Production: RUNNING
TIME: 65 mins.; REVIEWED: 12-14-39.
CAST: Nina Mae McKinney. Ida James, Jack
Carter, Hamtree Harrington. Willa Mae Lane.
Emmett Wallace.
PRODUCER: Arthur Leonard: DIRECTOR:
Arthur Leonard; AUTHOR: George Terwilliger:
CAMERAMAN: Jay Rescher.
Port of Hate
DISTRIBUTOR: Times Pictures: RUNNING
TIME: 57 mins.: REVIEWED: 8-22-39.
CAST: Polly Ann Young. Kenneth Harlan.
Carleton Young. Shia Jung. Monte Blue. Frank
La Rue.
PRODUCER: Harry S. Webb; DIRECTOR
Harry S. Webb; SCREENPLAY: Joe O'Donnell:
CAMERAMAN: Edmund Kull; EDITOR: Bob
Jahns.
Pride of Bluegrass
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners; RUNNING TIME
65 mins.: REVIEWED: 10-12-39: RELEASED:
10-7-39.
CAST: Edith Fellows. James McCallion. Gantry
the Great, Granville Bates, Adlrieh Bowker, Ar-
thur Lofc, De Wolf Hopper. Frankie Burke. Sam
McDaniels, John Butler.
DIRECTOR: William McGann: SCREENPLAY:
Vincent Sherman; CAMERAMAN: Ted McCord :
EDITOR : Frank De War.
Pride of the Navy
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic; RUNNING TIME:
63 mins.; REVIEWED: 1-24 39: RELEASED:
1-23-39.
CAST: James Dunn. Rochelle Hudson. Gordon
Oliver, Horace MacMahon, Gordon Jones, Char-
lotte Wynters, Joseph Crehan, Charles Trow
bridge.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Herman Schlom: DI
HECTOR: Charles Lamont: AUTHORS: James
Webb, Joseph Hoffman: SCREENPLAY: Ben
STUART WALKER
Seventeen
In Preparation:
Shepherd of the Mills
214
Markson, Saul Elkins; ART DIRECTOR: John
Victor Hackay: MUSICAL DIRECTOR: Cy Feuer:
CAMERAMAN: Jack Marta; EDITOR: Edward
Mann.
Prison Without Bars
DISTRIBUTOR: United Artists: RUNNING
TIME: 80 mins.; REVIEWED: 2-16-39; Produced
in England; RELEASED: 3-10-39.
CAST: Corrine Luchaire, Edna Best, Barry
Barnes, Mary Morris. Martita Hunt, Margaret
Yarde, Elsie Shelton, Lorraine Clewes, Clynis
Johns, Sally Wisher, Enid Lindsey. Phyllis Morris.
Nancy Roberts.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Irving Asher; DIREC-
TOR: Brian Desmond Hurst; SCREENPLAY:
Arthur Wimperis: CAMERAMAN: Georges Perinal.
Prisoner of Corbal
DISTRIBUTOR: Unity; RUNNING TIME: 75
mins.; REVIEWED: 9-11-39; Produced in Eng
land.
CAST: Nils Asther. Noah Beery, Hazel Terry
Hugh Sinclair, Ernest Deutsch, Davy Burnaby.
Clifford McLaglen.
DIRECTOR: Karl Grune; AUTHOR: Rafael
Sabatine: SCREENPLAY: S. Fullman; CAMERA
MAN: Otto Kanturok: EDITOR: E. Stokris.
Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex,
The
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners: RUNNING TIME
100 mins.: REVIEWED: 9-28-39: RELEASED :
11-11-39.
CAST: Bette Davis, Errol Flynn, Olivia de
Havilland. Donald Crisp, Alan Hale, Vincent Price.
Henry Stephenson, Henry Daniell, James Stephen
son, Nanette Forbes, Ralph Forbe9, Robert War-
wick, Leo G. Carroll.
PRODUCER: Hal B. Wallis; ASSOCIATE PRO
DUCER: Robert Lord; DIRECTOR: Michael Cur
t.iz; AUTHOR: Maxwell Anderson (from "Eliza
beth the Queen"); SCREENPLAY: Norman Reilly
Raine, Aeneas MacKenzie; ART DIRECTOR: An
ton Grot; MUSIC: Erich Wolfgang Korngolr):
CAMERAMEN: Sol Polito, W. Howard Greene:
EDITOR: Owen Marks.
Puritan, The (French)
DISTRIBUTOR: Lenauer International; RUN
NING TIME: 85 mins.; REVIEWED: 3-20-39:
Produced in France.
CAST: Jean Louis Barrault, Pierre Fresnay.
Viviane Romance: DIRECTOR: Jeff Musso.
Quick Millions
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century-Fox; RUNNING
TIME: 61 mins.: REVIEWED: 9-22-39; RE-
LEASED: 8-25-39.
CAST: Jed Prouty, Spring Byington, Ken
Howell, George Ernest, June Carlson, Florence
Roberts, Billy Mahan, Eddie Collins, Robert Shaw.
Helen Ericson, Marvin Stephens, Paul Hurst. John
T. Murray, Peter Lynn; Horace MacMahon.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: John Stone: DIREC-
TOR: Malcolm St. Clair: AUTHORS: Buster
Keaton, Joseph Hoffman; SCREENPLAY: Joseph
Hoffman, Stanley Rauh; CAMERAMAN: Lucien
Andriot; EDITOR: Harry Reynolds.
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
Racketeers of the Range
DISTRIBUTOR: RKO Radio; RUNNING TIME:
02 mins.: REVIEWED: 6-14-39; RELEASED;
5-26-39.
CAST: George O'Brien, Chill Wills, Marjorie
Reynolds, Gay Seabrook, Robert Fiske, John Dil
son, Monte Montague. Bud Osborne, Ben Corbett,
Ray Whitley.
PRODUCER: Bert Gilroy; DIRECTORS: D. Ross
Lederman; AUTHOR: Oliver Drake; SCREEN-
PLAY: Oliver Drake.
Rains Came, The
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century -Fox; RUNNING
TIME: 104 mins.; REVIEWED: 9-11-39; RE-
LEASED : 9-15-39.
CAST: Myrna Loy, Tyrone Power, George Brent.
Brenda Joyce, Nigel Bruce, Maria Ouspenskaya.
Joseph Schildkraut, Mary Nash, Jane Darwell.
Marjorie Rambeau, Henry Travers, H. B. Warner,
Laura Hope Crews, William Royle, Montague
Shaw, Harry Hayden.
PRODUCER: Darryl F. Zanuck; DIRECTOR
Clarence Brown; AUTHOR: Louis Bromfield :
SCREENPLAY: Philip Dunne, Julien Josephson;
EDITOR: Barbara McLean.
Range War
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount; RUNNING TIME
64 mins.: REVIEWED: 9-7-39: RELEASED:
9-8-39.
CAST: William Boyd, Russell Hayden. Willard
Robertson, Matt Moore, Pedro de Cordoba, Betty
Moran, Britt Wood, Kenneth Harlan, Francis Mc-
Donald, Don Latorre. Glenn Strange. Earl
Hodgins, Stanley Price, Jason Robards.
PRODUCER: Harry Sherman: DIRECTOR
Lesley Selander: AUTHOR: Josef Montaigne;
SCREENPLAY: Sam Robins; CAMERAMAN: Rus-
sell Harlan: EDITOR: Sherman A. Rose.
Rangle River
DISTRIBUTOR: J. H. Hoffberg: RUNNING
TIME: 72 mins.; REVIEWED: 5-17-39; Produced
in Australia.
CAST: Victor Jory, Margaret Dare, Robert
Coote, George Bryant, Rita Pauncefort, Leo Crack
nell, Cecil Perry, Georgia Sterling, Stewart McColl,
Phil Smith.
PRODUCER-DIRECTOR: Clarence G. Badger
AUTHOR: Zane Grey; CAMERAMAN: Earl Hinds:
EDITORS: Frank Coffey, Mona Donaldson.
Rasputin (French)
DISTRIBUTOR: Concord Films: RUNNING
TIME: 93 mins.: REVIEWED: 10-27-39: Pro-
duced in France.
CAST: Harry Bauer, Marcelle Chantal, Pierre
Richard Wilm; DIRECTOR: Marcel L'Herbier.
Real Glory. The
DISTRIBUTOR: United Artists; RUNNING
TIME: 95 mills.; REVIEWED : 9-15-39; RE-
LEASED: 9-29-39.
CAST: Gary Cooper, Andrea Leeds, David Niven.
215
DALE VAN EVERY
PRODUCING
FOR
PARAMOUNT
ERNEST B. SCHOEDSACK
Director
"DR. CYCLOPS"
(Paramount)
216
Reginald Owen, Broderick Crawford, Kay John
son, Russell Hicks. Vladimir Sokoloff, Benny tno-
cencio, Charles Waldron, Rudy Robles. Tetsu
Kot»ai, Roy Gordon, Henry Kolker.
PRODUCER: Samuel Goldwyn; ASSOCIATE
PRODUCER: Robert Riskin; DIRECTOR: Henry
Hathaway: AUTHOR: Charles L. Clifford:
SCREENPLAY: Jo SwerHhg, Robert R. Presnell ;
ART DIRECTOR: James Basevi: MUSICAL DI-
RECTOR: Alfred Newman: CAMERAMAN: Ru-
dolph Mate: SPECIAL EFFECTS: R. O. Binger,
Paul Eaglor: EDITOR : Daniel Mandell.
Re de Danari (Italian)
DISTRIBUTOR: Esperia: RUNNING TIME:
84 mins.: REVIEWED: 12-28-39; Produced in
Italy; RELEASED: 12-21-39.
CAST: Angelu Musco, Rosina Anselmi, Mario
Pisu; DIRECTOR: Enrico Guazzoni.
Reform School
DISTRIBUTOR: Million Dollar Productions;
RUNNING TIME: 58 mins.: REVIEWED: 5-12-39.
CAST: Louise Beavers, Reginald Fenderson,
Monte Hawley, Eugene Jackson, Freddie Jackson,
Eddie Lynn, DeForrest Covan, Bob Simmons.
Maceo Sheffield. Edward Thompson, Vernon Me
Calla, Alfred Grant, Milton Hall, Clifford Holland,
Edward Patrick, Charles Andrews, Harold Garri-
son. Edward Tony.
PRODUCER: Harry M. Popkin: ASSOCIATE
PRODUCER: Sara Frances: DIRECTOR: Leo C.
Popkin: AUTHORS: Hazel Jamieson, Joe O'Don-
nell; SCREENPLAY: Hazel Jamieson, Joe O'Don-
nell, Zella Young; MUSICAL SETTINGS: Lou
Frohman; CAMERAMAN: William Hyers; EDI-
TOR: Bart M. Rauw.
Remember?
DISTRIBUTOR: Loews. Inc.; RUNNING
TIME: 83 mins.; REVIEWED: 12-20-39? RE-
LEASED: 11-19-39.
CAST: Robert Taylor, Greer Carson, Lew Ayres,
Billie Burke, Reginald Owen, George Barbier.
Henry Travels, Richard Carle, Laura Hope Crews.
Sara Haden, Sig Rumann, Halliwell Hobbes.
PRODUCER; Milton Bren: DIRECTOR: Nor-
man Z. McLeod; AUTHORS: Corey Ford. Norman
Z. McLeod; SCREENPLAY: Corey Ford. Norman
Z. McLeod; MUSICAL SCORE: Edward Ward:
ART DIRECTOR: Cedric Gibbons; CAMERAMAN:
George Folsey; EDITOR: Harold F. Kress.
Rena, Rama Sanningen (Swedish)
DISTRIBUTORS: Scandinavian Talking Pic-
tures; RUNNING TIME: 79 mins.; REVIEWED:
10-24-39; Produced in Sweden.
CAST: Erik Berglund, Sickan Carlsson, Hakan
Westergren; DIRECTOR: Weyler Hildrebrand.
Renegade Ranger, The
DISTRIBUTOR: RKO Radio: RUNNING TIME:
00 mins.; REVIEWED: 2-21-39.
CAST: George O'Brien. Rita Hayworth. Ray
Whitley, Tim Holt, Lucio Villegas, William Royle.
Cecilia Callejo. Neal Hart, Monte Montague, Bob
Kortman, Charles Stevens, Jim Mason. Tom Lon-
don. Guy Usher.
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
PRODUCER: Bert Gilroy: DIRECTOR: David
Howard: AUTHOR; Bennett Cohen: SCREEN
PLAY: Bennett Cohen: CAMERAMAN: Harry
Wild: EDITOR: Frederick Knudtson.
Renegade Trail
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount; RUNNING TIME:
61 nuns.: REVIEWED: 7-25-39; RELEASED:
8-18-39.
CAST: William Boyd, George Hayes, Russell
Hay den, Charlotte Wyntere, Russell Hopton, Sonny
Bupp. Jack Rockwell, Roy Barcroft, John Merton.
Hob Kortman.
l'RODUCER: Harry Sherman; DIRECTOR: Leo
ley Selander; SCREENPLAY: John Rathmell;
CAMERAMAN: Russell Harlan.
Reno
DISTRIBUTOR: RKO Radio; RUNNING TIME:
73 mins.; REVIEWED: 11-16-39; RELEASED:
12-1-39.
CAST: Richard Dix, Gail Patrick, Anita Louise,
Paul Cavanaugh, Laura Hope Crews, Louis Jean
Heydt, Hobart Cavanaugh, Charles Halton, Astrid
Allwyn, Joyce Coinpton, Frank Faylen, William
Haade.
PRODUCER: Robert Sisk; DIRECTOR: John
Farrow; AUTHOR: Ellis St. Joseph: SCREEN-
PLAY: John Twist; ART DIRECTOR: Van Nest
Polglase: MUSICAL DIRECTOR: Roy Webb;
CAMERAMAN: J. Roy Hunt; EDITOR: Vernon
I.. Walker.
Return of Dr. X. The
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners; RUNNING TIME:
02 mins.: REVIEWED: 11-28-39: RELEASED:
12-2-39.
CAST: Humphrey Bogart, Rosemary Lane. Den
ins Morgan, Wayne Morris, Olin Howland. John
Litel, Lya Lys, Huntz Hall. Charles Wilson, Vera
Lewis. Howard Hickman. Arthur Aylesworth,
Jack Mower, Creighton Hale. Joseph Crehan.
DIRECTOR: Vincent Sherman: AUTHOR: W.
J. Makin; SCREENPLAY: Lee Katz; CAMERA
MAN: Sid Hiekox; EDITOR: Thomas Pratt.
Return of the Cisco Kid, The
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century -Fox; RUNNING
TIME: 70 nuns.; REVIEWED: 4-24-39; RE-
LEASED : 4-28-39.
CAST: Warner Baxter. Lynn Bari, Cesar Ro-
mero, Henry Hull. Kane Richmond, C. Henry Gor
don, Robert Barrat, Chris-Pin Martin. Adrian
Morris. Soledad Jiminez, Harry Strang, Arthur
Aylesworth. Paul Burns. Victor Killian, Eddie
Waller. Ruth Gillette, Ward Bond.
PRODUCER: Darryl F. Zanuck; ASSOCIATE
PRODUCER: Kenneth Maegowan; DIRECTOR:
Herbert I. Leeds; SCREENPLAY: Milton Sperling:
ART DIRECTORS: Richard Wiard. B. Ihnen; MU-
SICAL DIRECTOR: Cyril K. Mockridge; CAM-
ERAMAN: Charles Clarke: EDITOR: James B.
Clarke.
Return of the Frog. The
DISTRIBUTOR: Select Attractions; RUNNING
TIME: 70 mins.: REVIEWED: 10-11-39; Pro-
duced in England.
217
PAUL H. SLOANE
Recently Completed
Screen Play and Direction
on
"GE RON I MO"
In Preparation
"MILLIONS FOR DEFENSE"
for
PARAMOUNT
EDWARD DMYTRYK
Director
"GOLDEN GLOVES"
O- .O
v ^T"! s™T^^f **
218
CAST: Gordon Harker, Rene Kay. Una O'Con
nor. Hartley Power, Cyril Smith, Charles LeFeux.
Charles Carson, George Hayes. Aubrey Mallialieu.
Meinhardt Maur.
DIRECTOR: Maurice Elvey; AUTHOR: Edwin
Wallace: SCREENPLAY: Ian Hay: CAMERA
MAN: George Stretton: EDITORS: Peg-fry Han-
neasey. A. Jaggs.
Ride 'Em, Cowgirl
DISTRIBUTOR: Grand National; RUNNING
TIME: 52 mins.; REVIEWED: 1-19-39.
CAST: Dorothy Page, Milton Prome. Vince
Barnett, Lynn Mayberry, Joseph Girard, Prank
Ellis, Harrington Reynolds, Merrill McCormack,
Fred Berhle.
PRODUCER: Arthur Dreifuss; DIRECTOR:
Samuel Diege; AUTHOR: Arthur Hoerl; CAM-
ERAMAN: Mack Stengler; EDITOR: Guy B.
Thayer.
Riders of the Black River
DISTRIBUTOR: Columbia; RUNNING TIME:
59 mins.; REVIEWED: 9-28-39; RELEASED:
8-23-39.
CAST: Charles Starrett, Iris Meredith, Die,
Curtis, Stanley Brown, Bob Nolan. Francis Sayles.
Edmund Cobb, Forrest Taylor, The Sons of the
Pioneers.
DIRECTOR: Norman Deming; AUTHOR: Ford
Beefe; SCREENPLAY: Bennett R. Cohen; CAM-
ERAMAN: George Meehan: EDITOR: William
Lyon .
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
Hugh, Paul Kelly, Elizabeth Risdon, Ed Keane
Joe Sawyer, Joseph Crehaji, George Meeker, John
Hamilton. Robert Elliott. Eddie Chandler. Max
Wagner, Vera Lewis.
PRODUCER: Hal B. Wallis: ASSOCIATE PRO
DUCER: Samuel Bischoff; DIRECTOR: Raoul
Walsh; AUTHOR: Mark Hellinger; SCREEN-
PLAY: Jerry Wald, Richard Macaulay, Robert
Rossen; ART DIRECTOR: Max Parker; MUSICAL
DIRECTOR: Leo F. Forbstein; ORCHESTRAL
ARRANGEMENTS: Ray Heindorf; CAMERAMAN:
Ernie Haller; SPECIAL EFFECTS: Byron Haskin.
Edwin A. DuPar; EDITOR: Jack Killifer.
Roll. Wagons, Roll
DISTRIBUTOR: Monogram; RUNNING TIME:
52 mins.: REVIEWED: 12-21-39; RELEASED:
11-30-39.
CAST: Tex Ritter, Nelson McDowell, Muriel
Evans, Nolan Willis, Steve Clark, Tom London,
Reed Howes, Frank Ellis, Kenneth Duncan, Frank
LaRue.
PRODUCER: Edward Finney; DIRECTOR: Al
Herman; AUTHORS: Victor Adamson, Edmond
Kelso, Roger Merton: SCREENPLAY: Victor
Adamson, Edmund Kelso, Roger Merton; MU-
SICAL DIRECTOR: Frank Sanueci; CAMERAMAN:
Marcel A. LePicard; EDITOR: Fred Bain.
Romance of the Redwoods
Rio
DISTRIBUTOR: Universal; RUNNING TIME:
75 mins.: REVIEWED: 9-26-39: RELEASED:
9 29-39.
CAST: Basil Rathbone, Victor McLaglen, Sigrid
Gurie, Robert Cummings, Leo Carrillo, Billy Gil-
bert, Maurice Moscovich, Irving Bacon. Samuel S.
Hinds, Irving Piehel, Ferike Boros.
DIRECTOR: John Brahm; AUTHOR: Jean
Negulesco; SCREENPLAY: Aben Kandel, Edwin
Justus Mayer, Frank Partus, Stephen Morehouse
Avery; ART DIRECTOR: Jack Otterson; MUSICAL
DIRECTOR: Charles Previn: CAMERAMAN: Hal
Morh: EDITOR: Philip Calm.
Risky Business
DISTRIBUTOR: Universal; RUNNING TIME:
07 mins.; REVIEWED: 3-29-39; RELEASED:
J 3-39.
CAST: George Murphy, Dorothea Kent, Eduardo
Ciannelli, Leon Ames, El Brendel, Richard Tucker,
Frances Robinson, John Wray, Arthur Loft,
Pierre Watkin, Grant Richards, Charles Trow-
bridge, Mary Forbes.
PRODUCER: Burt Kelly; DIRECTOR: Arthur
Lubin; AUTHOR: William A. MeGuire; SCREEN-
PLAY: Charles Grayson.
Roaring Twenties, The
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners; RUNNING TIME:
104 mins.; REVIEWED: 10-16-39; RELEASED:
10-28-39.
CAST: James Cagney, Priscilla Lane, Humphrey
Bogart, Gladys George, Jeffrey Lynn, Frank Mc-
DISTRIBUTOR: Columbia; RUNNING TIME:
61 mins.: REVIEWED: 5-17-39: RELEASED:
3-30-39.
CAST: Charles Bickford, Jean Parker, Alan
Bridges, Gordon Oliver, Anne Shoemaker. Lloyd
Hughes, Pat O'Malley, Marc Lawrence. Earl Gunn,
Don Beddoe.
DIRECTOR: Charles Vidor; AUTHOR: Jack
London; SCREENPLAY: Michael L. Simmons;
EDITOR: Byron Robinson.
Rose of Washington Square
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century-Fox; RUNNING
TIME: 86 mins.; REVIEWED: 5-8-39; RE-
LEASED: 5-12-39.
CAST: Tyrone Power, Alice Faye. Al Joleon,
William Frawley, Joyce Compton. Hobart Cava-
naugh, Moroni Olsen, E. E. Clive, Louis Prima,
Charles Wilson, Hal K. Dawson, Paul Burns, Ben
Welden. Horace MacMahon. Paul Stanton. Maurice
Cass, Bert Roach.
PRODUCER: Nunnally Johnson; DIRECTOR:
Gregory Ratoff; AUTHORS: John Larkin. Jerry
Horwin; SCREENPLAY: Nunnally Johnson; CAM-
ERAMAN: Carl Freund; EDITOR: Louis Loeffler.
Rough Riders' Round-Up
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic; RUNNING TIME:
58 mins.; REVIEWED: 3-17-39: RELEASED:
3-13-39.
CAST: Roy Rogers, Mary Hart, Raymond Hat-
ton, Eddie Acuff, William Pawley, Dorothy Sebas-
tian, George Meeker, Jack Rockwell, Guy Usher,
George Chesbro, Glenn Strange, Duncan Renaldo,
Jack Kirk, Hank Bell, Dorothy Christie, Fred
Kelsey.
219
EUGENE J. ZUKOR
Producing
for
WILLIAM C. THOMAS
Associate Producer
"KING OF ALCATRAZ"
"$1,000 A TOUCHDOWN"
"THE FARMER'S DAUGHTER"
"GOLDEN GLOVES"
220
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Joe Kane; DIREG
TOR: Joe Kane: SCREENPLAY: Jack Natteford :
CAMERAMAN: Jack Marta: EDITOR: Lester
Orlebeck.
Rovin' Tumbleweeds
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic: RUNNING TIME:
64 mins.: REVIEWED: 11-20-39: RELEASED:
11-16-39.
CAST: Gene Autry. Smiley Burnett, Mary
Carlisle, Douglas Dumbrille. William Farnum.
Lee White, Ralph Peters, Gordon Hart, Vic Potel.
Sammy McKim, Jack Ingram, Reginald Barlow,
Eddie Kane, Guy Usher.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: William Berke; DI-
RECTOR: George Sherman; AUTHORS: Betty
Burbridge, Dorrell and Stuart McGowan: SCREEN-
PLAY; Betty Burbridge, Dorrel and Stuart Mc-
Gowan; CAMERAMAN: William Nobles: EDITOR:
Tony Martinelli.
Rulers of the Sea
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount; RUNNING TIME:
96 mins.; REVIEWED: 9-15-39: RELEASED:
11-17-39.
CAST: Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Margaret Lock
wood. Will Fyffe, George Bancroft. Montagu Love.
Vaughan Glaser, David Torrence, Lester Matthews,
Alan Ladd, David Clyde. Mike Driscoll, Mary Gor-
don, Lionel Pape, Ivan Simpson, Olaf Hytten,
Denis D'Auburn. David Dunbar, Barry Macollum.
George Melford, Wilson Benge, Dave Thrusby.
John Power, Earl Askain. Charles McAvoy, Napier
Rakes, Lawrence Grant, Jane Dewey, Clare Ver
dera. Neil Fitzgerald, Alec Craig.
PRODUCER: Frank Lloyd; ASSOCIATE PRO
DUCER: Lou Smith: DIRECTOR: Frank Lloyd:
AUTHORS: Talbot Jennings, Frank Cavett. Rich-
ard Collins: SCREENPLAY: Talbot Jennings,
Frank Cavett, Richard Collins: ART DIRECTORS:
Hans Dreier, John Goodman; MUSICAL SCORE:
Richard Hageman: CAMERAMEN: Theodor Spar
kuhl, Archie Stout; SPECIAL EFFECTS: Gordon
Jennings; EDITOR: Paul Weatherwax.
S. O. S. Tidal Wave
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic: RUNNING TIME:
60 mins.: REVIEWED: 6-2-39; RELEASED:
6-2-39.
CAST: Ralph Byrd. George Barbier, Kay Sutton,
Frank Jenks, Marc Lawrence, Dorothy Lee. Oscar
O'Shea, Mickey Kuhn, Ferris Taylor, Donald Barry,
Raymond Bai'ey.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Armand Schaefer:
DIRECTOR: John H. Auer; AUTHOR: James
Webb; SCREENPLAY: Maxwell Shane, Gordon
Kahn: ART DIRECTOR: John Victor Mackay:
MUSICAL DIRECTOR: Cy Feuer; CAMERAMAN:
Jack Marta: EDITOR: Ernest Nims.
Sable Cicada (Chinese)
DISTRIBUTOR: Modern Films; REVIEWED:
1-19-39; Produced in China.
CAST: Violet Koo. Y. L. Wei, I. E. Koo; DI
RECTOR: Richard Poh.
Sabotage
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic; RUNNING TIME:
69 mins.; REVIEWED: 10-6-39; RELEASED:
10-13 39.
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
CAST: Arleen Whalen, Gordon Oliver, Charles
Grapewin, Lucien Littlefield, Paul Guilfoyle, J. M.
Kerrigan, Dorothy Peterson, Don Douglas, Joseph
Sawyer, Horace McMahon, Maude Eburne. Johnny
Russell, Wade Botteler, Frank Darien.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Herman Schlom; DI-
RECTOR: Harold Young; SCREENPLAY: Lionel
House, Alice Altschuler; CAMERAMAN: Reggie
Lanning; EDITOR: William Morgan.
Saga of Death Valley
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic: RUNNING TIME:
58 mins.: REVIEWED: 12-22-39; RELEASED:
11-22-39.
CAST: Roy Rogers, George "Gabby" Hayes,
Donald Barry, Doris Day, Frank M. Thomas,
Jack Ingram, Hal Taliaferro, Lew Kelly, Fern
Emmett, Tommy Baker, Buz Buckley.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Joseph Kane; DI-
RECTOR: Joseph Kane; AUTHOR: Karen de
Wolf; SCREENPLAY: Stuart Anthony, Karen de
Wolf: CAMERAMAN: Jack Marta: EDITOR:
Lester Orlebeck.
Saint in London, The
DISTRIBUTOR: RKO Radio; RUNNING TIME:
72 mins.; REVIEWED: 7-19-39; RELEASED:
6-30-39.
CAST: George Sanders, Sally Gray, David
Burns, Gordon McLeod, Henry Oscar, Ralph Tru-
man, Carl Jaffe, Norah Howard, Baillard Bar-
keley.
PRODUCER: William Sistrom; DIRECTOR:
John Paddy Caret airs; AUTHOR: Leslie Charteris:
SCREENPLAY: Lynn Root, Frank Fenton; CAM-
ERAMAN: Claude Friese-Greene.
St. Louis Blues
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount; RUNNING TIME:
92 mins.; REVIEWED: 1-27-39; RELEASED:
2- 3-39.
CAST: Dorothy Lamour, Lloyd Nolan, Tito
Guizar, Jerome Cowan, Jessie Ralph, William
Frawley, Mary Parker, Maxine Sullivan, Cliff
Nazarro, Hall Johnson Choir.
DIRECTOR: Raoul Walsh; AUTHORS: Eleanor
Griffin, William Rankin; SCREENPLAY: John C.
Moffitt, Malcolm S. Boylan.
Saint Strikes Back, The
DISTRIBUTOR: RKO Radio; RUNNING TIME:
67 mins.; REVIEWED: 3-1-39: RELEASED:
3- 10-39.
CAST: George Sanders, Wendy Barrie, Jonathan
Hale, Jerome Cowan, Neil Hamilton, Barry Fitz-
gerald, Robert Elliott, Russell Hopton, Edward
Gargan, Robert Strange. Gilbert Emery, James
Burke.
PRODUCER: Robert Sisk; DIRECTOR: John
Farrow: AUTHOR: Leslie Charteris: SCREEN-
PLAY: John Twist; CAMERAMAN: Frank Red
man; EDITOR: Jack Hively.
School for Husbands
DISTRIBUTOR: J. H. Hoffberg; REVIEWED:
1-23-39; Produced in England.
221
EDWARD T. LOWE i
Associate Producer
"TOUCHDOWN ARMY"
"PAROLE FIXER"
"TELEVISION SPY"
"ALL WOMEN HAVE SECRETS"
'TEXAS RANGERS RIDE AGAIN"
"THE WOMAN FROM HELL"
Harold Hurley Unit
Paramount
222
CAST: Diane Churchill, Henry Kendall, June
Clyde, Romney Brent, Rex Harrison, Rorie Rus-
sell, Phil Thomas, Richard Golden, Judith Glick,
Joan Kemp-Walsh.
DIRECTOR: Andrew Martin: AUTHOR: Fred-
erick Jackson: SCREENPLAY: Austin Melford:
Frederick Jackson, Gordon Sherry; CAMERA
MAN: Phil Tannura.
Scipione L'Africano (Italian)
DISTRIBUTOR: Esperia; RUNNING TIME: 105
mins.: REVIEWED: 9-29-39; Produced in Italy.
CAST: Annibale Ninchi, Isa Miranda, Camillo
Pilotto; DIRECTOR: Carmine Gallione.
Second Fiddle
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century-Fox; RUNNING
TIME: 86 mins.; REVIEWED: 7-3-39; RE
LEASED: 7-14-39.
CAST: Sonja Henie, Tyrone Power, Rudy Vallee.
Edna May Oliver, Mary Healy. Lyle Talbot, Alan
Dinehart, The Brian Sisters. Stewart Reburn.
Spencer Charters, Charles Brokaw, Leyland Hodg-
son. A. S. Myron, John Hiestand.
PRODUCER: Gene Markey; DIRECTOR: Sidney
Lanfield: AUTHOR: George Bradshaw; SCREEN
PLAY: Harry Tugend: MUSIC AND LYRICS: Irv-
ine Berlin.
Secret of Dr. Kildare
DISTRIBUTOR: Loew's, Inc.: RUNNING
TIME: 84 mins.: REVIEWED: 11-28-39; RE-
LEASED: 11-24-39.
CAST: Lew Ayres, Lionel Barrymore, Lionel
Atwill, Helen Gilbert, Nat Pendleton, Laraine
Day, Sara Haden, Samuel S. Hinds, Emma Dunn.
Walter Kingsford, Grant Mitchell, Alma Kruger.
Robert Kent, Marie Blake, Martha O'Driscoll.
Nell Craig:, George Reed, Frank Orth.
DIRECTOR: Harold S. Bucquet: AUTHOR:
Max Brand; SCREENPLAY: Willis Goldbeck.
Harry Ruskin; ART DIRECTOR: Cedric Gibbons;
MUSICAL SCORE: Davis Snell; CAMERAMAN:
Alfred Gilks; EDITOR: Frank Hull.
Secret Service of the Air
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners: RUNNING TIME
CO mins.; REVIEWED: 3-6-39: RELEASED
3-4-39.
CAST: Ronald Reagan, John Litel, Ha Rhodes.
James Stephenson, Eddie Foy, Jr., Rosella Towne.
Larry Williams, John Ridgeley, Anthony Averill.
Bernard Nedell, Joe Cunningham, Morgan Con-
way, Raymond Bailey, John Harron.
DIRECTOR: Noel Smith; AUTHOR: Raymond
Schrock; CAMERAMAN: Ted McCord; EDITOR:
Doug- Gould.
Sergeant Madden
DISTRIBUTOR: Loew's, Inc.; RUNNING TIME:
82 mins.; REVIEWED: 3-22-39; RELEASED:
3-24-39.
CAST: Wallace Beery, Tom Brown, Alan Cur-
tis, Laraine Johnson, Fay Holden, Marc Lawrence,
Marion Martin, David Gorcey, Donald Haines, Ben
Welden, Etta McDaniell, John Kelly, Horace Mac-
Mahon, Neil Fitzgerald, Dickie Jones.
PRODUCER: J. Walter Ruben; DIRECTOR:
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
Josef von Sternberg: AUTHOR: William A. Ull-
man; SCREENPLAY: Wells Root: CAMERAMAN:
John Seitz.
She Married a Cop
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic: RUNNING TIME:
65 mins.: REVIEWED: 6-27-39; RELEASED
7-12-39.
CAST: Phil Reagan, Jean Parker. Jerome
Cowan, Dorothea Kent, Benny Baker, Barnett
Parker, Horace MacMahon, Oscar O'Shea. Mary
Gordon, Muriel Campbell, Peggy Ryan. Richard
Keene.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Sol C. Siegel; DI-
RECTOR: Sidney Salkow; AUTHOR: Olive
Cooper: SCREENPLAY: Olive Cooper: ART DI-
RECTOR: John Victor Mackay; MUSICAL DIREC
TOR: Cy Feuer; ANIMATION: Leon Schlesinger:
SONGS: Ralph Freed, Burton Lane: CAMERA
MAN: Ernest Miller: EDITOR: Ernest Nims.
Shors (Russian)
DISTRIBUTOR: Amkino: RUNNING TIME:
92 mins.: REVIEWED: 11-22-39; Produced in
Russia: RELEASED: 11-20-39.
CAST: E. Samoilov, I. Skurtav. A. Khvilia:
DIRECTOR: Alexander Dovzhenko.
Should a Girl Marry
DISTRIBUTOR: Monogram; RUNNING TIME:
(51 mins.: REVIEWED: 7-19-39; RELEASED
6- 10-39.
CAST: Anne Nagel. Warren Hull. Mayo Methnt,
Weldon Heyburn. Aileen Pringle. Lester Mathews.
Helen Brown, Sarah Padden, Gordon Hart. Ed-
mond Elton.
PRODUCER: E. B. Derr: DIRECTOR: Lam-
bert Hillyer: AUTHORS: Gayl Newbury. David
Silverstein: SCREENPLAY: Gayl Newbury, David
Silverstein; CAMERAMAN: Paul Ivano.
Should Husbands Work?
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic; RUNNING TIME
71 mins.; REVIEWED: 7-25-39: RELEASED:
7- 26-39.
CAST: James Gleason. Lucille Gleason, Russell
Gleason, Harry Davenport, Marie Wilson. Mary
Hart. Tommy Ryan, Berton Churchill, Henry
Kolker, Arthur Hoyt, Barry Norton. Mary Forbes.
William Brisbane. Harry Bradley.
PRODUCER: Sol C. Siegel; DIRECTOR: Gus
Meins: AUTHORS: Jack Townley, Taylor Caven :
SCREENPLAY: Jack Townley. Taylor Caven:
CAMERAMAN: Jack Marta: EDITOR: William
Morgan.
Silver on the Sage
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount: RUNNING TIME:
H6 mins.: REVIEWED: 2-15-39: RELEASED
3-31-39.
CAST: William Boyd, George Hayes, Russell
Hayden, Stanley Ridges, Frederick Burton, Ruth
Rogers. Jack Rockwell, Roy Barcroft, Ed Cassidy.
Sherry Tanzey. Jim Corey, Ben Wright, Bruce
Mitchell.
223
JERRY FAIRBANKS and ROBERT CARLISLE
Present
The Sixth Successful Year of
Paramount';
POPULAR SCIENCE SHORTS
In Color
The Fourth Series
of
UNUSUAL OCCUPATIONS
Color Short Subjects
for
Paramount Release
and a Novel New Series
"BITS OF LIFE"
Short Short Stories from Liberty Magazine
SCIENTIFIC FILMS, INC.
Hollywood, Calif.
224
PRODUCER: Harry Sherman: ASSOCIATE PRO-
DUCER: J. D. Trop: DIRECTOR: Lesley Selander:
AUTHOR: Clarence E. Mulford: SCREENPLAY:
Maurice Geraghty: ART DIRECTOR: Lewis J.
Rachmil: MUSICAL DIRECTOR: Boris Morros:
CAMERAMAN: Russell Harlan: EDITOR: Robert
Warwick.
Six-Gun Rhythm
DISTRIBUTOR: Grand National: RUNNING
TIME: 55 mills.: REVIEWED: 2-17-39.
CAST: Tex Fletcher. Joan Barclay. Ralph
Peters, Reed Howes, Walter Shumway. Slim
Hacker. Carl Mathews. Art Davis. Bob Fraser.
Jack McHugh, Sherry Tansey, Kitguard, Bud Mc-
Tagagrt, Ted Adams.
PRODUCER: Sam Newfleld; DIRECTOR: Sam
Newfield: AUTHOR: Ted Richmond: SCREEN-
PLAY : Fred Myron: ART DIRECTOR: Fred Peb-
ble; SONGS: Johnny Lange. Lew Porter; CAM-
ERAMAN: Art Reed; EDITOR: Robert Crandall.
6,000 Enemies
DISTRIBUTOR: Loew s. Inc.: RUNNING TIME:
(ill mins.: REVIEWED: li-1 2-39 : RELEASED:
()-!)-.'$!>.
CAST: Walter Pidgeon, Rita Johnson, Paul
Kelly, Nat Pendleton, Harold Hubcr, Grant Mit-
chell, John Arledge, J. M. Kerrigan, Adrian Morris,
Guinn Williams, Arthur Aylesworth. Raymond
Hatton. Lionel Royce, Tom Neal, Willie Fung.
PRODUCER: Lucien Hubard: DIRECTOR:
George Seitz: AUTHORS: Wilmon Menard. Leo
Stanley: SCREENPLAY : Bertram Millhauser:
CAMERAMAN: John Seitz: EDITOR: Conrad
Nervig.
Skicka Hem N: 7 (Swedish)
(Send Home No. 7)
DISTRIBUTOR: Scandinavian Talking Pictures:
RUNNING TIME: 84 mins.: REVIEWED: 5-11-
39; Produced in Sweden.
CAST: Dagmar Ebbescn, Nils Lundcll. Rut
Holm; DIRECTOR: Gideon Wahlberg.
Sky Patrol
DISTRIBUTOR: Monogram; RUNNING TIME:
01 mins.: REVIEWED: 9-21-39; RELEASED:
9- 12-39.
CAST: John Trent, Milburn Stone, Marjoric
Reynolds. Jackie Coogan. Jason Robards, Dickie
Jones, Boyd Irwin, Bryant Washburn, LeRoy
Mason. John Peters, John Day.
PRODUCER: Paul Malvern; DIRECTOR: How-
ard Bretherton: SCREENPLAY: Joseph West, N.
S. Parker; CAMERAMAN: Fred Jackman, Jr.
EDITOR: Carl Pierson.
Smashing the Money Ring
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners: RUNNING TIME:
57 mins.: REVIEWED: 11-20-39; RELEASED:
10- 21-39.
CAST: Ronald Reagan, Eddie Foy, Jr., Margot
Stevenson, Joe Downing, Charles D. Brown, El-
liott Sullivan, Joe King, Charles Wilson, William
Davidson, John Hamilton, Sidney Bracy, Jack
Wise, Jack Mower, John Turner.
DIRECTOR: Terry Morse; AUTHORS: An-
FEATURE REM.EASE CREDITS
thony Coldeway, Raymond Schrock: SCREEN-
PLAY: Anthony Coldeway. Raymond Schrock:
CAMERAMAN: James Van Trees; EDITOR: Frank
Ma gee.
Smashing the Spy Ring
DISTRIBUTOR: Columbia: RUNNING TIME:
.->!! mins.; REVIEWED: 1-19-39.
CAST: Ralph Bellamy, Ray Wray. Regis
Toomcy. Walter Kingsford. Ann Doran, Warren
Hull. Forbes Murray, Paul Whitney, John Tyrell.
May Wallace.
DIRECTOR: Christy Cabanne: AUTHORS: Dor-
n II and Stuart McGowan: SCREENPLAY: Arthur
T. Horman, Dorrell and Stuart McGowan: CAM-
ERAMAN: Allan Siegler; EDITOR: James
Sweeney.
Smiling Along
distributor: 20th Century -Fox ; running
TIME: S3 mins.: REVIEWED: 3-13-39; Produced
in England: RELEASED: 1-20-39.
CAST: Gracie Fields. Roger Livcsey. Mary Ma-
guirc, Peter Coke, Jack Donohuc. Hay Petrie,
Mike Johnson. Eddie Grey, Tommy Fields. Gladys
Drhl. Nino Rossini, Edward Rigby, Joe Mott,
Philip Leaver.
PRODUCER: Robert T. Kane; DIRECTOR:
Monty Hanks: SCREENPLAY: William Consel-
maii; CAMERAMAN: Mulz Greenbaum.
Smoky Trail
DISTRIBUTOR: Metropolitan; RUNNING TIME :
57 mins.; REVIEWED: 3-1-39.
CAST: Bob Steele, Bruce Dance, Jean Carmen.
Carleton Young, Ted Adams.
PRODUCER: Harry S. Webb; DIRECTOR: Ber-
nard B. Ray: AUTHOR: George Plympton;
SCREENPLAY: George Plympton: CAMERAMAN:
Edward Bull.
Smuggled Cargo
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic; RUNNING TIME:
82 mins.; REVIEWED: 8-23-39; released :
8-21-39.
CAST: Barry Mack ay, Rochelle Hudson, George
Harhicr, Ralph Morgan, John Wray, Cliff Edwards.
Arthur Loft, Wallis Clark, Robert Homans.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: John H. Auer: DI-
RECTOR: John H. Auer; SCREENPLAY: M.
Jaeoby, Earl Felton; CAMERAMAN: Jack Marta;
EDITOR: Ernest Nims.
Society Lawyer
DISTRIBUTOR: Loew's, Inc.; RUNNING TIME:
78 mins.; REVIEWED: 4-3-39; RELEASED
3-31-39.
CAST: Virginia Bruce, Walter Pidgeon, Leo Cav-
rillo, Eduardo Cianelli, Lee Bowman, Frances
Mercer, Ann Morriss, Herbert Mundin. Frank M.
Thomas, Edward S. Brophy, Tom Kennedy. Clar-
ence Kolb, Pierre Watkins, Ian Wolfe, Paul Guil-
toyle, Joseph Crehan.
PRODUCER: John W. Considine, Jr.: DIREC-
TOR: Edward L. Marin: AUTHOR: Arthur Somers
FEAT 1/ RE RELE ASE CREDITS
Roche: SCREENPLAY: Frances Goodrich. Albert
Hackett, Leon Gordon. Hugh Butler: MUSIC DI-
RECTORS: Georgie Stoll, Roger Edens: SONG:
Sam Coslow: CAMERAMAN: George Folsey: EDI-
TOR: Howard O'Neill.
Society Smugglers
DISTRIBUTOR: Universal: RUNNING TIME:
65 mins.: REVIEWED: 3-6-39: RELEASED:
2-24-39.
CAST: Preston Foster. Irene Hervey. Walter
Woolf King. Frank Jenks. Fred Keating. Regis
Toomey. Clay Clement. Frances Robinson. Ray-
mond Parker. Milburn. Stone. Doris Rankin. Harry
Hayden.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Ken Goldsmith: DI-
RECTOR: Joe May: SCREENPLAY: Arthur T.
Horman, Earl Felton: ART DIRECTOR: Jack
Otterson: MUSICAL DIRECTOR: Charles Previn:
CAMERAMAN: John W. Boyle: EDITOR: Philip
Cahn.
Soldier's Bride (Finnish)
DISTRIBUTOR: Werner S. Sazela: RUNNING
TIME : 90 mins.: REVIEWED: 12-21-39: Pro-
duced in Finland.
CAST: Tuulikki Paananen. Ritva Aro. Tuli
Arjo: DIRECTOR: Risto Orko.
Some Like It Hot
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount; RUNNING TIME.
64 mins.: REVIEWED: 5-9-39: RELEASED:
5-19-39.
CAST: Bob Hope. Shirley Ross. Una Merkel.
Gene Krapa. Rufe Davis. Bernard Nedell. Frank
Sully. Bernadene Hayes, Richard Denning. Clar-
ence H. Wilson. Dudley Dickerson. Harry Barris.
Wayne (Tiny) Whitt, Edgar Dearing. Jack Smart.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: William C. Thomas:
DIRECTOR: George Archainbaud: AUTHORS: Ben
Hecht. Gene Fowler: SCREENPLAY: Lewis R.
Foster. WUkie C. Mahoney: ART DIRECTORS:
Hans Dreier. Earl Hedric: SONGS: Frank Loesser,
Burton Lane. Gene Krupa. Remo Biondi: MUSI-
CAL ADVISOR: Arthur Franklin: CAMERAMAN:
Karl Struss: EDITOR: Edward Dmytryk.
Son of Frankenstein
DISTRIBUTOR: Universal: RUNNING TIME:
95 mins.: REVIEWED: 1-31-39: RELEASED:
1-13-39.
CAST: Basil Rathbone. Boris Karloff, Bela
Lugosi. Lionel Atwill. Josephine Hutchinson. Em-
ma Dunn. Donnie Dunnagan. Edgar Norton.
PRODUCER: Rowland V. Lee: DIRECTOR:
Rowland V. Lee: SCREENPLAY: Willis Cooper:
CAMERAMAN: George Robinson.
Song of the Buckaroo
DISTRIBUTOR: Monogram: RUNNING TIME:
5S mins.: REVIEWED: 1-12-39.
CAST: Tex Ritter. Jinx Falkeuberg. Tom Lon
don, Frank LaRue. Charles King. Bob Terry.
Horace Murphy. George Chesebro. Snub Pollard.
Mary Ruth. Ernie Adams. Dave O'Brien. Dorothy
Fay.
PRODUCER: Edward F. Finney: DIRECTOR
Al Herman: AUTHOR: John Rathmell: SCREEN
PLAY: John Rathmell: MUSICAL DIRECTOR
Frank Sanucci: SONGS: Garson Robison. Johnny
Lange. Fred Tryker. Tex Ritter. Frank Harford:
CAMERAMAN: Francis Corby: EDITOR: Fred
Bain.
Song of the Streets (French)
DISTRIBUTOR:: Mayer & Burstyn; RUNNING
TIME: TO mins.: REVIEWED: 9-14-39: Pro-
duced in France.
CAST: Vladimir Sokoloff, Madeleine Ozeray.
Jean-Pierre Aumont : DIRECTOR: Victor Trivas.
Sorority House
DISTRIBUTOR: RKO Radio: RUNNING TIME
>>4 mins.: REVIEWED: 4 24-39: RELEASED
5-5-39.
CAST: Anne Shirley. James Ellison. Barbara
Read. Adele Pearce. J. M. Kerrigan. Helen Wood.
Doris Jordan, June Storey, Elisabeth Ridson.
Margaret Armstrong.
PRODUCER: Robert Sisk: DIRECTOR: John
Farrow: AUTHOR: Mary Coyle Chase: SCREEN-
PLAY: Dalton Trumbo: CAMERAMAN: Nick
Musuraca: EDITOR: Harry Marker.
Sotto La Croce Del Sud (Italian)
(Under the Southern Cross)
DISTRIBUTOR: Esperia: RUNNING TIME :
81 mins.: REVIEWED: 4-14-39: Produced in
Italy.
CAST: Doris Duranti. Antonio Centa, Enrico
Glori: DIRECTOR: Guido Brignone.
South of the Border
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic: RUNNING TIME :
Tl mins.: REVIEWED: 12-11-39: RELEASED:
12-15-39.
CAST: Gene Autry. Lupita Tovar. Smiley
Burnett. June Storey. Mary Lee. Frank Reicher.
Duncan Renaldo. Alan Edwards. Claire DuBrey.
Dick Botiller, William Farnum. Selmar Jackson.
Sheila Darcy. Rex Lease.
ASSOCLA.TE PRODUCER: William Berke: DI-
RECTOR: George Sherman: AUTHOR: Dorrell
and Stuart McGowan: SCREENPLAY: Betty
Burbridge. Gerry Geraghty: CAMERAMAN: Wil-
liam Nobles: EDITOR: Lester Orlebeck.
Southward Ho!
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic: RUNNING TIME:
57 mins.: REVIEWED: S-2S-39: RELEASED:
5-19-39.
CAST: Roy Rogers. Mary Hart. George Hayes.
Wade Boteler. Arthur Loft. L. Chandler.
DIRECTOR: Joseph Kane: AUTHORS: Jack
Natteford. John Rathmell: SCREENPLAY: Ger-
ald Geraghty: CAMERAMAN: Jack Marta: EDI-
TOR : Lester Orlebeck.
Soviet Border (Russian)
DISTRIBUTOR: Amkino: RUNNING TIME.
94 mins.: REVIEWED: 3-2-39: Produced in
Russia: RELEASED: 2-18-39.
CAST: E. Tiapkina, E. Fedorova. N. Vino-
crndiv: DIRECTOR: A. G. Ivanov.
226
Special Inspector
DISTRIBUTOR: Syndicate Exchange: RUNNING
TIME: 53 mins.: REVIEWED: 11-1-39.
CAST: Charles Quigley. Rita Hay worth. George
McKay, Edgar Edwards, John Spaeey. Eddie
Laughton.
PRODUCER: Kenneth J. Bishop; DIRECTOR:
Leon Marsha: SCREENPLAY: Edgar Edwards:
CAMERAMAN: George Meehan: EDITOR: Wil-
liam Austin.
Spellbinder, The
DISTRIBUTOR: RKO Radio: RUNNING TIME:
<>!» mins.: REVIEWED: 9-7-39: RELEASED:
7-28-39.
CAST: Lee Tracy. Barbara Reed. Patric Knowles.
Allan Lane, Linda Hayes. Morgan Conway, Robert
E. Keane, Roy Gordon. Robert Strange, Elliott
Sullivan. Leonid Kinskey.
PRODUCER: Cliff Reid : DIRECTOR: Jack
Hively: AUTHOR: Joseph Anthony: SCREEN-
PLAY: Thomas Lennon, Joseph A. Fields:
CAMERAMAN: Russell Metty; EDITOR: Theron
Warth.
Spirit of Culver
DISTRIBUTOR: Universal; RUNNING TIME:
89 mins.: REVIEWED: 3-1-39: RELEASED:
3- 10-39.
CAST: Jackie Cooper, Freddie Bartholomew,
Tim Holt. Henry Hull, Andy Devine, Gene Rey-
nolds. Kathryn Kane. Jackie Moran, Walter Tet
ley. Pierre Watkin, John Hamilton.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Burt Kelley; DIREC-
TOR: Joseph Santley: AUTHORS: George Green.
Tom Buckingham, Clarence Marks: SCREEN-
PLAY: Nathanael West, Whitney Bolton; ART
DIRECTOR: Jack Otterson; MUSICAL DIREC-
TOR: Charles Previn: MUSIC AND LYRICS:
Frank Skinner, Charles Henderson: CAMERA-
MAN: Elwood Bredell; EDITOR: Frank Gross.
Spoilers of the Range
DISTRIBUTOR: Columbia; RUNNING TIME:
57 mins.; REVIEWED: 6-7-39: RELEASED:
4- 27-39.
CAST: Charles Starrett, Iris Meredith. Dick
Curtis, Kenneth MacDonald, Hank Bell, Bob
Nolan, Edward LeSaint, Forbes Murray, Art
Mix. Edmund Cobb. Edward Pell. Sr.
DIRECTOR: C. C. Coleman, Jr.: AUTHOR:
Paul Franklin; SCREENPLAY: Paul Franklin;
CAMERAMAN: Allen Siegler; EDITOR: William
Lyon.
Stagecoach
DISTRIBUTOR: United Artists: RUNNING
TIME: 96 mins.: REVIEWED: 2-15-39: RE
LEASED: 3-3-39.
CAST: Claire Trevor, John Wayne. Thomas
Mitchell, Andy Devine, John Carradine, George
Bancroft, Berton Churchll, Louise Piatt, Chris
Martin. Donald Meek, Tim Holt, Cornelius Keefe.
Francis Ford. Kent Odell, Walter McGrail. Chief
Big Tree, Bienda Fowler, Elvira Rios, Florence
Lake, Marga Ann Daughton, Yakima Canutt.
Harry Tenbrook, Paul McVey, Jack Pennick, Lou
Mason.
FEATURE RELEASE CREDiTS
PRODUCER: Walter Wanger; DIRECTOR:
John Ford: AUTHOR: Ernest Haycox: SCREEN-
PLAY: Dudley Nichols: CAMERAMAN: Bert
Glennon. Ray Binger: EDITORS: Dorothy Spencer.
Walter Reynolds.
Stand Up and Fight
DISTRIBUTOR: Locw's. Inc.: RUNNING
TIME: 105 mins.; REVIEWED: 1-4-39: RE-
LEASED: 1-6-39.
CAST: Wallace Beery, Robert Taylor. Florence
Rice, Helen Broderick, Charles Bickford, Barton
MacLane. Charles Grapewin, John Qualen, Robert
Glecker, Clinton Rosemond. Cy Kendall, Paul
Everton, Claudia Morgan. Selmer Jackson. Robert
Middlemass.
PRODUCER: Mervyn LeRoy: DIRECTOR:
W. S. Van Dyke II; AUTHOR: Forbes Parkhill:
SCREENPLAY: James M. Cain, Jane Murfin
Harvey Fergusson: CAMERAMAN: Leonard
Smith; EDITOR: Frank Sullivan.
Stanley and Livingstone
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century -Fox: RUNNING
TIME: 101 mins.; REVIEWED: 8-7-39; RE-
LEASED : 8-18-39.
CAST: Spencer Tracy, Nancy Kelly, Richard
Greene. Walter Brennan, Charles Coburn, Sir
Cedric Hardwicke. Henry Hull, Henry Travers.
Miles Mander. Davd Torrence. Paul Stanton.
Holmes Herbert. Montague Shaw. Brandon Hurst.
Hasson Said. Paul Harvey.
PRODUCER: Kenneth Macgowan: DIRECTOR:
Henry King: AUTHORS: Hal Long. Sam Hellman:
SCREENPLAY: Philip Dunne. Julien Josephson.
Star Maker, The
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount: RUNNING TIME:
94 mins.: REVIEWED: 8-23-39; RELEASED:
8-25-39.
CAST: Bing Crosby. Louise Campbell, Linda
Ware, Ned Sparks, Laura Hope Crews, Janet
Waldo. Walter Damroseh, Thurston Hall, Clara
Blandick. Oscar O'Shea, John Gallaudet, Ben
Weldon. Emory Pannell, Dorothy Vaughan, Bodil
Rosing. Paul Stanton, Morgan Wallace, Richard
Denning. Joseph Crehan. Ethel Griffies, Frank
Faylen, Billy Gilbert. Grace Hayle, Johnny Morris.
Selmer Jackson. Siegfried Arno, Ralph Faulkner,
Earle Dwire. Harry Bradley. Wally Maher. George
Bldredge, Stanley Price. George Guhl. Jim Dundee.
Max Wagner, Ralph Sanford. A. S. "Pop" Bryon.
Daisy Bufford, Allex Rox Fritzi Brunette Ed
Stanley, Ottola Nesmith, Jack Pennick, George
C. Pearce, Doro Merande, Frances Raymond,
Larry's Kid, Philharmonic Orchestra of Los
Angeles.
PRODUCER: Charles R. Rogers: DIRECTOR:
Roy Del Ruth: AUTHOR: Arthur Caesar:
SCREENPLAY: Frank Butler. Don Hartman,
Arthur Caesar: CAMERAMAN: Karl Struss: EDI-
TOR: Alma Macrorie.
Stolen Life
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount: RUNNING TIME:
90 mins.: REVIEWED: 4-25-39: Produced in
England: RELEASED: 5-26-39.
227
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
CAST: Elisabeth Bergner, Michael Redgrave,
Wilfrid Lawson, Mabel Terry Lewis, Richard Ain-
ley, Kenneth Buckley. Cyril Horrocks. O. B.
Clarence, John Lloyd Roy Russell Oliver Johnston
H. Regus. Davina Carid. Dorothy Dewhurst, Few-
lass Llewellyn. Paulette Preney. Ernest Ferney.
Stella Rebenina. Kaye Seely. Pierre Jouvenet.
Dorice Fordred. Cot O'Urdan. Annie Esmond.
D. J. Williams. Clement MeCallin. Gayenne
Michaeldzc. Byril Chamberlain.
PRODUCER: Paul Czinner: DIRECTOR: Paul
Czinner; AUTHOR: K. J. Benes: SCREENPLAY:
Margaret Kennedy.
Stop, Look and Love
DISTRIBl'TOR: 20th Ccnlry-Fox ; RUNNING
TIME: 57 mins.: REVIEWED: 9-11-30: RE-
LEASED: 9-22-39.
CAST: Jean Rogers. William Frawley. Robert
Kellard. Minna Gombell. Eddie Collins. Cora Sue
Collins. Jay Ward. Roger McGee. Lilliam Porter.
PRODUCER: Sol M. Wurtzcl: DIRECTOR:
Otto Brower: AUTHOR: Harry Delf: SCREEN-
PLAY : Harold Tarshis. Sada Cowan: CAMERA-
MAN : Lucien Andriot: EDITOR: Nick DeMaggio.
Story of Alexander Graham Bell. The
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century -Fox: RUNNING
TIME: 07 mins.: REVIEWED: 4-3-39: RE-
LEASED : 4-14-3!!
CAST: Don Ameche, Loretta Young. Henry
Fonda, Charles Coburn, Gene Lockhart. Spring
Byington, Sally Blanc. Polly Ann Young, Georgian.!
Young. Bobs Watson, Russel Hicks. Paul Stanton.
Jonathan Hale. Harry Davenport. Elizabeth
Patterson, Charles Trowbridge. Jan Duggan. Claire
Du Brey. Harry Tyler. Ralph Remley. Zeffie
Tilbury.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Kenneth Macgowan:
DIRECTOR: living Cummings: AUTHOR: Ray
Harris: SCREENPLAY: Lamar Trotti; CAMERA
MAN: Leon Shamroy: EDITOR: Walter Thompson.
Story of Vernon and Irene Castle, The
DISTRIBUTOR: RKO Radio: RUNNING TIME
93 mins.: REVIEWED: 3-31-39; RELEASED:
4-28-30.
CAST: Fred Astaire. Ginger Rogers, Edna May
Oliver, Walter Brennan. Lew Fields, Etienne
Girardot, Janet Beecher, Rolfe Sedan, Leonid
Kinskey, Robert Strange. Douglas Walton. Clar-
ence Derwent. Sonny Laniont. Frances Mercer, Vic-
tor Varconi. Donald McBride.
PRODUCERS: George Haight, Pandro S. Ber-
man; DIRECTOR: H. C. Potter; AUTHOR: Irene
Castle: SCREENPLAY: Richard Sherman: Oscar
Hammers tein II. Dorothy Yost: CAMERAMAN:
Robert de Grasse; EDITOR: William Hamilton.
Stranger from Texas, The
DISTRIBUTOR: Columbia: RUNNING TIME:
54 mins.: REVIEWED: 12-18-39: RELEASED
11-2-30.
CAST: Charles Starrett, Lorna Grey, Dick
Curtis, Richard Fiske. Edmund Cobb, Bob Nolan.
Sons of the Pioneers.
PRODL'CER: Harry L. Decker: DIRE' TOR :
Sam Nelson: AUTHOR: Ford Beebe: SCREEN
PLAY: Paul Franklin: CAMERAMAN: George
Meehan; EDITOR: Mel Thorsen.
Street of Missing Men
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic RUNNING TIME
li.'S mins.: REVIEWED: 4-25-39: RELEASE!'
4-28-39.
CAST: Charles Bickford. Harry Carey. Tommy
Ryan. Mabel Todd. Guinn Williams. Nana Bryant,
Ralph Graves. John Gallaudet. Regis Toomey.
PRODUCER: Armand Schaefer: DIRECTOR
Sidney Salkow: AUTHORS: Eleanor Griffen, Wil-
liam Rankin: SCREENPLAY: Frank Dolan. Leon
aid Lee: CAMERAMAN : Ernest Miller: EDITOR
Ernest Nims.
Streets of New York
DISTRIBUTOR: Monogram: RUNNING TIME
73 mins.: REVIEWED: 4-10-30: RELEASED:
4-12-30.
CAST: Jackie Cooper. Martin 9 pe 11m an, Sidney
Miller. Buddy Pepper. Bobby Stone. David Dur-
and. William Bucker. Robert Tucker. Kent Rogers.
George Cleveland. Robert Emmet t O'Connor, George
Irving, Dick Pureell. Marjorie Reynolds. William
Gould.
PRODUCER: Scott R. Dunlap: ASSOCIATE
PRODUCER: William T. Lackey: DIRECTOR:
William Nigh: AUTHOR: Robert D. Andrews:
SCEENPLAY: Robert D. Andrews: ART DIREC-
TOR: E. R. Hickson: MUSICAL DIRECTOR:
Edward Kay: CAMERAMAN: Harry Neumann:
EDITOR: Russell Schoengarth.
Stronger Than Desire
DISTRIBUTOR: Loews. Inc.; RUNNING TIME,
so mins.: REVIEWED: 7-0-39: RELEASED
0-30-30.
CAST: Virginia Bruce, Walter Pidgeon. Lee
Bowman. Ann Dvorak. Ilka Chase. Rita Johnson
Richard Lane. Ann Todd. Paul Stanton. Ferike
Boros.
PRODUCER: John W. Considine. Jr.: DIREC-
TOR: Leslie Fenton: AUTHOR: W. E. Woodward:
SCREENPLAY: David Hartz. William Ludwig:
CAMERAMAN: William Daniels: EDITOR: W.
Don Hayes.
Stunt Pilot
DISTRIBUTOR: Monogram; RUNNING TIME:
lil mins.; REVIEWED: 7 0-30; RELEASED:
7-1-39.
CAST: John Trent. Marjorie Reynolds. Mil-
burn Stone, Jason Robards. Pat O'Malley. George
Meeker, Wesley Barry, George Cleveland. Johnny
Day, Charles Morton. Mary Fields. Buddy Cox.
PRODUCER: Paul Malvern: DIRECTOR:
George Waggner: SCREENPLAY: Scott Darling.
Joseph West: CAMERAMAN: Fred Jackman, Jr.;
EDITOR: Carl Pierson.
Sun Never Sets, The
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount: RUNNING TIME:
08 mins.: REVIEWED: 0-12-39: RELEASED
0-0-39.
CAST: Douglas Fairbanks. Jr.. Basil Rathbone.
Barbara O'Neil, Lionel Atwill. Virginia Field.
228
C. Aubrey Smith, Melville Cooper, Mary Forbes.
John Burton, Arthur Mulliner, Theodor von Eltz,
Douglas Walton, Cecil Kellaway.
PRODUCER: Rowland V. Lee; DIRECTOR
Rowland V. Lee; AUTHORS; Jerry Horwln.
Arthur Fitz-Richard; SCREENPLAY: W. P. Lips-
comb; ART DIRECTOR: Jack Otterson; MUSI-
CAL SCORE: Frank Skinner; MUSICAL DIREC-
TOR: Charles Previn; CAMERAMAN: George
Robinson; EDITOR: Ted Kent.
Susannah of the Mounties
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century-Fox; RUNNING
TIME: 78 mins.; REVIEWED: 6-27-39: RE-
LEASED : 6-23-39.
CAST: Shirley Temple, Randolph Scott, Mar-
garet Lockwood, Martin Good Rider, J. Farrell
MacDonald, Maurice Moscovich, Moroni Olsen.
Victor Jory, Lester Matthews, Leyland Hodgson.
Herbert. Evans, Jack Luden, Charles Irwin, John
Sutton, Chief Big Tree.
PRODUCER: Kenneth Macgowan; DIRECTOR:
William A. Sriter: AUTHOR: Muriel Denison:
SCREENPLAY: Fidel La Barba. Walter Ferris.
Robert Ellis. Helen Logan; CAMERAMAN:
Arthur Miller; EDITOR: Robert Bischoff.
Swanee River
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century -Fox : RUNNING
TIME: 84 mins.: REVIEWED: 12-26-39.
CAST: Don Ameche. Al Jolson. Andrea Leeds.
Felix Bressart, Chick Chandler, Russell Hicks.
George Reed. Hall Johnson Choir, Richard Clarke.
Diane Fisher, Charles Halton, George Breakstone,
Al Herman, Charles Trowbridge, George Meeker.
Leona Roberts, Charles Tannen. Harry Haydcn.
Clara Blandick, Nella Walker, Esther Dale.
PRODUCER: Darryl F. Zanuck; ASSOCIATE
PRODUCER: Kenneth Maegowan; DIRECTOR:
Sidney Lanfield: SCREENPLAY: John Tainter
Foote, Philip Dunne: ART DIRECTORS: Richard
Day, Joseph C. Wright: MUSICAL DIRECTOR:
Louis Silvers: CAMERAMAN: Bert Glennon:
EDITOR: Louis Loeffler.
Sweepstakes Winner
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners; RUNNING TIME:
59 mins.; REVIEWED: 9-21-39: RELEASED:
5-20-39.
CAST: Marie Wilson. Johnnie Davis, Allen Jenk-
ins, Charles Foy, Jerry Colonna, Vera Lewis,
Frankie Burke. Granville Bates, Bert Hanlon,
George Lloyd, Sidney Bracy.
DIRECTOR: William McGann; AUTHORS: Al-
bert DeMond. Hugh Cummings; SCREENPLAY:
John Krafft, Albert DeMond; CAMERAMAN:
Arthur Edeson: EDITOR: Frank Magee.
Szegeny Gozdagok (Hungarian)
DISTRIBUTOR: Danubia Pictures: RUNNING
TIME: 82 mins.: REVIEWED: 12-21-39; Pro-
duced in Hungary.
CAST: Zita Szeckley, Gero Maly. Theodore
Uray; DIRECTOR: Jeno Dsepreghy.
Szivet Szivert (Hungarian)
(Heart for Heart)
DISTRIBUTOR: Danubia: RUNNING TIME:
75 mins.; REVIEWED: 1-23-39: Produced in
Hungary.
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
CAST: Eva Szorenvi. Antal Pager, Julius CBor
tos: DIRECTOR: Istvan Szekely.
Toil Spin
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century-Fox; RUNNING
TIME: 84 mins.: REVIEWED: 2-15-39: RE-
LEASED: 2-10-39.
CAST: Alice Faye. Constance Bennett, Nancy
Kelly, Joan Davis, Charles Farrell, Jane Wyman,
Kane Richmond, Wally Vernon, Joan Valerie, Ed-
ward Norris, J. Anthony Hughes, Harry Daven-
port. Mary Gordon, Harry Rosenthal, Irving
Bacon. Sam Hayes.
PRODUCER: Harry Joe Brown; DIRECTOR:
Hoy Del Ruth; AUTHOR: Frank Weed; SCREEN-
PLAY: Frank Weed.
Taku
DISTRIBUTOR : Norman Dawn Productions;
RUNNING TIME: 44 mins.; REVIEWED: 9-18-39.
PRODUCER: Norman Dawn; DIRECTOR: Nor-
man Dawn: AUTHOR: Susan Denis; CAMERA-
MAN: Norman Dawn; EDITOR: Charles Hunt, Jr.
Taming of the West, The
DISTRIBUTOR: Columbia: RUNNING TIME:
55 mins.: REVIEWED: 10-12-39: RELEASED:
12-7-39.
CAST: Bill Elliott. Iris Meredith, Dick Curtis.
Dub Taylor. James Craig. Stanley Brown, Ethan
Allen, K. MacDonald. Victor Wong, Don Beddoe.
DIRECTOR: Norman Deming; AUTHOR: R. L.
Johnson: SCREENPLAY: C. F. Royal, R. L.
Johnson: CAMERAMAN: George Meehan; EDI-
TOR: Otto Meyer.
Tarzan Finds a Son!
DISTRIBUTOR: Loew s. Inc.; RUNNING TIME:
90 mins.: REVIEWED: fi-7-39: RELEASED:
(i-10-39.
CAST: Johnny Weismuller. Maureen O'Sullivan.
John Sheffield, Ian Hunter. Henry Stephenson,
Frieda Inescourt. Henry Wilcoxon. Laraine Day.
Morton Lowry.
PRODUCER: Sam Zimbalist: DIRECTOR:
Richard Thorpe; SCREENPLAY: Cyril Hume;
CAMERAMAN: Leonard Smith: EDITORS: Frank
Sullivan, Gene Ruggiero.
Television Spy
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount: RUNNING TIME:
58 mins.: REVIEWED: 10-13-39: RELEASED:
10-20-39.
CAST: William Henry, Judith Barrett, William
Collier, Sr., Anthony Quinn, Richard Denning.
John Eldredge, Dorothy Tree, Morgan Conway.
Minor Watson. Byron Foulger.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Edward T. Lowe:
DIRECTOR: Edward Dmytryk; AUTHOR: Andre
Bohem; SCREENPLAY: Horace McCoy, William
R. Lipman, Lillie Hayward; CAMERAMAN:
Harry Fischbeck; EDITOR: Ann Bauchens.
Tell No Tales
DISTRIBUTOR: Loew s, Inc.: RUNNING TIME
68 mins.: REVIEWED: 5-15-39; RELEASED:
5-12-39.
_>o3
MICHAEL CURTIZ
Director
"Dodge City" "The Private Lives of Elizabeth
'Four Da hters" anC* ^ssex"
g "Daughters Courageous"
"Virginia City" "Four Wives"
IN PRODUCTION
"THE SEA HAWK"
234
CAST: Melvyn Douglas. Louise Piatt. Gene
Lockhart, Douglas Dumbrille, Florence George,
Halliwell Hobbes, Zeffie Tilbury. Harlan Briggs.
Sara Haden. Hobart Cavanaugrh, Oscar O'Shea,
Theresa Harris, Jean Fenwick, Esther Dale,
Joseph Crehan, Tom Collins.
PRODUCER: Edward Chodorov; DIRECTOR:
Leslie Fenton: AUTHORS: Pauline London, Alfred
Taylor: SCREENPLAY: Lionel Houser: ART
DIRECTOR: Cedric Gibbons: MUSICAL SCORE:
Dr. William Axt; CAMERAMAN: Joseph Rutten-
berg: MONTAGE: Peter Ballsbuseh: EDITOR:
W. Donn Hayes.
Tevya (Yiddish)
DISTRIBUTOR: Edwin A. Relkin; RUNNING
TIME: 100 mins.: REVIEWED: 12-28-39.
CAST: Maurice Schwartz. Miriam Riselle, Paula
Lubelska. Leon Liebgold, Vicki Marcus, Perle
Marcus. Julius Adler. David Makaranko. Helen
Grossman. Morris Strassberg. Louis Weissberg.
Al Harris. Boez Young.
PRODUCER: Henry Ziskin; DIRECTOR: Man-
rice Schwartz.
That's Right — You're Wrong
DISTRIBUTOR: RKO Radio: RUNNING TIME:
93 mins.: REVIEWED: 11-20-39; RELEASED:
11-24-39.
CAST: Kay Kyser, Adolph Menjou, May Rob-
son, Lucille Ball, Dennis O'Keefe, Edward Everett
Horton. Roscoe Karns, Moroni Olsen, Hobart
Cavanaugh, Ginny Simms, Harry Babbitt. Sully
Mason, Ish Kabibble, Dorothy Levett. Lillian
West, Denis Tankard, Jane Goude, Kathryn Adams,
Erne Parnell. Charles Doehrer.
PRODUCER: David Butler; DIRECTOR: David
Butler: AUTHORS: David Butler. William Con-
selman: SCREENPLAY: William Conselman.
James V. Kern: ART DIRECTOR: Van Nest Pol-
glase: MUSICAL ARRANGEMENTS: George Dun-
ning; CAMERAMAN: Russell Metty: SPECIAL
EFFECTS: Vernon L. Walker; EDITOR: Irene
M orra .
That They May Live (French)
DISTRIBUTOR: Mayer & Burstyn: RUNNING
TIME: 74 mins.; REVIEWED: 11-10-39: Pro-
duced in France.
CAST: Victor Francen, Jean Max, Marie Lou:
DIRECTOR: Abel Gance.
These Glamour Girls
DISTRIBUTOR: Loew s. Inc.; RUNNING TIME:
78 mins.; REVIEWED: 8-22-39: RELEASED:
8-18-39.
CAST: Lew Ayres. Lana Turner. Tom Brown.
Richard Carlson, Jane Bryan, Anita Louise, Marsha
Hunt, Ann Rutherford, Mary Beth Hughes. Owen
Davis, Jr., Ernest Truex, Sumner Getchell, Peter
Hayes, Don Castle. Tom Collins.
PRODUCER: Sam Zimbalist: DIRECTOR: S.
Sylvan Simon; AUTHOR: Jane Hall: SCREEN
PLAY: Jane Hall, Marion Parsonnet: ART DI-
RECTOR: Cedric Gibbons: MUSICAL SCORE
Edward Ward, David Snell: MUSIC AND LYRICS:
Edward Ward, Bob Wright, Chet Forrest: CAM
ERAMAN: Alfred Gilks; EDITOR: Harold F.
Kress.
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
They All Come Out
DISTRIBUTOR: Loew's, Inc.; RUNNING TIME:
70 mins.; REVIEWED: 8-4-39: RELEASED:
7-14-39.
CAST: Rita Johnson, Tom Neal, Bernard Nedell,
Edward Gargan, John Gallaudet, Addison Richards,
Frank M. Thomas, George Tobias, Ann Shoe-
maker, Charles Lane.
DIRECTOR: Jacques Tourneur: AUTHOR:
John C. Higgins; SCREENPLAY: John C. Higgins:
CAMERAMEN: Clyde De Vinna, Paul C. Vogil:
EDITOR: Ralph E. Goldstein.
They Asked for It
DISTRIBUTOR: Universal; RUNNING TIME:
lil mins.; REVIEWED: 7-12-39: RELEASED
5-26-39.
CAST: William Lundigan. Joy Hodges, Michael
Whalen. Isabel Jewell. Lylc Talbot. Thomas Beck.
Spencer Charters.
DIRECTOR: Prank McDonald: AUTHOR: James
B. Lowell: SCREENPLAY: Arthur T. Horman:
CAMERAMAN : Stanley Cortez: EDITOR: Philip
Cahn.
They Made Her a Spy
DISTRIBUTOR: RKO Radio; RUNNING TIME:
69 mins.: REVIEWED: 3-30-39; RELEASED:
4-14-39.
CAST: Sally Eilers. Allan Lane. Frank M.
Thomas, Fritz Lieber, Larry Blake, Charles Hal
ton. Theodore von Eltz. Pierre Watkin, Addison
Richards, Louis J. Hcydt,, Spencer Charters. Alec
Craig, Roger Hunt.
PRODUCER: Robert Sisk: DIRECTOR: Jack
Hively: AUTHORS: Lionel Houser. George Bricker;
SCREENPLAY : Garson Kanin, Joe Pagano.
They Made Me a Criminal
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners; RUNNING TIME
92 mins.; REVIEWED: 1-18-39: RELEASED:
1-28-39.
CAST: John Garfield. Claude Rains. Gloria
Dickson, May Robson. Billy Halop. Bobby Jordan.
Leo Gorcey. Huntz Hall, Gabriel Dell. Ann Sheri-
dan. Robert Gleckler, John Ridgely, Barbara Pep-
per, William Davidson, Ward Bond, Robert Strange.
Louis Jean Heydt. Frank Riggi. Cliff Clarke, Dick
Wessel, Raymond Brown, Sam Hayes.
PRODUCERS: Jack L. Warner, Hal B. Wallis;
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Benjamin Glazcr: DI-
RECTOR; Busby Berkeley; AUTHORS: Bertram
Millhauser, Beulah Marie Dix: SCREENPLAY:
Sig Herzig: CAMERAMAN: James Wong Howe:
EDITOR: Jack Killifer.
They Shall Have Music
DISTRIBUTOR: United Artists: RUNNING
TIME: 105 mills.: REVIEWED: 7 14 39; HE
LEASED: 8-18-39.
CAST: Jascha Helfetz. Andrea Leeds, Joel Me-
Crea, Gene Reynolds, Walter Brennan. Porter
Hall, Terry Kilburn, Walter Tetle-y, Chuck Stubbs.
Tommy Kelly, Jacqueline Nash. Alfred Newman.
Mary Ruth, John St. Polis, Alexander Schoen
EDWARD G. ROBINSON
Radio Program
"BIG TOWN"
hprsr. Marjorie Main. Arthur Hohl. Paul Harvey,
The Peter Meremblum California Junior Sym-
phony Orchestra.
PRODUCER: Samuel Goldwyn: ASSOCIATE
PRODUCER: Robert Riskin; DIRECTOR: Archie
Mayo: AUTHOR: Irmgard von Cube: SCREEN-
PLAY: John Howard Lawson: CAMERAMAN:
Greg's Toland: EDITOR: Sherman Todd.
This Man Is News
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount: RUNNING TIME
63 mins.: REVIEWED: 7-26-39: Produced In
England: RELEASED: 8-18-39.
CAST: Barry K. Barnes. Valeric Hobson, Ala-
stair Sim, John Warwick. Philip Leaver. James
Barrie. David Keir, Tom Gil. Edward Lcxy. Garry
Marsh. Kenneth Buckley.
DIRECTOR: David MacDonald: AUTHORS
Roger MacDougal, Allen MacKinnon: SCREEN
PLAY: Roger MacDougal, Allen MacKinnon:
CAMERAMAN: Henry Harris: EDITOR: Reginald
Beck.
Those High Grey Walls
DISTRIBUTOR: Columbia: RUNNING TIME:
SI mins.: REVIEWED: 10-30-39: RELEASED:
9-21-39.
CAST: Walter Connolly, Onslow Stevens. Paul
Fix, Bernard Nedell. Iris Meredith. Oscar O'Shea.
Nicholas Soussanin. Don Beddoc.
DIRECTOR: Charles Vidor; AUTHOR: W. A.
Ullman, Jr.: SCREENPLAY: Lewis Meltzer:
CAMERAMAN: John Stumar: EDITOR: Gene
Milford.
Three Musketeers, The
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century -Fox; RUNNING
TIME: 73 mins.: REVIEWED: 2-20-39: RE-
LEASED: 2-17-39.
CAST: Don Ameche. The Ritz Brothers. Lionel
Atwill, Gloria Stuart, Pauline Moore, Binnie
Barnes, John Carradine, Miles Mander, Joseph
Schildkraut. Moroni Olsen, Douglas Dumbrille.
John King. Russell Hicks. Gregory Gaye, Lester
Mathews, Georges Renavant. Montagu Shaw, Jean
Parry, Fredrik Vogeding.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Raymond Griflith:
DIRECTOR: Allan Dwan; AUTHOR: Alexander
Dumas: SCREENPLAY: M. M. Musselman. Wil-
liam A. Drake, Sam Hellmau: MUSIC: Samuel
Pokrass, Walter Bullock: CAMERAMAN: Peverell
Marley: EDITOR: Jack Dennis.
Three Smart Girls Grow Up
DISTRIBUTOR: Universal; RUNNING TIME:
90 mins.; REVIEWED: 3-20-39; RELEASED:
3-24-39.
CAST: Deanne Durbin, Charles Winninger, Nan
Grey, Helen Parrish, Robert Cummings, William
Lundigan, Ernest Cossart, Nell Walker.
PRODUCER: Joe Pasternak; DIRECTOR: Henry
Koster; AUTHORS: Bruce Manning, Felix Jack-
son: CAMERAMAN: Joseph Valentine: EDITOR:
Ted Kent.
Three Sons
DISTRIBUTOR: RKO Radio; RUNNING TIME :
72 mins.; REVIEWED: 10-20-39: RELEASED:
10 13-39.
FEATURE RELEASE CREDiTS
CAST: Edward Ellis. J. Edward Bromberg.
Katherine Alexander. William Gargan. Kent Tay-
lor. Virginia Vale, Robert Stanton. Grady Sutton.
Dick Hogan. Adele Pearcc, Barbara Pepper. Alex-
ander D'Arcy.
PRODUCER: Robert Sisk; DIRECTOR: Jack
Hively; AUTHOR: Lester Cohen: SCREENPLAY:
John Twist: CAMERAMAN: Rus<ell Metty: EDI-
TOR: Thereon Werth.
Three Texas Steers
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic: RUNNING TIME:
59 mins.: REVIEWED: 6-19-39; RELEASED:
5-12-39.
CAST: John Wayne, Ray Corrigan, Max Ter-
hune, Carole Landis, Ralph Graves, Roscoe Ates.
Collette Lyons, Billy Curtis, Ted Adams, Stanley
Blystone, David Sharpe, Ethan Laidlaw, Lew
Kelly.
PRODUCER: William Berke; DIRECTOR:
George Sherman; AUTHORS Betty Burbridge.
Stanley Roberts; CAMERAMAN: Ernest Miller:
EDITOR: Tony Martinelli.
Three Waltzes (French)
DISTRIBUTOR: Vedis Film*; RUNNING
TIME: S5 mins.; REVIEWED: 5-11-39; Produced
in France.
CAST: Yvonne Printemps. Pierre Fresnay, Henri
Guisol: DIRECTOR: Ludwig Berger.
Thunder Afloat
DISTRIBUTOR: Loew s. Inc.: RUNNING TIME:
94 nuns.: REVIEWED: 9-19-39: RELEASED:
9-15-39.
CAST: Wallace Beery, Chester Morris, Virginia
Grey. Douglas Dumbrille. Carl Esmond, Clem
Hevans, John Qualen, Regis Toomey, Henry Vic-
tor, Addison Richards, Hans Joby, Henry Hunter,
Jonathan Hale.
PRODUCER: J. Walter Ruben; DIRECTOR:
George B. Seitz; AUTHORS: Ralph Wheelwright,
Harvey Haislip; SCREENPLAY: Wells Root, Har-
vey Haislip; ART DIRECTORS: Cedric Gibbons:
MUSICAL SCORE: Edward Ward. David Snell;
COSTUMES: Dolly Tree: CAMERAMAN: John
Seitz; EDITOR: Frank E. Hull.
Time in the Sun
DISTRIBUTOR : Marie Seton; RUNNING TIME:
59 mins.; REVIEWED: 10-19-39; Produced in
Mexico.
PRODUCER: Marie Seton; SCRIPT AND NAR-
RATION: Marie Scion, Paul Burnford; EDI-
TORIAL SUPERVISOR: Paul Burnford; CAM-
ERAMAN: E. Tisse: MUSIC: Ponce Espino, Car-
los Tarin.
Too Busy to Work
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century -Fox; RUNNING
TIME: 65 mins.; REVIEWED: 12-11-39; RE-
LEASED: 11-17-39.
CAST: Jed Prouty, June Carlson, Spring By-
mgton, Kenneth Howell, Florence Roberts, George
Ernest, Billy Mahan, Chick Chandler, Andrew
Tombes, Marjorie Gateson, Marvin Stephens,
237
WARNERS FOR SHOWMANSHIP!
HENRY BLANKE
Associate Producer
"JUAREZ"
"THE OLD MAID"
(Voted two of the ten best pictures of 1939 in the
Film Daily's poll of newspaper critics.)
"THE ADVENTURES OF ROBIN HOOD"
(Voted one of the ten best pictures of 1938 in the
Film Daily's poll of newspaper critics.)
"LIFE OF EMILE ZOLA"
(Voted the best picture of 1937 in the Film Daily's poll
of newspaper critics.)
"THE STORY OF LOUIS PASTEUR"
"ANTHONY ADVERSE"
"GREEN PASTURES"
"MID-SUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM"
(Four of the ten best pictures of 1936 in the Film Daily's
poll of newspaper critics.)
WILLIAM KEIGHLEY
Director
"VALLEY OF THE GIANTS"
"BROTHER RAT"
"YES, MY BARLING BAUGBTER"
"EACB BAWN I BIE"
"THE FIGHTING 69th"
238
Irvine Bacon, Helen Ericson, H. Goodwin, II.
Atchley, Joan Davis.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: John Stone; DI-
RECTOR: Otto Brower; SCREENPLAY: Robert
Ellis, Helen Logan, Stanley Rauh: CAMERA-
MAN: Edward Cronjager; EDITOR: Fred Allen.
Topper Takes a Trip
DISTRIBUTOR: United Artists; RUNNING
TIME : 85 mins.: REVIEWED: 1-5-39; RE-
LEASED: 1-12-39.
CAST: Constance Bennett, Roland Young, Billie
Burke, Alan Mowbray, Verree Teasdale, Franklin
Pangborn, Alexander D'Arcy, Paul Hurst, Eddy
Conrad, Spencer Charters, Irving Pichel, Paul
Everton, Duke York, Leon Belasco, George Rene-
vent, George Humbert, Alphonse Martel, James
Morton, Torben Meyer, George Davis.
PRODUCER: Hal Roach; ASSOCIATE PRO-
DUCER: Milton H. Bren; DIRECTOR: Norman Z.
MeLeod: AUTHOR: Thorne Smith; SCREENPLAY:
Eddie Moran, Jack Jevne, Corey Ford; CAMERA-
MAN: Norbert Brodine; EDITOR: William Ter-
hune.
Toprini Nasz (Hungarian)
DISTRIBUTOR: Danubia Pictures: RUNNING
TIME: 83 mins.; REVIEWED: 11-17-39; Pro-
duced in Hungary.
CAST: Paul Javor, Klari Tolnay, Ferenc Kiss:
DIRECTOR: Endre de Toth.
Torchy Blane in Chinatown
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners; RUNNING TIME:
59 mins.; REVIEWED: 2-6-39; RELEASED:
2-4-39.
CAST: Glenda Farrell. Barton MacLane, Tom
Kennedy, Henry O'Neill, Patric Knowles, James
Stephenson, Janet Shaw, Frank Shannon George
Guhl, Anderson Lawlor, Richard Bond, Ed
Chandler.
DIRECTOR: William Beaudine; AUTHORS:
Murray Leinster, Will Jenkins; SCREENPLAY:
George Bricker; CAMERAMAN: Warren Lynch;
EDITOR: Frederick Richards.
Torchy Plays With Dynamite
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners: RUNNING TIME:
59 mins.: REVIEWED: 9-25-39; RELEASED:
8-12-39.
CAST: Jane Wyman, Allen Jenkins, Tom Ken-
nedy, Sheila Bromley, Joe Cunningham, Eddie
Marr, Edgar Deering, Frank Shannon, Bruce Mc-
Farlane, George Lloyd, Aldrich Bowker, John
Ridgely, Larry Williams, John Harmon Cliff
Clark, Nat Carr.
DIRECTOR: Noel Smith; AUTHOR: Seott
Littleton; SCREENPLAY: Earle Snell, Charles
Beldon; CAMERAMAN: Arthur L. Todd; EDITOR:
Harold McLernon.
Torpedoed
DISTRIBUTOR: Film Alliance of the U. S.J
REVIEWED: 9-28-39; Produced in England.
CAST: H. B. Warner, Robert Douglas, Richard
Cromwell, Hazel Terry, Noah Berry, Esme Percy,
Frederick Culley, Binky Stuart, Henry Victor.
PRODUCER: Herbert Wilcox; DIRECTOR:
Norman Walker; SCREENPLAY: Gerald Elliot.
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
Torture Ship
DISTRIBUTOR: Producers Pictures: RUNNING
TIME: 57 mins.: REVIEWED: 11-22-39.
CAST: Lyle Talbot, Irving Pichel, Jacqueline
Wells, Sheila Bromley, Russel Hopton, Antheny
Averill, Eddie Holdcn, Wheeler Oakman, Leander
de Cordova, Dmitri Alexis, Skelton Knaggs, Adia
Kuznetzoff. Stanley Blystone, William Chapman.
Fred Walton.
DIRECTOR: Victor Halperin: CAMERAMAN:
Jack Greenleigh; EDITOR: Holbrook Todd.
Tough Kid
DISTRIBUTOR: Monogram; RUNNING TIME:
61 mins.; REVIEWED: 1-4-39.
CAST: Frankie Darro, Dick Purcell, Judith
Allen, Lillian Elliott, Dan Rowan, William Ruhl,
Lew Kelly, Ralph Peters, Max Marx, Jean Joyce,
Wilbur Mack, Joe Lynch, Cliff Howell, Joseph
Girard.
PRODUCER: Scott R. Dunlap; ASSOCIATE
PRODUCER: Lindsley Parsons; DIRECTOR:
Howard Bretherton; AUTHOR: Brenda Weisberg:
SCREENPLAY: Well Totman; CAMERAMAN:
Harry Newman; EDITOR: Russell Schoengarth.
Tower of London
DISTRIBUTOR: Universal; RUNNING TIME:
92 mine.; REVIEWED: 11-21-39; RELEASED:
11-17-39.
CAST: Basil Rathbone, Boris Karloff, Barbara
O'Neil, Ian Hunter, Vincent Price, Nan Grey,
Ernest Cossart, John Sutton, Leo G. Carroll, Miles
Manden, Lionel Belmont, Rose Hobart, Ronald
Sinclair, John Herbert-Bond, Ralph Forbes,
Frances Robinson, G. P. Huntley. John Rodion,
Walter Tetley, Donnie Dunagan.
PRODUCER: Rowland V. Lee; DIRECTOR:
Rowland V. Lee; AUTHOR: Robert N. Lee;
SCREENPLAY: Robert N. Lee; ART DIRECTOR:
Jack Otterson; MUSICAL DIRECTOR: Charles
Previn; ORCHESTRATIONS: Frank Skinner;
CAMERAMAN: George Robinson; EDITOR: Ed
Curtiss.
20,000 Men a Year
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century-Fox; RUNNING
TIME: 83 mins.; REVIEWED: 11-1-39; RE-
LEASED: 10-27-39.
CAST: Randolph Scott, Margaret Lindsay,
Preston Foster, George Ernest, Maxie Rosenbloom,
Robert Shaw, Mary Healy, Jane Darwell, Kane
Richmond, Douglas Wood, Sen Yung, Paul Stan-
ton, Tom Seidel, Edward Gargan, Harry Tyler,
Sidney Miller.
PRODUCER: Sol M. Wurtzel; DIRECTOR: Al-
fred Green; AUTHOR: Frank Wead; SCREEN-
PLAY: Lou Breslow, Owen Frances; CAMERA-
MAN: Ernest Palmer; AERIAL PHOTOGRAPHY:
Charles Marshall: EDITOR: Fred Allen.
Trapped in the Sky
DISTRIBUTOR: Columbia: RUNNING TIME
60 mins.; REVIEWED: 2-16-39; RELEASED
6-1-39.
239
PAUL MUNI
Management
M . C . LEVEE
Hollywood
DENNIS
MORGAN
240
CAST; Jack Holt, C. Henry Ciordoii, Kulph
Morsan, Katherine DeMille. Paul Evarton Sidney
Blackmer. Ivan Lebedefi, Regris Toomey, Holmes
Herbert.
PRODUCER: Larry Darmour; ASSOCIATE
PRODUCER: Rudolph Flothow; DIRECTOR:
Lewis D. Collins, AUTHOR: Eric Taylor: SCREEN-
PLAY: Gordon Rigby, Eric Taylor; CAMERA-
MAN: James S. Brown, Jr.: EDITOR: Dwight
Caldwell.
Treachery on the High Seas
DISTRIBUTOR: Film Alliance of the U. S.:
RUNNING TIME: G8 mins.: REVIEWED: 9-28-30:
Produced in England.
CAST: Bebe Daniels, Ben Lyon. Tom Helmore.
Charles Farrell. Hay Petrie, Gordon McLeod,
James Carew; DIRECTOR: Emil Reinert.
Trigger Pals
DISTRIBUTOR: Grand National: RUNNING
TIME: 60 mins.: REVIEWED: 1-16-39.
CAST: Art Jarrett, Lee Powell, Al St. John.
Dorothy Faye, Ted Adams, Nina Guilbert, Ernie
Adams, Earl Douglas, Stanley Blystone, Frank
LaRue. Ethan Allen.
PRODUCER: Phil Krasne; DIRECTOR: Sam
Newfield: AUTHORS: George Plympton, Ted
Richmond: SCREENPLAY: George Plympton:
CAMERAMAN* : Jack Greenhalgii: EDITOR: Roy
Luby.
Tropic Fury
DISTRIBUTOR: Universal: RUNNING TIME:
62 mins.: REVIEWED: 9-18-39; RELEASED:
10-13-30.
CAST: Richard Arlen, Andy Devine, Beverly
Roberts, Lou Merrill, Lupita Tovar, Samuel S.
Hinds, Charles Trowbridge, Leonard Mudie, Adia
Kuznetzoff, Noble Johnson, Frank Mitchell, Mil-
burne Stone.
PRODUCER: Ben Pivar: DIRECTOR: Christie
Cabanne: AUTHORS: Maurice Tombragel, Ben
Pivar: SCREENPLAY: Michael L. Simmons;
CAMERAMAN: Jerry Ash.
Tumbleweeds
Revival with synchronized sound effects; DIS-
TRIBUTOR: Astor Pictures; RUNNING TIME:
86 mins.: REVIEWED: 5-9-39.
Twelve Crowded Hours
DISTRIBUTOR: RKO Radio; RUNNING TIME:
64 mins.: REVIEWED: 3-1-39; RELEASED:
3-3-39.
CAST: Richard Dix, Lucille Ball, Alan Lane,
Donald MaeBride, Cyrus W. Kendall, Granville
Bates, John Arledge, Bradley Page, Dorothy Lee,
Addison Richards, Murray Alper, John Gallaudet.
Joseph de Stefani.
PRODUCER: Robert Sisk; DIRECTOR: Lew
Landers: AUTHORS: Garret Fort, Peter Ruric;
SCRENPLAY: John Twist; CAMERAMAN: Nick
Musuraca: EDITOR: Henry Marker.
Two Bright Boys
DISTRIBUTOR: Universal; RUNNING TIME:
70 mins.; REVIEWED: 9-28-39: RELEASED:
9-15-39.
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
CAST: Jackie Cooper. Freddie Bartholomew.
Alan Dinehart, Dorothy Peterson, Eddie Acuff,
Melville Cooper, Willard Robertson, Hal Dawson.
Eddy Waller. J. M. Kerrigan.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Burt Kelly; DIREC-
TOR: Joseph Santley: SCREENPLAY: V. Bur-
ton, E. Hartmann: CAMERAMAN: Elwood Bre-
dell: EDITOR: Phil Cahn.
Two's Company
DISTRIBUTOR: Times Pictures: RUNNING
TIME: 64 mins.: REVIEWED: 12-28-39: Pro-
duced in England.
CAST: Ned Sparks, Mary Brian. Patric Knowle*.
Gordon Harker, Morton Selten, Harry Holman.
Olive Blakeney, Gibb McLaughlin, Edmond
Breon, Robb Wilton, H. F. Maltby. Lawrence
Hanray.
DIRECTOR: Tim Whelan.
Typhoon Treasure
DISTRIBUTOR: Commonwealth Productions:
RUNNING TIME: 68 mins.: REVIEWED: 6-29-39:
Produced in the South Seas.
CAST: Cambell Copelin, Gwen Munro, Joe Valli.
Douglas Herald, Kenneth Brampton. Norman
French.
PRODUCER: R. L. Wilkinson: AUTHOR: John
P. McLeod; CAMERAMEN: George Malcolm.
Harry Malcolm, A. B. Cummings.
U-Boot 29
DISTRIBUTOR: Columbia; RUNNING TIME:
77 mins.: REVIEWED: 10-11-39: Produced in
England: RELEASED: 10-7-39.
CAST: Conrad Veidt, Valerie Hobson, Sebastian
Shaw, Marius Goring, June Duprez, Athole Stew
art. Agnes Laughton, Helen Haye, Cyril Ray-
mond George Summers, Hay Petrie, Grant Suther-
land, Mary Morris, Robert Rendel, Margaret
Moffatt.
PRODUCER: Irving Asher; DIRECTOR: Michael
Powell; SCREENPLAY: Emeric Pressburger;
CAMERAMAN : Bernard Browne; EDITOR: Hugh
Stewart.
Undercover Doctor
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount; RUNNING TIME:
67 mins.: REVIEWED: 6-5-39: RELEASED:
6-9-39.
CAST: Lloyd Nolan, Janice Logan, J. Carrol
Naish, Heather Angel. Broderick Crawford, Robert
Wilcox, Richard Carle, Stanley Price, John El-
dredge, George Meeker, Raymond Hatton, Philip
Warren, Paul Fix.
DIRECTOR: Louis King; AUTHOR: J. Edgar
Hoover; SCREENPLAY: Horace McCoy, William
R. Lipman; CAMERAMAN: William C. Mellor;
EDITOR: Arthur Schmidt.
Under-Pup. The
DISTRIBUTOR: Universal; RUNNING TIME:
88 mins.: REVIEWED: 8-25-39: RELEASED:
9-1-39.
CAST: Gloria Jean, Robert Cummings, Nan
Grey, Beulah Bondi, Virginia Weidler, Margaret
LEWIS SEILER
"DUST BE MY DESTINY"
242
Lindsay. C. Aubrey Smith. Hilly Gilbert, Ami
Gillis, Raymond Walburn, Paul Cavanaugh, Samuel
S. Hinds, Shirley Mills.
PRODUCER: Joe Pasternak; DIRECTOR: Rich-
ard Wallace; AUTHOR: I. A. R. Wylie: SCREEN-
PLAY: Grover Jones; CAMERAMAN: Hal Mohr;
EDITOR: Frank Gross.
Unexpected Father
DISTRIBUTOR: Universal; RUNNING TIME:
73 mills.; REVIEWED: 7-17-39; RELEASED:
7-14-39.
CAST: Baby Sandy. Shirley Ross, Dennis
O'Keefe. Mischa Auer, Joy Hodges, Dorothy Arnold.
Anne Gwynne, Anne Nagel, Donald Briggs. Richard
Lane, Paul Guilfoyle, Mayo Methot, Jane Darwell.
Spencer Charters, Ygor and Tanya.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Ken Goldsmith; DI-
RECTOR: Charles Lamont; AUTHORS: Leonard
Spiegelgass, Charles Grayson; SCREENPLAY:
Leonard Spiegelgass, Charles Grayson: ART DI-
RECTOR: Jack Otterson: MUSICAL DIRECTOR:
Charles Previn; CAMERAMAN: George Robinson:
EDITOR: Ted Kent.
Union Pacific
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount; RUNNING TIME:
135 mins.; REVIEWED: 4-28-39: RELEASED:
5-5-39.
CAST: Barbara Stanwyck, Joel McCrea, Akim
Tamiroff, Robert Preston, Lynne Overman. Brian
Donlevy, Anthony Quinn, Evelyn Keyes, Stanley
Ridges. Regis Toomey, Syd Saylor, J. M. Kerrigan,
William Haade. Harry Woods, Fuzzy Knight.
Francis MacDonald, Henry Kolker, Richard Lane,
Hugh MacDonald.
PRODUCER: Cecil B. deMille; DIRECTOR:
Cecil B. deMille: AUTHOR: Ernest Haycox;
SCREENPLAY: Jack Cunningham, Walter DeLeon,
C. Gardner Sullivan, Jesse Lasky, Jr.; ART DI-
RECTOR'S: Hans Dreier, Roland Anderson; MUSI-
CAL SCORE: George Antheil; CAMERAMEN:
Victor Milner, Dewey Wrigley; EDITOR: Anne
Bauchens.
Unmarried
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount; RUNNING TIME:
63 mins.: REVIEWED: 5-25-39: RELEASED:
5-26-39.
CAST: Buck Jones, Helen Twelvetrees, Donald
O'Connor, John Hartley Robert Armstrong Sidney
Blackmer, Larry Crabbe, Edward Pawley, William
Haade, Phillip Warren, Dorothy Howe, Lucien
Littlefield.
DIRECTOR: Kurt Neumann; AUTHORS: Grover
Jones, William Slavens McNutt; SCREENPLAY:
Lillie Hay ward, Brian Marlow; ART DIRECTORS:
Hans Drier, Robert Odell; MUSICAL DIRECTOR:
Boris Morros ; CAMERAMAN : Harry Fischbeck ;
EDITOR: Stuart Gilmore.
Varju A Toronyoran (Hungarian)
DISTRIBUTOR: Hungaria Pictures; RUNNING
TIME : 80 mins.; REVIEWED: 11-29-39; Pro-
duced in Hungary.
CAST: Gabor Rapnay, Erszebet Simor, Maria
Egry; DIRECTOR: A. Endre Rodriguez.
FEATURE RELEASE CREDiTS
Vi Tvaa (Swedish)
DISTRIBUTOR: Scandinavian Talking Pic-
tures: RUNNING TIME: 85 mins.: REVIEWED:
12-16-39: Produced in Sweden.
CAST: Sture Lagerwall, Signe Hasso, Stig Jar-
rel; DIRECTOR: Sigurd Bauman.
Wall Street Cowboy
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic: RUNNING TIME:
86 mins.; REVIEWED: 9-7-39: RELEASED:
8-6-39.
CAST: Roy Rogers, George "Gabby" Hayes, Ray-
mond Hatton, Ann Baldwin, Pierre Watkin,
Louisiana Lou. Craig Reynolds, Ivan Miller.
Reginald Barlow, Adrian Morris.
PRODUCER: Joseph Kane; DIRECTOR: Joseph
Kane: AUTHOR: Doris Schroeder; SCREENPLAY:
Gerald Geraghty, Norman Hall; CAMERAMAN:
Jack Marta: EDITOR: Lester Orlebeck.
Ware Case, The
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century -Fox; RUNNING
TIME: 72 mins.; REVIEWED: 7-31-39; Pro
dueed in England: RELEASED: 7-21-39.
CAST: Clive Brook. Jane Baxter, Barry K
Barnes, C. V. France. Francis L. Sullivan, Frank
Cellier, Edward Rigby, Peter Bull, Dorothy Sea-
combe, Athene Seyler.
PRODUCER: Michael Balcon; DIRECTOR:
Michael Balcon; AUTHOR: George Pleydell Ban-
croft; SCREENPLAY: Roland Pertwee. Robert
Stevenson; CAMERAMAN: Ronald Nearme.
Waterfront
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners; RUNNING TIME:
61 mins.: REVIEWED: 7-25-39: RELEASED:
7-15-39.
CAST: Gloria Dickson, Dennis Morgan, Marie
Wilson, Larry Williams, Sheila Bromley, Aldrieh
Bowker, Frank Faylen, Ward Bond, Arthur Gani
ner, George Lloyd.
DIRECTOR: Terry Morse; AUTHOR: Kenyon
Nicholson: SCREENPLAY: Lee Katz, Arthur
Ripley: CAMERAMAN: James Van Trees: EDI
TOR: Louis Hesse.
Way Down South
DISTRIBUTOR: RKO Radio; RUNNING TIME:
62 mins.: REVIEWED: 7-25-39; RELEASED:
7-21-39.
CAST: Bobby Breen, Alan Mowbray, Ralph
Morgan, Clarence Muse, Steffi Dunna, Sally Blane.
Edwin Maxwell, Charles Middleton, Robert Greig.
Lillian Yarbo, Stymie Beard, Jack Carr, Marguerite
Whitten, Hall Johnson Choir.
PRODUCER: Sol Lesser; DIRECTOR: Bernard
Vorhaus; AUTHORS: Clarence Muse, Langston
Hughes; SCREENPLAY: Clarence Muse, Lang-
ston Hughes: ART DIRECTOR' Lewis J. Rachmil:
SPECIAL EFFECTS: Vernon L. Walker: MUSI-
CAL DIRECTOR: Victor Young; SONGS: Clar-
ence Muse, Langston Hughes; CAMERAMAN:
Charles Schoenbaum; EDITOR: Arthur Hilton.
We Are Not Alone
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners; RUNNING TIME:
243
""Itf WARNERS f
LEON SCHLESINGER
Producer of
'Merrie Melodies" and "Looney Tunes'
for
WARNER BROS.
Starting 10th Year
of Production
42 cartoons for
1939-40 Season
244
112 mills.: REVIEWED: 11-9-39: RELEASED:
11-25:59.
CAST: Paui Muni. Jane Bryan. Flora Rob-
son, Raymond Severn. Una O'Connor. Henry
Daniell. Montagu Love. James Stephenson. Stan-
ley Logan, Cecil Kellaway. Alan Napier, Ely
Malyon. Douglas Seott. Crauford Kent, May
Beatty, Billy Bevan, Holmes Herbert. John
Powers. Colin Kenny, Ethel Griffies.
EXECUTIVE PRODUCER: Hal B. Wallis: AS-
SOCIATE PRODUCER: Henry Blanke: DIRECTOR:
Edmund Gouldins: AUTHOR: James Hilton:
SCREENPLAY: James Hilton. Milton Krims:
CAMERAMAN: Tony Gaudio: EDITOR: Warren
Low.
West of Santa Fe
DISTRIBUTOR- Columbia; RUNNING TIME
00 mins.: REVIEWED: 1-6-39.
CAST: Charles Starrett, Iris Meredith. DieU
Curtis Robert Fiske LeRoy Mason Bob Nolan.
Hank Bell. Edmund Cobb. Clem Horton. Riehanl
Bottilier, Eddie Hcarn. Edward LeSaint. Buek
Connor.
DIRECTOR: Sam Nelson; AUTHOR: Bennett R.
Cohen: SCREENPLAY: Bennett R. Cohen; CAM
ERAMAN: Allen Siegler; EDITOR: William Lyon.
Western Caravans
DISTRIBUTOR: Columbia: RUNNING TIME:
59 mins.: REVIEWED: 7-17-39; RELEASED:
6-15-39.
CAST: Charles Starrett, Iris Meredith, Dick
Curtis, Russell Simpson. Hal Taliaferro. Hank
Bell, Bob Nolan. Sammy McKim, Edmund Cobb,
Ethan Laidlaw, Sons of the Pioneers.
DIRECTOR: Sam Nelson: SCREENPLAY: Ben-
nett R. Cohen; CAMERAMAN: George Cooper:
EDITOR: William Lyon.
What a Life
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount; RUNNING TIME
75 mins.: REVIEWED: 9-19-39; RELEASED
10-6-39.
CAST: Jackie Cooper, Betty Field. John Howard.
Janice Logan, Vaughan Glaser, Lionel Stander,
Hedda Hopper, James Corner. Dorothy Stiekney.
Kathleen Loekhart. Lueien Littlefield, Sidney
Miller. Andrew Tombes. George Guhl, Arthur
Aylesworth, Wilda Bennett, Bennie Bartlett. Kay
Stewart, Leonard Sues. Eddie Brian. Janet Waldo.
Betty McLaughlin, Douglas Fahy, Roberta Smith.
Nora Cecil.
PRODUCER: Jay Theodore Reed: DIRECTOR:
Jay Theodore Reed; AUTHOR: Clifford Goldsmith:
SCREENPLAY: Charles Brackett. Billv Wilder
ART DIRECTORS: Hans Dreier, Earl Hedrick;
CAMERAMAN: Victor Milner; EDITOR: William
Shea.
When the Husband Travels (Greek)
DISTRIBUTOR: Latin Films: RUNNING
TIME: 93 mins.; REVIEWED: 11-29-39; Pro-
duced in Greece.
CAST: Manos Philippides, Anna Kalouta, Marika
Kalouta; DIRECTOR: Toga Mizrahi.
When Tomorrow Comes
DISTRIBUTOR: Universal; RUNNING TIME.
90 mins.: REVIEWED: 8-17-39: RELEASED
8-11-39.
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
CAST: Irene Dunne. Charles Boyer. Barbara
O'Neil, Onslow Stevens. Nydia Westman, Fritz
Feld, Nella Walker. Harry Bradley, Milton Par-
sons.
PRODUCER: John M. Stahl; DIRECTOR: John
M. Stahl: AUTHOR: James Cain; SCREENPLAY:
Dwight Taylor: CAMERAMAN: John Mescall:
EDITOR: Milton Carruth.
Whirlpool of Desire (French)
DISTRIBUTOR: HO Films; RUNNING TIME:
75 mins.: REVIEWED: 11-29-39: Produced in
France.
CAST: Jeanne Boitel, Jean Galland. Mauriee
Maillot: DIRECTOR: Edmond Greville.
Whispering Enemies
DISTRIBUTOR: Columbia: RUNNING TIME
62 mills.: REVIEWED: 1-4-39; RELEASED
3-24-39.
CAST: Jack Holt. Dolores Costello. Addison
Richards. Joseph Crehan, Donald Briggs, Pert
Kelton. Paul Everton.
PRODUCER: Larry Darmour; DIRECTOR
Lewis D. Collins: AUTHORS: John Rawlins, Har
old Tarshis: SCREENPLAY: Gordon Rigby, Tom
Kilpatrick; CAMERAMAN: James S. Brown. Jr.:
EDITOR: Dwight Campbell.
Wife, Husband and Friend
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century-Fox: RUNNING
TIME: SO mins.; REVIEWED: 2-27-39: RE-
LEASED: 3-3-39.
CAST: Warner Baxter. Loretta Young, Binnir
Barnes. George Barbier, Helen Westley, Cesar
Romero. Eugene Pallette. J. Edward Bromberp.
Ruth Terry, Helen Ericson, Kay Griffith. Harry
Rosenthal. Edward Cooper, Lawrence Grant.
Howard Hickman. George Irving, Harry Hayden.
Charles Williams, Rene Riano.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Nunnally Johnson:
DIRECTOR: Gregory Ratoff: AUTHOR: James
M. Cain; SCREENPLAY: Nunnally Johnson;
CAMERAMAN: Ernest Palmer: EDITOR: Walter
Thompson.
Wild Horse Canyon
DISTRIBUTOR: Monogram: RUNNING TIME
57 mins.: REVIEWED: 1-3-39.
CAST: Jack Randall. Dorothy Short, Frank
Vaconelli, Dennis Moore. Warner Richmond, Ed
("assidy, Walter Long, Charles Kin?, Earl Douglas.
PRODUCER: Robert Tansey; DIRECTOR:
Robert Hill; AUTHOR: Robert Emmett: SCREEN-
PLAY: Robert Emmett: CAMERAMAN: Bert
Longnecker.
Wings of the Navy
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners: RUNNING TIME:
89 mins.: REVIEWED: 1-19-39; RELEASED:
2-11-39.
CAST: George Brent. Olivia de Havlllund, John
Payne Farnk McHugh John Litel, Victor Jory.
Henry O'Neill, John Ridgley, John Gallaudet,
Donald Briggs, Edgar Edwards, Regis Toomey.
Albert Marin. Jonathan Hale. Pierre Watkln.
Don Douglas. May Hoffman. Alan Davis. Larry
Williams.
2-45
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
PRODUCERS: Jack L. Warner. Hal B. Wallis:
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Lou Edelman: DIREC
TOR: Lloyd Bacon: AUTHOR: Michael Fessier;
SCREENPLAY: Michael Fessier; CAMERAMAN
Arthur Edeson. Elmer Dyer: EDITOR: William
Holmes.
Wings Over Africa
DISTRIBUTOR: Merit Pictures: RUNNING
TIME: 62 mins.: REVIEWED: 8-7-39; Produced
in England.
CAST: Joan Gardner. Ian Colin, James Har-
court. James Carew. James Craven. Alan Napier.
DIRECTOR: Ladislaus Vajda: AUTHOR: Akos
Tolnay; SCREENPLAY: Akos Tolnay; CAMERA
MAN: James Dunlin.
Winner Take All
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century -Fox: RUNNING
TIME: 62 mins.: REVIEWED: 4-12-39; RE
LEASED: 4-21-39.
CAST: Tony Martin. Gloria Stuart. Henry
Armetta. Slim Summerville, Kane Richmond.
Robert Allen, Inez Palange. Johnnie Pirone, Jr..
Pedro de Corboda, Betty Creco. Eleanor Virzie.
PRODUCER: Jerry Hoffman: DIRECTOR: Otto
Brower; AUTHOR: Jerry Cady; SCREENPLAY
Frances Hyland. Albert Ray: CAMERAMAN:
Edward Cronjager: EDITOR: Nick DeMaggio.
Winter Carnival
DISTRIBUTOR: United Artists: RUNNING
TIME: 105 mins.: REVIEWED: 7-20-39; RE
LEASED: 7-28-39.
CAST: Ann Sheridan, Richard Carlson. Helen
Parrish, James Corner. Robert Armstrong. Alan
Baldwin. Joan Brodel. Virginia Gilmore. Cecil
Cunningham. Robert Allen, Marsha Hunt. Morton
Lowry, Jimmy Butler. Kenneth Steven*. Benny
Droham, Martin Turner.
PRODUCER: Walter Wanger: DIRECTOR:
Charles F. Riesner: AUTHOR: Budd Schulberg:
SCREENPLAY: Lester Cole. Budd Schulberg.
Maurice Rapf: CAMERAMAN: Merritt Gerstad;
EDITOR: Dorothy Spencer.
Within the Law
DISTRIBUTOR: Loew's. Inc.: RUNNING TIME:
65 mins.: REVIEWED: 4-12-39: RELEASED:
3-17-39.
CAST: Ruth Hussey. Tom Neal. Paul Kelly.
William Gargan, Paul Cavanaugh, Rita Johnson.
Samuel S. Hinds. Lynne Carver. Sidney Blaekmer.
Jo Ann Sayers, Ann Morriss, James Burke, Donald
Douglas. Cliff Clark, Claude King.
DIRECTOR: Gustav Machaty: AUTHOR: Bay-
ard Veiller; SCREENPLAY: Charles Lederer.
Edith Fitzgerald: CAMERAMAN: Charles Lawton:
EDITOR: George Boemler.
Witness Vanishes, The
DISTRIBUTOR: Universal; RUNNING TIME
66 mins.; REVIEWED: 10-27-39: RELEASED
9-22-39.
CAST: Edmund Loew, Wendy Barne, Bruce
Lester, Walter Kingsford. Forrester Harvey, J. M.
Kerrigan, Barlowe Borland. Vernon Steele. Reg-
inald Barlow. Ley] and Hodgson, Denis Green.
PRODUCER : Irving Starr; DIRECTOR: Otis
Garrett: AUTHOR: James Ronald: SCREENPLAY.
Robertson White; CAMERAMAN: Arthur Marti
aelli.
Wizard of Oz, The
DISTRIBUTOR: LoeWs. Inc.; RUNNING TIME
101 mins.: REVIEWED: 8-10-39: RELEASED
8-25-39.
CAST: Judy Garland. Frank Morgan Bay
Bolger, Bert Lahr, Jack Haley, Billie Burke.
Margaret Hamilton, Charley Grapewin, Pat
Walshe. Clara Blandick. The Singer Midgets.
PRODUCER: Mervyn LeRoy; DIRECTOR: Vic-
tor Fleming: AUTHOR: L. Frank Baum; SCREEN
PLAY: Noel Langley, Florence Ryerson, Edgar
Allan Wolfe, Noel Longley; MUSIC: Harold Ar-
len; LYRICS: E. Y. Harburg; MUSICAL NUM
BERS: Bobby Connolly: CAMERAMAN: Harold
Rosson: EDITOR: Blanche Sewell.
Wolf Call
DISTRIBUTOR: Monogram: RUNNING TIME
61 mins.; REVIEWED: 5-23-39; RELEASED
5-22-39.
CAST: John Carroll. Movita, Peter George
Lynn. Guy Usher. Holmes Herbert. Polly Ann
Young, George Cleveland, John Kelly Wheeler
Oakman John Sheehan, Charles Irwin, Grey Sha-
dow (dog).
PRODUCER: Paul R. Malvern: DIRECTOR
George Waggner: AUTHOR: Jack London
SCREENPLAY: Joseph West: ART DIRECTOR
E. R. Hickson: MUSICAL SCORE: Edward Kay
SONGS: Fleming Allen; CAMERAMAN: Fred
Jackman. Jr.; EDITOR: Carl Pierson.
Woman Doctor
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic: RUNNING TIME
65 mins.: REVIEWED: 1-31-39: RELEASED
2-6-39.
CAST: Frieda Inescort. Henry Wilcoxon, Claire
Dodd. Sybil Jason. Cora Witherspoon, Frank
Reicher. Gus Glassmire, Dickie Jones, Joan
Howard. Spencer Charters, Virginia Brissac, Rex
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Sol C. SiegeL DI-
RECTOR: Sidney Salkow; AUTHORS: Alice Alt-
schuler. Miriam Geiger; SCREENPLAY: Joseph
Moncure March: ART DIRECTOR: John Victor
Mackay: MUSICAL DIRECTOR: Cy Feuer:
CAMERAMAN: Ernest Miller; EDITOR: Ernest
Nims.
Woman Is the Judge, A
DISTRIBUTOR: Columbia: RUNNING TIME
62 mins.: REVIEWED: 10-3-39: RELEASED
7-10-39.
CAST: Frieda Inescort. Otto Kruger. Rochellt
Hudson. Mayo Methot. Gordon Oliver. Arthur Loft.
Walter Fenner, John Dilson Bentley Hewlett.
Beryl Mercer.
DIRECTOR: Nick Grinde: SCREENPLAY: Karl
Brown: CAMERAMAN: Benjamin Kline; EDITOR
Byron Robinson.
Women, The
DISTRIBUTOR : Loew's. Inc. : RUNNING TIME
132 mins.: REVIEWED: 8-29-39: RELEASED
9-1-39.
CAST: Norma Shearer. Joan Crawford. Rosa
lind Russell. Mary Boland, Paulette Goddard.
Phyllis Povah, Joan Fontaine. Virginia Weidler.
Lucile Watson, Florence Nash. Muriel Hutchison
Esther Dale, Ann Morriss, Ruth Hussey. Dennle
Moore, Mary Cecil, Mary Beth Hughes Virginia
Gray Margaret Main. Cora Witherspoon. Hedda
Hopper.
PRODTTER: Hunt Stromberg: DIRECTOR:
246
George Cukor: AL'THOR: Clare Boothe: SCREEN-
PLAY: Anita Loos. Jane Murfin: ART DIREC-
TOR : Cedric Gibbons: MUSICAL SCORE: Edward
W3rd. David Snell: CAMERAMEN: Oliver T.
Marsh. Joseph Ruttenberg; EDITOR: Robert J.
Kerns.
Women in the Wind
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners: RUNNING TIME
65 mins.: REVIEWED: 4-21-39: RELEASED:
4 15-39.
CAST: Kay Francis. William Gargan. Victor
Jory. Maxie Rosenbloom. Eddie Foy. Jr.. Sheila
Bromley. Eve Arden. Charles Anthony Hughes.
Frankie Burke. John Dilson. Spencer Charters.
Vera Lewis. William Gould. Gordon Hart, Ha
Rhodes. Roselle Towne.
DIRECTOR: John Farrow: AUTHOR: Francis
Walton: SCREENPLAY: Lee Katz. Albert De-
Mond: CAMERAMAN: Sid Hickox: EDITOR
Thomas Pratt.
Wuthering Heights
DISTRIBUTOR: United Artists: RUNNING
TIME: 103 mins.: REVIEWED: 3-28-39; RE-
LEASED: 4-7-39.
CAST: Merle Oberon. Laurence Olivier. David
Niven. Flora Robson. Donald Crisp. Geraldine
Fitzgerald. Hugh Williams. Leo G. Carroll. Cecil
Humphries. Miles Mander. Romaine Callender.
Cecil Kellaway. Rex Downing. Sarita Wooten.
Douglas Scott.
PRODUCER: Samuel Goldwyn: DIRECTOR
William Wyler: AUTHOR: Emily Bronte:
SCREENPLAY: Ben Hecht. Charles MacArthur:
MUSICAL DIRECTOR: Alfred Newman: CAMERA
MAN: Greg:? Toland: EDITOR: Daniel Mande>
Wyoming Outlaw
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic: RUNNING TIME:
62 mins.: REVIEWED: 7-13-39; RELEASED:
6-27-39.
CAST: John Wayne. Ray Corrigan. Raymond
Hatton, Donald Barry. Adele Pearce. LeRoy
Mason. Charles Middleton. Katherine Kenworthy.
Elmo Lincoln. Jack Ingram, David Sharpe. Jack
Kenney. Yakima Canutt.
PRODUCER: William Berke: DIRECTOR:
George Sherman: AUTHOR: Jack Natteford:
SCREENPLAY: Betty Burbridge. Jack Natteford:
CAMERAMAN: Reggie Lanning: EDITOR: Tony
Martinelli.
Yes, My Darling Daughter
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners: RUNNING TIME
SO mins.: REVIEWED: 2-15-39: RELEASED:
2-25-39.
CAST: Priscilla Lane. Jeffrey Lynn. Roland
Young. Fay Bainter. May Robson. Genevieve
Tobin. Ian Hunter. Robert Homans. Edward
Gargan. Spencer Charters. Lottie Williams.
PRODUCERS: Jack L. Warner. Hal B. Wallis:
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Benjamin Glazer: DI-
RECTOR: William Keighley: AUTHOR: Mark
Reed: SCREENPLAY: Casey Robinson: CAMERA
MAN: Charles Rosher: EDITOR: Ralph Dawson.
You Can't Cheat an Honest Man
DISTRIBUTOR: Universal: RUNNING TIME:
TO mins.: REVIEWED: 2-20-39: RELEASED -
2-17-39.
CAST: W. C. Fields. Edgar Bergren (with
Charlie McCarthy and Mortimer Snerd), Constance
Moore John Arledge. James Bush, Thurston Hall.
Mary Forbes. Edward Brophy, Arthur Hohl.
Princess Baba Blacaman. Eddie Anderson.
PRODUCER: Lester Cowan: DIRECTOR: George
Marshall: AUTHOR: Charles Bogle: SCREEN-
PLAY: George Marion. Jr.. Richard Mack. Everett
Freeman: ART DIRECTOR: Jack Otterson: MU-
SICAL DIRECTOR: Charles Previn: CAMERA
MAN: Milton Krasner: EDITOR: Otto Ludwig-.
You Can't Get Away With Murder
DISTRIBUTOR: Warners: RUNNING TIME:
78 mins.: REVIEWED: 3-29-39: RELEASED:
4-29-39.
FEATURE RELEASE CREDITS
CAST: Humphrey Bogart. Billy Halop. Gale
Page. John Litel. Henry Travers, Harvey Ste-
phens. Harold Huber. Joe Sawyer. Joe Downing.
George E. Stone, Joseph King, Joseph Crehan.
John Ridgely, Herbert Rawlinson.
DIRECTOR: Lewis Seiler: AUTHOR: Lewis
Lawes, Jonathan Finn; SCREENPLAY: Robert
Buckner. Don Ryan. Kenneth Garnet: CAMERA
MAN: Sol Polito: EDITOR: James Gibbon.
Young Mr. Lincoln
DISTRIBUTOR: 20th Century-Fox: RUNNING
TIME: 100 mins.: REVIEWED: 6-2-39: RE-
LEASED: 6-9-39.
CAST: Henry Fonda. Alice Brady, Marjorir
Moore. Richarddd 1HAP0
Weaver, Arleen Whelan. Eddie Collins. Pauline
Moore. Richard Cromwell. Donald Meek. Dorris
Bowdon. Eddie Quillan. Spencer Charters. Ward
Bond. Milburn Stone, Cliff Clark. Robert Lowery.
Charles Tannen. Francis Ford. Fred Kohler. Jr.
PRODUCER: Kenneth Macgowan: DIRECTOR:
John Ford: AUTHOR: Lamar Trotti; SCREEN
PLAY: Lamar Trotti: CAMERAMAN: Bert Glen
non: EDITOR: Walter Thompson.
Youth in Revolt (French)
DISTRIBUTOR : Columbia: RUNNING TIME:
91 mins.: REVIEWED: 5-24-39: Produced in
France.
CAST: Jean-Louis Barrault. Fabien Loris.
Charles Daurat. Odette Joyeux: DIRECTOR: Jean
Benoit-Levy.
Zaza
DISTRIBUTOR: Paramount: RUNNING TIME:
70 mins.: REVIEWED: 1-4-39: RELEASED:
1-13-39.
CAST: Claudette Colbert. Herbert Marshall. Bert
Lahr. Helen Westley. Constance Collier. Genevieve
Tobin. Walter Catlett. Rex O'Malley. Rex Evans.
Robert C. Fischer. Ernest Cossart John Sutton.
Michael Brook. Philip Warren, Alexander Left-
wich. Janet Waldon. Fredrika Brown. Clarence
Harvey. John Power. Dorothy Davton.
PRODUCER: Albert Lewin: DIRECTOR: George
Cuknr: AUTHORS: Pierre Berton. Charles Simon:
SCREENPLAY: Zoe Akins: CAMERMAN: Charles
Lang: EDITOR: Edward Dmytryk.
Zenobia
DISTRIBUTOR: United Artists: RUNNING
TIME: 71 mins.: REVIEWED: 3-14-39: RE-
LEASED: 4-21-39.
CAST: Oliver Hardy. Harry Langdon. Billie
Burke. Alice Brady. James Ellison. Jean Parker.
June Lang. Olin Howland, J. Farrell MacDonald.
Stephin Fetchit, Hattie McDaniels, Philip Hurlic.
Hobart Cavanaugh. Clem Bevans. Chester Conk-
lin. Tommy Mack. Robert Dudley. Hall Johnson
Choir.
PRODUCER: Hal Roach: ASSOCIATE PRO
DUCER: A. Edward Sutherland: DIRECTOR
Gordon Douglas: AUTHORS: Walter DeLeon.
Arnold Belgard: SCREENPLAY: Corey Ford: ART
DIRECTOR: Charles D. Hall: MUSICAL SCORE:
Marvin Hatley: CHORAL ARRANGEMENTS: Hall
Johnson: CAMERAMAN: Karl Struss: SPECIAL
EFFECTS: Roy Seawright: EDITOR: Bert Jordan.
Zero Hour
DISTRIBUTOR: Republic: RUNNING TIME
62 mins.; REVIEWED: 5-24-39; RELEASED:
5-26-39.
CAST: Frieda Inescourt. Otto Kruger. Adrienne
Ames. Don Douglas. Jane Darwell, J. M. Kerrigan.
Ann Todd. Leonard Carey. Sarah Padden, Ferris
Taylor. Willard Parker. Landers Stevens.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Sol C. Siegel: DIREC-
TOR: Sidney Salkow; AUTHOR: Garrett Fort;
SCREENPLAY: Garrett Fort: ART DIRECTOR:
John Victor Mackay; MUSICAL DIRECTOR: Cy
Feuer: CAMERAMAN: Ernest Miller; EDITOR:
William Morgan.
247
SHORT SUBJECT
TITLES
A LIST OF SHORT SUBJECTS RELEASED DURING 1939
— A —
A Ducking They Did Go Columbia
Acres of Plenty RKO Radio
Act Your Age RKO Radio
Africa, Land of Conquest Paul Devlin
Africa, Land of Heat Paul Devlin
Africa Squawks 20th Century-Fox
Aghileen Pinnacles, The 20th Century-Fox
Air Waves RKO Radio
Aladdin And His Wonderful Lamp Paramount
Alfalfa's Aunt M-G-M
All American Blondes Columbia
Always Kickin' Paramount
American Royal RKO Radio
American Saddle Horses Vitaphone
An Hour for Lunch M-G-M
Ancient Egypt M-G-M
Andy Clyde Gets Spring Chicken Columbia
Angel of Mercy M-G-M
Apollon. Dave, & Orchestra Vitaphom
Aqua Rhythm Paramount
Arabian Ba«aar United Artists
Arabs With Dirty Fezzes Universal
Arcade Varieties RKO Radio
Archery Versus Golf Hoff berg
Art Education Amkino
Art Gallery, The M-G-M
Art of Make-up Columbia
Ash Can Fleet, The M-G-M
Auto Antics M-G-M
Autograph Hound, The RKO Radio
Ave Maria French Film Exchange
Awful Goof. The Columbia
— B
Baby Daze RKO Radio
Background for War, The Mediterranean. RKO Radio
Baking and Confectionery Industry Amkino
Bakuriani Amkino
Bandits and Ballade RKO Radio
Bank Notes Universal
Barnyard Baseball 20th Century-Fox
Barnyard Brat Paramount
Barnyard Egg-Citement 20th Century-Fox
Barron. Blue. & Orchestra Vitaphone
Bars and Stripes Forever Vitaphonc
Battle Fleets of England. Thi RKO Radio
Beach Picnic RKO Radio
Bear That Couldn't Sleep. The M-G-M
Beautiful Switzerland ....Columbia
Believe It or Else Vitaphom
Bit Fish Columbia
Big Game Fishing... ...20th Century -Fox
Big Town Commutes Columbia
Bill of Rights Vitaphom
Bird on Nellie's Hat Universal
Birth of a Toothpick Universal
Birth of the Movies Alliance
Birthplace of Icebergr 20th Century-Fox
Bits of Life Paramount
Blamed for a Blonde RKO Radio
Blue Danube, The M-G-M
Blue Danube Waltz, The Paramount
Bola Mola Land Universal
Book of Books Columbia
Bookworm. The M-G-M
Boom Goes the Groom Columbia
Bow String RKO Radio
Bows and Arrows Columbia
Boy Meets Joy Universal
Breaking the News Paramount
Broadway Buckaroo Vitaphone
Building of Boys Columbia
Busy Little Bears Paramount
- C —
Cafe Boheme Universal
Calling All Curs Columbia
Captain Spanky's Showboat M-G-M
Catalina Islands Columbia
Catching Whoppers Paramount
Chained Vitaphone
Champagne Music of Lawrence Welk . . Paramount
Charity Ball Columbia
Charles Goodyear Columbia
Charlie Cukoo Universal
Charm Bracelet, The Columbia
Chicken Jitters Vitaphone
Chile Paramount
China Fights On Amkino
Chump Takes a Bump, The Columbia
Circus Co-ed Paramount
City. The Civic Films
Clinton. Larry. & Orchestra Vitaphone
Clock Wise RKO Radio
Clocking the Jockeys 20th Century-Fox
Clown Princess M-G-M
Coal Amkino
Coat Tails RKO Radio
College Songs Columbia
Colombia Paramount
Colorful Curacao M-G-M
Conquering the Colorado 20th Century-Fox
Couriers of the Xation Emerson Yorke
Cousin Wilbur M-G-M
Crack Pot Cruise Universal
Crawfords "At Home.'' The Vitaphone
Crime Wave RKO Radio
Crisis Mayer & Burstyn
Crisis in the Pacific RKO Radio
Crop Chasers Columbia
Crosby Hit Song* Columbia
Cuckoo Bird. The. . .20th Century -Fox
Culinary Carving M-G-M
Cupid Rides the Range RKO Radio
Curious Puppy Vitaphone
Customers Wanted Paramount
248
SHORT SUBJECT TITLES
Dad for a Day M-G-M
Daffy Duck and Dinosaur Vitaphone
Dangerous Dan McFoo Vitaphone
Day At the Zoo, A Vitaphone
Day of Rest, The M-G-M
Day on Treasure Island, The M-G-M
Dark Magic M-G-M
Dean of the Pasteboards Vitaphone
Death Valley Thrills Paramount
DeLange, Eddie, & Orchestra Vitaphone
Desert Adventure, A Paramount
Detouring America Vitaphone
Devil Drivers RKO Radio
Diamond Dust Paramount
Diving- Rhythm Columbia
Dixie. U. S. A RKO Radio
Djamboul Amkino
Dog Daze M-G-M
Dog Gone RKO Radio
Dog Is Born, A Paramount
Doggone Modern Vitaphone
Donald's Lucky Day RKO Radio
Donald's Penguin RKO Radio
Double Diving M-G-M
Dream of Love, A M-G-M
Dreams on Ice Columbia
Drunk Driving M-G-M
Duel Personalities M-G-M
Ecuador Paramount
18th Anniversary Reel Columbia
Elias Howe Columbia
Eternal Fire United Artists
Evergreen Empire, The 20th Century -Fox
— F —
Fagin's Freshmen Vitaphone
Failure at Fifty, A M-G-M
Farewell Vienna Paramount
Fashion Forecasts (Nos. 3, 4. 5. til
20th Century-Fox
Fat Chance, A Vitaphone
Feathered Pests RKO Radio
Film Fan, The Vitaphone
Filming the Fleet 20th Century-Fox
Fio Rito, Ted, & Orchestra Paramount
First Robin, The 20th Century-Fox
Fisherman's Pluck ... Paramount
Five Times Five RKO Radio
Flying Frogs Amkino
Flying Targets Columbia
Football Thrills of 1038 M-G-M
Footsteps American Red Cross
For Auld Lang Syne. .Rogers Memorial Committee
For Your Convenience Vitaphone
Forgotten Victory M-G-M
Fox Hunting United Artists
France in North Africa Paul Devlin
Fresh Fish Vitaphone
Fresh Vegetable Mystery, The Paramount
Friendship Songs Columbia
Frozen Feet 20th Century-Fox
Fur Wealth of the U. S. S. R Amkino
— 6? —
Gadgeteers Vitaphone
Gals and Gallons Universal
Gandy Goose in a Bully Romance.
20th Century-Fox
Gandy Goose in G-Man Jitters. .20th Century Fox
Getting Your Money's Worth (No. 3)
Lenauer International
Ghosks Is the Bunk Paramount
Giant of Norway M-G-M
Glimpses of Australia M-G-M
Glove Slingers Columbia
Going Places (Nos. 59, 60, 61, 62, 63,
64, 65, 66, 67. 68. 6!). 70 1 Universal
Gold RKO Radio
Golden West, The 20th Century-Fox
Goldrush Daze Vitaphone
Goldilocks and the Three Bears M-G-M
Golf Chumps Columbia
Good Egg Vitaphone
Good Neighbors 20th Century-Fox
Good Skates Paramount
Goofy and Wilbur RKO Radio
Gorilla Hunt, The Columbia
Greener Hills, The M-G-M
Gun Play RKO Radio
Gypsy Songs Columbia
— # —
Ham-ateur Night Vitaphone
Happily Buried M-G-M
Happy Childhood Amkino
Harum Scarum Vitaphone
Happy Tots Columbia
Haunted House Vitaphone
Hello, Mama RKO Radio
Hello How Am I Paramount
Help Wanted M-G-M
Here Comes Malicious Turf O'Grams
Here's Hal Paramount
Hermitage Amkino
Heroes at Leisure M-G-M
High Peril Vitaphone
Historic Cities of India Columbia
Hitch-Hiker, The 20th Century-Fox
Hobo Gadget Band Vitaphone
Hockey Champ, The RKO Radio
Hold Your Breath Paramount
Holland and the Zuyder Zee Columbia
Hollywood Goes Hawaiian Columbia
Hollywood Hobbies M-G-M
Hollywood Sweepstakes Columbia
Home Boner RKO Radio
Home Cheap Home Vitaphone
Home Early M-G-M
Homes of Today FHA
Hook, Line and Sinker 20th Century-Fox
Horse Show Columbia
House That Jack Built, The Columbia
Housing In Our Time. . . .V. S. Housing Authority
How to Eat M-G-M
How to Sublet M-G-M
Hunting Dogs 20th Century-Fox
Hunting Hounds RKO Radio
Hydro-Maniacs Paramount
— / —
I'll Tell the World MacFadden Publications
I'm Just a Jitterbug Universal
lee Antics M-G-M
Ice Cutters RKO Radio
Ice Frolics Vitaphone
Ice Pond, The 20th Century-Fox
Imperial Delhi M-G-M
Information Please (Nos. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5 i . RKO Radio
Inside Baseball 20th Century-Fox
Inside the Capitol Columbia
Inside the White House Columbia
Iron and Steel Amkino
Isle of Pleasure 20th Century-Fox
It's An 111 Wind Vitaphone
It's the Natural Thing to Do Paramount
249
SHORT SUBJECT TITLES
— J —
Jai Alai Columbia
Jamaica Paramount
Japan: Master of the Orient RKO Radio
Java Journey M-G-M
Jeepers Creepers Vitaphone
Jerusalem United Artists
Jitterbug- Follies M-G-M
Jitterbug- Knights Columbia
Jockeys Up Columbia
Joy Scouts M-G-M
Judo Experts Paramount
— K —
Mr. Sheldon Goes to Town Cinema Sale*
Modern Methods Vitaphone
Moments of Charm ol 1940 Paramount
Money to Loan M-G-M
Monkeys ia the Cwaziest People. .20th Century-Fox
Monroe Doctrine Vitaphone
Montmarte Madness Columbia
Monument to Rustavelli Amkino
Mooching Through ' Georgia Columbia
Moonlight Melodies Columbia
Morgan. Russ. & Orchestra Vitaphone
Morocco Columbia
Moscow Subway Amkino
Mother, The Astor
Mother Goose in Swingtime Columbia
Mountain Ears Columbia
Movies March On. The RKO Radio
Moving Vanities RKO Radio
Muscle Maulers 20th Century-Fox
Music Through the Years Paramount
Musical Mountaineers Paramount
Mutiny on the Body Columbia
My Friend the Monkey Paramount
Mystic Siam 20th Century-Fox
Kennedy the Great RKO Radio
Kennel Kings RKO Radio
King Vulture Columbia
Know Your History (Nos. 1, 2, 3j Columbia
Krazy's Bear Tale Columbia
Krazy's Shoe Shop Columbia
Kristopher Kolumbus. Jr Vitaphone
— L —
Land of Alaska Nellie M-G-M
Land of Inca Memories Paramount
Land of the Midnight Fun Vitaphone
Leave Well Enough Alone Paramount
Lebanon Coast United Artists
Let's Talk Turkey M-G-M
Library of Congress Columbia
Lincoln in the White House Vitaphone
Little Brother Rat Vitaphone
Little Goldfish, The M-G-M
Little Lion Hunter Vitaphone
Little Lost Sheep Columbia
Little Tough Mice Universal
Lives in Peril Vitaphone
Livingston, Jerry, & Orchestra Vitaphone
Lone Stranger and Porky, The Vitaphone
Lopez, Vincent, & Orchestra Vitaphone
Love On Tap M-G-M
Lucas, Clyde, & Orchestra Vitaphone
Lucky Pigs Columbia
M —
McCoy. Clyde, & Orchestra Vitaphone
Mad Maestro, The M-G-M
Magic Beans Universal
Magic Fish Amkino
Maid to Order RKO Radio
Mama's New Hat M-G-M
Man Made Island Columbia
March of Freedom . Universal
Marching Youth Amkino
Marine Circus . . . M-G-M
Marriage Go-Round RKO Radio
Masters, Frankie, & Orchestra Paramount
Master's Touch, The Vitaphone
May Day, 1939 Amkino
Meat Amkino
Mechanix Illustrated (Nos. 2, 3, 4, 5. o',
1938-39: 1. 2, 1939-401 Vitaphone
Memory Lingers On, The Bert Ennis
Mendelssohn's Wedding March M-G-M
Merry Wives of Windsor Paramount
Metropolis, 1939 RKO Radio
Millionaire Hobo . . .Columbia
Minute from Death. A Vitaphone
Miracle at Lourdes M-G-M
Miracles of Modernization FHA
N
Nation's Capitol- Washington, D. C. Emerson Yorke
Natural Wonders of Washington State M-G-M
Naughty But Mice Vitaphone
Naughty Neighbors Vitaphone
Nautical Knights Universal
Navy Champions Columbia
Nellie of the Circus Universal
Nell's Yells Columbia
Nevada Unlimited RKO Radio
Never Sock a Baby Paramount
New Hampshire Columbia
New Moscow Amkino
New Roadways M-G-M
Newsfronts of War. 1940 RKO Radio
Nick's Coffee Pot 20th Century -Fox
Night at the Troc, A Columbia
Night In a Music Hall, A Columbia
North Sea Lenauer International
Novelty Parties Columbia
Now It Can Be Sold Columbia
Nutty Network, The 20th Century-Fox
— () —
Odd Sports Columbia
Officer Duck RKO Radio
Oily to Bed. Oily to Rise Columbia
Old Fire Horse. The 20th Century-Fox
Old Glory Vitaphone
Old Hickory Vitaphone
Old Natchez M-G-M
Old Time Songs Columbia
One Against the World M-G-M
One Armed Bandit Universal
One Day Stand Vitaphone
One Gun Gary in Nick ol Time. .2oth Century-Fox
One Mother's Family M-G-M
One Mouse in a Million . . 20lh Century-Fox
Orphan Duck. The 20th Century-Fox
Osborne, Will, & Orchestra Vitaphone
Owl and the Pussycat, The . :.'0th Century-Fox
— P —
Pack Trip RKO Radio
Palace of Pioneers Amkino
Parade of Hits, The Columbia
Paramount Pictorials (Nos. b, 7, 8. 9,
10, 11, 12) Paramount
Paramount Presents Hoagy Carmichael . Paramount
Park Your Baby Columbia
Peace on Earth M-G-M
Peaceful Neighbors Columbia
230
Peru Paramount
Pest from the West Columbia
Pete Roleum and His Cousins Joseph Losey
Petra United Artists
Petunia Natural Park M-G-M
Pharmacy Frolics Universal
Picturesque Udaipur M-G-M
Pied Piper Porky Vitaphone
Pilot Boat RKO Radio
Playtime for the Stars Columbia
Plumb Crazy RKO Radio
Poetry of Nature M-G-M
Pointer, The RKO Radio
Points on Pointers Vitaphone
Polar Pals Vitaphone
Popular Science (.Nos. 3, 4, 6. b', 1,
2, 3) Paramount
Porky and Teabiscuit Vitaphone
Porky the Giant Killer Vitaphone
Porky's Hotel Vitaphone
Porky's Movie Mystery Vitaphone
Porky's Picnic Vitaphone
Porky's Tire Trouble Vitaphone
Pound Foolish M-G-M
Practical Pig-, The RKO Radio
Prest-o Change-o Vitaphone
Prize Guest, The 20th Century-Fox
Projection Room Vitaphone
Prophet Without Honor M-G-M
Public Hobby Number One Paramount
Puppet Theater Amkino
— Q —
Quaint St. Augustine M-G-M
Quiet Please Vitaphone
— R —
Radio Hams M-G-M
Raiders Over England Monogram
Ranch House Romeo RKO Radio
Rattling Romeo Columbia
Readin', Ritin' and Rhythm KKO Radio
Red Army Amkino
Red Army Sportsmen Amkino
Rembrandt French Film Exchange
Republic of Panama Paramount
Rhumba Land Universal
Rhumba Rhythm M-G-M
Rhythm on the Reservation Paramount
Ride, Cowboy Ride Vitaphone
Riding the Crest .... KKO Radio
Right to Education Amkino
Right to Rest Amkino
Right Way. The Vitaphone
Ring Madness RKO Radio
Rio, Rita, & Orchestra. . Vitaphone
River Thames United Artists
Roaming Camera, The Vitaphone
Robinhood Makes Good Vitaphone
Rollin' in Rhythm Vitaphone
Romance in Color Vitaphone
Romance in Industry Gontard Ilfleld
Romance of the Potato M-G-M
Rome Symphony . . United Artists
Royal Rodeo Vitaphone
SHORT SUBJECT TITLES
Rubinoff and Orchestra Vitaphone
Ruins of Palmyra and Baalbek. .United Artists
Rural Hungary M-G-M
— s —
Sage Brush Serenade RKO Radio
Sales Slips RKO Radio
Samovar Serenade RKO Radio
Sand Hogs 20th Century-Fox
Sap Takes a Wrap, The Columbia
Saved By the Belle Columbia
Scared Crows, The Paramount
Scrappy's Added Attraction Columbia
Scrappy's Rodeo Columbia
Scrappy's Sideshow Columbia
Screwball Football Vitaphone
Sea Scouts RKO Radio
Seal Skinners M-G-M
See Your Doctor M-G-M
Seeing Red Vitaphone
Seeing Spots Vitaphone
Set 'Em Up M-G-M
Shaw, Artie, & Orchestra U938-39) .. .Vitaphone
Shaw, Artie. & Orchestra (1939-40) .. .Vitaphone
Shaw's, Artie, Class in Swing Paramount
Sheep in the Meadow 20th Century-Fox
Shooting for Par 20th Century-Fox
Silly Superstition Universal
Silent Night, Holy Night Hofiberg
Sioux Me Vitaphone
Ski Birds M-G-M
Ski Girl Vitaphone
Skinny the Moocher Columbia
Sky Fighters 20th Century-Fox
Sky Game RKO Radio
Slap Happy Valley Universal
Slapsie Maxie's Vitaphone
Small Fry Paramount
Small Town Idol Vitaphone
Smithsonian Institution Columbia
Snifflles and Bookworm Vitaphone
Snow Falls RKO Radio
Snow Follies Universal
Snow Man's Land Vitaphone
Snuffy's Party Universal
So Does An Automobile Paramount
Society Dog Show RKO Radio
Sojourn in India Columbia
Soldiers of the Sea RKO Radio
Soldiers With Wings RKO Radio
Somewhat Secret M-G-M
Somewhere On the Western Front Astor
Song Is Born, A Paramount
Songs of Romance. Columbia
Songs of the West Columbia
Sons of Liberty Vitaphone
Sophomore Swing Vitaphone
Soup to Mutts Universal
Soviet Fishermen Amkino
Soviet Village Amkino
Soviet Woman, The Amkino
Sporting Irish, The Paramount
Sporting Wings RKO Radio
251
SHORT SUBJECT TITLES
— U —
Sports Immortals 20th Century -Fox
Star is Shorn. A Columbia
Starlight Night Hoffberir
Stars on the Radio Columbia
State of the Nation, The RKO Radio
Static in the Attic Columbia
Stephen Foster Sonirs Columbia
Stevens. Leith. & Orchestra Vitaphone
Story of Alfred Nobel. The M-G-M
Story of Dr. Jenner. The M-G-M
Story That Couldn't Be Printed M-G-M
Stranger Than Fiction (Nos. 58. 59. 60,
61, 62. 63. 64. 65. 66. 67. 68. 69. 70) .Universal
Strauss Waltzes Columbia
Stubborn Mule Universal
Sundae Serenade Vitaphone
Swans Paramount
Sweet Moments Paramount
Swing- Hotel Universal
Swing- Opera. A Vitaphone
Swing Sanatorium Universal
Swing Styles Vitaphone
Swing- Vacation RKO Radio
Swing- You Swingers Columbia
Swing's The Thing Astor
Swingtime in the Movies Vitaphone
Swingnet RKO Radio
Sword Fishing Vitaphone
— T —
Take a Cue
Talking- Feet .
Tax Trouble
Teacher's Pest
Technique of Tennis
Television
Tempest Over T
M-G-M
. . . Hoffberir
. .Vitaphone
. .Columbia
. . Columbia
RKO Radio
unis 20th Century-Fox
Tempo of Tomorrow Paramount
That's Africa Paramount
Their Last Bean 20th Century -Fox
Their New Fatherland Amkino
There Goes Rusty Columbia
Fil"st M-G-M
Three Bears. The 20th Century-Fox
Three Kings and a Queen Paramount
Three Little Sew and Sews Columbia
Three Minute Fuse Vitaphone
Three Sappy People Columbia
Thru the Claciers of the Caucau ;i Amkino
Thugs With Dirty Mugs Vitaphom-
Time Out for Lessons M-G-M
Tiny Troubles M-G-M
Touchdown Review Paramount
Trailing the Jaguar Hoffberg
Training Animal Stars Columbia
Trip to the Sky French Film Exchange
Tropical Ice Gardens Columbia
Tropical Topics RKO Radio
Trouble Finds Andy Clyde Columbia
Truth Aches RKO Radio
Two Boys and a Doc Paramount
Two Headed Giant 20th Cestury-Fox
U. S. Treasury Columbia
U. S. S. R. on the Screen Amkino
Uely Duckling The rro Radio
Uncle Sam. the Farmer rko Radio
Unfinished Symphony. The Paramount
Unseen Guardians M-G-M
Unusual Occupations (Nos. 4. 5. 6.
1. 2)
. Paramount
— V —
Valiant Venezuela M-G-M
Versre of Disaster Vitaphone
Viking Trail. The »Oth Century-Fox
Voodoo Fire Vitaphone
Vote Trouble Vitaphone
— TV-
Wanderers of the Desert United Artists
Wanted No Master M-G-M
War. Peace and Propaganda RKO Radio
Wardrobe Girl Vitaphone
Warning. The Alliance
Watch Tour Step Paramount
Watchdog The 20th Century-Fox
We Want Our Mummy Columbia
Weather Wizards M-G-M
West Wa» ...'.RKO Radio
What Every Inventor Should Know
20th Century-Fox
While America Sleeps M-G-M
Wicky -Wacky Romance 20th Century-Fox
Wild and Bully Universal
. Paramount
William Tell
Winter Playground rro Radio
Winter Wonderland Emerson Torke
Wise Quack Vitaphone
With Best Dishes Universal
With These Weapons.
American Social Hygiene Ass'n
Witness Trouble Vitaphone
World Leaders on Peace and Democracy.
T. M. C. A.
World of 1960 Columbia
World of Tomorrow. The RKO Radio
World's Fair. Jr Vitaphone
Worm's Eye View. A Columbia
Wotta Nitemare Paramount
Wrong Room. The rro Radio
— Y —
Yankee Doodle Goes to Town M-G-M
Yankee Doodle Home Columbia
Yes. We Have No Bonanza Columbia
Yip Yip Yippy Paramount
You're Next to Closing Vitaphone
Young America Atlas
Young America — Mexico's New Crisis. .RKO Radio
Youth in the Saddle 20th Century-Fox
— z —
Zoo
Zoo in Manhattan.
RKO Radio
.... Central
252
COMPANY
RELEASES
DURiMG 1939
An asterisk (*) indicates that the information was made up from
Film Daily records. Other data was supplied by distributors.
William Alexander
FEATURE*
Ireland's Border Line.
Alliance Films Corp.
FEATURES
Dead Men Tell No Tales, Black Limelight, House-
master, North Sea Patrol, Just Like a Woman.
SHORTS*
Birth of the Movies, The Warning'.
Amkino Corp.
FEATURES
Great Citizen, Man With the Gun. Soviet Border.
Concentration Camp. Alexander Nevsky, New Hor-
izons, Oppenheim Family, Amangeldy, Lenin in
1918, Conquests of Peter the Great, On His Own,
Shors. The Golden Key.
SHORTS
Their New Fatherland, Djamboul, Bakuriani,
Flying Frog's, Red Army Sportsmen, Thru the
Glaciers of the Caueausus, Monument to Rustavelli,
Right to Rest, May Day 1939, Moscow Subway,
Art Education. Right to Work, Baking and Con-
fectionery Industry, The Soviet Woman. Iron and
Steel. Coal, New Moscow, China Fights On, Happy
Childhood, Palace of Pioneers, Right to Education,
Meat, Soviet Fishermen, Fur Wealth of the USSR,
Voicet Village, Hermitage, Red Army. Magic Fish,
Puppet Theater, Marching Young, Issues of U. S.
S. R. On the Screen.
Apex Pictures
FEATURE
Mothers of Today I Yiddish i .
Astor Pictures Corp.
FEATURES
Tumbleweeds", Everything is Rhythm, U-67, Out
of Singapore, Gay Nineties, Hell's Angels*.
SHORTS
Swing's The Thing, The Mother, Somewherr on
the Western Front.
• Reissue.
Avramenko
FEATURE
Cossacks in Exile (Ukrainian).
Casino Film Exchange, Inc.
FEATURES
Musketier Meier III, Dahinten in del' Heice
Maedchen in Weiss, Hummel-Hummel, Herbst-
manoever, Der lustige Witwenball, Familie
Schimek, Fremdenheim Filoda, Die Blonde Car-
men, Der Favorit der Kaiserin.
Columbia Pictures
FEATURES
Homicide Bureau. The Thundering West. Fron-
tier of '49, The Lone Wolf Spy Hunt, Texas
Stampede, North of Shanghai, My Son Is a Crimi-
nal, Let Us Live, Blondie Meets the Boss, Lone
Star Pioneers, Whispering Enemies. Romance of the
Redwoods, North of the Yukon, The Lady and the
Mob. First Offenders, The Law Comes to Texas.
Spoilers of the Range, Outside These Walls, Blind
Alley. Missing Daughters, Only Angels Have Wings.
Trapped in the Sky. Western Caravans. Clouds Over
Europe. Parents on Trial, Good Girls Go to Paris,
A Woman is the Judge, Blondie Takes a Vacation,
The Man from Sundown. Behind Prison Gates.
Coast Guard, The Man They Could Not Hang, Five
Little Peppers and How They Grew, Riders of Black
River, Konga. The Wild Stallion, Golden Boy, Hid
den Power, Outpost of the Mounties, Those High
Grey Walls, U-Boat 29, Scandal Sheet, Mr. Smith
Goes to Washington, Beware Spooks!, Miracle on
Main Street, The Stranger from Texas, Blondie
Brings up Baby, The Amazing Mr. Williams, Cafe
Hostess, Fugitive at Large, Taming of the West,
My Son is Guilty. L'Alibi (French). Youth in Re-
volt (French), Runaways of St. Agil (French),
The Devil is an Empress (French).
SHORTS
All-Star Comedies 26 2-reelers
Music Hall Vanities 4 1-reelers
Color Rhapsodies 12 1-reelers
Krazy Kat Cartoons 3 1-reelers
Scrappy Cartoons 4 1-reelers
Phantasies Cartoons 2 1-reelers
Fables Cartoons 2 1-reelers
253
Community Sing 11 l-reelers
Sport Recles 11 l-reelers
Screen Snapshots 11 l-reelers
Washing-ton Parade 5 l-reelers
Fools Who Made History 2 l-reelere
Columbia Tours 8 l-reelers
Happy Hour Specials 6 l-reelers
Cinescope 1 l-reeler
SERIALS
Flying- G-Men, Mandrake — the Magician, Over-
land With Kit Carson.
Commonwealth Productions
FEATURE*
Typhoon Treasure.
Concord Films
FEATURE*
Rasputin (French).
Credo Pictures
FEATURE*
Mirele Efros (Yiddish).
Danubia Pictures
FEATURES*
Erik a Buzakalasz (Hung-arian) ; Fehervari
Huszarok (Hung-arian): Keseru Kezeshetek (Hun-
garian); Meg-vedtem Egy Asszonyt (Hungarian):
Szeg-eny Gozdagok (Hungarian); Szivet Szivert
(Hungarian); Toprini Nasz (Hungarian).
Esperia Film Distributing Co.
FEATURES
Eravamo 7 Sorelle, Lotte Nell'Ombra. Sotto la
Croce del Sud, Per Uomini Soli, Scipione l'Africano.
II Signor Max. Ho Perduto Mio Marita, Amore
Sulle Alpi, Aria del Continente, Lo Squadronc
Bianco, Matrimonio Ideale, Re di Danari.
Film Alliance of the United States
FEATURES
The Challenge, Second Bureau. Bombs Over Lon-
don, Torpedoed, Treachery on the High Seas, Port
of Shadows, Citadel of Silence.
French Cinema Center
FEATURES*
Harvest (French).
French Motion Picture Corp.
FEATURE*
Heartbeat (French).
Garrison Films
FEATURE*
The 400 Million.
Gateway Productions
FEATURE*
Bad Boy.
COMPANY RELEASES
Grand National Pictures
FEATURES*
Exile Express, Panama Patrol, Ride 'Em Cow-
girl. Six-Gun Rhythm, Trigger Pals.
HO Films
FEATURE*
Whirlpool of Desire (French).
J. H. Hoffberg Co.
FEATURES
English: School for Husbands, Rangle River. Thf
Forbidden Territory. Secret of Stamboul. Timber
Land Terror. Irish: Father O'Flynn. French: Made-
moiselle Ma Mere. Escape from Yesterday. Polish:
Zabawka, Pan Redaktor Szaleie. Swedish: En Saga.
Czechoslovakian : Senkyka v Divoke Krasy, To
Zezhate Hadimrsku. Dutch: De Big Van Het Regi-
ment. Spanish: Plegaria Gaucha.
SHORTS
Talking Feet. Trailing the Jaguar. Slarhsht
-Night.
Hollywood Productions
FEATURE*
Harlem Rides the Range.
Hungaria Pictures
FEATURES*
Boreas Amerikaban (Hungarian); Gyimesi Vad-
virag (Hungarian): Harapos Ferj (Hungarian):
Ket Egoly (Hungarian); Leanyvari Boszorkany
(Hungarian): Nincsenek Veletlenek (Hungarian):
Varju A Toronyoran (Hungarian).
International Roadshows
FEATURE*
Double Deal.
Latin Films
FEATURE*
When the Husband Travels ( Greek ) .
Lenauer International Films
FEATURES
Bizarre Bizarre, Dame De Pique, The Puritan.
SHORTS
Xorth Sea. Getting Your Money's Worth. No. 3.
Lenwal Productions
FEATURE*
Poncomania.
Loew's, Inc. (M-G-M)
FEATURES
Stand Up and Fight, Burn 'Em Up O'Connor.
Idiot's Delight. Four Girls in White, Honolulu, The
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. Fast and Loose.
Let Freedom Ring. Pygmalion. Ice Follies of 1939.
Within the Law. Sergeant Madden. Society Lawyer.
Broadway Serenade. The Kid from Texas. The
254
COMPANY RELEASES
Hardy's Ride High. Calling Dr. Kildare, Lucky
Night, Tell No Tales. It's a Wonderful World.
Bridal Suite. 6.000 Enemies, Tarzan Finds a Son!.
Maisie. Stronger Than Desire, On Borrowed Time.
They All Come Out, Andy Hardy Gets Spring Fever.
Goodbye, Mr. Chips. Miracles for Sale, Lady of the
Tropics, These Glamour Girls, The Wizard of Oz,
The Women, Blackmail, Thunder Afloat, Dancing
Co-ed, Fast and Furious, At the Circus, Bad Little
Angel, Ninotchka, Remember?, Another Thin Man,
The Secret of Dr. Kildare. Joe and Ethel Turp Call
on the President, Henry Goes Arizona. Nick Carter.
Master Detective, Judge Hardy and Son, Balalaika.
SHORTS
Crime Does Not Pay 6 2-reelers
M-G-M Musicals 3 2-reelers
Our Gang Comedies 11 1-reelers
Robert Benchley 7 1-reelers
M-G-M Miniatures 10 1-reelers
FitzPatrick Traveltalks 13 1-reelers
Pete Smith Specialities 13 1-reelers
Passing Parade 10 1-reelers
M-G-M Cartoons 14 1-reelers
Malmar Pictures
FEATURE*
Avec Lc Sourire (French).
Ernst Mattsson
FEATURE*
Bor Borson. Jr. (Norwegian).
Arthur Mayer & Joseph Burstyn
FEATURES
Crisis, Song of the Streets, That They May Live,
Katia.
Merit Pictures
FEATURE*
Mystic Circle Murder, Wings Over Africa.
Metropolitan Pictures
FEATURE*
El Diablo Rides. Smoky Trail.
Million Dollar Productions
FEATURE*
Reform School.
Modern Films
FEATURE*
Sable Cicada (Chinese).
Monogram Pictures
FEATURES
Convict's Code, Drifting Westward. Navy Secrets,
Sundown on the Prairie, Star Reporter, Roll in'
Westward, Mystery Plane, Mystery of Mr. Wong.
Trigger Smith, Undercover Agent, Streets of New
York, Boys' Reformatory, Down the Wyoming
Trail, Wolf Call, Across the Plains, Should a Girl
Marry?, Stunt Pilot, Man from Texas, Mr. Wong in
Chinatown, Girl from Rio, Riders of the Frontier,
Irish Luck, Oklahoma Terror, Sky Patrol, The
Fight for Peace, Crashing- Thru, Mutiny in the Big
House, Overland Mail, Danger Flight, Fighting
Mad, Heroes in Blue, The Phantom Strikes, Roll
Wagons Roll, Yukon Flight, Lucky Texas, West-
bound Stage, Gentleman from Arizona.
SHORTS
Raiders Over England.
Paramount Pictures
FEATURES
Disbarred, Zaza, Ambush. Paris Honeymoon, St.
Louis Blues, Persons in Hiding, Boy Trouble, One
Third of a Nation, Sunset Trail, Cafe Society, The
Beachcomber, King of Chinatown, Midnight, Sud-
den Money, Silver on the Sage, I'm from Missouri,
Bulldog Drummond's Secret Police, Never Say Die,
Back Door to Heaven, The Lady's from Kentucky,
Union Pacific, Hotel Imperial, Some Like It Hot.
Unmarried, Stolen Life, Gracie Allen Murder Case,
Undercover Doctor, Invitation to Happiness, Grand
Jury Secrets, Heritage of the Desert, Bulldog
Drummond's Bride, Man About Town, Million
Dollar Legs, The Magnificent Fraud, Island of
Lost Men, Night Work, Our Leading Citizen, Rene-
gade Trail, This Man is News, The Star Maker.
Death of a Champion, Range War, Beau Geste,
$1000 a Touchdown. Honeymoon in Bali, What a
Life, Jamaica Inn, Television Spy, Disputed Pass-
age, Law of the Pampas, The Cat and the Canary,
Rulers of the Sea, Our Neighbors — The Carters,
The Night of Nights. The Llano Kid. All Women
Have Secrets, Gulliver's Travels. The Great Victor
Herbert.
SHORTS
Headliners 12 1-reelers
Paragraphics 11 1-reelers
Sportlights 13 1-reelers
Betty Boop Cartoons 6 1-reelers
Popeye Cartoons 7 1-reelers
Popeye Cartoon 1 2-reeler
Color Cruises 7 1-reelers
Color Classic Cartoons 4 1-reelers
Symphonic Shorts 3 1-reelers
Paramount Pictorials ... . . . 7 1-reelers
Popular Science 7 1-reelers
Unusual Occupations 5 1-reelers
Pax Film, Inc.
FEATURE
End of a Day.
Polish American Film Co.
FEATURE*
Druga Mlodosc (Polish).
Producers Pictures Corp.
FEATURES*
Goose Step (formerly Beasts of Berlin), Torture
Ship.
RKO Radio Pictures
FEATURES
Pacific Liner, The Great Man Votes, Arizona
Legion, Fisherman's Wharf, Boy Slaves, Gunga Din,
Beauty for the Asking, Twelve Crowded Hours,
The Saint Strikes Back, Trouble in Sundown,
Almost a Gentleman, Love Affair, Flying Irishman,
They Made Her a Spy, Fixer Dugan, The Rookie
Cop, Story of Vernon and Irene Castle, Sorority
House, Panama Lady, Racketeers of the Range,
255
The Girl from Mexico. The Girl and the Gambler,
Five Came Back, Timber Stampede, The Saint in
London, Career. Way Down South. The Spellbinder,
Bachelor Mother. Bad Lands, In Name Only, Con-
spiracy, The Fighting Gringo, Full Confession, The
Day the Bookies Wept, Fifth Avenue Girl, Nurse
Edith Cavell. Everything's on lee. Three Sons.
Sued for Libel. The Flying Deuces, The Marshal
of Mesa City, Allegheny Uprising, Meet Dr. Chris-
tian, That's Right — You're Wrong, Reno. Two
Thoroughbreds, Escape to Paradise, The Hunch-
back of Notre Dame.
SHORTS
Wall Disney Cartoons 13 1-reelers
Nu-Atlas Musicals 5 1-reelers
RKO Pathe Sportscopes 13 1-reelers
March of Time 13 1-reelers
Radio Flash Comedies 5 1-reelers
Edgar Kennedy Comedies . . ... 6 1-reelers
Ray Whitley Series 4 1-reelers
Headliners Series 2 1-reelers
Leon Errol Comedies 6 1-reelers
Five Times Five 1-reeler
Reelisms 13 1-reelers
Information Plci.se 5 1-reelers
Regal Distributing Corp.
FEATURE*
The Mutiny of the Elsinore.
Edwin A. Relkin
FEATURE*
Tevya (Yiddish).
Republic Pictures
FEATURES
Fighting Thoroughbreds. The Mysterious Miss
X. Pride of the Navy, Woman Doctor, Forged Pass-
port. I Was a Convict. Street of Missing Men. Man
of Conquest, My Wife's Relatives, The Zero Hour.
S. O. S. — Tidal Wave, Mickey the Kid. She Mar-
ried a Cop, Should Husbands Work. Smuggled
Cargo. Flight at Midnight, Calling All Marines.
Sabotage, Jeepers Creepers, Main Street Lawyer,
The Covered Trailer, Thou Shalt Not Kill, Money
to Burn.
WESTERNS
Home on the Prairie, Rough Riders Round-Up,
Mexieali Rose, The Night Riders, Frontier Pony
Express, Blue Montana Skies, Three Texas Steers,
Southward Ho!, Mountain Rhythm, In Old Cali-
ente, Wyoming Outlaw, Colorado Sunset, New
Frontier, In Old Monterey, Wall Street Cowboy, The
Arizona Kid, The Kansas Terrors. Rovin' Tumble-
weeds, Saga of Death Valley, Cowboys from Texas,
South of the Border, Days of Jesse James.
SERIALS
The Lone Ranger Rides Again, Daredevils of the
Red Circle, Dick Tracy's G-Men, Zorro's Fighting
Legion.
Sack Amusement Co.
FEATURES*
The Bronze Buckaroo, One Dark Night.
Scandinavian Talking Pictures
FEATURES*
Baldevins Brolloy (Swedish), Du Gamla-du Fria
(Swedish), EnKvinnas Ansikte (Swedish), Famil-
jen Andersson (Swedish), Kustens Glada Kavaljerer
(Swedish), Livet Paa Hegnsgaard (Danish), Med
Folket For Fosterlandet (Swedish), Rena Rama
Sanningen (Swedish), Skieka Hem N: 7 (Swedish),
Vi Tvaa (Swedish).
COMPANY RELEASES
Select Attractions, Inc.
FEATURES
Return of the Frog, Demon Barber of Fleet Street
Royal Divorce.
Marie Seton
FEATURE
Time in the Sun.
Spectrum Pictures
FEATURES*
Code of the Fearless. Heroes of the Marne
I French I, In Old Montana.
Sphinx Films
FEATURE*
A Brivele der Mamen (Yiddishi, Mamele (Yid-
dish) .
Standard Pictures
FEATURE*
The Mill on the Floss.
Syndicate Exchange
FEATURES*
Manhattan Shakedown, Special Inspector.
Times Pictures
FEATURE*
Daughter of the Tong, Port of Hate. Two's
Company.
Tower Pictures
FEATURE
Double Crime on the Maginot Line ( French t.
Transatlantic Films
FEATURES*
The Affair Lafont (French), Last Desire (French).
Tri-National
FEATURES*
Champs-Elysees (French), Crossroads (French),
Heart of Paris (French).
Twentieth Century-Fox
FEATURES
While New York Sleeps, The Lady Vanishes.
Charlie Chan in Honolulu. Mr. Moto's Last Warn-
ing, Smiling Along. Jesse James. The Arizona Wild-
eat, Tail Spin, The Three Musketeers. Pardon Our
Nerve; Wife, Husband and Friend: Inside Story.
The Little Princess, Everybody's Baby, The Hound
of the Baskervilles. Mr. Moto in Danger Island,
The Story of Alexander Graham Bell, Winner Take
All, Inspector Hornleigh. The Return of the Cisco
Kid, Climbing High. Chasing Danger, Rose of
Washington Square, Boy Friend. The Gorilla. Jones
Family in Hollywood, Young Mr. Lincoln. Charlie
Chan in Reno. Susannah of the Mounties. It Could
Happen to You. Mr. Moto Takes a Vacation. Second
Fiddle, News is Made at Night, The Ware Case,
Frontier Marshal. Hotel for Women, Chicken
256
Wagon Family, Stanley and Livingstone. Quick
Millions, Adventures ol Sherlock Holmes, Charlie
Chan at Treasure Island, The Rains Came: Stop.
Look and Love: Here I am a Stranger, The Escape,
Hollywood Cavalcade, Pack Up Your Troubles.
Shipyard Sally. 20,000 Men a Year, Heaven With
a Barbed Wire Fence, Drums Along- the Mohawk
Too Busy to Work, Day-Time Wife, Charlie Chan
in City in Darkness, Inspector Horleigh on Holiday,
Barricade, The Honeymoon's Over, Everything Hap-
pens at Night, The Cisco Kid and the Lady.
SHORTS
Ed Thorgerson-Sports 7 1-reelers
Terry-Toons 26 1-reelers
Lew Lehr 1-reelers
Lowell Thomas-Magic Carpet 6 1-reelers
Vyvyan Donner Fashions 4 1-reelers
Adventures of a News Cameraman ... 4 1-reelers
Father Hubbard's Alaskan Adventures. 2 1-reelers
COMPANY RELEASES
First Love, One Hour to Live. Tower of London.
The Big Guy. Laugh It Off. Man from Montreal.
Missing Evidence; Charlie McCarthy, Detective;
Destry Rides Again.
SHORTS
Cartoons lti 1-reelers
Stranger Than Fieti'-n 13 1-reelers
Going Places 12 1-reelers
Color Cartoons 4 1-reelers
Mentones 8 1-reelers
Two-Reel Musica's 4 2-reeIers
Special 1 2-reeler
SERIALS
Scouts to the Rescue. Buck Rogers. Oregon Trail,
The Phantom Creeps.
Ufa Films, Inc.
FEATURES
Liebesbriefe Aus Dem Engadin. Kautschuk, Edel-
weisskoenig, Kleines Bezirksgerieht, Der Blaufuchs.
Diskretion Ehrensache, Dir Gehoert Mein Herz, Das
Spiel Im Sommerwind. Pour Le Merite, Am Seidenen
Faden, Kameraden Auf See. Der Sehritt Vom Wege,
Drei Unteroffiziere. Rote Orchiden, Aufruhr In
Damaskus, Hoehzeitsreise, Maenner Muessen So
Sein; Nanu, Sie Kennen Korff Noch Night; Zeil In
Den Wolken, Der Florentiner Hut, Hotel Sacher.
Der Biberpelz, Ein Hoffnungsloser Fall. Liebe
Streng Verboten, Der Gouverneurer. Der Verkannte
Lebermann, Marguerite: Drei, Liebe Kann Luegen,
Die Kluge Schwiegermutter. Verwehte Spuren. Five
Millionen Suchen Einen Erben. Das Umsterbliehe
Herz, Es War Eine Rauschende Ballnacht, Der
Kampf Mit Dem Draehen, Peer Gynt. I A I Ober-
bayern, Der Umsterbliehe Walzer, Robert Koch-Der
Bekaempfer Des Todes, Das Ekel. Jugend, Frau
Sylvelin, Der Arme Millionair.
Ultra Films
FEATURE*
Light Ahead (Yiddish).
United Artists
FEATURES
Topper Takes a Trip. Made For Each Other.
King of the Turf, Stagecoach, Prison Without Bars.
Wuthering Heights, Zenobia, Captain Fury, Winter
Carnival, Four Feathers, Man in the Iron Mask.
They Shall Have Music, Intermezzo, The Real
Glory, Eternally Yours, The Housekeeper's Daugh-
ter, Slightly Honorable, Raffles.
SHOKTS
World Windows 10 1-reelers
Unity Pictures
FEATURE*
Prisoner of Corbal.
Universal Pictures
FEATURES
The Last Warning. Son of Frankenstein. Gam-
bling Ship. Pirates of the Skies. You Can't Cheat
an Honest Man. Society Smugglers, Risky Business.
Spirit of Culver, Mystery of the White Room. Three
Smart Girls Grow Up, Family Next Door. East Side
of Heaven, Code of the Streets. Big Town Czar.
For Love or Money, Ex-Champ, They Asked For It.
Inside Information, The Sun Never Sets. House of
Fear, The Forgotten Woman, Unexpected Father.
I Stole a Million, When Tomorrow Comes, The
Under-Pup, Mutiny on the Blaekhawk, Hawaiian
Nights, The Mikado, Two Bright Boys, The Witness
Vanishes, Rio, Hero For a Day, Tropic Fury, Little
Accident, Call a Messenger, Legion of Lost Fliers,
Vedis Films
FEATURE*
Three Waltzes i French I .
Walch Film Corp.
FEATURES
Bouquets from Nicholas (French), La Vierge
Folle (French I.
Warner Bros.-First National-
Vitaphone
FEATURES
Devil's Island. King of the Underworld. Off the
Record, They Made Me a Criminal, Torchy Blanc
in Chinatown, Wings of the Navy; Nancy Drew.
Reporter: Yes, My Darling Daughter: Secret Service
of the Air, The Oklahoma Kid. The Adventures of
Jane Arden. Blackwell's Island, On Trial, Dodee
City, Women in the Wind, Dark Victory. You Can't
Get Away With Murder. Confessions of a Nazi Spy,
Torchy Runs for Mayor. Sweepstakes Winner, Code
of the Secret Service. The Man Who Dared. Juarez:
Nancy Drew. Trouble Shooter; The Kid from Ko
komo. Naughty But Nice, Hell's Kitchen, Water-
front, Daughters Courageous, The Comboy Quarter-
back, Indianapolis Speedway, Torchy Plays With
Dynamite, Each Dawn I Die, Angels Wash Their
Faces, Everybody's Hobby, The Old Maid. Nancy
Drew and the Hidden Staircase, Dust Be My
Destiny, No Place to Go. Espionage Agent. Pride
of the Blue Grass, On Your Toes, Smashing the
Money Ring, The Roaring Twenties, Kid Night-
ingale, Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex, On
Dress Parade, We Are Not Alone, The Return of
Dr. X, Private Detective, The Mad Empress, Four
Wives, Invisible Stripes.
SHORTS
Technicolor Productions 9 2-rcclers
Broadway Brevities 16 1-reelers
Floyd Gibbons True AUve.il in-. . !) 1-reelers
The Color Parade 12 1-reelers
Merrie Melodies Cartoons 27 1-reelers
Technicolor Specials 2 1-reelers
Melody Masters Brands 16 1-reelers
Looney Tunes Cartoons 17 1-reelers
Vitaphone Varieties 10 1-reelers
Warwick Pictures
FEATURE*
Death Goes North.
World Pictures
FEATURES*
Betrayal (French), Marseillaise (French).
York Pictures
FEATUKK
I Met a Murderer.
257
FEATURES
IMPORTED
DURING 1939
Above All. the Truth i Germain: Produced in tier-
many.
Affair Lafont, The (French); Transatlantic; Pro-
duced in France.
Alarm (Spanish); Produced in Mexico.
Alexander Nevsky I Russian i : Amkino: Produced
m Russia.
Allergi Masnadieri (Italian); Pullini Films: Pro-
duced in Italy.
Alpine Passion (German): Produced in Germany
Am Seidenen Faden (German); Ufa: Produced in
Germany.
Amangeldy ( Russian I : Amkino: Produced in Russia.
Amore Sulle Alpi (Italian); Esperia: Produced in
Switzerland.
Anticipated Day ( Polish!: Produced in Poland.
Aria del Continente (Italian): Esperia: Produced
in Italy.
Aufruhr In Damaskus (German); Ufa: Produced
111 Germany.
Aunt of the Girls (Spanish): Cinexport : Produced
in Mexico.
Autumn Maneuvers (German); Casino: Produced
in Germany.
Avec Le Sourire (French); Malmar: Produced in
France.
Baldevins Brollop I Swedish I : Scandinavian Talk-
in? Pictures: Produced in Sweden.
Ball of Glass (German): Produced in Germany.
Batalion ( Czechoslovakia!) I : Produced in Czecho-
slovakia.
Battle With the Dragon iGerman); Bavaria: Pro-
duced in Germany.
Behind the Curtain I Egyptian) : Produced in Egpyt.
Betrayal (French): World: Produced in France.
Bizarre Bizzarre ( French I ; Lenauer International:
Produced in France.
Black Jacket (Chinese); Produced in China.
Black Limelight; Alliance: Produced in England.
Blindfolded Eyes (Spanish) : Produced in Mexico.
Blonde Carmen. The ( German i; Produced in
Germany.
Blood Marriage (Spanish): Produced in Argentina
Boarding House Filoda (Germain: Produced in
Germany.
Bohemian Life (Spanish): Produced in Spain.
Bombs Over London: Film Alliance of the U.S.:
Produced in England.
Bor Borson, Jr. (Norwegian) : Ernst Mattson: Pro-
duced in Norway.
Boresa Amerikaban (Hungarian); Hnngaria; Pro-
duced in Hungary.
Bouquets from Nicholas (French); Walch Film
Corp.: Produced in France.
Boy's School (French): Columbia: Prodnced in
France.
By My Pistols (Spanish) : Produced in Mexico.
Cada Loco Con Su Temal I Spanish); Produced in
Mexico.
Cadets of San Martin (Spanish) ; Produced in
Argentina.
Captain Grant's Children (Russian): Amkino: Pro-
duced in Russia.
Carnival in Vienna I German I : Produced in Ger-
many.
Cemetery of the Eagles (Spanish): Produced in
Spain.
258
Challenge. The: Film Alliance of the U. S.: Pro-
duced in England.
Champs-Ely sees (French): Tri-National: Produced
in France.
Citadel of Silence (French): Film Alliance of the
U. S.: Produced in France,
(limbing High: 20th Century -Fox: Produced in
England.
Clouds Over Europe: Columbia: Produced in
England.
College (German I : Produced in Germany.
Comrades at Sea (German): Produced in Germany.
Concentration Camp (Russian): Amkino: Produced
in Russia.
Conquests of Peter the Great (Russian): Amkino:
Produced in Russia.
Crossroads (French!: Tri-National: Produced in
France.
Dame De Pique (French): Lenauer International:
Produced in France.
Das Ekel (German): Ufa: Produced in Germany.
Das Spiel in Sommerwind (German!: Ufa: Pro-
duced in Germany.
Das Unsterbliche Herz (German): Ufa: Produced
in Germany.
De Big Van Het Resriment (Dutch) : Hoffberg: Pro-
duced in Holland.
Dead Men Tell No Tales: Alliance: Produced in
England.
Demon Barber of Fleet Street. The: Select: Pro-
duced in England.
Der Anne Millioner ( German i : Ufa: Produced in
Germany.
Der Biberpelz (German): Ufa: Produced in Ger-
many.
Der Blaufuchs (German): Ufa: Produced in Ger-
many.
Der Florentiner Hut (German): Ufa: Produced in
Germany.
Der Gouverneuer (German): Ufa: Produced in
Germany.
Der Sehritt Vom Wege (German): Ufa: Produced
in Germany.
Der Unsterbliche Walzer (German): Ufa: Produced
in Germany.
Der Verkannte Lebemann (German): Ufa: Pro-
duced in Germany.
Devil Is an Empress. The (French): Columbia:
Produced in France.
Die Kluge Schwiegermutter (German): Ufa: Pro-
duced in Germany.
Dir Gohocrt Mein Hcrz I German I; Ufa: Produced
in Germany.
Diskretion Ehrensache (German): Ufa: Produced
in Germany.
Double Crime in the Mairinot Line (French):
Tower: Produced in France.
Drei Unteroffiiziere (German): Ufa: Produced in
Germany.
Druga Mlodosc (Polish): Polish American Film
Co.. Produced in Poland.
Du Gamla. due Fria (Swedish) : Scandinavian Talk-
ing Pictures: Produced in Sweden.
Edelweisskoenisr I German): Ufa: Produced in
Germany.
Em Hoff nungsloser Fall (German); Ufa: Produced
m Germany.
El Capitan Adventurero (Spanish); Jose Guererro:
Produced in Mexico.
En Kvinnas Ansikte (Swedish) : Scandinavian Talk-
in? Pictures: Produced in Sweden.
Kn Saga (Swedish) ; Hoffberg: Produced in Sweden.
End of a Day, The (French) : Pax Film: Produced
m France.
Eraramo Sette Sorella (Italian) : Esperia: Produced
in Italy.
Erik a Buzakalasz (Hungarian): Danubia: Pro-
duced in Hungary.
Es War Eine Rauschende Ballnacht (German):
Ufa: Produced in Germany.
Escape from Yesterday (French): Hoffberg; Pro-
duced in France.
Everything is Rhythm: Astor; Produced in Ger-
many.
Faded Tracks i German i : Produced in Germany.
Familjen Andersson (Swedish): Scandinavian Talk-
ing Pictures: Produced in Sweden.
Family Hummel (German): Produced in Germany.
Family Schinek (German): Produced in Germany.
Father O'Flymi: Hoffberg: Produced in Ireland.
Fehervari Huszarok (Hungarian): Danubia: Pro-
duced in Hungary.
Final Melody. The (Spanish): Produced in Cuba.
Finf Millionen Suchen Einen Erben (German);
Ufa: Produced in Germany.
Flowers from Nice (German I: Produced in Ger-
many.
Forbidden Territory: Hoffberg: Produced in Eng-
land.
Four Feathers: United Artists: Produced in
England.
400 Million. The: Garrison: Produced in China.
Frau Sylvelin (German): Ufa: Produced in Ger-
many.
Friends (Russian) : Amkino: Produced in Russia.
Frog. The: 20th Century-Fox; Produced in England.
Gehenna (Polish) : Kinopol: Produced in Poland.
God in the Clouds (German) : Produced in Germany.
Golden Key. The (Russian): Amkino: Produced in
Russia.
Goodbye. Mr. Chips: M-G-M: Produced in England.
Governor, The (German): Produced in Germany.
Great Citizen, The (Russian): Amkino: Produced
in Russia.
Grouch, The (German): Produced in Germany.
Gyimesi Vadvirag (Hungarian): Hungaria: Pro-
duced in Hungary.
Harapos Ferj (Hungarian): Hungaria: Produced
in Hungary.
Harmonica (Czechoslovakia^) ; Produced in Czech-
oslovakia.
Harvest (French) : French Cinema Center: Produced
in France.
Haven't You Met Korff (German): Produced in
Germany.
Heart of Fire (Chechoslovakian); Produced in
Czechoslovakia.
Heart of Paris (French): Tri-National ; Produced
in France.
Heartbeat (French) : French M. P. Corp.: Produced
in France.
Hearts in Love (German): Produced in Germany.
Heroes of the Marne (French) : Spectrum: Produced
in France.
Higher Learning (German): Produced in Germany.
Ho Perduto Mio Marito (Italian): Esperia: Pro-
duced in Italy.
Hoehzeitsreise (German): Ufa: Produced in Ger-
many.
Honeysuckle. The (Spanish): Produced in Argen-
tina.
Hopeless Case. The (German): Produced in Ger-
many.
Hotel Saeher (German); Ufa; Produced in Ger-
many.
Hotels of Lunatics (Spanish) ; Produced in Mexico.
House of the Orge (Spanish): Produced in Mexico.
Housemaster: Alliance; Produced in England.
I Am Tn Oberbayern (German) ; Ufa; Produced in
Germany.
IMPORTED FEATURES
I Due Sergenti (Italian) ; Produced in Italy.
II Corsaro Nero (Italian): Esperia: Produced in
in Italy.
II Dottor Antonio (Italian I: Produced in Italy.
II Signor Max (Italian): Esperia; Produced in
Italy.
Immortal Waltzes (German): Produced in Ger-
many.
In the Rough (Spanish) : Produced in Mexico.
Indian. The (Spanish): Produced in Mexico.
Infidelity (Spanish): Produced in Mexico.
Innocence (German): Produced in Germany.
Inspector Hornleigh; 20th-Cen tury-Fox ; Produced
in England.
Inspector Hornleigh on Holiday; 20th-century -Fox :
Produced in England.
Ireland's Border Line; William Alexander: Produced
in Ireland.
Jamaica Inn: Paramount: Produced in England.
John, the Soldier of Vengeance (Spanish); Pro-
duced in Mexico.
Judgement of God (Finnish): Produced in Finland
Ju^end (German): Ufa: Produced in Germany.
Just Like a Woman: Alliance: Produced in England.
Justice of Pancho Villa (Spanish); Produced in
Mexico.
Kameraden Auf See (German): Ufa: Produced in
Germany.
Katia (French): Mayer & Burstyn: Produced in
France.
Kautschuk (German); Ufa: Produced in Germany.
Keseru Kezeshetek (Hungarian) ; Danubia; Pro-
duced in Hungary.
Ket Egoly (Hungarian): Hungaria; Produced in
Hungary.
Kleines Bezirksgerieht (German); Ufa: Produced
in Germany.
Kol Nidre (Yiddish): Produced in Poland.
Kustens Glada Kavaljerer (Swedish): Scandinavian
Talking Pictures: Produced in Sweden.
L'Alibi (French): Columbia: Produced in France
L'Aria del Continente (Italian); Esperia: Produced
in Italy.
La Vierge Folic (French) : Walch Film Corp.: Pro-
duced in France.
La Wally (Italian): Produced in Italy.
Last Desire (French): Transatlantic: Produced in
France.
Last Meeting, The (Spanish) ; Produced in Ar-
gentina.
Last Melody. The (Spanish): Produced in Cuba.
Lc Quai Brumes (French): Film Alliance of the
U. S.: Produced in France.
Le Sorprese di un Matrimonio (Italian) : Produced
in Italy.
Leanyvari Boszorkany (Hungarian): Hungaria:
Produced in Hungary.
Leghorn Hat, The (German): Produced in Ger-
many.
Lelicke Ve Sherlocka Holmesa (Czechoslovakian) :
Produced in Czechoslovakia.
Lenin in 1018 (Russian): Amkino: Produced in
Russia.
Lieoe Kami Luegen (German): Ufa: Produced in
Germany.
Liebe Streng Verboten (German): Ufa: Produced
in Germany.
Liebesbriefe Aus Dem Engadin (German): Ufa:
Produced in Germany.
Life Is a Tango (Spanish): Produced in Spain.
Little Country Club (German): Produced in Ger-
many.
Livet Paa Hegnsgaard (Danish): Scandinavian
Talking Pictures: Produced in Denmark.
Lo Squadrone Bianco (Italian): Esperia: Produced
in Italy.
Lost Traces (German) : Produced in Germany.
Lotte Nell'Ombra (Italian): Esperia: Produced in
Italy.
Love Can Lie (German) : Produced in Germany.
25y
IMPORTED FEATURES
Love Is Not Allowed (German); Produced In
Germany.
Mademoiselle Ma Mere (French): Hoffberg: Pro-
duced in France.
Maenner Muessen So Sein (German): Ufa: Pro-
duced in Germany.
Maid on the Mountains (Spanish); Produced in
Mexico.
Man With the Gun, The (Russian): Amkino: Pro-
duced in Russia.
Marguerite: Drei (German): Ufa: Produced in
Germany.
Maria (Spanish): Produced in Mexico.
Marseillaise (French): World: Produced in France.
Matrimonio Ideale (Italian); Esperia: Produced
in Italy.
Mayor. The (Spanish): Produced in Mexico.
Med Folket For Fosteilandet (Swedish): Scandi-
navian Talking Pictures: Produced in Sweden.
Mcgvedtem Eery Asszonyt ( Hungarian ) ; Danubia ;
Produced in Hungary.
Merchant Father (Spanish): Produced in Mexico.
Merry Widow Ball (German): Produced in Ger-
many.
Mikado, The: Universal; Produced in England.
Mill of the Gods (German): Produced in Germany.
Mill on the Floss: Standard: Produced in England.
Misstep. The (German): Produced in Germany.
Mutiny of the Elsinore, The: Regal: Produced in
England.
Mysterions Mr. X (German) : Produced in Germany.
Nanan. Sie Kennen Korff Noch Nicht (German);
Ufa: Produced in Germany.
New Horizons (Russian): Amkino: Produced in
Russia.
Newsboy and the Lady. The (Spanish): Produced
in Spain.
Ninesenek Veletlenek (Hungarian) : Hungaria: Pro-
duced in Hungary.
North Sea Patrol: Alliance: Produced in England.
North Wind (Spanish): Produced in Argentina.
On His Own (Russian); Amkino; Produced in
Russia.
Oppenheim Family (Russian) ; Amkino: Produced
in Russia.
Pan Redaktor Szaleje (Polish) ; Hoffberg; Pro-
duced in Poland.
Papacito Lindo (Spanish): Azteca; Produced in
Mexico.
Peer Gynt (German) : Ufa: Produced in Germany.
Pension Filoda, The (German); Produced in Ger-
many.
Per Uomini Soli (Italian): Esperia; Produced in
Italy.
Perfidia (Spanish); RKO: Produced in Mexico.
Phantom Strikes, The; Monogram; Produced in
England.
Play in the Summer (German) ; Produced in Ger-
many.
Plegaria Gaucha (Spanish); Hoffberg; Produced in
Argentina.
Pompadour, The (German: Produced In Germany.
Poor Plutocrats, The (German) : Produced in
Germany.
Port of Shadows (French): Film Alliance of the
U. S.: Produced in France.
Pour Le Merite (German); Ufa; Produced in
Germany.
Prison Without Bars; United Artists: Produced in
England.
Prisoner of Corbal: Unity: Produced in England.
Puritan, The (French): Lenauer International:
Produced in France.
Rangle River: Hoffberg: Produced in Australia.
Rasputin (French): Concord: Produced in France.
Re de Danari (Italian) : Esperia; Produced in Italy.
Red Orchards (Polish) : Produced in Poland.
Rena. Rama Sanningen (Swedish): Scandinavian
Talking Pictures: Produced in Sweden.
Return of the Frog, The: Select; Produced in
England.
Robert Koch, Der Bekaempfer Des Todes (Ger-
man); Ufa: Produced in Germany.
Rose De Xachimilco (Spanish): Produced in
Mexico.
Rote Orchideen (German): Produced in Germanv.
Royal Divorce: Select: Produced in England.
Sable Cicada (Chinese); Modern: Produced in
China.
School for Husbands; Hoffberg; Produced in
England.
Seipione L'Africano (Italian); Esperia: Produced
in Italy.
Second Bureau: Film Alliance of the U. S.: Pro-
duced in England.
Secret of Stamboul; Hoffberg; Produced in England.
Senkyrka v Divoke Krasy (Czechoslovakian) : Hoff-
berg: Produced in Czechoslovakia.
Shors (Russian); Amkino; Produced in Russia.
Sixth Form Girl (German): Produced in Germany.
Skicka Hem N: 7 (Swedish): Scandinavian Talk-
ing Pictures: Produced in Sweden.
Smiling Along; 20th Century-Fox ; Produced in
England.
Soldier's Bride (Finnish) ; Werner S. Sazela: Pro-
duced in Finland.
Song of the Homeland (German); Produced in
Germany.
Song of the Streets (French): Mayer & Burstyn:
Produced in France.
Sotto La Croce Del Sud (Italian); Esperia: Pro-
duced in Italy.
Soviet Border (Russian); Amkino: Produced in
Russia.
Stolen Life: Paramount: Produced in England.
Stronger Than Love (German); Produced in Ger
many.
Szegeny Gozdagok (Hungarian): Danubia; Pro-
duced in Hungary.
Szivet Szivert (Hungarian): Danubia: Produced
in Hungary.
That They May Live (French): Mayer & Burstyn;
Produced in France.
This Man is News: Paramount: Produced in
England.
Three Waltzes (French) ; Vedis Films: Produced
in France.
Time in the Sun; Marie Seton: Produced in
Mexico.
To Neznate Hadimrasku (Czechoslovakian); Hoff-
berg; Produced in Czechoslovakia.
Toprini Nasz (Hungarian): Danubia: Produced in
Hungary.
Torpedoed: Film Alliance of the U. S.; Produced
in England.
Treachery on the High Seas: Film Alliance of the
U. S.: Produced in England.
Two's Company: Times: Produced in England.
Typhoon Treasure: Commonwealth: Produced in
the South Seas.
U-Boat 29: Columbia: Produced in England.
Variu A. Toronyoran (Hungarian) : Hungaria: Pro-
duced in Hungary.
Verwehte Spuren (German); Ufa; Produced in
Germany.
Vi Tvaa (Swedish) : Scandinavian Talking Pictures:
Produced in Sweden.
Violet from Potsdam Square (German); Produced
in Germany.
Ware Case. The: 20th Century-Fox: Produced in
England.
When the Husband Travels (Greek): Latin Films:
Produced in Greece.
Whip, The (Spanish): Produced in Mexico.
Whirlpool of Desire (French): H-0 Films: Pro-
duced in France.
White Majesty (German); Produced in Germany.
Wings Over Africa: Merit; Produced in England.
Woman's Paradise (German) ; Produced in Ger-
many.
Youth (German) ; Produced in Germany.
Youth in Revolt (French); Columbia: Produced
in France.
Zabawka (Polish) : Hoffberg; Produced in Poland.
Ziel In Den Wolken (German); Ufa; Produced in
Germany.
260
HE NEVER
SITS OUT A
DANCE!
Leo's been whirling Miss Box -office to dizzy
heights all season, but now watch him cut
capers this Spring and Summer!
[Just look — ►)
NORTHWEST PASSAGE
in Technicolor • Spencer Tracy
BROADWAY MELODY o/19-AO
Fred Astaire • Eleanor Powell
STRANGE CARGO • Clark Gable • Joan Crawford
YOUNG TOM EDISON . . Mickey Rooney
NEW MOON • Jeanette MacDonald • Nelson Eddy
FORTY LITTLE MOTHERS • Eddie Cantor
DR. KILDARE'S STRANGE CASE
Lew Ayres • Lionel Barrymore
MORTAL STORM
James Stewart ' Margaret Sullavan
WATERLOO BRIDGE • Vivien Leigh • Robert Taylor
"I've got every
dance with
you, Leo, Dear!
20 MULE TEAM • Wallace Beery ' Leo Carrillo
SUSAN AND GOD • Joan Crawford • Fredric March
EDISON THE MAN
Clarence Brown Production • Spencer Tracy
PRIDE AND PREJUDICE
Greer Garson • Laurence Olivier
ANDY HARDY MEETS DEBUTANTE
Lewis Stone • Mickey Rooney ' Judy Garland
BOOMTOWN • Clark Gable • Spencer Tracy
Claudette Colbert * Hedy Lamarr
MARX BROTHERS • "GO WEST-
ESCAPE • All Star Cast in Best Selling Novel
I LOVE YOU AGAIN • William Powell -Myrna Loy
Thanks, honey,
we make a
great team!
{Music, of course, by -►)
FRIENDLY
TO YOUR
CASH
REGISTER!
Year after year the sweetest
box -office tunes are M-G-M!
s i<: It I A L s
RELEASED SINCE 1920
An alphabetical list of serials released since 1920. All are talk-
ing pictures except those marked with one of the following
symbols: S — Silent; PT — Part talking; S-SE — Synchronized effects.
Ace Drummond Universal, 1936
Stars: John King, Jean Rogers, Noah Beery, Jr.;
Directors: Ford Beebe, Cliff Smith.
Ace of Scotland Yard (PT & S) . . .Universal, 192!)
Star: Crauford Kent; Director: Ray Taylor.
Ace of Spades (S) Universal, 1925
Star: William Desmond; Director: Francis Ford.
Across the World With Mr. & Mrs. Martin Johnson
Principal, 1930
Director: Martin Johnson.
Adventures of Ruth (S) Pathe, 1919
Star: Ruth Roland; Director: Ruth Roland.
Adventures of Frank Merriwell . . . Universal, 193<>
Stars: Don Briggs, Jean Rogers: Director: Cliff
Smith.
Adventures of Rex and Rinty. . . .Universal, 1935
Stars: Rex, Rin-Tin-Tin, Jr.; Directors: Ford
Beebe, Reeves Eason.
Adventures of Tarzan (S) Artclass, 1928
Stars: Elmo Lincoln, Louise Lorraine; Director:
Robert Hill.
Airmail Mystery Universal, 1932
Star: James Flavin: Director: Ray Taylor.
After the Fog (S) Beacon, 1929
Star: George Terwilliger; Director: Arthur
Statter.
Around the World (S) Universal, 1923
Star: William Desmond; Director: Reeves Eason.
Avenging Arrow (S) Pathe, 1921
Star: Ruth Rolland; Directors: William Bow-
man, W. S. Van Dyke.
Bar-C Mystery (S) Pathe, 192(>
Stars: Dorothy Phillips, Wallace MacDonald;
Director: Robert F. Hill.
Battling Brewster (S) Rayart
Stars: Franklyn Farnum, Helen Holmes; Direc-
tor: Dell Henderson.
Battling With Buffalo Bill Universal, 1931
Star: Rex Bell; Director: Ray Taylor.
Beasts of Paradise (S) Universal, 1923
Star: William Desmond; Director: William Craft.
Black Coin, The Stage & Screen, 193G
stars: Rex Lease, Jack Mulhall; Director: Elmer
Clifton.
Black Book, The (S) Pathe, 1929
Stars: Allene Ray, Walter Miller; Directors:
Spencer Gordon Bennet, Tom Storey.
Blake of Scotland Yard Victory, 193T
Star: Bela Lugosi; Director: Robert F. Hill.
Blake of Scotland Yard (S) Universal, 1927
Star: Hayden Stevenson: Director: Robert F.
Hill.
Bride 13 (S) Fox, 1920
Director: Richard Stanton.
Buck Rogers Universal, 1939
Star: Larry Crabbe; Directors: Ford Beebe,
Saul A. Goodkind.
Burn 'Em Up Barnes Mascot, 1931
Stars: Jack Mulhall, Frankie Darro; Directors:
Colbert Clark. Armand Sehaefer.
Call of the Savage Universal, 1935
Stars: Noah Beery, Jr., Walter MilleV; Director:
Louis Friedlander.
Casey of the Coast Guard (S) Pathe, 192(5
Stars: George O'Hara. Wallace MacDonald;
Director: Robert F. Hill.
Chinatown After Dark (S) Unknown, 1928
Chinatown Mystery (S) Syndicate, 1928
Star: Joe Bonomo: Director: J. P. MeGowan.
Clancy of the Mounted Universal, 1933
Stars: Tom Tyler, Jacqueline Wells; Director:
Ray Taylor.
Clutching Hand, The Stage & Screen, 193<>
Stars: Jack Mulhall. William Farnum: Director:
Albert Herman.
Crimson Flash (S) Pathe, 1927
Stars: Cullen Landis. Eugenia Gilbert; Director:
Arch Heath.
Custer's Last Stand Stage & Screen, 193(>
Stars: Rex Lease, Jack Mulhall; Director:
Elmer Clifton.
Danger Island Universal, 1931
Star: Kenneth Harlan; Director: Ray Taylor.
Daredevil Jack (S) Pathe, 1920
Star: Jack Dempsey: Director: W. S. Van Dyke.
Daredevils of the Red Circle Republic, 1939
Stars: Charles Quigley, Herman Brix; Directors:
William Witney, John English.
Darkest Africa Republic, 1930
Stars: Clyde Beatty, Manuel Kin?: Directors:
Reeves Eason. Joseph Kane.
Days of Buffalo Bill, The (S) . . . .Universal, 1922
Star: Art Acord: Director: Edward Laemmle.
Days of Daniel Boone, The (S) . . .Universal, 1923
Star: Jack Mower; Director: Frank Messinger.
Detective Lloyd Universal. 1932
Star: Jack Lloyd; Director: Henry MacRae.
Devil Horse, The Mascot, 1932
Star: Harry Carey: Director: Olto Brower.
Diamond Master, The (S) Universal, 1928
Stars: Louise Lorraine, Hayden Stevenson; Di-
rector: Jack Nelson.
Diamond Queen, The (S) Universal, 1921
Star: Eileen Sedgwick; Director: Edward Kull.
Dick Tracy Republic, 1937
Stars: Ralph Byrd, Kaye Hughes, Smiley Bur-
nette; Directors: Ray Taylor, Alan James.
Dick Tracy Returns Republic, 1938
Stars: Ralph Byrd. Lynn Roberts; Directors:
William Witney, John English.
Dick Tracy's G-Men Republic, 1939
Stars: Ralph Byrd, Irving Pichel : Directors:
William Witney, John English.
Do or Die (S) Universal, 1921
Star: Eddie Polo: Director: .1. P. MeGowan.
Double Adventure (S) Pathe, 1921
Star: Charles Hutchinson: Director: W. S. Van
Dyke.
Dragon's Net (S) Universal, 1920
Star: Marie Walcamp; Director: Henry MacRae,
265
you see — and hear — all
the news when it's news,
where it's news in
NEWS
OF THE
DAY
A Mctro-Goldwyn-Maycr Release
Executive Offices: 1540 Broadway
Editorial Offices: 450 West 56th Street
New York
266
Eagle of the Night (S) Pathe, 1928
Star: Frank Clarke: Director: James Fulton.
Ragle's Talons <S) Universal. 1923
Star: Fred Thompson: Director: Duke Worne.
Elmo the Fearless (S) Universal, 1920
Star: Elmo Lincoln: Director: J. P. McGowan.
Kantomas (S) Fox, 1921
Director: Edward Sedgwick.
Fast Express (S) Universal, 1924
Star: William Duncan: Director: William Duncan.
Fatal Warning, The (S) Mascot, 1929
Stars: Helene Costello. Ralph Graves: Director:
Richard Thorpe.
Fighting Devil Dogs, The Republic, 1938
Stars: Lee Powell. Herman Brix: Directors:
William Witney, John English.
Fighting For Fame (S) Rayart, 1927
Star: Ben Alexander: Director: Duke Worne.
Fighting Marine. The (S) Pathe. 1936
Star: Gene Tunney: Director: Spencer Gordon
Bennet.
Fighting Marines Mascot. 193."i
Stars: Grant Withers. Adrian Morris: Directors:
Reeves Bason, Joseph Kane.
Fighting Banger, The (S) Universal. 1920
Star: Jack Daugherty: Director: Jay Marchant.
Fighting With Buffalo Bill (S) . . . Universal. 192«
Star: Wallace MacDonald: Director: Ray Taylor.
Fighting With Kit Carson Mascot. 1933
Star: John Mack Brown: Directors: Armand
Schaefer, Colbert Clark.
Final Reckoning. The <S> Universal. I92S
Star: Louise Lorraine: Director: Ray Taylor.
Fingerprints Universal. 1931
Star: Kenneth Harlan: Director: Ray Taylor.
Fire Detective. The (S) Pathe. 1929
Stars: Hush Allan. Gladys McConnell: Directors:
Spencer Gordon Bennet. Tom Storey.
Fire Fighters. The (S) Universal. 1927
Star: Helen Ferguson; Director: Jacques Jaccard.
Five Cards (S) Gibson Productions
Star: Ethlyn Gibson.
Flame Fighter, The (S) Rayart
Star: Herbert Rawlinson; Director: Duke Worne.
Flaming Frontiers Universal. 1938
Stars: John Mack Brown. Eleanore Hansen:
Directors: Ray Taylor, Alan James.
Flash Gordon Universal. 193<i
Stars: Larry Crabbe. Jean Rogers. Priscilla Law-
son: Director: Frederick Stephani.
Flash Gordon's Trip to Mars. . . .Universal. 1938
Stars: Larry Crabbe, Jean Rogers: Directors:
Ford Beetle. Robert F. Hill.
Flying G-Men Columbia, 1939
Stars: Robert Paige. Richard Fiske: Directors:
Ray Taylor. James W. Home.
Fortieth Door. The (S) Pathe. 1921
stars: Allelic Ray, Bruce Gordon: Director:
George B. Seitz.
Galloping Ghost, The Mascot. 1931
Star: Red Grange: Director: Reeves Eason.
Galloping Hoofs (S) Pathe. 1921
Stars: Allene Ray, Johnny Walker: Director:
George B. Seitz.
Ghost City (S) Universal. 1923
star: Pete Morrison: Director: Jay Marchant.
Go Get 'Em Hutch (S) Pathe, 1922
star: Charles Hutchinson; Director: George B.
Seitz.
Gordon of Ghost City Universal, 1933
Stars: Buck Jones. Walter Miller: Director: Ray
Taylor.
ireat Adventures of Wild Bill Hickok
Columbia, 1938
Star: Gordon Elliott: Directors: Mack V.
Wright, Sam Nelson,
tireat Circus Mystery, The (S) ... Universal, 1928
Star: Joe Bonomo: Director: Jack Marchant.
Green Archer, The (S) Pathe. 192,"">
Stars: Allene Ray. Waller Miller; Director:
Spencer Gordon Beimel.
SERIALS SINCE 1920
Haunted Island (S) Universal. 1928
Stars: Jack Daugherty. Helen Foster: Director:
Robert F. Hill.
Haunted Valley (S) Pathe. 1923
Star: Ruth Roland: Director: George Marshall.
Hawk of the Hills (S) Pathe. 1927
Stars: Frank Lacketeen. Allene Ray. Walter
Miller; Director: Spencer Gordon Bennet.
Hawk of the Wilderness Republic, 1938
Stars: Herman Brix, Mala. Monte Blue; Direc-
tors: William Witney. John English.
Her Dangerous Path (S) Pathe. 1923
Star: Edna Murphy; Director: Roy Clements.
Heroes of the Flames Universal. 1931
Star: Tim McCoy: Director: Robert F. Hill.
Heroes of the West Universal, 1932
Star: Noah Beery. Jr.: Director: Ray Taylor.
Heroes of the Wild (S) Mascot, 1927
Star: Jack Hoxie.
House Without a Key. The (S) Pathe, 192(i
Stars: Allene Ray. Walter Miller: Director:
Spencer Gordon Bennet.
Hunting Tigers in India Principal, 1930
Director: Comm. George M. Dyott.
Hurricane Express Mascot. 1932
Star: John Wayne; Directors: Armand Schaefer.
J. P. MacGowan.
Hurricane Hutch (S) Pathe. 1921
Star: Charles Hutchinson: Director: George B.
Seitz.
Idaho (S) Pathe. 1925
Stars: Mahlon Hamilton, Vivian Rich: Director:
Robert F. Hill.
Indians Are Coming. The Universal, 1930
Stars: Tim McCoy, Allene Ray; Director: Henry
MacRae.
Into the Net (S) Pathe, 1921
Stars: Edna Murphy. Jack Mulhall: Director:
George B. Seitz.
Iron Man. The (S) Universal. 1921
Star: Albertini: Director: Jay Marchant.
Isle of Sunken Gold (S) Mascot, 1927
Star: Anita Stewart.
Jade Box. The Universal, 1930
stars: Louise Lorraine. Jack Perrin : Director:
Ray Taylor.
Jungle Jim Universal. 1937
Stars: Grant Withers. Evelyn Brent: Directors:
Ford Beebc. Smith.
Jungle Menace Columbia, 1937
stars: Frank Buck. Reginald Denny: Directors:
George M. Melford. Harry Fraser.
Jungle Mystery Universal, 1932
Star: Tom Tyler; Director: Ray Taylor.
King of the Circus (S) Universal. 1920
Star: Eddie Polo: Director: J. P. McGowan.
King of the Kongo (S and talking versions)
Mascot. 1920
stars: Jacqueline Logan. Walter Miller. Richard
Tucker: Director: Richard Thorpe.
King of the Jungle (S) Rayart. 1927
Star: Sally Long, Elmo Lincoln; Director:
Webster Cullison.
King of the Wild Mascot. 1931
Stars: Boris Karloff. Walter Miller: Director:
Reeves Eason.
Last Frontier. The RKO Radio. 1932
Star: Lon Chaney. Jr.: Director: Spencer Gordon
Bennet
Last of the Mohicans, The Mascot, 1932
Star: Harry Carey: Directors: Reeves Eason,
Ford Beebe.
Law of the Wild Mascot, 1931
Stars: Rex, Rin-Tin-Tin, Jr., Ben Turpin: Direc-
tors: Armand Schaefer, Reeves Eason.
Leatherstocking (S) Pathe, 1921
Stars: Walter Miller. Edna Murphy; Director:
George B. Seitz.
267
Lightning Express Universul, 1930
star: Louise Lorraine; Director: Henry MacRae.
Lightning Warrior Mascot, 1931
Stars: Rin-Tin-Tin. FranUie Darro, George
Brent: Directors: Armand Sehaefer. Ben Kline.
Lone Defender, The Mascot, 19.30
Stars: Rin-Tin-Tin. Walter Miller: Director:
Richard Thorpe.
Lone Ranger Rides Again. The. . . .Republic, 1939
Stars: Lee Powell. Chief Thunder Cloud: Di-
rectors: William Witney. John English.
Lone Ranger Rides Again, The. . . .Republic, 1939
Stars: Robert Livinsrston, Chief Thunder Cloud:
Directors: William Witney, John English.
Lost Jungle. The Mascot, 1931
star: Clyde Beatty: Directors: Armand Sehaefer.
David Howard.
Lost Special. The Universal, 1932
Star: Ernie Nevers: Director: Henry MacRae.
Man Without a Face, The (S) Pathe, 1928
Stars: Allene Ray. Walter Miller: Director:
Spencer Gordon Bennet.
Mandrake, the Magician Columbia, 1939
Stars: Warren Hull. Doris Weston: Directors:
Sam Nelson, Norman Deming.
Mansion of Mystery (S) Pizor. 192 7
Stars: Teddy Reaves. William Barrymore: Di-
rector: Robert Horner.
Mark of the Frog. The (S) Pathe, 1928
Stars: Donald Reed. Margaret Morris: Director:
Arch Heath.
Masked Menace, The (S) Pathe, 1927
stars; Larry Kent. Jean Arthur: Director: Arch
Heath.
Melting Millions (S) Pathe, 1927
Stars: Allene Ray. Walter Miller: Director:
Spencer Gordon Bennet.
Miracle Kider, The Mascot, 1935
star: Tom Mix; Directors: Armand Sehaefer.
Reeves Eason.
Moon Riders. The (S) Universal, 1920
Star: Art Acord: Director: Reeves Eason.
Mysterious Airman. The (S) Artclass. 1928
Stars: Walter Miller. Eugenia Gilbert: Director:
Harry Revier.
Mysterious Pilot. The Columbia. 1937
star: Capt. Frank Hawks: Director: Spencer
Gordon Bennet.
Mystery Box (S) Davis, 1926
Mystery Mountain Mascot. 1934
Star: Ken Maynard: Directors: Otto Brower.
Reeves Eason.
Mystery Pilot (S) Rayart
Stars: Rex Lease. Katherine McGuire: Director:
Harry Moody.
Mystery Rider. The (S) Universal, 1928
Stars: William Desmond. Derlys Perdue: Di-
rector: Jack Nelson.
Mystery Squadron Mascot. 1933
Star: Bob Steele: Directors: Colbert Clark. David
Howard.
New Adventures of Tarzan. The
Burroughs-Tarzan, 1935
Star: Herman Brix: Director: Edward Kull.
On Guard (S) Pathe, 1927
Star: Cullen Landis: Director: Arch Heath.
Oregon Trail Universal, 1939
Star: Johnny Mack Brown; Director: Ford
Beebe.
Oregon Trail, The (S) Universal. 1923
Star: Art Acord: Director: Edward Laemmle.
Overland With Kit Carson Columbia, 1939
Star: Bill Elliott: Directors: Sam Nelson, Nor-
man Deming.
Tainted Stallion. The Republic. 1937
Star: Ray Corrigan: Directors: William Whitney.
Alan James. Ray Taylor.
Perils of the Jungle (S) Artclass, 1927
Star: Evalyn Knapp: Director: Ray Taylor.
Perils of the Wild (S) Universal, 1925
Star: William Desmond: Director: Francis Ford.
SE REALS St MCE 1920
Perils of the Yukon (S) Universal. 1922
Star: William Desmond; Director: Perry Vekroff.
Phantom Creeps, The Universal, 1939
Star: Bela Lugosi: Directors: Ford Beebe. Saul
A. Goodkind.
Phantom Empire, The Mascot. 1935
Stars: Gene Autry. FranUie Darro; Directors:
Otto Brower. Reeves Eason.
Phantom Foe (S) Pathe, 1920
Stars: Warner Oland. Juanita Hansen; Director:
Bertram Millhauser.
Phantom Fortune (S) Universal, 1923
Star: William Desmond; Director: Robert F.
Hill.
Phantom of the Air Universal, 1933
Star: Tom Tyler; Director: Ray Taylor.
Phantom Police (S) Rayart
Star: Herbert Rawlinson: Director: Robert
Dillon.
Phantom Rider, The Universal. 1936
Star: Buck Jones: Director: Ray Taylor.
Phantom of the West Mascot, 1931
Star: Tom Tyler: Director: Ross Lederman.
Pirate Gold (S) Pathe, 1920
Star: June Caprice: Director: George B. Seitz.
Pirate of Panama (S) Universal, 1929
Stars: Buffalo Bill. Jr.. Natalie Kingston; Di-
rector: Ray Taylor.
Pirate Treasure Universal, 1934
Star: Richard Talmadge; Director: Ray Taylor.
Pirates of the Pines (S) Goodart. 1928
Star: George O'Hara: Director: J. C. Cook.
Play Ball (S) Pathe, 1925
Stars: Allene Ray. Walter Miller; Director:
Spencer Gordon Bennet.
Plunder (S) Pathe, 1923
Star: Pearl White; Director: George B. Seitz.
Police Reporter (S) Artclass, 1928
Stars: Walter Miller. Eugenia Gilbert; Director:
Jack Nelson.
Power God (S) Davis, 1926
Queen of the North Woods (S) Pathe, 1929
Stars: Walter Miller, Ethlyne Clair: Directors:
Spencer Gordon Bennet. Tom Storey.
Radio Detective, The (S) Universal, 192«
Star: Jack Daugherty; Director: William Crin-
ley.
Radio King (S) Universal. 1922
Star: Roy Stewart; Director: Robert F. Hill.
Radio Patrol Universal, 1937
Star: Grant Withers; Directors: Ford Beebe.
Cliff Smith.
Red Barry Universal. 1938
Stars: Larry Crabbc. Frances Robinson; Direc-
tors: Ford Beebe, Alan James.
Red Rider, The Universal, 1934
Stars: Buck Jones, Walter Miller; Director:
Louis Friedlander.
Return of Chandu Principal, 1934
Star: Bela Lugosi: Director: Ray Taylor.
Return of the Riddle Rider (S) . .Universal, 1927
Star: William Desmond; Director: Robert F.
Hill.
Riddle Rider (S) Universal, 1924
Star: William Desmond: Director: William Craft.
Roaring West, The Universal, 1935
Stars: Buck Jones. Walter Miller: Director: Ray-
Taylor.
Robinson Crusoe (S) Universal, 1922
Star: Harry Myers: Director: Robert F. Hill.
Robinson Crusoe of Clipper Island . Republic, 1936
Stars: Mala, Mamo Clark; Directors: Ray Tay-
lor, Mack V. Wrigt.
Rustlers of Red Dog Universal, 1935
Stars: John Mack Brown, Walter Miller: Direc-
tor: Louis Friedlander.
Ruth of the Range (S) Pathe, 1923
Star: Ruth Roland: Director: Ernest C. Warde.
Ruth of the Rockies (S) Pathe, 1920
Star: Ruth Roland; Director: George Marshall.
S. 0. S. Coast Guard Republic, 1937
Stars: Ralph Byrd. Bela Lugosi; Directors:
William Witney. Alan James.
Sailors of the Seven Seas (S) Trinity-
Director: Harry Revier.
269
M-G-M
270
Scarlet Arrow, The- (S) Universal, 1928
Star: Francis Bushman, Jr.: Director: Raj-
Taylor.
Scarlet Brand, The <S) Artistic, 1928
Star: Neal Hart.
Scarlet Streak, The (S) Universal, 1935
Star: Jack Daugherty: Director: Henry MacRae
Scotty of the Scouts (S) Rayart, 1926
Star: Ben Alexander: Director: Duke Worne.
Scouts to the Rescue Universal, 1939
Star: Jackie Cooper: Directors: Ray Taylor,
Alan James.
Secret Agent X-9 Universal. 193T
Star: Scott Kolk: Directors: Ford Beebe, Cliff
Smith.
Secret Four. The (S) Universal, 1921
Star: Eddie Polo: Director: Al Russell.
Secret Service Sanders (S) Rayart
Stars: Richard Holt. Ann Little: Director: Duke
Worne.
Secret of Treasure Island, The ... Columbia, 1938
Stars: Don Terry. Gwen Gaze, Grant Withers.
Walter Miller: Director: Elmer Clifton.
Sentinel Light (S) Beacon, 1929
Star: George Terwilliger: Director: Arthur
Statter.
Shadow of Chinatown Victory, 193(i
Star: Bela Lugosi; Director: Robert F. Hill.
Shadow of the Eagle Mascot, 1932
Star: John Wayne: Director: Ford Beebe.
Silent Flyer (S) Universal, 1927
star: Malcolm McGregory; Director: William
Craft.
Sky Ranger (S) Pathe, 1921
Star: June Caprice: Director: George B. Seitz.
Snowed In (S) Pathe, 1926
star: Allene Ray: Director: Spencer Gordon
Bennet.
Social Buccaneer, The (S) Universal, 1923
Star: Jack Mulhall; Director: Robert F. Hill.
Speed (S) Pathe, 1922
Star: Charles Hutchinson: Director: George B.
Seitz.
Spell of the Circus Universal, 1931
Stars: Francis X. Bushman. Jr., Alberta
Vaughn: Director: Robert F. Hill.
Spider's Web, The Columbia, 1938
Stars: Warren Hull. Iris Meredith; Directors:
Ray Taylor, James W. Home.
Stanley in Africa (S) Universal, 1922
Stars: Eddie Polo, George Walsh; Director:
Edward Kull.
Steel Trail (S) Universal, 1923
Star: William Duncan; Director: William Dun-
can.
Strings of Steel, (S) Universal, 1926
Star: William Desmond; Director: Henry Mac-
Rae.
Sunken Silver (S) Pathe, 1925
Stars: Allene Ray, Walter Miller; Director:
George B. Seitz.
Tailspin Tommy Universal, 1931
Stars: Maurice Murphy, Noah Beery, Jr.. Walter
Miller; Director: Louis Friedlander.
Tailspin Tommy in the Great Air Mystery
Universal, 1935
Stars: Clark Williams, Noah Beery, Jr.; Direc-
tor: Ray Taylor.
Tarzan, the Fearless Principal, 1933
Star: Buster Crabbe: Director: Robert F. Hill.
Tarzan, the Mighty (S) Universal, 1928
Star: Frank Merrill: Director: Jack Nelson.
Tarzan, the Tiger (S-SE) Universal, 1929
Star: Frank Merrill: Director: Henry MacRae.
Ten Scars Make a Man (S) Pathe, 1924
Stars: Allene Ray. Jack Mower; Director:
William Parke.
Terrible People (S) Pathe, 1928
Stars: Allene Ray. Walter Miller; Director:
Spencer Gordon Bennet.
Terror Trail (S) Universal, 1921
Stars: Eileen Sedgwick: Director: Edward Kull.
Terry of the Times Universal, 1930
Star: Reed Howes; Director: Henry MacRae.
Third Eye, The (S) Pathe, 1920
Stars: Warner Oland. Eileen Percy: Director:
James W. Home.
Three Musketeers, The Mascot, 1933
Star: John Wayne; Directors: Armand Sehaefer.
Colbert Clark.
SERIALS SliVCE 1920
Tiger's Shadow. The (S) rathe. 1928
Stars: Gladys McConnell, Hugh Allan: Director:
Spencer Gordon Bennet.
Timber Queen (S) Pathe, 1922
Star: Ruth Roland: Director: Fred Jackman.
Tim Tyler's Luck Universal, 1937
Stars: Frankie Thomas. Jack Mulhall: Director:
Ford Beebe.
Trail of the Tiger (S) Universal, 1927
Stars: Francis Teague, Jack Daugherty: Direc-
tor: Henry MacRae.
Trailed by Three (S) Pathe, 1920
Stars: Stuart Holmes. Frankie Mann; Director:
Perry Vekroff.
Trooper 77 (S) Rayart, 1926
Star: Herbert Rawlins: Director: Duke Worne.
Undersea Kingdom Republic, 1936
Star: Ray Corrigan; Directors: Reeves Eason,
Joseph Kane.
Vanishing Dagger (S) Universal, 1920
Star: Eddie Polo: Director: Jacques Jaccard.
Vanishing Legion, The Mascot, 1931
Stars: Harry Carey, Edwina Booth; Director:
Reeves Eason.
Vanishing Millions (S) Sierra, 1926
Stars: William Fairbanks. Vivian Rich; Direc-
tor: Alvin J. Netz.
Vanishing Rider, The (S) Universal, 1928
Star: William Desmond; Director: Ray Taylor
Vanishing Shadow, The Universal, 1934
Stars: Onslow Stevens. Walter Miller; Director:
Louis Friedlander.
Vanishing West (S) Mascot, 1928
Star: Jack Perrin; Director: Richard Thorpe.
Velvet Fingers (S) Pathe, 1920
Stars: George Seitz, Marguerite Courtot: Direc-
tor: George B. Seitz.
Vigilantes Are Coming, The Republic, 1936
Stars: Robert Livingston, Big Boy Williams.
Raymond Hatton; Directors: Ray Taylor, Mack
V. Wright.
Vultures of the Sea (S) Mascot. 1928
Stars: Johnny Walker, Shirley Mason; Director:
Richard Thorpe.
Way of a Man (S) Pathe, 1924
Stars: Allene Ray, Walter Miller; Director:
George B. Seitz.
Whispering Shadow, The Mascot. 1933
Star: Bela Lugosi; Directors: Albert Herman,
Colbert Clark.
Whispering Smith Rides (S) Universal. 1927
Star: Wallace MacDonald; Director: Ray Taylor.
White Eagle (S) Pathe, 1922
Star: Ruth Roland; Director: W. S. Van Dyke.
White Horseman (S) Universal. 1921
Star: Eddie Polo; Director: J. P. McGowan.
Who's Guilty? (S) Sammon
Wild West (S) Pathe, 1925
Stars: Helen Ferguson, Jack Mulhall; Director:
Robert F. Hill.
Wild West Days Universal, 1937
Star: John Mack Brown; Directors: Ford Beebe,
Cliff Smith.
Winking Idol, The (S) Universal, 1926
Star: William Desmond: Director: Francis Ford.
Winners of the West (S) Universal, 1921
Star: Art Acord: Director: Edward Laemmle.
Wolf Dog Mascot. 1933
Stars: Rin-Tin-Tin. Jr.. George Lewis, Frankie
Darro; Directors: Colbert Clark, Harry Frazer.
Wolves of the North (S) Universal, 1924
Star: William Duncan: Director: William Dun-
can.
Yellow Arm (S) Pathe, 1921
Stars: Warner Oland. Juanita Hansen: Director:
Bertram Millhauser.
Yellow Cameo, The (S) Pathe. 1928
Star: Allene Ray: Director: Spencer Gordon
Bennet.
Young Eagles First Division, 1934
Zorro Rides Again Republic, 1937
Stars: John Carroll, Helen Christian: Directors:
William Witney. John English.
Zorro's Fighting Legion Republic, 1939
Stars: Reed Hadley. Sheila Darcy: Directors:
William Witney, John English.
271
(
KING VIDOR
NORTHWEST PASSAGE'
272
ORIGINAL TITLES
Names of books and plays made into motion pictures under
titles different than the original are listed below. Data
includes the original title, author, release title and distributor.
Original Title Release Title
and Author and Distributor
ABOUT THE MURDER OP THE CIRCUS QUEEN
(Anthony Abbot): Circus Queen Murder, Co-
lumbia, 1933.
ABYSMAL BRUTE (Jack London): Conflict,
Universal, 1921.
ACE, THE (Herman Rossman): Hell in the
Heavens, Fox, 1934.
AD MAN (Arch A. Gaffney, Charles Curran) :
No Marriage Ties, RKO, 19.33.
ACROSS THE AISLE (W. R. Burnett): 38
Hours to Kill, Fox, 1936.
ADA BEATS THE DRUM (Anita Loos): Mama
Steps Out. M-G-M, 1937.
ADAM'S ENEMY; His Exciting Night, Univer-
sal, 1938.
ADIOS (Lanier Bartlett, Virginia Stivers Bart-
lett) : The Lash, First National, 1931.
ADMIRABLE CRICHTON (James M. Barrie) :
Male and Female, Paramount. 1919.
ADRIENNE LECOUVREUR (Eugene Scribe.
Ernest Legouve) : Dream of Love, M-G-M.
1928.
ADVENTURES OP A BANKNOTE (Bella Da-
laco); Uneasy Money, Pox, 1928.
ADVENTURES OF GERARD (A. Conan Doyle) :
Fighting Eagle. Pathe, 1917.
ADVENTURES OF KING PAUSOLE (Pierre
Louys) ; The Merry Monarch, Syndicate, 1935.
ADVENTURES OF WALLY GAY (H. S. Hall):
Steel Preferred, PDC, 1926.
ADVENTURESS, THE ( Ewart Adamson):
Desert Bride, Columbia, 1928.
AFRAID TO TALK (Edward James): Young
Fugitives, Universal, 1938.
AFTER ALL (John Van Druten) ; New Morals
for Old, M-G-M, 1932.
AFTER FIVE (William deMille) : Night Club,
Paramount, 1925.
AFTERWARDS (Walter Hackett) : Their Big
Moment, RKO, 1934.
AGONY COLUMN (Earl Derr Biggers) ; Second
Floor Mystery, Warner Bros., 1930.
AIR DEVILS (John Monk Saunders): Devil
Dogs of the Air, Warner Bros., 1935.
ALIAS THE DEACON, (John D. Hymer) ; Half
a Sinner, Universal, 1924.
ALL IS CONFUSION (Richard Macaulay) ; Riding
on Air, RKO Radio. 1937.
ALL FOR LOVE (Peter B. Kyne) : Valley of
Wanted Men, Conn Pictures, 1935.
ALL GOOD AMERICANS (S. J. and Laura
Perelman): Paris Interlude, M-G-M. 1934.
ALL MUST MARRY (George Ade) : Woman
Proof, Paramount 1923.
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED (Wallace Sullivan):
Four's a Crowd, Warners. 1938.
Original Title Release Title
and Author and Distributor
ALL THE BROTHERS WERE VALIANT (Ben
Ames Williams) ; Across to Singapore. M-G-M
1928.
ALL THE KING'S MEN (Fulton Oursler) :
Second Wife, RKO, 1936.
ALL WOMEN ARE BAD (William Anthony
McGuire); Don't Bet on Women, Fox, 1931.
ALTAR ON THE HILL (Mary Roberts Rine
hart): Silent Watcher, First National, 1924.
ALWAYS FAITHFUL (Ewart Adamson); Flash
ing Fangs, FBO, 1926.
AMAZING QUEST OF ERNEST BLISS (E. Phil-
lips Oppenheim): Romance and Riches. Grand
National, 1937.
AMBASSADOR FROM THE UNITED STATES
(Guy Bolton); Ambassador Bill, Fox, 1931.
AMBUSH (Arthur Riehman) ; The Reckless
Hour, First National, 1931.
AMERICAN BLACK CHAMBER (Herbert O.
Yardley); Rendezvous, M-G-M, 1935.
AMOS JUDD (John Ames Mitchell): Young R.~
jah. Paramount, 1922.
AMONG THE MARRIED (Vincent Lawrence):
Men Call It Love, M-G-M, 1931.
AM TEETISCH (Carl Slobada) ; Tea for Three
M-G-M, 1927.
AMY JOLLY (Beno Vigny) ; Morocco, Paramount
1930.
ANCHORS AWEIGH (Delmer Daves); Shipmates
Forever, First National, 1935.
ANDREW APPLEJOHN'S ADVENTURE (Walter
Hackett) ; Captain Applejack, Warner Bros
1931.
ANGEL FACE MOLLY (Fred Kennedy Myton)-
Heart Bandit, Metro, 1924.
ANGEL PASSES (Jacques Bousquet, Henri Falk);
Blonde or Brunette, Paramount, 1927.
ANGELS OF DOOM (Leslie Charteris) ; The Saint
Strikes Back, RKO, 1939.
ANNA KARENINA (Tolstoi) ; Love. M-G-M
1927.
ANNE'S AN IDIOT (Pamela Wynne); Dangerous
Innocence, Universal, 1925.
APPLE SAUCE (Barry Connors) ; Brides Are
Like That, First National, 1936.
APRIL MADNESS (Crosby George); June Mad-
ness, Metro, 1922.
APRIL SHOWERS (Edgar Allen Wolfe): April
Fool, Chadwick, 1926.
APRON STRINGS (Dorrence Davis); Virtuous
Husband, Universal, 1931.
ARABELLA (Alden Nash); We're Rich Again
RKO, 1934.
ARABIAN NIGHTS (Unknown); The Thief of
Bagdad. United Artists, 1924.
273
\*** a
m
FLOUO
PRODUCED BY
WIIFIELB
s ii u: i i i \
for
M • G • M
274
Original Title
and Author
Release Title
and Distributor
Original Title
anil Author
Release Title
and Distributor
AREN'T WE ALL (Frederick Lonsdale I : Kiss
in the Dark, Paramount. 1925.
ARGONAUTS (Peter B. Kyne) : Tide of Empire
M-G-M. 1929.
AT YALE (Owen Davis): Hold 'Em Tale. Pathe.
1928.
ATTIC OF FELIX BAVU (Edward Carroll):
Bavu. Universal, 1923.
AULD JEREMIAH (Henry C. Rowland): Bonnie
Bonnie Lessie. Universal. 1919.
AXELLE (Pierre Benoit) : Surrender. Fox, 1931.
AZURE SHORE (Frederick and Fanny Hatton):
Rush Hour. Pathe. 1928.
BAB (Mary Roberts Rinehart) : Bab's Burglar.
Paramount, 1917.
BAB (Mary Roberts Rinehart): Bab's Diary.
Paramount. 1917.
BAB (Mary Roberts Rinehart): Bab's Matinee
Idol. Paramount. 1917.
BAB (Mary Roberts Rinehart): Her Country
First. Paramount. 1918.
BABY IN THE ICEBOX (James M. Cain): She
Made Her Bed. Paramount. 1934.
BACHELOR BORN (Ian Hay) : Housemaster. Al-
liance, 1939.
BACK FROM THE DEAD (Andrew Soutar) : Back
to Life. Associates Exhibitors, 1925.
BACKFIELD (Byron Morgan. J. Robert Bren) :
The Band Plays On. M-G-M, 1934.
BACKSTAGE PHANTOM ( Wadsworth Camp ) : The
House of Fear, Universal, 1939.
BADGE OF POLICEMAN O'ROON, THE (0
Henry); Dr. Rhythm. Paramount. 1938.
BADGES (Max Marcin. Edward Hammond).
Ghost Talks, Fox, 1931.
BAD COMPANY (Val Burton. E. Hartmann) ;
Two Bright Boys, Universal, 1939.
BAD SAMARITAN (Eugene M. Rhodes); Desert
Driven, FBO, 1923.
BALL OF FIRE (Gladys Unger, Jesse Lasky, Jr.);
Music is Magic, Fox, 1935.
BANCO (Alfred Savoir) : Lost — a Wife, Para-
mount, 1925.
BANDWAGON (H. L. Gates) ; Half Way to
Heaven, Paramount, 1929.
BARBARA WINSLOW, REBEL (Elizabeth Ellis);
Dangerous Maid, First National, 1923.
BARBER JOHN'S BOY (Ben Ames Williams):
Man to Man, Warner Bros., 1931.
BARKER; THE (John Kenyon Nicholson): Hoop-
la, Fox. 1923.
BAR SINISTER (Richard Harding Davis) : Al-
most Human, Pathe, 1927.
BASQUERIE (Eleanor Mercein) : Their Mad Mo-
ment, Fox, 1931.
BAT, THE (Mary Roberts Rinehart. Avery Hop-
wood) ; The Bat Whispers, United Artists, 1931.
BATTLE, THE (Robert Stevenson): Thunder in
the East, United Artists. 1934.
BEACHCOMBER (Mildred Cram) ; Sinners in the
Sun. Paramount. 1932.
BEAR TAMER'S DAUGHTER (Konrad Bercovici) ;
Revenge, United Artists, 1928.
BEAUTIFUL BULLET (Harold McGrath) : Dan-
ger Street, FBO. 1928.
BEAUTY AND THE BEAST (Alan Green, Julian
Brodie); Love on the Run, M-G-M, 1936.
BEAUTY (Faith Baldwin): Beauty for Sale.
M-G-M, 1933.
BED ROCK (Jack Bethea) ; Coming Through.
Paramount, 1925.
BEE HUNTER (Zane Grey): Under the Tonto
Rim, Paramount, 1933.
BEHAVIOR OF ANIMALS AND MAN (Un-
known) : Mechanics of the Human Brain, Am-
kino, 1928.
BEHAVIOR OF MRS. CREWE (George O'Neill.
Doris Anderson) : Uncertain Lady, Universal.
1934.
BEHIND THE WHEEL (Welford Beaton); Speed-
ing Venus, PDC. 1926.
BEHOLD. WE LIVE (John Van Druten) : If I
Were Free, RKO, 1933.
BELLAMY, THE MAGNIFICENT (Roy Honiman) :
Gentleman of Paris, Paramount, 1927.
BELLS OF WALDENBRUCK (Frank Leon
Smith) ; Melody in Spring, Paramount, 1934.
BELLED PALM, THE (Allan Vaughan Elston) :
Paradise Isle. Monogram. 1937.
BELONGING (Olive Wedsley) ; In Every Wom-
an's Life, First National, 1924.
BENEFITS FORGOT (Honore Morrow): Of Hu-
man Hearts, M-G-M. 1938.
BERG, THE (Ernest Raymond): Atlantic, British
International. 1930.
BEST IN LIFE (Muriel Hine) : Fifth Avenue
Models. Universal, 1925.
BEST PEOPLE (David Gray, Avery Hopwood) :
Fast and Loose. Paramount, 1930.
BETTER WIFE (Gouveneur Morris): Anybody's
Woman, Paramount, 1930.
BETTY'S A LADY (Gerald Paul Beaumont):
The Count of Ten. Universal, 1928.
BIDDY (Travis Inham) : The Most Precious
Thing in Life, Columbia, 1934.
BIG (Lewis J. Foster); The Magnificent Brute.
Universal. 1936.
BIGAMIST (Lewis Allen Brown); Naughty But
Nice, First National, 1927.
BIG BROTHER (Rex Beach): Young Donovan's
Kid, RKO, 1931.
BIG-BOW MYSTERY (Israel Zangwell) : Perfect
Crime, FBO, 1928.
BIG-BOW MYSTERY (Israel Zangwell) ; The
Crime Doctor, RKO, 1934.
BIG HEARTED JIM (Petterson Marzoni) ; Broth-
erly Love, M-G-M, 1928.
BIG MITTEN (Damon Runyon); No Ransom.
Liberty, 1935.
BIG SHOW (Arthur Guy Empey) : Bigger Than
Barnum's, FBO, 1926.
BIOGRAPHY (S. N. Behrman) ; Biography of a
Bachelor Girl, M-G-M, 1936.
BIRD MAN (J. Frank Clark); High Flyer, Ray-
art, 1926.
BITTERNESS (Rupert Hughes) : Look Your Best.
Goldwyn, 1933.
BILLETED (F. Tennyson. Jesse and H. M. Har-
wood) ; Misleading Widow, Paramount, 1919.
BILLY KANE, WHITE AND UNMARRIED (John
D. Swain) : White and Unmarried, Paramount.
1921.
BLACK-STEMMED CHERRIES (Vaszary Janos) ;
Storm at Daybreak, M-G-M, 1933.
BLACK BEACH (Ralph Stock); Love Flower,
First National, 1920.
BLACKBIRDS (Harry James Smith) : Slightly
Scarlet. Paramount, 1930.
BLACK ROOM (George Bronson Howard); Man
from Headquarters. Rayart. 1928.
BLACK MARRIAGE (Fred Jackson) ; Her Man
O'War, PDC, 1926.
275
m
BRADBURY FOOTE
Screenplays — 1940
YOUNG TOM EDISON
Starring Mickey Rooney
and
*EDISON, THE MAN
Starring Spencer Tracy
j In Collaboration
276
Original Title
and Author
Release Title
and Distributor
Original Title
and Author
Release Title
and Distributor
BLACK RIDER (Max Brand) : The Cavalier.
Tiffany, 1928.
BLACK SHEEP (Dorothy Howell) : Guilty .
Columbia. 1930.
BLAZE DERRINGER (Eugene P. Lyle. Jr.):
American Pluck. Chadwick, 1926.
BLESS THEIR HEARTS (Sarah Addington) :
And So They Were Married, Columbia. 1936.
BLESS YOU. SISTER (H. R. Riskin. John
Meehan) ; Miracle Woman, Columbia, 1931.
BLIND MICE (Vera Caspary. Winifred Lenihan) :
Working Girls, Paramount, 1931.
BLIND SPOT (Kenyon Nicholson) : Taxi, Wamer
Bros., 1932.
BLONDE BABY (Wilson Collison) ; Three Wise
Girls. Columbia, 1932.
BLONDE DYNAMITE (Murray Roth, Ben Ryan):
She's Dangerous, Universal, 1937.
BLOOD AND DIAMONDS (Arthur Hoerl) ; Cross
Examination. Artclass, 1932.
BLUE BLOOD AND THE PIRATE (Peter B.
Kyne); Breed of the Sea. PBO. 1926.
BLUE COAST. THE (Hans Mueller); Monte
Carlo. Paramount, 1930.
BLUFFERS (Robert S. Carr) : Hot Stuff. First
National, 1929.
BOARDING HOUSE BLUES (Pauline Forney.
Dudley Murphy): Jazz Heaven. RKO. 1929.
BOOK ENGINEER (Arthur Guy Empey) : Mid-
night Flyer, FBO, 1926.
BOOK OF CARLOTTA (Arnold Bennett); Sacred
and Profane Love. Paramount, 1921.
BOOK OF CHARM (Unknown); Boy Friend.
M-G-M, 1926.
BOOK OF DANIEL DREW (Bouck White); The
Toast of New York, RKO Radio. 1937.
BOOMERANG. THE (Winchell Smith. Victor
Mupes) ; Love Doctor, Paramount, 1929.
BORDER LEGION (Zane Grey): Last Round Up.
Paramount, 1934.
BORDER RAIDER (W. D. Hoffman): Apache
Raider. Pathe, 1928.
BORN OF THE CYCLONE (Marion Burton); Un-
tamed Youth, FBO. 1924.
BORROWED TIME (Martin Mooney ) ; You Can't
Buy Luck, RKO Radio, 1937.
BOSS OF THE BARB RANCH (William Jacobs):
Moonlight on the Prairie; Warner Bros., 1935.
BOULE CABINET (Burton E. Stevenson): In
the Next Room. First National, 1930.
BRANDING IRON (Katherine Newlin Burt):
Body and Soul, M-G-M. 1927.
BRASS BOWL (Joseph Vance); Masquerade.
Fox, 1929.
BREAD, BUTTER AND RHYTHM (Milton Sper-
ling, Boris Ingster) ; Happy Landing, 20th Cen-
tury-Fox, 1938.
BREAD ON THE WATERS (Peter B. Kyne):
Hero on Horseback, Universal, 1927.
BRIDE (George Middleton. Stuart Oliver); Danger
Girl; PDC, 1936.
BRING ME HIS EARS (Clarence E. Mulford) :
Borderland. Paramount. 1937.
BROADWAY VIRGIN (Lois Bull); Manhattan
Butterfly, Imperial, 1935.
BROKEN THREADS (Ernest Wilkes); Man from
Funeral Range. Paramount, 1918.
BROKEN DISHES (Martin Flavin) ; Too Young
to Marry, Warner Bros., 1931.
BROKEN DISHES (Martin Flavin); Love Be-
gins at 20: First National. 1936.
BROOK EVANS (Susan Glaspell) ; Right to
Love. Paramount, 1920.
BROTHERS (Elmer Harris); Forbidden Woman.
Equity, 1920.
BROTHERS (Edwin Burke) ; Woman Trap. Para-
mount, 1936.
BROWNSTONE FRONT (Lew Levenson) ; East
of Fifth Avenue, Columbia, 1933.
BRUTE BREAKER (Johnston McCullough) ; Ice
Flood. Universal, 1926.
BUCCANEER OF THE BAHAMAS (Unknown):
Sweet Daddies. First National, 1926.
BULLDOG DRUMMOND AND THE ORIENTAL
MIND (H. C. McNeile) ; Bulldog Drummond's
Bride, Paramount, 1939.
BURIED ALIVE (Arnold Bennett): His Double
Life, Paramount, 1933.
BURLESQUE (Unknown); Dance of Life, Para-
mount, 1929.
BURLESQUE (George Manker Watters) : Swing
High, Swing Low. Paramount, 1937.
BURNT OFFERING (W. Maxwell Goodhue) ;
Sin of Nora Moran, Majestic, 1933.
BURN. WITCH, BURN! (Abraham Merritt) ; The
Devil-Doll, M-G-M, 1936.
BUSINESS BEFORE PLEASURE (Jules Eckert
Goodman, Montagu Glass) : Potash and Perl-
mutter in Hollywood, First National, 1926.
BUSINESS IS BEST (Arthur Somers Roche);
Girl from Chicago. Warner Bros., 1927.
BUTTER AND EGG MAN (Arthur Caesar, Monty
Banks. Earl Baldwin): The Tenderfoot, Vita-
graph, 1917.
BUTTERFLY ON THE WHEEL (Anonymous);
Scandal in Paris, Felson-Europa, 1929.
CABALLERO OF THE LAW (Ben Hecht. Charles
MacArthur) : Crime Without Passion, Para-
mount, 1934.
CABALLERO' S WAY (O'Henry): In Old Arizona.
Fox, 1929.
CABALLERO'S WAY. THE (O'Henry) : Return
of the Cisco Kid, 20th Century-Fox, 1939.
CAESAR'S WIFE (W. Somerset Maugham):
Infatuation. First National. 1926.
CALEB WEST. MASTER DIVER (F. Hopkinson
Smith) ; Deep Waters, Paramount, 1921.
CALENDAR, THE (Edgar Wallace) : Bachelor's
Folly. World Wide, 1932.
( ALL ON THE PRESIDENT. A I Damon Runyon) :
Joe and Ethel Turp Call on the President.
M-G-M, 1939.
CALVARY ALLEY (Alice Heagan Rice) ; Sun-
shine Nan. Paramount, 1918.
CANAVAN (Rupert Hughes): It Had To Happen,
20th Century-Fox, 1936.
CANDID CAMERA GIRL (George Bilson) : Ex-
posed, Universal, 1938.
CANYON WALLS (Zane Grey): Smoke Lightning.
Fox, 1933.
CAPE COD FOLKS (Sarah P. McLean): Women
Who Give, Metro, 1924.
CAPE FORLORN (Frank Harvey); Love Storm.
British International. 1931.
( APE SMOKE (Walter Frost. Paul Dickey); Black
Magic. Fox, 1929.
CAPTAIN APPLEJACK (Walter Hackett) ; Strang-
gers of the Night, Metro. 1923.
CAPTAIN DIEPPE ( Anthony Hope ) ; Adventure
in Hearts. Paramount, 1919.
CAPTAIN FERREOL (Victorien Sardou) : Night
of Mystery, Paramount, 1928.
277
Jack Conway
Director
- .
v.
Boom Town"
EDWARD BUZZELL
Director
HONOLULU'
MARX BROTHERS
///
'A DAY AT THE CIRCUS7
278
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and Author
Release Title
and Distributor
Original Title
and Author
Release Title
and Distributor
CAPTAIN SAZARAC (Charles Tenney Jackson):
Eagle of the Sea, Paramount, 1926.
CARDBOARD LOVER, THE (Jacques Deval) :
The Passionate Plumber, M-G-M, 1932.
CARLO ROCCO (Laurence Clark, Max Giersberg,
Frederick Herendeen. Edward Horan) ; All the
King's Horses. Paramount, 1935.
CARNIVAL GIRL (William R. Doule) : Young
Desire. Universal, 1930.
CARYL OF THE MOUNTAINS (James Oliver Cur-
wood) ; Trails of the Wild, Ambassador, 1935.
CASANOVA'S MEMOIRS; Loves of Casanova.
M-G-M. 1929.
CASE OF THE CARETAKER'S CAT (Erie Stan-
ley Gardner) ; Case of the Black Cat, First
National, 1936.
CASE OF THE CONSTANT GOD (Rufus King) ;
Love Letters of a Star, Universal, 1936.
CAT AND THE CANARY (John Willard) ; The
Cat Creeps, Universal, 1930.
CAVANAUGH, FOREST RANGER (Hamlin Gar-
land); Ranger of the Big Pines, Vitagraph,
1925.
CENTURY CHAMPION (Frank R. Pierce); Dead
Man's Curve, FBO, 1927.
'CEPTION SHOALS (H. Austin Adams) ; Out of
the Fog. Metro, 1919.
CERTIFIED (Willoughby Speyers) : Maid's Night
Out. RKO Radio. 1938.
CHALLENGE (H. C. MeNeile): Bulldog Drum
mond in Africa, Paramount, 1938.
CHAMP, THE (Joseph Jackson): Be Yourself.
United Artists. 1930.
CHAMPION (Thomas Louden. A. E. Thomas) :
World's Champion, Paramount, 1922.
CHANGELINGS, THE (Donn Byrne) ; His Cap-
tive Women, First National, 1929.
CHANNEL CROSSING (Verne Whitehead): Re
ported Missing. Universal. 1937.
CHAP CALLED BARDELL (Llewelyn Hughes) ;
Sky Hawk, Fox, 1929.
CHARM SCHOOL (Alice Duer Miller); Someone
to Love, Paramount, 1928.
CHARMED LIFE OF MISS AUSTIN (Samuel Mer-
win); Crooked Streets, Paramount, 1920.
CHATTERBOX (Bayard Veiller) ; Alias French
Gertie, RKO, 1930.
CHATTERBOX (Bayard Veiller) ; Smooth as
Satin, RBO, 1925.
CHECKERS (Henry M. Blossom, Jr.) ; Gold Heels,
Fox, 1925.
CHERI-BIBI (Gaston Leroux) ; Phantom of Paris.
M-G-M, 1931.
CHERRY TREE (Aaron Hoffman) ; George Wash-
ington Cohen: Tiffany, 1929.
CHI HOUSE. THE (Mary Coyle Chase): Sorority
House, RKO, 1939.
CHICKEN FEED (Guy Bolton) : Wages for Wives.
Fox. 1925.
CHICKEN WAGON FAMILY (Barry Benenfield) :
Dixie Merchant, Fox. 1924.
CHILDREN'S HOUR, THE (Lillian Hellman);
These Three, United ARrtists. 1936.
CHILDREN, THE (Edith Wharton) ; Marriage
Playground; Paramount, 1929.
CHIN, CHIN, CHINAMAN (Percy Walsh) ; Boat
from Shanghai, First Anglo, 1932.
CHING, CHING, CHINAMAN (Wilbur Daniel
Steele): Shadows, Goldwyn, 1919.
CHRISTMAS EVE AT PILOT BUTTE (Courtney
Riley Cooper) ; Desperate Trails, Universal,
1921.
CHRYSALIS (Rose Albert Porter) : All of Me.
Paramount, 1934.
CHURCH MOUSE (Ladislaus Fodor. Paul Frank);
Beauty and the Boss, Warner Bros., 1932.
CIRCLE. THE (Somerset Maugham): Strictly Un-
conventional, M-G-M, 1930.
CISSY (Gustav Holm, Ernest Decsey. Hubert
Marischka) ; The King Steps Out, Columbia,
1936.
CLANSMAN. THE (Thomas Dixon): The Birth of
a Nation, United Artists, 1915.
CLARISSA OF THE POST ROAD (Grace S.
Mason) ; Man Crazy, First National, 1928.
CLARK'S FIELD (Robert Herniek) ; Dangerous
Money, Paramount, 1934.
CLASSIFIED (Edna Ferber) : Hard to Get, First
National, 1929.
CLASSIFIED (Wally Klein, Joseph Schrank) : Hard
to Get, Warners, 1938.
CLASS PROPHECY (Eleanore Griffin); When
Love Is Young, Universal. 1937.
CLAUSTROPHOBIA (A. Carter Goodloe) : I
Live My Life. M-G-M. 1935.
CLAW, THE (Henry Bernstein): Washington
Masquerade: M-G-M, 1922.
CLICK OF THE TRIANGLE "T" (Oscar Friend);
Phantom Bullet: Universal, 1926.
CLINGING FINGERS (Elizabeth Holding, Marion
Orth); Price of Pleasure, Universal, 1925.
CLIPPED WINGS (Rita Lambert); Hello Sister.
Fox, 1933.
CLUBFOOT (Valentine Williams); The Crouch-
ing Beast, Olympic, 1936.
COB WEB (Leon M. Lion, E. Naughton Davies) :
Strangling Threads. Hepworth, 1924.
COCKTAILS (Ben Herschfeld) : Girls Who Dare,
Selznick, 1920.
CODE OF THE WEST (Zane Grey); Home on the
Range, Paramount, 1935.
COLLEGE WIDOW, THE (George Ade) : Fresh-
man Love, Warner Bros., 1936.
COLLUSION (J. E. Harold Terry); Midnight
Lovers, First National, 1926.
COLLUSION (Theodore D. Irwin); Unknown
Blonde, Majestic, 1934.
COME-BACK (M. D. C. Crawford); Knockout,
First National, 1925.
COME OUT OF THE KITCHEN (Alice Duer Mil-
ler, A. E. Thomas) ; Honey, Paramount, 1930.
COME OUT OF THE KITCHEN (Alice Duer Mil-
er, A. E. Thomas): Cheri (French), Para-
mount, 1931.
COMET, THE (Betty Laidlaw, Robert Lively.
Charles Garyson) ; Personal Secretary, Univer-
sal. 1938.
COMMAND TO LOVE (Rudolph Lothar, Frith
Gottwald) ; Boudoir Diplomat, Universal, 1930.
COMMON CLAY (Cleves Kinkead) ; Private Num-
ber, 20th Century-Fox, 1936.
COMPANIONATE (George Kibb Turner); Half
Marriage, RKO. 1929.
COMPROMISED DAPHNE (Edith Fitzgerald):
Compromised. First National, 1931.
CONCEALMENT (Leonard Ide) : Secret Bride,
Warner Bros.. 1935.
CONCERT. THE (Herman Barr) ; Fashions in
Love, Paramount, 1929.
CONCHITA (Edward Knoblock) ; Loves Comes
Along. RKO. 1930.
CONDEMNED TO DEVIL'S ISLAND (Blair Niles) ;
Condemned, United Artists, 1929.
279
1^
EDGAR SELWYN
Producer
M-G-M
32
CARET WItSOM
280
Uriglual Title
and Author
Release Title
and Distributor
Original I'i(lr
and Author
Release Title
and Distributor
CONFESSION (Ernest Vajda) : Woman on Trail.
Paramount. 1927H.
CONFESSION. THE (Clara Ratzka): Whirl of
Youth, World Wide. 1929.
CONNECTICUT YANKEE IN KING ARTHUR'S
COURT (Mark Twain): A Connecticut Yankee.
Fox, 1931.
CONQUEROR'S HOUSE ( G. H. Broadhurst) : Call
of the North, Paramount, 1921.
CONQUISTADOR (Katherine Fullerton Gerould) ;
Romance of the Rio Grande, Fox, 1929.
CONQUISTADOR (Katherine Fullerton Gerould):
Yankee Senior, Fox. 1926.
CONSTANT WIFE (Somerset Maugham): Charm-
ing Sinners, Paramount. 1929.
COOKING HER GOOSE (H. H. Van Loan. Lottie
Ann Westman); Runaway Bride. RKO. 1930.
COP. THE (Kubee Glasmon): The Man in Blue,
Universal. 1937.
CORN COB KELLEY (Peter B. Kyne) : Sham-
rock Handicap. Fox, 1926.
CORNFLOWER CASSIE'S CONCERT (Peter B.
Kyne) ; Beauty and the Bad Man, PDC, 1926.
CORNERED (F. Hugrh Herbert): Road to Para-
dise, First National. 1930.
COTTONWOOD GULCH (Clarence E. Mulford) :
North of Rio Grande. Paramount, 1937.
COUNTRY LOVE (Hulbert Footner) : Youth to
Youth, Metro. 1922.
COUNTERFEIT (LeRoy Scott): Flirting With
Love. First National, 1924.
COUNT PETE (Francis M. Cockrell) ; Walking
On Air. RKO. 1936.
COURAGE (Mary L. Johnson): Satan and the
Woman, Excellent, 1928.
COURAGE (Tom Barry); My Bill, Warners. 1938
COUSIN KATE (Hubert Henry Davies) : Strictly
Modern, First National, 1930.
COWBOY AND THE KING (George Yates. Jr.):
Lightning Lariats, FBO. 1927.
CRADLE SNATCHERS (Robert S. Carr) ; Why
Leave Home?, Sox, 1929.
CRAZY OVER PIGEONS (Daniel Fuchs) ; The
Day the Bookies Wept. RKO, 1939.
CRIME; Law of the Underworld. RKO Radio,
1938.
CRIME OF SYLVESTRE BONNARD (Anatole
France): Chasing Yesterday, RKO. 1935.
CRIMES OF THE ARMCHAIR CLUB (Arthur
Somers Roche): Mystery Club, Universal.
1926.
CRITICAL YEAR (Rudolph Lothar, Hans Back-
witz); For Wives Only, PDC, 1927.
CROSSROADS (Martin Flavin): Age of Consent.
RKO, 1932.
CUP. THE (Thomas Buchanan): Rainbow Riley.
First National. 1926.
CURSE OF CAPISTRANO (Johnston McCulley) :
The Mark of Zorro. United Artists, 1920.
CUTTLE'S HIRED MAN (Max Brand); Against
All Odds, Fox, 1924.
CYCLONE HICKEY (A. P. Younger): Swellhead.
Columbia. 1927.
CYPRIENNE (Victorien Sardou) : Don't Tell the
Wife, Warner Bros.. 1927.
CZARINA (Lajos Biro, Meynhert Lengyel) : For-
bidden Paradise. Paramount, 1924.
DADDY AND I (Elizabeth Jordan): Make Way
For a Lady. RKO. 1936.
DALLA. THE LION CUB (Cynthia Stockley) ;
Female, Paramount, 1924.
DAMES (John Kobler) : The Forgotten Woman.
Universal, 1939.
DANCING HOOFS (Adele Buffington): Avenging
Rider. FBO. 1928.
DANCING PARTNER (Alexander Engel. Alfred
Greenwald): Just a Gigolo. M-G-M. 1931.
DANGER (Bayard Veiller) ; Woman with Four
Faces, Paramount, 1923.
DANGEROUS MAID. A (Sydney Rosenthal): Poor
Schmaltz, Paramount, 1915.
DANGEROUS SET, A (Marion Dix, Jerry Hor-
win) ; Two Against the World, First National.
1936.
DARK CHAPTER, THE (E. J. Rath): What a
Man!, World Wide. 1930.
DARK SWAN. THE (Ernest Pascal): Wedding
Kings. First National, 1930.
DARK TOWER (George S. Kaufman. Alexander
Woollcott); Man With Two Faces. First Na-
tional, 1934.
DASHING (Ruth Comfort Mitchell): A Six
Shootin' Romance, Universal, 1926.
DAS HOHE LIED (Book, Suderman: Play. Ed-
ward Sheldon) ; Lily of the Dust. Paramount,
1924.
DAS VERLOREN PARADISE (Ludwig Fulda) ;
Lost Paradise, Paramount, 1914.
DARK ROSALEEN (Max Brand) : Flying Horse
man. Fox. 1926.
DAS OPERN GLASS (Gabriel Renter) : Irresis-
table Lover, Universal, 1927.
DAUGHTER OF FU MANCHU (Sax Rohmer) :
Daughter of the Dragon, Paramount, 1931.
DAUGHTER OF MOTHER McGINN (Jack Boyle) :
Through the Dark, Metro-Goldwyn, 1924.
DAUGHTER OF A MAGNATE (Frank H. Spear
man) ; Love Special, Paramount, 1921.
DAUGHTER OF THE DONS (William McLeod
Raine) : Burning the Wind. Universal, 1929.
DAUGHTER OF THE DONS (William McLeod
Raine) ; Man in the Saddle, Universal. 1926.
DAWN (Capt. Reginald Berkeley): Nurse Edith
Cavell. RKO, 1939.
DAWN GLORY (Joseph Schrank, Philip Dunning);
Page Miss Glory. Warner Bros., 1935.
DAWN OF TOMORROW (George W. Sutton. Jr.);
Framed. First National. 1927.
DAY NEVER CAME, THE (Vina Delmar) ; King
of Burlesque. 20th Century-Fox, 1935.
DAY OF SOULS (Charles Tenny Jackson); The
Show, M-G-M, 1927.
DEAD DON'T CARE. THE (Jonathan Latimer);
The Last Warning. Universal, 1939.
DEAD MAN'S GOLD (J. Allan Dunn) ; No Man's
Gold, Fox, 1926.
DEAR MAID OF DREAMS (Betty Fitzgerald):
Helene of the North, Paramount, 1916.
DEAR ME (Luther Reed, Hale Hamilton);
Purple Highway, Paramount, 1923.
DEAR PRETENDER, THE (Alice Ross Clover) :
On Thin Ice, Warner Bros., 1925.
DEAR SOOKY (Percy Crosby); Sooky, Para-
mount. 1931.
DEATH CATCHES UP WITH MR. KLUCK
(Xantippe) : Danger on the Air. Universal. 1938.
DEATH FROM A TOP HAT (Clayton Rawson) :
Miracles for Sale, M-G-M. 1939.
DEATH HOPS THE BELLS (Charles M. Brown);
Irish Luck, Monogram, 1939.
DEATH IN THE DEEP SOUTH (Ward Greene)
They Won't Forget, Warner Bros.. 1937.
281
Is CLAUDINE WEST
tea
ft
ft
Goodbye Mr. Chips
Screenplay
ft
On Borrowed Time
Screenplay"
In Collaboration
PETE SMITH
M-G-M
J8Z
Original Tide
and Author
Release Title
and Distributor
Original Title
anil Author
Release Title
and Distributor
DEATH WATCH (Edgar Wallace): Before Dawn.
RKO. 1933.
DEBTS OF HONOR (Jack Boyle): Soiled. Gold
wyn. 1925.
DEBUTANTE. THE (Ralph Spence) : Goin?
Highbrow, Warner Bros., 1935.
DECENCY (Arthur Gregor) : What Price Decency?.
Majestic. 1933.
DEFINITE OBJECT (Jeffrey Farnol) ; Her Reputa-
tion. First National, 1923.
DELICATESSEN (Brooke Hanlon): It Must Be
Love, First National, 1926.
DEMETRIOS CONTOS (Jack London): Devil's
Skipper, Tiffany, 1928.
DER KOENIG DER BERNINA (Jacob Christopher
Heer) ; Eternal Love, United Artists, 1929.
DER KOMET (Atilla Orbok): My Lips Betray.
Fox, 1933.
DER KOMET (Atilla Orbok): Thin Ice. 20th
Century-Fox. 1937.
DESERT FIDDLER (William H. Hamby) : Percy.
Pathe. 1925.
DESERT HEALER (E. M. Hull): Old Loves and
New. First National, 1926.
DESERT MADNESS (W. E. Wing:): Trail of the
Horse Thieves, RKO. 1929.
DESERT OF ODYSSEY (Peter B. Kyne) : Cal-
ifornia. M-G-M, 1927.
DESPERATE WOMAN (Sam Janney) : Ladies at
Play. First National. 1926.
DEUCE OF HEARTS (Earl Derr Biggers) ; Take
the Stand. Liberty, 1934.
DEUCES WILD (J. Kaley) ; Saddle Aces, Republic.
1935.
DEVIL'S OWN (Talbot Mundy) : Manhattan,
Paramount. 1924.
DEVIL'S TRIANGLE (Andrew Soutar) ; Almost
Married. Fox. 1932.
DEVIL WAS SICK (Jane Hinton) : God's Gift
to Women, Warner Bros., 1931.
DEVIL'S PLAYGROUND (Kenneth J. Saunders) :
Lady Who Dared, First National, 1931.
DIAMOND JIM BRADY (Parker Morrell); Dia-
mond Jim, Universal, 1935.
DIE FLUCHT INS WEISSE LAND (Peter Freu-
chen); Eskimo. M-G-M, 1933.
DIE HEILIGE LUGE (Karin Michaelis) : Star
for a Night, 20th Century-Fox. 1936.
DIE HOSE (Unknown): Royal Scandal. Movie-
graphs, 1929.
DIPLOMA (Emerich Foeldes) : Man's Past, Uni-
versal. 1927.
DIVERSION (John Van Denten) : Careless Age,
First National. 1929.
DIVORCE EVIDENCE (J. DuRocher MacPher-
son) : Evidence, Warner Bros.. 1929.
DIVORCEE. THE (Leo Fall): Sensational Divorce,
American General, 1929.
DIVORCONS (Victorien Sardou): Let's Get a
Divorce, Paramount, 1926.
DIXIE (Gerald Beaumont); Dixie Handicap. Met-
ro-Goldwyn, 1925.
DOCKWALLOPER, THE (John Monk Saunders) ;
Docks of New York, Paramount, 1928.
DOCTOR NYE (Joseph C. Lincoln); Idle Tongues.
First National, 1924.
DOMBEY AND SON (Charles Dickens): Rich
Man's Folly, Paramount. 1931.
DOG OF FLANDERS (Louise De La Ramee) :
Boy of Flanders. Metro-Goldwyn, 1924.
283
DON CAESAR DE BAZEN lAdolphe D'Enery,
P. S. T. Dumenier) : Spanish Dancer. Para-
mount, 1923.
DON'T FORGET TO REMEMBER ( unknown i:
There Goes the Groom, RKO Radio. 193T.
DOORMAT. THE (Ethel Clifton. Brenda Fowler i ;
Honeymoon Express. Warner Bros.. 1926.
DOUBLE-DYED DECEIVER, A (O'Henry); The
Texan. Paramount. 1930.
DOUBLE DYED DECEIVER. THE (O'Henry):
The Llano Kid. Paramount. 1939.
DOUBLING FOR CUPID (Nina Wilcox): Beau-
tiful Cheat. Universal, 1926.
DOUBLING OF LORA (Peggy Gaddis) ; Her Big
Night. Universal, 1926.
DOVE. THE (Willard Mack); Girl of the Rio.
RKO. 1932.
DOVE. THE (Willard Mack); The Girl and the
Gambler, RKO. 1939.
DOVER ROAD (A. A. Milne); Where Sinners
Meet. RKO, 1934.
DOVER ROAD (A. A. Milne): Little Adven-
turess, PDC. 1927.
DOWN OUR WAY (Larry Evans) ; Judgment of
the Hills. FBO. 1927.
DOWN TO EATH (Albert Treynor, Jeff Moftitt):
Always in Trouble. 20th Century-Fox, 1938.
DOWN WITH WOMEN (George W. Worts): For
Ladies Only, Columbia, 1927.
DREAMLAND (Clarence Buddington Kelland) :
Strike Me Pink. United Artists. 1936.
DRIFTING (John Colton): Shanghai Lady. Uni-
versal, 1929.
DRIFTWOOD (Albert Payson Terhune) : Daring
Love, Truart, 1924.
DRUM, THE (F. Britten Austin): The Last Out-
post, Paramount, 1935.
DUBROVSKY (Alexander Pushkin): The Eagle,
United Artists. 1925.
DULCY (George S. Kaufman, Marc Connelly):
Not So Dumb, M-G-M, 1930.
DUST AND SUN (Clement Ripley): A Devil
With Women. Fox, 1930.
DUSTY ERMINE (unknown): Hideout in the
Alps. Grand National. 1937.
DYING DETECTIVE, THE (A. Conan Doyle);
The Return of Sherlock Holmes, Paramount.
1929.
EASY GOING (Byron Morgan): Way Out West,
M-G-M. 1936.
EASY GOING (Unknown); On Again — Off Again:
RKO Radio. 1937.
EASY COME, EASY GO (Owen Davis): Only
Saps Work, Paramount, 1930.
EAST LYNNE (Mrs. Henry Wood) : Ex-Flame.
Liberty, 1930.
EAST SIDE, WEST SIDE (Felix Riesenberg) ;
Skyline, Fox, 1931.
EASY MONEY (Owen Davis): Only Saps Work.
Paramount, 1930.
EASY STREET (Blair Hall); Easy Road. Para-
mount, 1921.
EDITHA'S BURGLAR (Frances Hodgson Bur-
nett); Family Secret, Universal, 1924.
EGYPT (Ernest Pascal): Sensation Seekers, Uni-
versal, 1927.
ELIZABETH THE QUEEN (Maxwell Anderson):
The Private Lives ol Elizabeth and Essex.
Warners, 1939.
ELLEN YOUNG (Edmund Goulding) ; Quest of
Life, Paramount, 1916.
ELLIS ISLAND (Walter Reiseh): Gateway. 20th
Century-Fox. 193S.
•A
DANNY
GRAY
it
284
Original Title
and Author
Kelease Title
anil Distributor
Original Title
and Author
Release Title
and Distributor
ELLISO (A. Kazbek); Caucasion Love, Amkino.
1929.
ELMER THE GREAT (Ring: Lardner, George M.
Cohan); Fast Company. Paramount, 1929.
EMPEROR OF PORTUGALIA (Selma Lagerlof ) ;
Tower of Lies. Metro-Goldwyn, 1925.
ENEMY TERRITORY (Margaret Culkin Ban-
ning) ; Woman Against Woman. M-G-M, 1938.
ENTER DARCY (Samuel Hopkins Adams):
Wanted — a Husband. Paramount, 1919.
ENTER SIR JOHN (Clemence Danes) ; Murder.
British International, 1930.
ESCAPE (Alden Brooks); Exquisite Sinner, M-
G-M. 1926.
ETERNAL MASCULINE (Dorothy Canfield): Two
Heads on a Pillow, Liberty, 1934.
EUGENIE GRANDET (Honore de Balzac) : Con
quering Power, Metro, 1921.
EVA THE FIFTH (John K. Nicholson. John Gol-
den): Girl in the Show, M-G M, 1930.
EVELYN PRENTICE (W. E. Woodward) : Stronger
Than Desire. M-G-M. 1939.
EVEN STEPHEN (Gerald Beaumont): Just
Another Blonde, First National. 1926.
EVERYBODY WAS VERY NICE (Stephen Vin-
cent Benet) : Love. Honor e-" -d Behave. War-
ners, 1938.
EVERYTHING MONEY CAN BU 1 (Ethel Watts
Mumford) ; After Business Hours, PDC, 1925.
EX-DUKE. THE (E. Phillips Oppenheim); Prince
of Tempters, First National, 1926.
EXILES (Richard Harding Davis); Fugitives,
Fox, 1929.
EX-MISTRESS (Dora Macy) ; My Past, Warner
Bros., 1931.
EYES OF YOUTH (Charles Guernon. Max Mar-
cin); Loves of Sonya, United Artists. 1927.
EYES WIN (Alvin J. Neitz); Loco Luck, Uni-
versal, 1927.
FACE (Lucy Stone Terrill) ; Unguarded Women
Paramount, 1924.
FACE THE FACTS (unknown): Mr. Boggs Buys
a Barrel, Grand National. 1937.
FACE THE FACTS (Clarence B. Kelland) : Mr
Boggs Steps Out, Grand National, 1938.
FAILURE (Katharine Haviland-Taylor) : A Man
to Remember, RKO Radio, 1938.
FAILURE, THE (Katharine Haviland Taylor):
One Man's Journey. RKO, 1933.
FAITHFUL (Audrey and Waverly Carter); A
Notorious Affair, First National, 1930.
FALCON, THE (Bocaccio): For Woman's Favor.
Lee-Bradford, 1924.
FALLEN ANGELS (Arthur Somcrs Roche); Man.
Woman and Wife, Universal, 1928.
FALSE FIRES (Octavus Roy Cohen) : Law and
the Man, Rayart, 1928.
FAMILY UPSTAIRS, THE (Harry Delf ) ; Har-
mony at Home, Fox, 1930.
FANNY (Marcel Pagnol) : Port of Seven Seas.
M-G-M, 1938.
FANNY HERSELF (Edna Ferber) ; No Woman
Knows, Universal, 1921.
FANTASY, THE (Frances Hodgson Burnett):
The Little Princess, 20th Century-Fox, 1939.
FASHIONS FOR MEN (Franz Molnar) ; Fine
Clothes, First National, 1925.
FATHER AND THE BOYS (George Ade) ; Youns
As You Feel, Fox, 1931.
FATHER'S DAY (J. C. and Elliott Nugentl:
Richest Man in the World. M-G-M, 1930.
FAWN. THE (Edward Knoblock); Marriage
Maker, Paramount, 1923.
FEATHERED SERPENT (Edgar Wallace); The
Menace, Columbia, 1932.
FEDORA (Victorien Sardou): Woman from Mos-
cow, Paramount, 1928.
FEEDER. THE (Mildred Cram) ; Behind the
Makeup, Paramount, 1930.
FELLOW PRISONERS (Sir Philip Gibbs) ; Cap-
tured, Warner Bros., 1933.
FEMALE OF THE SPECIES (H. C. ( Sapper I
McNeile) ; Bulldog Drummond Comes Back.
Paramount. 1937.
FEMALE OF THE SPECIES, THE (Alan Scott.
Charles Norman); Wise Girl, RKO Radio. 1937.
FEMININE TOUCH, THE (Caroline Lockhart) :
Dude Wrangler, World Wide, 1930.
FER DE LANCE (Rex Stout); Meet Nero Wolfe,
Columbia, 1936.
FERREOL (Victorien Sardou); Night of Mystery.
Paramount, 1928.
FIFTY-TWO WEEKS FOR FLORETTE (Elizabeth
Alexander) : You Belong to Me, Paramount,
1934.
FIGHTING MARINES, THE (George Waggner) :
Air Devils, Universal, 1938.
FIGHTING CARAVANS (Zane Grey); Wagon
Wheels, Paramount, 1934.
FILM STAR'S HOLIDAY, A (Peter B. Kyne) ;
Pride of the Legion, Mascot, 1932.
FIRE EATERS (Unknown); Flaming Gold, RKO,
1934.
FIREBRAND, THE (Edward Justine Mayer);
Affairs of Cellini. United Artists, 1934.
FIREWALKER, THE (John Russell): Girl of
the Port, RKO, 1930.
FIRST AND THE LAST (John Galsworthy) ;
The Stranger, Paramount, 1924.
FIRST CABIN (Louis Joseph Vance); Cheaters
at Play, Fox, 1932.
FIRST REBEL, THE (Neil H. Swanson ) ; Al-
legheny Uprising, 20th Century -Fox, 1939.
FISTIC CAVALIER (H. B. Wright): Lights of
Paris, Swedish Talking Pictures. 1928.
FLAME, THE (Hans Muller) ; Montmartre, Par-
amount, 1924.
FLAMING PASSION (Kathleen Norris) ; Lucretia
Lombard, Warner Bros., 1923.
FLAPPER WIFE (Beatrice Burton): His Jazz
Bride, Warner Bros., 1926.
FLEA MARKET (C. E. Andrews) ; Innocents of
Paris, Paramount, 1929.
FLIGHT TO THE HILLS (Charles Neville Buck) ;
The Runaway, Paramount, 1926.
FLIRT, THE (Booth Tarkington) ; Bad Sister,
Universal, 1931.
FLOWER OF NAPOLI (Gerald Beaumont); Man
In Blue, Universal, 1925.
FLOYD'S UNLIMITED (Isabel Dawn, Boyce De
Gaw) ; Don't Bet on Blondes, Warner Bros.,
1935.
FOG (John Willard) ; Black Waters, World Wide.
1929.
FOOTLIGHTS (Clarence Buddington Kelland):
Speak Easily, M-G-M, 1932.
FOOTLIGHTS (Rita Weiman) ; Spotlights, Para-
mount. 1927.
FOREIGNER (Ralph Connor); God's Crucible
Hodkinson, 1921.
FORGET ME NOT (Hugh Gray, Arthur Wim-
peris) : Forever Yours, Grand National, 1937.
285
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anil Author
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and Distributor
Original Title
and Author
Release Title
and Distributor
FOR TWO CENTS (George S. Brooks); Big News
Pathe. 1929.
FORTUNEERS. THE (Reginald Tavener) ; Crime
Ring, RKO Radio. 1938.
FOUR BROTHERS (Tristram Tupper) ; First
Kiss, Paramount, 1928.
FOUR FROM THE INFANTRY (Ernest Johann-
sen); Comrades of 1918, Tobis, 1931.
FOUR MARYS. THE (Fanny Heaslip Lea): Man-
Proof. M-G-M, 1938.
FOUR MINUTES LATE (James Oliver Curwood) ;
Northern Frontier, Ambassador, 1935.
FOUR WALLS (Dana Burnett, George Abbott);
Straight is the Way, M-G-M, 1934.
FOX HOUND, THE (Maxwell Grant); Internation-
al Crime, Grand National, 1938.
FRA DIAVOLO (Auber); Devil's Brothers. M-
G-M, 1933.
FREE LOVE (Benjamin Glazer); Sinners in
Silk, Metro-Goldwyn, 1924.
FRIEND OF NAPOLEON (Richard Connell);
Seven Faces, Fox, 1929.
FROG, THE (Gerald Beaumont); Silks and
Saddles, Universal, 1928.
FROM HELL CAME A LADY (George Scarbor-
ough): Woman from Hell, Fox, 1929.
FROM THIS DARK STAIRWAY (Mignon G.
Ebcrhardt); Murder of Dr. Harrigan. First
National, 1930.
FURTHER ADVENTURES OF TOM SAWYER
(Mark Twain); Huek and Tom, Paramount,
1918.
FUGITIVE GOLD (Erie Stanley Gardner); Spe-
cial Investigator. RKO. 1936.
FURY OF THE TROPICS (Maurice Tombragel.
Ben Pivar); Tropic Fury, Universal, 1939.
GALLAGHER (Richard Harding Davis); Let 'Er
Go Gallagher, Pathe, 1928.
GALLANT GUARDSMAN (Gerald Beaumont);
My Own Pal, Fox, 1926.
GALLANT HIGHWAY (Edwin L. Marin); Pur-
suit, M-G-M, 1935.
GALLANT LADY (Gilbert Emery. Douglas Doty):
Always Goodbye, 20th Century-Fox. 1938.
GAMBLING CHAMPLAIN (Gerald Beaumont):
Wild Oats, PDC, 1926.
GAME OF LIGHT (Richard Washburn Child):
Live Wire, First National, 1925.
GARLAN AND CO. (David Graham Phillips);
Souls for Sables, Tiffany, 1925.
GAY BANDIT (Tom Gill); Gay Caballero, Fox.
1932.
GAY BANDITTI. THE (I. A. R. Wylie) ; The
Young in Heart, United Artists, 1938.
GAY CABALLERO (Pierre Couderc, Hal Devitt) ;
Captain Thunder, Warner Bros., 1931.
GAY NINETIES, THE (Gene Markey) : The
Floradora Girl. M-G-M, 1930.
G-DOG (Earl Johnson, Guy Austin): Tho Rookie
Cop, RKO, 1939.
GENERAL, THE (Lajos Zakahy) ; Virtuous Sin.
Paramount, 1930.
GENTLEMEN, THE KING! (Damon Runyon) :
Professional Soldier, 20th Century -Fox, 1935.
GENTLEMAN OF NEW YORK (Louis Stevens):
Criminal Lawyer. RKO Radio, 1937.
GHOST OF JOHN HOLLING (Edgar Wallace):
Mystery Liner, Monogram, 1934.
GHOST'S STORY (Basil King) : Earthbound.
Goldwyn, 1920.
GIFTERS (C. D. Lancaster); Little Irish Girl,
Warner Bros., 1926.
°"rt SEE1 JRIESTT- THE ,Ferenc Molnar):
The Bride Wore Red. M-G-M. 1937.
GIRL IN UPPER C (Wilson Collison) ; Girl in the
Pullman. Pathe, 1927.
GIRL OF THE PAMPAS (Burke Jenkins); Flame
of the Argentine, FBO, 1926.
GIRL WHO DARED (James Oliver Curwood)
Paid in Advance, Universal, 1919.
GIRL WHO LIVED IN THE WOOD (Marjorie
B. Cooke); Little 'Fraid Lady, R. C, 1921.
GIRL WHO WASN'T WANTED (Kenneth B
Clark); Rough Romance. Fox. 1930.
GIRL WHO WAS THE LIFE OF THE PARTY
'Mary Roberts Rinehart) ; Girls Men Forget
Principal. 1924.
GIGMS ^EBELLI0N' A (Unknown): Don't. M
GIRL'S TOGETHER (Mildred Cram) ; This Modern
Age. M-G-M, 1931.
GIVE THE LITTLE GIRL A HAND (Fannie
Hurst): Painted Angel. First National, 1930.
GLENGARRY SCHOOLDAYS (Ralph Connors)-
Critical Age. Hodkinson, 1923.
GLITTER (Katherine Brush); Drop Kick First
National, 1927.
GLORIOUS BETSY (Rita Johnson Young) - Hearts
Divided, First National. 1936.
GLORIOUS BUCCANEER (Emma Lundsay Squi-
er) ; Dancing Pirate, RKO, 1936.
GOD'S FOOL (Fanny Kilbourne) ; Glorious Fool
Goldwyn, 1922.
GOLD DIGGERS (Avery Hopwood) : Gold Dig-
gers of Broadway, Warner Bros., 1929.
GOLDEN DREAMS (Zane Grey): Rookv Moun-
tain Mystery, Paramount, 1935.
GOLDFISH BOWL, THE (Mary McCall): It's
Tough to Be Famous, First National, 1932.
GOOD GRACIOUS ANNABELLE (Clare Rummer);
Annabelle's Affairs, Fox, 1931.
GOOD LUCK (Seymour Hicks, Ian Hay): Sport-
ing Lover, First National, 1926.
GOOSE WOMAN (Rex Beach); The Past of
Mary Holmes, RKO, 1933.
GOVERNOR, THE (Andreyev); Last of the Czar.
Amkino, 1929.
GOWNS BY ROBERTA (Alice Duer Miller)-
Roberta. RKO, 1936.
GRAND CROSS OF THE CRESCENT (Richard
Harding Davis); Stephen Steps Out. Paramount.
1926.
GRAND DUCHESS AND THE WAITER (Alfred
Savoir) ; Here Is My Heart, Paramount, 1926.
GRANDMA BERNIE LEARNS HER LETTERS
(I. A. R. Wylie): Four Sons. Fox, 1928.
GRAVEY GAME (Harry Stuhldreher, W. T.
Martin); The Band Plays On, M-G-M, 1934.
GREAT ADVENTURE (Arnold Bennett): His
Double Life, Paramount, 1933.
GREAT CROONER. THE (Clarence B. Kelland):
Mr. Dodd Takes the Air. Warner Bros.. 1937.
GREAT DESIRE (Gilbert Frankau) ; Christopher
Strong, RKO, 1933.
GREAT DIVIDE (William Vaughn Moody);
Woman Hungry, First National, 1931.
GREAT GOD FOURFLUSH (Unknown); A Wom-
an's Man, Monogram, 1934.
GREAT LOVE I Ferenc Molnar): Double Wedding
M-G-M. 1937.
GREAT MUSIC (Martin Brown); Soul Fire.
First National, 1925.
GREAT WELL (Alfred Sutro) : Neglected Wom-
en. FBO. 1924.
286
Original Title
and Author
Release Title
and Distributor
Original Title
and Author
Release Title
and Distributor
GREEK POROPULOS. THE (Edgar Wallace):
Born to Gamble. Republic. 1935.
GREEN* DICE (Anne Cameron): Mr. Skitch. Fox.
1933.
GREEN HAT (Michael Arlen) : Woman of Af-
fairs. M-G-M. 1929.
3REEN SHADOW (James Edward Grant): Muss
Em Up, RKO, 1936.
GREEN STOCKINGS (A. E. W. Mason): The
Flirting- Widow, First National. 1930.
GRIFTERS. THE (C. D. Landcaster) ; Little Irish
Girl. Warner Bros., 1926.
GROOTMAN CASE (Walter Maria Espe) : Crime of
the Century, Paramount. 1933.
GROUCH BAG (Wallace Smith): Not Quite De-
cent, Fox. 1929.
GROUND CREW I Lionel Houserl : Sky Giant.
RKO Radio. 1938.
GUYS AND DOLLS (Damon Runyon) : A Very
Honorable Guy. First National. 1934.
GYPSY MELODY (Melchior Lengyel) : Caravan.
Fox. 1934.
GYPSY LOVE (Franz Lehar) : Rogue Song.
M-G-M. 1930.
HADSCHI MURAT (Leo Tolstoi) : White Devil.
Ufa. 1930.
HAIL AND FAREWELL (William Hurlburt) :
Heart of a Siren. First National. 1925.
HALF AN HOUR (James M. Barrie) : Doctor's
Secret, Paramount, 1929.
HALF WAY TO SHANGHAI ( Harold Buckley i :
Sinners in Paradise. Universal. 1938.
HAND 'EM OVER (Arthur Rosson): Trailing
Trouble. Universal. 1930.
HANDFUL OF CLOUDS (Rowland Brown): Door-
way to Hell. Warner Bros., 1930.
HANGOVER MURDERS (Adam Hobhouse) : Re-
member Last Night, Universal. 1935.
HAPPINESS INSURANCE (Arturo S. Momm) :
Cock O' the Walk. World Wide. 1930.
HARBOR BAR (Peter B. Kyne) : Loving- Lies.
Allied Producers and Distributors. 1923.
HARBOUR. THE I Theodore Reeves): Only 8
Hours, M-G-M, 1935.
HASSAN (James Elroy Flecker) : Lady of the
Harem. Paramount. 1926.
HAUNTED LADY (Adela Rogers St. John):
Scandal. Universal. 1929.
HAWK ISLAND (Howard Irving Young): Mid-
night Mystery. RKO. 1930.
HEADLINE HOLIDAY (Wolfe Kaufman I : Sued
for Libel. RKO. 1939.
HEADLINE HUNTRESS: Change of Heart. 20th
Century-Fox. 1938.
HE STOPPED AT MURDER (Arthur Ebenhack):
Going the Limit. FBO, 1926.
HEAD AND SHOULDERS (F. Scott Fitzgerald) :
Chorus Girl's Romance. Metro, 1920.
HEADED FOR A HEARSE i Jonathan Latimer):
The Westland Case. Universal. 1937.
HEART AND HAND (Olive Edens): A House
Divided. Universal. 1932.
HEART IS YOUNG. THE (May Edington) ; False
Madonna. Paramount. 1932.
HEART OF A THIEF (Paul Armstrong) : Paths
to Paradise. Paramount, 1925.
HEART OF SALLY TEMPLE (Rupert Holland):
Winning of Sally Temple, Paramount, 1917.
HEART OF THE NIGHT WIND (Vingle E. Roe) :
Big Timber. Universal. 1924.
HEARTS I Adela Rogers St. Johns): Pretty
Ladies. Metro-Goldwyn. 1925.
HEATHER ON THE HIGH HAND ( Arthur
Stringer): The Lady Fiirhts Back. Universal.
1937.
HEAT WAVE (Roland Pert wee) : Road to Singa-
pore. Warner Bros.. 1931.
HEAVENBENT (Gerald Beaumont): The Rain-
maker, Paramount. 1926.
HEAVEN'S GATE (Florence Leighton Pfalzgraf):
Our Little Girl. 20th Century-Fox, 1935.
HEIR TO HOORAH fPaul Armstrong): Ever
Since Eve. Fox, 1934.
HELD FOR ORDERS (Frank H. Spearman):
Night Flyer, Pathe. 1928.
HELIOTROPE (Richard Washburn Child); For-
gotten Faces, Paramount, 1936.
HELL ON ICE (George Waggner) : Idol of the
Crowds. Universal. 1937.
HELLO. HOLLYWOOD (Frank Fenton. Lynn
Root): Keep Smiling. 20th Century-Fox. 1938
HELL'S KITCHEN HAS A PANTRY (Borden
Chase): The Devil's Party. Universal. 1938.
HELL'S PLAYGROUND (Vera Simonton): White
Cargo, British International, 1930.
HER CARDBOARD LOVER (Jacques Deval) :
The Passionate Plumber. M-G-M, 1932.
HERE COMES THE BANDWAGON (H. L. Gates) :
Half Way to Heaven. Paramount. 1929.
HERE'S HOW (Richard Washburn Child I:
Mad Whirl, Universal, 1924.
HERE Y'ARE BROTHER (Dixie Wilson): Affair
of the Follies, First National. 1927.
HERMIT DOCTOR OF GAYA (I. A. R. Wylie) :
Stronger Than Death, Metro. 1920.
HI TAXI! (Walter A. Sinclair): Timid Terror.
FBO, 1927.
HIGH ROAD (Frederick Lonsdale): Lady ol
Scandal. M-G-M, 1930.
HIGHWAY TO HELL (Helen Vreeland. Hilda
Vincent): Danger Patrol. RKO Radio. 1937.
HIGHWAY ROBBER (Albert Treynor) ; It's a
Small World. Fox. 1935.
HIGHWAYMAN (Lajos Biro): Heart Thief. PDC.
1927.
HILLMAN. THE (E. Phillips Oppenheim) : Be-
hold This Woman, Vitagraph, 1924.
HINDLE WAKES (Stanley Houghton): Fanny
Hawthorne. Excellent, 1929.
HIOB (Joseph Roth); Sins of Man. 20th Cen-
tury-Fox. 1936.
HIS MAJESTY BUNKER BEAN (Harry Leon
Wilson. Lee Wilson Dodd) : Bunker Bean, RKO.
1936.
HOLLYWOOD AND THE ONLY CHILD (Frank
Condon): Hollywood, Paramount, 1923.
HOLLYWOOD GIRL (J. P. McEvoy) : Show
Girl in Hollywood. First National, 1930.
HOME TOWNERS. THE (George M. Cohan):
Times Square Playboy. Warner Bros.. 1936.
HONORABLE MR. WONG (Achmed Abdullah.
David Belasco): The Hatchet Man. First
National. 1932.
HOPALONG CASSIDY RETURNS (Clarence E.
Mulford) : The Eagle's Brood. Paramount. 1935.
HORSEFLESH (Frederick Hazlitt Brennan I :
Sporting Blood. M-G-M. 1931.
HORSE SENSE (L. V. Jefferson I ; Set Up. Uni-
versal, 1926.
HOT MONEY (S. J. Peters): High Pressure.
Warner Bros., 1932.
HOT NEWS (Emile Gauvreaui ; Scandal for Sale.
Universal. 1932.
287
Original Title
and Author
Release Title
and Distributor
Original Title
and Author
Release Title
and Distributor
HOTTENTOT, THE (Victor Mapes. William Col-
lier, Sr.): Going Places, Warners. 1938.
HOUSE BEHIND THE HEDGE (Mary Spain
Vigus) ; Unknown Treasures. Sterling, 1926.
HOUSE IN THE COUNTRY, A (Melvyn Levy):
Hideaway, RKO Radio, 1937.
HOUSE OP CHANCE (G. des Wentworth Smith):
Cheating Blondes, Capitol, 1933.
HOUSE OF CONNELLY (Paul Green); Carolina
Fox, 1934.
HOUSE OF GLASS (Marion Orth); Lure of Jade
FBO, 1921.
HOWDY COWBOY (Reaves Eason): Roaring
Ranch, Universal, 1930.
HOWDY FOLKS (Pearl Franklin); Thunder
Mountain, Fox, 1935.
HOWDY, STRANGER (Robert Sloan, Louis Pet-
tier, Sr.) ; Cowboy from Brooklyn, Warners.
1938.
HUE AND CRY (Karl Detzer) ; Car 99, Para-
mount, 1935.
HUMANIZING MR. WIMSBY (Peter B. Kyne) ;
Making a Man. Paramount, 1922.
HUNCH, THE (Albert Payson Terhune) ; Knock
out Reilly. Paramount, 1927.
HURDY, GURDY MAN (Unknown); Love, Live
and Laugh, Fox, 1929.
HURRY KANE (Ring Lardner. George M.
Cohan) ; Fast Company, Paramount, 1929.
HUSBANDS OF EDITH (Robert W. Chambers) :
Fast Worker, Universal, 1924.
HUSK (Thomas Walsh); We're Only Human,
RKO, 1936.
I HATE HORSES (Finley Peter Dunne. Jr., Philip
Dunne) : Breezing Home, Universal, 1937.
I. JERRY TAKE THEE JOAN (Cleo Lucas);
Merrily We Go to Hell. Paramount, 1932.
I LOVE YOU (William LeBaron) ; Lovin' the
Ladies, RKO. 1930.
I SHALL GIVE A MILLION (C. Zavattini, G.
Mondaini); I'll Give a Million. 20th Century
Fox, 1938.
I WILL BE FAITHFUL (Kathleen Shepard) : Hu-
man Cargo, 20th Century-Fox, 1936.
I WILL REPAY (Baroness Orczy) ; Swords and
the Woman, FBO, 1924.
IDLE HANDS (Earl Derr Biggers) ; Ruling Pas-
sion. Fox, 1916.
IDLE HANDS (Earl Derr Biggers): Warner
Bros., 1931.
IDOL. THE (Martin Brown); Mad Genius, War-
ner Bros., 1931.
IDYL OF RED GULCH (Bret Harte) ; Man from
Red Gulch, PDC, 1925.
IDYL'S END (Claude Anet) : Mayerling (French):
Pax Film. Inc.. 1937.
IF A WOMAN WILL (Elizabeth De Jeans) ; Crash-
ing Thru. FBO. 1923.
IF I WERE KING (Justin Huntly McCarthy);
Vagabond King, Paramount, 1930.
IF THE GODS LAUGH (Rosita Forbes): Fight-
ing Love, PDC, 1927.
ILLUSTRIOUS CORPSE (Tiffany Thayer) ; Stran-
gers of the Evening, Tiffany, 1932.
IMPASSIVE FOOTMAN (Sapper): Woman in
Bondage. Harold Auten, 1932.
IMPATIENT VIRGIN (Donald Henderson Clarke) ;
Impatient Maiden, Universal, 1922.
IMPERFECT IMPOSTOR (Norman Venner) ;
Irish Luck, Paramount, 1925.
IMPOSTOR, THE (Leonard Merrick, Martha Mor-
ton) : Daughter of Luxury, Paramount, 1928.
IMPOSTOR. THE (Harry James Smith): A Tailor
Made Man, M-G-M, 1931.
IMPULSES (Roger Hartman) ; Sporting Chance
Peerless, 1931.
INDISCRETIONS OF THE DUCHESS (Anthony
Hope): Naughty Duchess, Tiffany, 1928.
INEVITABLE MILLIONAIRE (E. Phillips Op-
penheim): Millionaires. Warner Bros., 1926.
INHERITORS (I. A. R. Wylie) ; Gaiety Girl. Uni-
versal, 1924.
IN LOVE WITH LOVE (Unknown): Crazy
That Way, Fox. 1930.
INNER SHRINE (Basil King): The Street Called
Straight, Goldwyn, 1920.
INNER SIGHT (Martha Lord): Love's Whirl-
pool, PDC. 1924.
IN OLD CALIFORNIA (Ben Pivar) ; Mutiny in
the Blackhawk, Universal, 1939.
IN PRAISE OF JAMES CARABINE (DonD
Byrne) ; Blarney, M-G-M, 1926.
IN THE GARDEN OF CHARITY (Basil King):
Tides of Passion. Vitagraph. 1925.
IN THE NIGHT WATCH (Sarrere and Netoty):
Night Watch. First National. 1928.
IN THE MEXICAN QUARTER (Thomas Gill)
Border Cafe. RKO Radio. 1937.
IN THE STREET OF THE FLYING DRAGON
(Dorothy Goodfellow) ; Five Days to Live
FBO, 1922.
INTERFERENCE (Roland Pert wee. Harold Dear-
den): With Regret. Paramount, 1935.
INTERLOCUTORY (Charles Brackett) ; Tomor-
row's Love, Paramount, 1925.
INTERNATIONAL SPY (George Waggner) : The
Spy Ring, Universal, 1938.
INTERPRETER'S HOUSE (Struthers Burt): I
Want My Man, First National, 1925.
INVISIBLE GOVERNMENT (Jerome Wilson);
Exclusive Rights, Preferred, 1927.
INVISIBLE WOUNDS (Col. Frederick Palmer);
New Commandment, First National, 1925.
IRIS (Arthur Pinero) ; Slave of Vanity, R. C.
1920.
IRON CHALICE (Octavus Roy Cohen); Red Rice
PDC, 1926.
IRON MAN (W. R. Burnett): Some Blondes Are
Dangerous, Universal, 1937.
ISLE OF LIFE (Stephen French Whitman):
Blonde Saint, First National, 1926.
IT HAPPENED IN HOLLYWOOD (William A.
Wellman. Robert Carson); A Star is Born.
United Artists. 1937.
IT HAPPENED ONE DAY (Marjorie Bartholo-
mew Paradis) : This Side of Heaven. M-G-M
1934.
IT IS TO LAUGH (Fannie Hurst): Younger
Generation. Columbia, 1929.
IT MIGHT HAVE HAPPENED (Bella Muni.
Aben Finkel) ; The Deceiver, Columbia. 1931.
IT NEVER HAPPENED BEFORE (Robert Harari.
Maxwell Shane); Hitting A New High, RKO
Radio. 1937.
JACK DAW'S STRUT (Harriet Henry); Beauty
and the Boss, Warner Bros., 1932.
JACK DAW'S STRUT (Harriet Henry) ; Bought.
Warner Bros., 1931.
JACK IN THE PULPIT (Gordon Harris); Jack
O' Hearts, American Cinema, 1926.
JACOB'S WELL (Pierre Benoit) ; Daughter of
Israel, Syndicate, 1928.
JAILBREAK (Dwight Taylor) ; Numbered Men.
First National, 1930.
288
_ ualily of
product and good
will are the most
compelling fac-
tors in distrib-
utor-exhibitor
relations*
20TH CEP
1940 TAKES A !
IN HAVING Ml
ON ITS BOOl
BEFORE IN
rURY-FOX IN
PECIAL PRIDE
RE ACCOUNTS
5 THAN EVER
TS HISTORY.
T
he confidence
which America's ex-
hibitors have thus
placed in 20th Century
Fox will always be
the company's guid-
ing responsibility.
Original Title
mi! Author
Keleuse Title
and Distributor
Original Title
and Author
Release Title
and Distributor
JAMES THE FOGEY (Henry Arthur Jones):
Call of Youth. Paramount. 1921.
JAN VOLANIK (Harry R. Irvine) ; Black Fury.
First National. 1935.
.IANIE OF THE WANING GLORIES (Raymond
Spears): Bar-C Mystery: Pathe, 1926.
JAZZ KING (James Ashmore Creelman) ; Dancers
in the Dark, Paramount, 1932.
.IRAN OF THE LAZY J (B. M. Bower); RidhV
Thunder, Universal, 1925.
JEANNE OF THE MARSHES (E. Phillips Op-
penheim) ; Behind Masks. Columbia. 1932.
J KM OF THE OLD ROCK ( Georgre Weston ) :
Winning Girl. Paramount. 1919.
JENNY'S ESCAPADE (Hans Bachwitz. Fritz
Jokobstetter) ) : Stranded in Paris. Paramount,
l!)2(i.
JERRY COMES HOME (Roy Briant) : Itching
Palms, FBO. 1923.
JEWEL (Clara L. Burnham): Chapter in Her
Life. Universal. 1923.
JIMMY. THE CROOK (Ludwig von Wohl) ; Cen-
tury Daredevil. American General. 1929.
JO AND JOSETTE (Ladislaus Vadnai. Paul Frank.
George Fraser) ; Josette. 20th Century-Fox,
1938.
JOAN OF ARC (Joseph Delteil) : Passion of
Joan of Arc, Affiliated European, 1929.
JOAN THURSDAY (Louis Joseph Vance): Great-
er Than Marriage, VitagTaph, 1925.
JOE COLLEGE (Carey Ford. H. T. Wenning) :
The Sophomore, Pathe, 1929.
JOSEPH GREER AND HIS DAUGHTER (Henry
Kitchell Webster) : What Fools Men Are,
American Releasing Co., 1922.
.1 1'AREZ AND MAXIMILIAN (Franz Werfel) :
Juarez. Warners. 1939.
JUDAS TREE (John Monk Saunders): I Found
Stella Parish, First National, 1935.
JUDITH (C. E. Montague): True Heaven, Fox,
1929.
JUDITH OF BLUE LAKE RANCH (Jackson
Gregory); Two Kinds of Women. Paramount.
1932.
JUDGMENT OF THE WEST (Valma Clark):
Slanderers, Universal, 1924.
JUNGLE LAW (I. A. R. Wylie) : Man Must
Live, Paramount, 1925.
JUNGLE WATER HOLE (Francis Guihan): Dan-
gerous Adventure. Warner Bros.. 1922.
JUNK (Kenneth Harris); Idle Rich. M-G-M, 1929.
JUST A WOMAN (Eugene Walter. Owen Francis):
No Other Woman. RKO, 1933.
JUST AND THE UNJUST ( Vaughn Renter);
Hell's 400. Fox. 192(5.
KALEIDOSCOPE IN K (A. J. Cronin) : Once to
Every Woman, Paramount, 1934.
KARL AND ANNA (Leonard Frank): Home-
coming. Paramount. 1928.
KANGAROOS, THE (Victor Mapes) ; High Flyers.
KKO Radio. 193' .
KEMPY (J. C. and Elliott Nugent): Wise Girls,
M-G-M, 1930.
KEY WOMAN (Joseph Steele); Society Smug
glers, Universal, 1939.
KID'S LAST FIGHT (George Yates, Jr.): Red Hot
Hoofs. FBO. 1920.
KIDNAPED (Rupert Hughes): Miss Fane's Baby
is Stolen, Paramount, 1934.
KILLER, THE (Stewart Edware White); Mys-
tery Ranch. Fox. 1932.
KINGDOM OF HEART'S DESIRE (George Wes
ton); You Never Saw Such a Girl: Paramount
1919.
KING HARLEQUIN (Rudolph Lothar) : Magic
Flame, United Artists. 1927.
KING OF THE KHYBER RIFLES (Talbot Mun-
dy); Black Watch. Fox, 1929.
KING OF THE RITZ (Albert J. Cohen, Robert
T. Shannon); A Night at the Ritz, Warner
Bros.. 1935.
KING'S JACKAL (Unknown): Honor Among
Men, Fox, 1924.
KINGS IN EXILE (Alphonse Daudet) ; Confes
sions of a Queen, Paramount, 1931.
KISSES BY COMMAND (Ivan Lebedeff ) : Wom-
an Pursued, RKO, 1931.
KITTEN AND THE KING (Gerald Beaumont):
Traffic Cop, FBO. 1926.
KITTY CARSTAIRS (J. J. Bell); London's
Lights, FBO. 1928.
"K" - "K" (Mary Roberts Rinehart) : The
Unknown. M-G-M. 1927.
KNICKERBOCKER KID (Matt Tayior) ; Stepping
Along, First National, 1926.
KNIGHT OF THE RANGE (William Wallace
Cooke) : Sonora Kid. FBO, 1927.
KONGO (Chester De Vonga, Killman Gordon) ;
West of Zanzibar. M-G-M. 1929.
LA BATAILLE DES DAMES (Eugene Scribe.
Ernest Legouve) ; Devil May Care. M-G-M.
1929.
LA BERCEAU (Eugene Bireux) ; The Cradle.
Paramount, 1922.
LA CASA DE LA TROYA (Alejandro Perez
Luzin): In Gay Madrid, M-G-M, 1930.
LA COUTURIERE DE LUNEVILLE (Samson
Raphaelson): Dressed to Thrill, Fox, 1935.
LADDER, THE (Harold Vickers) ; Ladder of
Lies. Paramount. 1920.
LADIES OF THE JURY (John F. Ballard): We're
on the Jury. RKO. 1937.
LADY LUCK (Alex Gottlieb) ; Gambling Ship.
Universal. 1939.
LADY LUCK (G. Carleton Brown. Emanuel Man-
heim) ; Gambling Ship, Universal, 1938.
LADY, THE (Martin Brown): Secret of Ma
dame, M-G-M, 1933.
LADY AVERAGE (Jack Goodman. Albert Rice) ;
Meet the Missus. RKO Radio. 1937.
LADY CHRISTILINDA (Monekton Hoffe) ; Street
Angel. Fox. 1928.
LADY FOR HIRE (Robert Milton. Guy Bolton):
Lady Refuses. RKO. 1931.
LADY IN ERMINE (Rudolph Schnazer, Ernes!
Welisch) : Bride of the Regiment, First Na-
tional, 1930.
LADYFINGERS (Jack Gregory): Alias Lady-
fingers. Metro. 1921.
LADY LIES, THE (John Meehan) : Via Tva.
Paramount, 1931.
LADY OF LY ONS (Edward Bulwer-Lyt ton I : In
the Name of Love. Paramount, 1925.
LADY OF PETROGRAD (Unknown); Living
Image. Phoenix. 1928.
LADY WITH A BRADE (Frank Wrad. Ferdinand
Revheri ; Stranded. Warner Bros., 1935.
LADY WHO PLAY'ED FIDELE I Gerald Beau-
mont): Scarlet Saint. First National. 1925.
LA FEMME NUE (Henri Bataille) : Model from
Montmartre. Paramount, 1928.
LAFITTE. THE PIRATE (Lylo Saxon): The
Buccaneer. Paramount, 1938.
LA GRINGA (Tom Cushing) ; South Sea Rose
Fox, 1929.
LAME DOG INN ( Laszo Bus Fekete) ; Road-
house Murder, RKO, 1932.
LAND OF PROMISE (W. Somerset Maugham):
The Canadian, Paramount, 1926.
LA PAIVA (Karl Vollmoeller) : Lady of the
Pavements, Warner Bros., 1929.
LA PASSERELLA (De Gresac and De Croisset) ;
Marriage of Kitty, Paramount, 1915.
LA PEAU DE CHAGRIN (Honore de Balzac) :
Slave of Desire, Goldwyn. 1923.
LARGER THAN LIFE: He Couldn't Say No. War-
ners. 1938.
LA RUBIA (H. W. Roberts); Wile's Romance.
Metro, 1923.
LAST ADAM (James Gould Cozzens) ; Doctor
Bull, Fox, 1933.
LATE CHRISTOPHER BEAN (Sidney Howard,
Ren Rauchois) ; Christopher Bean, M-G-M,
1933.
293
HENRY KING
294
Original Title
and Author
Kelease Title
and Distributor
Original Title
and Author
Kelease Title
ami Distributor
L'ATLANTIDE (Pierre Benoit I ; Missing- Hus-
bands, Metro, 1922.
LAUGHING LADY (Alfred Sutro) : Society
Scandal. Paramount, 1924.
LAURELS AND THE LADY (Leonard Merrick):
Magnificent Lie, Paramount, 1931.
LAW-BRINGERS (G. B. Lancaster); Eternal
Struggle, Metro, 1923.
LAWLESS HONEYMOON 'Lolita Ann Westman):
The Perfect Clue, Majestic. 1935.
LEA LYON (Alexander Brody) ; Surrender, Fox.
1931.
LEAH KLESCHN A (C. M .S. McLellan): Girl
Who Came Back. Paramount. 1918.
LEAH KLESCHNA (C. M. S. McLellan): Moral
Sinner. Paramount. 1924.
LEANDER CLICKS (William Slavens McNutt) :
Hot Tip. RKO. 1935.
LEATHERPACE ( Baroness Orezy ) ; Two Lovers.
United Artists, 1928.
LEDGER OF LIFE (George Patullo) : Private
Affairs PDC 1925.
LEGEND OF SLEEPY HOLLOW (Washington
Irving') : Headless Horseman, Hodkinson. 1922.
LEGIONARY, THE (Lajos Biro); Silent Lover,
First National, 1926.
L'EQUIPAGE (Joseph Kessel): The Woman I
Love. RKO Radio. 1937.
L'EQUIPAGE (J. Kessele): Last Flight, First
National. 1931.
L'EQUIPAGE (Joseph Kessel); The Woman I
Love. RKO Radio, 1937.
LE ROSIER DE MADAME (Guy de Maupas-
sant); He, Astor, 1933.
LES MAINS D'ORLAC (Maurice Renard) ; Mad
M-G-M. 1935.
LES RENEGATS (Andre Armandy) ; Renegades,
Fox, 1930.
LET'S GET TOGETHER (Katharine Kava-
naugh) : Every Saturday Night. 20th Century-
Fox. 1936.
LET'S GO (E. J. Rath); Fast Life. First Na-
tional, 1929.
LET'S PLAY KING (Sinclair Lewis): Newly
Rich. Paramount, 1931.
LIFE IN THE LATIN QUARTER (Henri Mur-
ger) ; La Boheme. M-G-M. 1926.
LIGHTNING EXPRESS (Unknown); Rich Men's
Sons, Columbia. 1928.
LIGHTS OUT (Paul Dickey, Mann Page) : Crash-
ing Hollywood, RKO Radio, 1938.
LI LIE, THE (Yolanthe Mareesl ; Three Women.
Warner Bros., 1924.
LILIOM (Benjamin Glazcr) ; Trip to Paradise.
Metro, 1921.
LIMEHOUSE NIGHTS (Thomas Burke) ; Broken
Blossoms, Griffith, 1919.
LIMEHOUSE POLLY (Edward J. Montague):
Shanghaied. FBO, 1927.
LIMPY (William Johnston): When a Fellow
Needs a Friend, M-G-M, 1932.
LION'S TRAP (Daniel Rubin): Midnight Mad
ness, Pathe, 1928.
LIPS OF STEEL ( Harry Hervey ) ; Prestige.
RKO. 1932.
LISTEN KIDS (Lee Loeb, Mort Brans); Laugh
It Off, Universal, 1939.
LITTLE ANGEL ( LeRoy Scott); Lady of Chance.
M-G-M. 1929.
LITTLE BIT OF FLUFF (Walter W. Ellis):
Skirts, Fox, 1921.
LITTLE CAFE (Tristan Bernard) ; Playboy of
Paris, Paramount, 1930.
LITTLE GYPSY (Robert Ellis. Helen Logan):
Rascals, 20th Century-Fox, 1938.
LITTLE LADY OF THE BIG HOUSE (Jack Lon-
don); Little Fool, Metro, 1921.
LITTLE LENA (Wallace Smith); Big Time Fox.
1929.
LITTLE MISS BLUEBEARD (Gabriel Drgeely) :
Miss Bluebird, Paramount, 1925.
LITTLE MISS BLUEBEARD (Avery Hopwood) ;
Her Wedding Night, Paramount, 1930.
LITTLE MORE (W. B. Maxwell); Gilded High-
way, Warner Bros., 1926.
LIVING CORPSE, THE (Leo Tolstoi): Re-
demption, M-G-M. 1930.
LIVING UP TO LIZZIE (Arthur G. Collins) :
Personal Maid's Secret, First National, 1935.
L'OCCIDENT (Henry Kistaemaecher) ; Eye for
Eye, Metro, 1918.
LOKIS (Prosper Merimee): Legend of the Bear's
Wedding. Amkino, 1918.
LOLA MONTEZ (Adolf Paul); Palace of Pleas-
ure. Fox, 1926.
LONE HAND (Frank M. Clifton): Lone Hand
Saunders. FBO, 1926.
LONELY LADY; Secrets of an Actress, Warners,
1938.
LONELY ROAD (unknown): Scotland Yard Com-
mands, Grand National. 1937.
LOOK OF EAGLES, THE (John Taintor Foote) ;
Kentucky. 20th Century-Fox, 1938.
LOOKING AFTER SANDY (Margaret Turnbull) ;
Bad Little Angel, M-G-M, 1939.
LORD CHUMLEY (David Belasco, William de-
Mille); Forty Winks, Paramount, 1925.
LORD OF THUNDERGATE (Sidney Hersehel
Small); Thundergate, First National, 1924.
LORD'S REFEREE (Gerald Beaumont); Blue
Eagle. Fox. 1926.
LOSER'S END (unknown): The Women Men
Marry. M-G-M, 1937.
LOST GOD (John Russell); Sea God, Paramount,
1930.
LOST HOUSE (Unknown); Kid Sister, Colum-
bia, 1927.
LOST ECSTASY (Mary Roberts Rinehart) : I
Take This Woman, Paramount, 1931.
LOUIS BERETTI (Donald Henderson Clarke):
Born Reckless, Fox. 1930.
LODIS XIV (Arthur Wimperis) ; Wife Savers,
Paramount, 1928.
LOUISIANA (J. Augustus Smith); Drums o'
Voodoo. International Stageplay, 1934.
LOVE-DREAMS (Elmer Harris, Ann Nichols):
Her Gilded Cage, Paramount. 1922.
LOVE 'EM AND LEAVE 'EM (George Abbott.
John V. A. Weaver) ; Saturday Night Kid.
Paramount, 1929.
LOVE FLIES IN THE WINDOW (Anne Morrison
Chaplin); This Man is Mine, RKO, 1934.
LOVE IN A BASEMENT (John Wells): Living
on Love. RKO Radio, 1937.
LOVE INSURANCE (Earl Derr Biggers) : Reck-
less Age, Universal, 1924.
LOVE YOUR BODY (Schuyler E. Grey. Paul R.
Milton): Search for Beauty. Paramount. 1934.
LOVE LIKE THAT. A (David Garth); Breakfast
for Two. RKO Radio, 1937.
LUCKY DAMAGE (Mark Edmund Jones); War-
ner Bros., 1929.
LUCK RIDES A BOLD FACED NAG (James W.
Raine) : Stark Love, Paramount, 1927.
LUCK OF THE NAVY (Mrs. Clifford Mills) ;
North Sea Patrol. Alliance. 1939.
LUCKY PENNY (Paul Gerard Smith); Just
Around the Corner, 20th Century-Fox, 1938.
LUCKY SAM McCARVER (Sidney Howard);
We're All Gamblers. Paramount, 1927.
LULLABY, THE (Edward Knoblock); Sin of
Madelon Claudet, M-G-M. 1931.
LYONS MAIL (Henry Irving); Midnight Stage.
Pathe, 1919.
McTEAGUE (Frank Norris) : Greed. Metro-
Gold wyn, 1924.
MADAME BOVARY (Gustave Flaubert): Un-
holy Love, Hodkinson, 1932.
MADAME LUCY (Jean Arlette) ; Madame Be-
have, PDC, 1925.
MADAME JULIE (Irving K. Davis) ; Woman
Between, RKO, 1931.
MADAME LA GIMP (Damon Runyon); Lady
for a Day, Columbia, 1933.
MAGNIFICENT AMBERSONS (Booth Tarking-
ton) : Pampered Youth. Vitagraph, 1925.
295
HARRY JOE BROWN
1939
THE RAINS CAME
HOLLYWOOD CAVALCADE
JOHNNY APOLLO
EVERYTHING HAPPENS AT NIGHT
1940
WESTERN UNION
FOUR SONS
DOWN TO THE SEA IN SHIPS
ARGENTINA
296
Original Title
and Author
Release Title
and Distributor
Original Title
and Author
Release Title
and Distributor
MAGNOLIA (Booth Tarknigton) ; River of Ro-
mance, Paramount, 1927.
MAGNOLIA (Booth Tarkington) ; Mississippi.
Paramount. 1935.
MAGNOLIA (Booth Tarkington): Fighting Cow-
ard. Paramount. 1924.
MAIN SPRING (Louis Joseph Vance) : Lost at
Sea, Tiffany, 1926.
MAIN STREET (Sinclair Lewis): I Married a
Doctor, First National. 1936.
MAKER OF GESTURES (John Monk Saunders) :
Too Many Kisses. Paramount, 1925.
MALEFACTOR, THE (E. Phillips Oppenheim):
Test of Honor, Paramount, 1919.
MALIBU (Vance Joseph Hoyt) ; Sequoia. M-G-M,
1934.
MAMAN (Germaine and Moscousin): Magnifi-
cent Flirt, Paramount, 1928.
MAM'SELLE JOE (Harriet T. Comstock) ; Silent
Years, FBO, 1921.
MAN AND THE MOMENT (Elinor Glyn) ; Mad
Hour, First National, 1928.
MAN CRAZY (Frederick A. Bowen) ; Naughty
Flirt. First National, 1931.
MAN FROM ASHALUNA (Henry Payson
Dowst): On the Stroke of Three, FBO. 1924.
MAN FROM BLANKLEY'S (F. Anstey) ; Four-
teenth Man. Paramount. 1920.
MAN FROM MEXICO (H. A. Du Souchet) :
Let's Get Married. Paramount, 1926.
MANHATTAN MARY (William K. Wells, George
White. DeSylva Brown and Henderson); Fol-
low the Leader, Paramount, 1930.
MAN I KILLED (Maurice Rostand); Broken Lul-
laby, Paramount, 1932.
MAN IN POSSESSION. THE (H. M. Harwood) :
Personal Property. M-G-M. 1937.
MAN IN THE IRON MASK (Alexander Dumas) :
Iron Mask. United Artists. 1929.
MAN PROPOSES (Claude Binyon, Sidney Skol-
sky) ; The Daring Young Man, Fox, 1935.
MAN WHO BROKE HIS HEART (Frederick
Schlick): Wharf Angel. Paramount. 1934.
MAN WHO KILLED (Claude Farrere, Pierre
Frondale) : Right to Love, Paramount, 1920.
MAN WITHOUT A COUNTRY (Everett Hale):
As No Man Has Lived, Fox, 1925.
MAN'S LAW (Peter B. Kyne) : Self Defense,
Monogram, 1933.
MANHANDLING ETHEL (Frank R. Adams) :
Enchantment, Paramount, 1921.
MANHATTAN LOVE SONG (Kathleen Norris) :
Change of Heart, Fox, 1934.
MANIFESTATION OF HENRY (Ethel Watts) :
Straight is the Way, M-G-M. 1934.
MANON LESCAUT (Abbe Prevost) ; When a
Man Loves, Warner Bros.. 1927.
MARCEL LEVIGNET (Elwyn Barron); House of
Silence, Paramount. 1918.
MARCO HIMSELF (Octavus Roy Cohen): Spe-
cial Lion, Paramount. 1930.
MARIPOSA (Henry Baerlein) ; The Charmer,
Paramount, 1925.
MARRIAGE BED, THE (Ernest Pascal): Hus-
band's Holiday, Paramount, 1932.
MARRIAGE OF KITTY (Fred de Gresac, F. de
Croisset) ; Afraid to Love, Paramount, 1927.
MARRIAGE OF OLYMPE (Emile Augier) ; New
Lives for Old. Paramount. 1925.
MARYLAND, MY MARYLAND (James Francis
Dwyer) ; Bride of the Storm, Warner Bros.,
1926.
MARY CAREY (Kate L. Bosher) : Nobody's
Kid, R. C, 1921.
MARY THE THIRD (Rachel Crothers) ; Wine
of Youth, Metro-Goldwyn, 1924.
MARTINIQUE (Laurence Eyre) ; Volcano. Par-
amount. 1926.
MASKEE (Ernest Paynter) ; Shipmates, First
National. 1935.
MASKERADE (Walter Reisch) ; Escapade. M-G-
M. 1935.
MASKS OF ERWIN REINER (Jakob Wasser-
mann); Masks of the Devil, M-G-M. 1928.
MASTER OF MEN (Sir Hall Caine) : Name the
Man. Metro-Goldwyn. 1924.
MATRON'S REPORT (Frederick H. Brennan):
Blue Skies, Fox. 1929.
MATRON'S REPORT (Frederick H. Brennan):
Little Miss Nobody, 20th Century-Fox, 1936.
MATTER OF PRIDE, A (William C. White):
Beg, Borrow or Steal, M-G-M, 1937.
MATURA (Ladislaus Fodor) ; Girls Dormitory,
20th Century-Fox, 1936.
MELO (Henri Bernstein): Dreaming Lips. United
Artists. 1937.
MEMORY OF LOVE (Bessie Breuer) ; In Name
Only, RKO, 1939.
MENDEL, INC. (David Freedman) ; Heart of
New York. Claridge. 1916.
MENIAL STAR (Charles Hoffman): The Affairs
of Annabel. RKO Radio. 1938.
MEN OF AFFAIRS (Roland Pert wee) : There's
Millions In It, FBO, 1924.
MERIDIAN 7-1212: Time Out for Murder. 20th
Century-Fox. 1938.
MERRY ANDREW (Lewis Beach) : Handy Andy.
Fox, 1934.
MERRY GO ROUND (George Sklar. Albert
Maltz): Afraid to Talk, Universal, 1932.
MERRY WIVES OF GOTHAM (Laurence Eyre) :
■ Lights of Old Broadway, Metro-Goldwyn, 1925.
MERTON OF THE MOVIES (Harry Leon Wil-
son): Make Me A Star, Paramount, 1932.
METHAIS SANDORF (Jules Verne) : Isle of
Zorda. Pathe. 1922.
MICHAEL STROGOFF (Jules Verne): The
Soldier and the Lady. RKO Radio, 1937.
MIDNIGHT RAIDERS (unknown); Trouble at
Midnigkt. Universal. 1937.
MIGHTIER THAN THE SWORD (William Ran
kin); A Girl with Ideas. Universal, 1937.
MIKE (Grace Perkins) ; Torch Singer. Para
mount. 1933.
MILLION POUND DAY, THE (Leslie Charteris) ;
The Saint in London, RKO, 1939.
MINICK (Edna Ferber, George S. Kaufman);
Welcome Home, Paramount. 1925.
MIRACLE (Clarence Buddington Kelland) ; Wom-
an's Faith, Universal, 1925.
MIRACLE OF HATE (James Shelley Hamilton) ;
Man Who Fights Alone, Paramount, 1924.
MIRACLE RACKET (Saul Elkins) : Tarnished
Angel. RKO Radio. 1938.
MIRAGE. THE (Edgar Selwyn) ; Possessed, M-
G-M. 1931.
MISDEAL (Basil Woon) ; Recaptured Love
Warner Bros.. 1930.
MISSING MAN (Benjamin Glazer. Melchior Len-
gyel) : Strange Cargo. Pathe. 1929.
MISS AESOP BUTTERS HER BREAD (Lenore
Coffee, William Joyce Co wen) ; Good Girls Go
to Paris, Columbia. 1939.
MISS NANCY (Anna Fielder) ; Her Father's Son,
Paramount, 1916.
MISS THOMPSON (W. Somerset Maugham);
Sadie Thompson, United Artists, 1928.
MISSISSIPPI (Ben Lucien Burman) ; Heaven on
Earth, Universal, 1931.
MISUNDERSTOOD (Booth Tarkington): Boy of
Mine, First National, 1923.
MITZI (Delly): Rose of Paris, Universal. 1924.
MLLE. MODISTE (Henry Blossom): Kiss Me
Again. First National, 1931.
MOBY DICK (Herman Melville) : Sea Beast.
Warner Bros.. 1926.
MODERN CINDERELLA (James Cain); When
Tomorrow Comes. Universal, 1939.
MODERN MADONNA (Stanley Caroline Abbot);
Forgotten Law, Metro. 1922.
MOLIHOFF (Maurice Bedel) ; Along Came Love.
Paramount, 1931.
MOLLY AND ME (Lois Leeson) ; Bright Lights,
First National, 1935.
MON HOMME (Andre Picard, Francis Carco) :
Shadows of Paris. Paramount, 1924.
MONEY MASTER (Gilbert Parker); Wise Fool,
Paramount. 1921.
297
WALTER LANG
Director
"THE BLUE BIRD"
"STAR DUST"
298
Original Title
and Author
Release Title
and Distributor
Original Title
and Author
Release Title
and Distributor
MONEY RIDER (Gerald Beaumont): Down the
Stretch, First National, 1936.
MOON FLOWER (Lajos Birot; Eve's Secret.
Paramount, 1925.
MONSIEUR LE FOX (Willard Mark): Men of
the North. M-G-M, 1930.
MORALS OF MARCUS ORDEYNE (William J.
Locke) : Morals of Marcus. Gaumont British,
1936.
MORE THAN LOVE (Lester Cole): The Jury's
Secret. Universal, 1938.
MOSCOW NIGHTS (Pierre Benoit) : I Stand
Condemned, United Artists, 1936.
MOTHER LODE (Dan Totheroh, George O'Neil):
Yellow Dust, RKO. 1936.
MOTHER O'DAY (Leroy Scott): City That Nev-
er Sleeps, Paramount, 1924.
MOTHER, THE (Leroy Scott): Poverty of
Riches. Goldwyn. 1921.
MOTHER'S MILLIONS (Howard MeKonl
Barnes) : She-Wolf, Fox, 1925.
MOUNTAINS ARE MY KINGDOM (Stuart
Hardy) : Forbidden Valley, Universal, 1938.
MOUNTEBANK (William J. Locke); Side Show
of Life. Warner Bros.. 1931.
MOUTH OF THE DRAGON (Jessie Henderson);
Perfect Flapper, First National, 1924.
MR. AVERAGE MAN (Gilbert Wright): Thanks
for Everything. 20th Century-Fox, 1938.
MR. BISBEE'S PRINCESS (Waller DeLeon. Paul
M. Jones) : You're Telling Me, Paramount.
1934.
MR. BONES (Irving Berlin): Mammy, Warner
Bros.. 1930.
MR. ISAACS (F. Marion Crawford); Son of
India. M-G-M. 1931.
MR. MOTO'S LAST WARNING (J. P. Mar-
quand); Mysterious Mr. Moto, 20th Century-
Fox, 1938.
MR. ROMEO (Harry Wagstaff Gribble) ; Chick-
en a la King, Fox. 1928.
MR. & MRS. HADDOCK ABROAD (Donald Og-
den Stewart) : Finn and Hattie, Paramount.
1931.
MRS. PARAMOUR (Louis Joseph Vance): Mar-
ried Flirts, Metro-Goldwyn. 1024.
MUDDLED DEAL: Blond Cheat, RKO Radio, 1938.
MUD LARK (Arthur Stringer): Purchase Price,
Warner Bros.. 1932.
MUD TURTLE (Elliott Lester): City Girl, Fox,
1930.
MUJER (Martinez Sierra); Io-Tu-Y-Ella. Fox.
1933.
MURDER FOR A WANTON (Whitman Cham-
bers): Sinner Take All, M-G-M. 1936.
MURDER OF STEPHEN KESTER (Harriett
Ashbrook): Green Eyes, Chesterfield. 1934.
MURDER AT SEA (Arthur Hoerl); Convicted,
Artclass, 1931.
MURDER IN A CHINESE THEATER (Joseph
Santley): Mad Holiday. M-G-M, 1936.
MURDER IN SURGERY (James G. Edwards) ;
Mystery of the White Room, Universal, 1939.
MUTINY (Scott Darling); Scarlet Seas. First
National. 1928.
MY FIRST ADVENTURE (Unknown): It's Easy
to Become a Father, Ufa, 1929.
MY LORD OF THE DOUBLE B (Norton S.
Parker) ; Lady from Hell, Associated Exhib-
itors, 1926.
MY MAMIE ROSE (Owen Kildare) ; Fool's High-
way, Universal, 1924.
MYLES CALTHORPE (F. E. Mills Young);
Thou Art the Man, Paramount. 1920.
MYSTERY OF HUNTINGS END (Mignon Eber-
hart) : Mystery House, Warners, 1938.
MYSTERY OF THE DEAD POLICE (Philip
MacDonald) : Mystery of Mr. X. M-G-M, 1934.
NANCY'S PRIVATE AFFAIRS (Myron C. Fa
gan): Smart Woman, RKO, 1931.
NARROW STREET, THE (Edward Blateman
Morris) ; Wide Open, Warner Bros., 1930.
NATIONAL ANTHEM (J. Hartley Manners);
Marriage Whirl, First National, 1925.
NAUGHTY CINDERELLA (Avery flopwood) :
Good and Naughty, Paramount, 1926.
NAUGHTY WIFE (Fred Jackson): Test of
Honor, Paramount, 1919.
NAVY WIFE (Kathleen Norris) : Beauty's
Daughter. Fox. 1935.
NERVE OF FOLEY (Frank Spearman) : Run-
away Express, Universal, 1926.
NEST EGG (Anne Caldwell); Marry Me, Para-
mount, 1925.
NET, THE (Rex Beach): Fair Lady, Warner
Bros.. 1922.
NEW FREEDOM, THE (Peter B. Kyne) ; Men
of Action, Conn, 1935.
NEW HENRIETTA (Winchell Smith. Victor
Mapes) ; The Saphead, Metro. 1921.
NEW PARDNER, THE (Al Herman): Hot Off
the Press. Victory, 1935.
NEW YORK LADY (Donald Ogden Stewart) ;
Tarnished Lady. Paramount, 1931.
NEW YORK TOWN (Ward Morehouse): Big
City Blues, Warner Bros.. 1932.
NEW YORK WEST (Wallace Smith); West of
Broadway, M-G-M, 1932.
NIBELUNGEN (Wagner) ; Siegfried. Ufa, 1925.
NIBELUNGENLIED, THE (C. F. Vaon Harbou) :
Kriemhild's Revenge, Ufa, 1928.
NIGHT BUS (Samuel Hopkins Adams): It Hap
pened One Night, Columbia, 1934.
NIGHT HOSTESS (Phillip and Frances Dunn-
ing) : Woman Racket, M-G-M, 1930.
NIGHTSTICK (John Wray, J. C. Nugent, Eleine
S. Carrington) : Alibi, Universal, 1929.
NO BRAKES (A. W. Somerville) ; Oh, Yeah!,
Pathe. 1930.
NO GROOM TO BRIDE HER (George Beck) ;
Everybody's Doing It, RKO Radio. 1938.
NO LAW IN SHADOW VALLEY; Lawless Valley.
RKO Radio. 1938.
NO POWER ON EARTH (Lester Colo); The Bis
Guy, Universal, 1939.
NORWICH VICTIMS. THE (Francis Beeding) ;
Dead Men Tell No Tales, Alliance, 1939.
NOOSE, THE (Constance Linsay Skinner) ; Green
Temptation, Paramount. 1922.
NORTHING TRAMP. THE (Edgar Wallace) :
Strangers on a Honeymoon. GB. 1937.
NORTH OF 36 (Emerson Hough): Conquering
Horde, Paramount. 1931.
NORTH SHORE (Wallace Irwin): Woman in
Red. First National, 1935.
NOSTROMO (Joseph Conrad): Silver Treasure,
Fox, 1926.
NOT HERBERT (Howard Irving Young); Per-
fect Sap, First National, 1927.
NOT PROVEN (F. Tennyson Jesse) ; Half Angel,
Fox, 1936.
O, PROMISE ME (Peter B. Kyne): Buckaroo
Kid. Universal, 1926.
OATH OF STEPHEN HULLER (E. A. Dupont) ;
Variety, Paramount, 1926.
OBEY THAT IMPULSE (DeSylva. Brown and
Henderson. Leo McCarey) : Indiscreet, United
Artists. 1931.
OBSCURITY (Rupert Hughes): Breach of Prom-
ise. World Wide, 1932.
OCTAVE OF CLAUDIUS (Barry Pain); Blind
Bargain, Goldwyn, 1922.
ODD THURSDAY (Very Caspary) ; Such Women
Are Dangerous, Fox, 1934.
OH, PROMISE ME (Peter B. Kyne) ; Flaming
Guns. Universal. 1933.
ODD DOLL'S HOUSE (Damon Runyon); Mid
night Alibi. First National. 1934.
OKAY AMERICA (William A. McGuire) ; Risky
Business, Universal, 1939.
OLD FATHERS AND YOUNG SONS (Booth
Tarkington ) ; Father's Son, First National,
1930.
OLD GRAD (Malt Taylor); Hero lor a Day. Uni-
versal, 1939.
OLD HUTCH LIVES UP TO IT ( Garret Smith I
Old Hutch. M-G-M. 1936.
299
WILLIAM A. SEITER
Director
//
"THREE BLIND MICE"
HANKS FOR EVERYTHING"
//
SUSANNAH OF THE MOUNTIES"
"ALLEGHENY UPRISING'
"IT'S A DATE"
'//
300
Original Title
and Author
Release Title
and Distributor
Original Title
and Author
Release Title
and Distributor
OLD LADY SHOWS HER MEDALS (James M.
Barrie): Seven Days' Leave. Paramount, 1930.
OLD MAN MINICK (Edna Ferber) ; The Ex-
pert. Warner Bros.. 1932.
OLD MAN MURPHY (Patrick Kearney. Harry
Wag-staff Oribble) ; His Family Tree. RKO.
1935.
OLD MRS. LEONARD AND THE MACHINE
GUNS (George Bradshaw, Price Day) : The
Lady and the Mob. Columbia. 1939.
OLD SOAK. THE (Don Marquis): Good Old
Soak. M-G-M, 1937.
OLYMPIA (Ferenc Molnar) ; His Glorious Night.
M-G-M. 1929.
OLYMPIA (Adolph Bannauer) : Western Wallop.
Universal, 1924.
ONCE A PEDDLER (Hugh McNair Kahler) :
Little Giant. First National, 1933.
ONCE THERE WAS A PRINCESS (Juliet Wil-
bur Tompkins) : Misbehaving- Ladies, First
National. 1931.
ONCE TO EVERY MAN (Larry Evans) ; Fight-
ing- Heart. Fox, 1926.
ONE EIGHTH APACHE (Peter B. Kyne) ; Danger
Ahead, Victory, 1935.
ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS (Richard Connell) :
New Year's Eve, Fox, 1929.
ONE OF US (Jack Lait. Jo Swerling) ; Love
Burglar, Paramount, 1919.
ONE WHO WAS CLEVER, THE (Elliott White
Springs) : Young Eagles, Paramount, 1930.
133 AT THREE (Gerald Beaumont): Winner
Takes All, Universal. 1918.
ONLY A DREAM (Lothar Schmidt): Marriage
Circle. Warner Bros.. 1924.
OP O' MY THUMB (Frederick Fenn, Richard
Pryce) : Suds, United Artists, 1920.
OPEN DOOR (Oscar Blumenthal. Gustav Kadel-
burg) ; Is Matrimony a Failure?, Paramount.
1922.
ORDEAL (Dale Collins): Ship from Shanghai.
M-G-M, 1930.
ORDER, PLEASE (Edward Childs Carpenter):
One New York Night, M-G-M, 1935.
ORPHAN. THE (Clarence Mulford) : Deadwood
Coach, Fox, 1925.
OTHER MEN'S WIVES (Walter Hackett) : Sweet-
hearts and Wives. First National, 1930.
OTHER TIMES (Harold Brighouse) ; Children
of Jazz. Paramount, 1923.
OUT OF THE NIGHT (Rita Johnson Young):
Hell Harbor. United Artists. 1930.
OUT TO WIN (John Wesley Grey) : Warner
Bros., 1930.
OUTCAST (Hubert Henry Davies) : The Girl
from Tenth Avenue, First National, 1926.
OUTLAW, THE (Jackson Gregory): Hearts and
Spurs, Fox, 1925.
OVER THE BORDER (Herman Wbitaker) ;
Three Bad Men, Fox, 1925.
OVER THE BORDER (Herman Whitaker) :
Not Exactly Gentlemen, Fox. 1931.
OVER THE HILL TO THE POORHOUSE (Will
Carleton) : Over the Hill. Pathe. 1917.
OVERLAND RED (Henry Herbert Knibbs) :
Sunset Trail. Paramount, 1917.
PAGE TIM O'BRIEN (John Morosco) : Love in
the Dark, Metro, 1922.
PAID WITH TEARS (Frances Fenton) ; Passion
Song, Excellent, 1929.
PAINTED SCENE (Henry Kitchell Webster):
Great Adventure. Pathe, 1918.
PAINTED WOMAN (Frederick Arnold Kum-
mer) ; Slave Market, Paramount, 1917.
PAIR OF SILK STOCKINGS (Cyril Harcourt) :
Silk Stocking. Universal, 1927.
PAIR OF SIXES (Edward H. Peple) : Queen
High, Paramount.
PAL O' MINE (Marion Jackson): Thundering
Hoofs. FBO, 1924.
PANAMA FLO (Garrett Ford) : Panama Lady,
RKO. 1939.
PANDORA LA CROIX (Gene Wright) : As Man
Desires. First National, 1925.
PANI WALEWSKA (Waclaw Gasiorowski. Helen
Jerome) : Conquest. M-G-M. 1937.
PARDON MY GLOVE (Zoe Akins) : Ladies Lovp
Brutes. Paramount. 1930.
PARSON OF PARAMINT (Peter B. Kyne I :
While Satan Sleeps. Paramount. 1922.
PARSON'S WIDOW (Christopher Jansen); Wil. li
Woman. Pearless-World. 1917.
PART-TIME WIVES (Faith Baldwin): Week
End Marriage, First National, 1932.
PASSAGE TO HONG KONG (George Kibbee
Turner, Merican C. Cooper. Jane Bigelow I :
Roar of the Dragon. RKO, 1932.
PASSIONATE SONATA (Wilson Collison): Ex-
pensive Women. First National. 1931.
PATCHION (Maurice Hennequin. Felix Duques-
nel): Gay Deceiver. M-G-M. 1920.
PATH OF GLORY, THE (Joseph Sehrank. Philip
Dunning) ; Page Miss Glory. Warner Bros..
1935.
PATROL (Philip MacDonald): Lost Patrol.
RKO, 1934.
PAUL STREET BOYS (Ferenc Molnar): No
Greater Glory, Columbia, 1934.
PAVILLION ON THE LINKS (Robert Louis
Stevenson) ; White Circle, Paramount, 1920.
PEACEFUL PERCY (Bertram Millhauser) ; Pools
in the Dark, FBO, 1924.
PEACOCK FEATHER (Katharine Leslie Moore) :
Pennies from Heaven, Columbia. 1936.
PEACOCK SCREEN (Fanny Heaslip Lea) :
Cheaters, Tiffany, 1927.
PEARLS BEFORE CECILY (Charles Brackett) :
Risky Business, PDC. 192(5.
PEGGY BE CAREFUL (Ethel M. Hadden) :
Understudy, FBO. 1922.
PEGGY OF BEACON HILL (Mayzie Grieg):
Love Gamble. Henry Ginsburg, 1920.
PELICAN, THE (F. Tennyson Jesse. H. M
Harwood) : Marriage License, Fox, 1926.
PENNY ARCADE (Marie Baumer) ; Sinner's
Holiday. Warner Bros.. 1930.
PENTHOUSE (Arthur Somers Roche): Society
Lawyer. M-G-M. 1939.
PEPE LE MOKO (Detective Ashelbe) : Algiers.
United Artists, 1938.
PERE GORIOT (Balzac): Paris at Midnight.
PDC. 1926.
PERFECT ALIBI. THE (Arthur T. Hormanl ;
Double Danger. RKO Radio, 1938.
PERFECT WEEK-END (Frederick Hazlitt Bren
nan): St. Louis Kid, Warner Bros., 1934.
PERPETUA (Dion Calthrop) ; Love's Boomer-
ang, Paramount, 1922.
PERSONS IN HIDING (J. Edgar Hoover): Under-
cover Doctor, Paramount, 1939.
PERSON-TO-PERSON CALL (Sarah E. Rodgers) :
Girl Overboard, Universal, 1937.
PETER IBBETSON (George de Marnier) ; For-
ever. Paramount. 1921.
PHANTOM CROWN (Bertida Harding); Juarez.
Warners. 1939.
PHANTOM FAME (Ben Markson. H. N. Swan-
son): Half Naked Truth. RKO. 1932.
PICTURE ON THE WALL (J. B. Ellis): Shadow
on the Wall, Lumas. 1925.
PIE IN THE SKY (George Holland): Don't Tell
the Wife. RKO Radio, 1937.
PIERRE OF THE PLAINS (Edgar Selwyn) ;
Heart of the Wilds. Artcraft. 1918.
PIERRE OF THE PLAINS (Edgar Selwyn); Ove
The Border, Paramount, 1922.
PIGBOATS (Edward Ellsberg) ; Hell Below. M
G-M. 1933.
PIGS (Anne Morrison, Patterson McNutt) :
Midnight Kiss, M-G-M, 1929.
PILLORY, THE (Brandon Fleming); The Elev
enth Commandment, Allied, 1933.
PINK CHEMISE (Philip Wylie) ; Come On
Marines, Paramount, 1934.
PINK GODS AND BLUE DEMONS (Cynthia
Stockley) : Pink Gods, Paramount, 1922.
PIONEERS OF THE OLD SOUTHWEST (Con-
stance Lindsay) ; Daniel Boone, RKO, 1936.
301
RALPH SPENCE
"DOWN ARGENTINE WAY
Screen Play*
V
Preparing:
"THE LIFE OF O. HENRY'
(In collaboration with Sara Coleman Porter)
'In collaboration
302
Ordinal Title
and Author
Release Title
and Distributor
Original Title
and Author
Release Title
and Distributor
PIN MONEY (Henrv C. Vance); Diamond
Handcuffs, M-G-M. 1928.
PINNACLE (Erich von Stroheim) : Blind Hus
bands. Universal, 1910.
PLASTER SAINTS (Frederick Arnold Kummer) :
Spitfire, RKO, 1934.
PLAYING WITH FIRE (James Oliver Cur wood) I
Song of the Trail, Ambassador, 1936.
PLEASE HELP EMILY (Byron Morgan); Palm
Beach Girl, Paramount, 1926.
PLUTOCRAT (Booth Tarkington) : Business and
Pleasure, Fox, 1932.
POOR NUT, THE (J. C. and Elliott Nugent):
Local Boy Makes Good. First National. 1931.
POP (Rupert Hughes) ; Remembrance, Goldwyn,
1922.
POPPY (Dorothy Donnelly); Sally of the Saw-
dust, United Artists. 1925.
PORTRAIT OF A LADY (Netta Syrett) : A
Woman Rebels. RKO, 1936.
PORTRAIT OF SADIE McKEE (Vina Delmar) ;
Sadie McKee, M-G-M, 1934.
POTIPHAR'S WIFE (Edgar Middleton); Her
Strange Desire, Powers. 1932.
POUCHE (Avery Hop wood, Rene Peter, Henri
Falk); This is the Night, Paramount, 1932.
PRECIOUS (James Forbes); Bachelor's Affairs.
Fox, 1932.
PRINCE CONSORT (Leon Xanrof. Jules Chan-
cel): Love Parade. Paramount, 1929.
PRINZE CILLAH (Julia Claretie) : Her Final
Choice. Paramount. 1918.
PRINCESS ZIM, ZIM (E. L. Sheldon); Coney
Island Princess. Paramount. 1916.
PRIVATE PETTIGREW'S GIRL (Dana Bur
nett) ; Pettigrew's Girl, Paramount, 1919.
PRIVATE PETTIGREW'S GIRL (Dana Bur-
nett) : Shopworn Angel, Paramount, 1929.
PRIVATE PETTIGREW'S GIRL (Dana Burnet):
The Shopworn Angel, M-G-M, 1938.
PRIVATE PROPERTY (Norman Houston): A
Royal Romance, Columbia, 1930.
PRIVATE SECRETARY (Alan Brener Schultz) :
Behind Office Doors, RKO. 1031.
PRIVATE SECRETARY. THE (Franz Shultz) ;
Office Girl, RKO, 1932.
PROBLEM IN GRAND LARCENY (Jack Boyle):
Missing Millions, Paramount, 1922.
PRODIGAL FATHER. THE (Cosmo Hamilton):
The Perfect Gentleman. M-G-M, 1935.
PROFESSOR UNRATH (Heinrich Mann): Blue
Angel. Paramount, 1930.
I'ROMENADE DECK (Ishbel Ross) : Three on a
Honeymoon, Fox, 1934.
PUBLIC ENEMY NO. 1 (Seton I. Miller): The
G-Men, Warner Bros., 1935.
PUBLIC RELATIONS (Courtenay Terrett) :
Made on Broadway. M-G-M. 1933.
PURITAN AT LARGE (I. A. R. Wylie) ; The
Road to Reno, Universal. 1938.
PURPLE AND FINE LINEN (May Edington) :
Three House, First National. 1927.
PURPLE MASK (Gouverneur Morris): Ace of
Hearts. Goldwyn, 1921.
PUZZLE OF THE BRIAR PIPE (Stuart Palm
er) : Murder on a Brdile Path, RKO, 1936.
PUZZLE OF THE PEPPER TREE (Stuart Palm-
er) ; Murder on a Honeymoon, RKO, 1935.
QUARANTINE (F. Tennyson Jesse) : Lovers
in Quarantine, Paramount, 1925.
QUARRY, THE (John A. Moroso) : Shadow
of the Law, Paramount, 1930.
QUARRY, THE (John A. Moroso); City of
Silent Men, Paramount. 1921.
QUEEN WAS IN THE PARLOR (Noel Coward) ;
Tonight is Ours, Paramount, 1933.
QUEEN WAS IN THE PARLOR (Dale Collins):
Forbidden Love, Pathe, 1928.
QUEEN OF MAIN STREET (Juliet Wilbor
Thompkins) ; Misbehaving Ladies, First Na-
tional, 1931.
QUEEN'S HUSBAND (Robert E. Sherwood I ;
The Royal Bed, RKO, 1931.
QUEEN'S HUSBAND (Robert E. Sherwood):
Le Roi S'Ennuie, RKO, 1931.
QUEMADO (William W. Winter): That Devil
Quemado, FBO. 1925.
QUEST OF JOAN (James Oliver Curwood):
Prisoners of the Storm, Universal, 1926.
QUINTUPLETS TO YOU (Olga Moore): You
Can't Beat Love. RKO Radio, 1937.
RACING BLOOD (Edwin Dial Torgerson): Speed
to Burn, 20th Century-Fox, 1938.
RACING LUCK (Tristam Tupper) ; Red Hot
Tires. Warner Bros., 1925.
RAFFLES, THE AMATEUR CRACKSMAN (E.
W. Hornung): Haffles, United Artists, 1930.
RAGGED MESSENGER (W. B. Maxwell); Ma-
donna of the Street, Columbia, 1930.
RAINBOW (Lawrence Stallings. Oscar Ham
merstein, II) ; Song of the West, Warner
Bros., 1930.
RAMBLIN' KID (Earl W. Bowman): Long:.
Long. Trail, Universal, 1929.
RAMBLERS. THE (Guy Bolton, Harry Ruby.
Bert Kalmar) ; The Cuckoos, RKO, 1930.
RANGE DWELLERS (B. M. Bowers): Taming
the West. Universal. 1925.
RANGEY PEPE (Guy Morton); Texas Trail.
PDC, 1925.
RATTLER ROCK (Ralph Cummings) : Rarin'
to Go, Artclass, 1924.
READY LETTER WRITER (Blanche Brace) :
Don't Write Letters. Metro, 1922.
REAR CAR (Edward E. Rose): Murder in the
Private Car, M-G-M. 1934.
REAR CAR (Edward E. Rose) : Red Lights,
Goldwyn, 1923.
REASON WHY (Elinor Glyn); Soul Matee.
M-G-M, 1926.
RECIPE FOR MURDER (Arthur Kober) ; The
Great Hotel Murder. Fox, 1936.
RECREATION OF BRIAN KENT (Harold Bell
Wright) : Wild Brian Kent. RKO. 1926.
RED DAWN (Harold Shumate): Call of Cour
age. Universal. 1925.
REDEMPTION COVE (Donn Byrne): Woman
God Changed, Paramount, 1921.
RED HARVEST (Dashiell Hammett) : Road-
house Nights, Paramount, 1930.
RED HEADED HUSBAND (Katharine Newlin
Burt): Silent Rider, Triangle. 1927.
RED MARK (John Russell): Where the Pave-
ment Ends, Metro, 1923.
RED MIRAGE (I. A. R. Wylie) : Foreign
Legion, Universal. 1928.
REGULAR PEOPLE (Edgar Franklin Stearn):
Idle Rich. M-G-M, 1929.
REGISTERED WOMAN (John Farrow): Wom-
an of Experience, Hiller and Wilk, 1918.
RELATIVE VALUES (Sophie Kerr): Young
Ideas, Universal, 1924.
REMORSE (Evelyn Campbell) : Masked Angel.
Chadwick. 1928.
RENFREW RIDES AGAIN (Laurie York Erskine) ;
Fighting Mad, Monogram, 1939.
RENFREW RIDES THE RANGE (Laurie York
Erskine) ; Crashing Thru, Monogram, 1939.
RENUNCIATION (Peter B. Kyne): Beautiful
Gambler. Universal. 1921.
RESURRECTION (Leo Tolstoy): We Live
Again. United Artists, 1934.
REPEAL (Charles Francis Coe) ; The Gay
Bride. M-G-M, 1934.
REPUBLICANS AND SINNERS (Keane Thomp-
son. Douglas MacLean); Six of a Kind, Para-
mount, 1934.
RETURN ENGAGEMENT (Nancy Hamilton, James
Shute, Rosemary Casey) ; Fools for Scandal,
Warners. 1938.
RETURN FROM LIMBO (Albert Carr) : Women
Are Like That, Warners. 1938.
RETURN OF THE BAD MAN (Porter Emerson
Brown. J. Parker Reade. Jr.); The Trumpet
Blows. Paramount, 1934.
REVOLT (Mary McCall); Scarlet Dawn, War-
ner Bros., 1932.
30.?
-
Kenneth Maceowan
Associate Producer
"YOUNG MR. LINCOLN"
"SWANEE RIVER"
"STANLEY AND LIVINGSTONE"
Robert Helen
ELLIS and LOGAN
Under contract to
20th CENTURY-FOX
304
Original Title
and Author
Itelease Title
and Distributor
Original Title
and Author
Itelease Title
and Distributor
RICHTOFEN. RED KNIGHT OF THE AIR (Peter
Joseph): Richtofen, Symon Gould, 1932.
RIDDLE ME THIS (Daniel L. Rubin); Guilty as
Hell, Paramount. 1932.
RIDDLE OF THE DANGLING PEARL (Stuart
Palmer) : The Plot Thickens, RKO, 1936.
RIDE HIM COWBOY (Kenneth Perkins): Un-
known Cavalier, First National, 1926.
RIDE 'EM COWBOY (Harrington Strong-) ;
Valley of Hunted Men, Pathe, 1928.
RIDE 'IM COWBOY (Walter J. Coburn): Be-
tween Dangers, Pathe, 1927.
RIDIN' KID FROW POWDER RIVER (Henry
H. Knibbs) ; Mounted Stranger, Universal.
1930.
RlDE IN THE COUNTRY (George Kibbe Turn
er) : Walking Back, Pathe, 1928.
RIGHT TO KILL (Herman Bernstein): Her
Private Affair, Pathe, 1929.
RIGHT TO LIVE (Gouverneur Morris): That
Model from Paris, Tiffany, 1926.
RINGER, THE (Edgar Wallace) : The Phantom
Strikes, Monogram, 1939.
RINGSIDE (Gene Buck); Night Parade, RKO,
1929.
RITA COVENTRY (Julian Street, Herbert Os-
borne); Don't Call It Love, Paramount, 1923.
RIVER THE (Sir Patrick Hastings): Notori-
ous Lady, First National, 1927.
ROAD TO HEAVEN (Harry Fried) ; Humanity.
Fox. 1923.
ROBBER BARONS, THE (Matthew Josephson):
The Toast of New York, RKO Radio, 1937.
RODNEY (Leonard Nason) ; Keep 'Em Rolling.
RKO. 1934.
ROLES (Zane Grey) ; Changing Husbands, Para-
mount, 1924.
ROMANCE (Joseph Conrad); Road to Romance,
M-G-M. 1927.
ROMANCE IN A GLASS HOUSE (Jerry Wald,
Julius J. Epstein, Robert Andrews) : I Live
for Love, Warner Bros., 1935.
ROMANY RYE (George R. Simms) : Life Line.
Paramount, 1919.
ROOKERY NOOK (Ben Travers) : One Embar-
rassing Night, M-G-M, 1930.
ROPES (Wilbur Daniel Steele); Undertown,
Universal. 1931.
ROPE'S END (Rex Beach); Sainted Devil,
Paramount, 1924.
ROSANNE OSANNE (Cynthia Stockley) : Sins
of Rosanne, Paramount, 1920.
ROSEBUSH OF A THOUSAND YEARS (Mabel
Wagnalls) ; Revelation, Metro-Goldwyn, 1924.
ROSE GARDEN HUSBAND (Margaret Widde-
mer) ; A Wife on Trial, Butterfly, 1917.
ROSE IN THE RING (George Barr McCutch-
eon) ; Circus Men, Paramount, 1914.
ROSE OF THE RITZ (Charles Beahan, Garrett
Fort) ; Naughty Baby. First National, 1929.
ROULETTE (Fannie Hurst) : Wheel of Chance,
First National, 1928.
ROUND-UP. THE (Clarence E. Mulford) ; Hills
of Old Wyoming, Paramount, 1937.
ROYAL FAMILY, THE (Edna Ferber, George
S. Kaufman) ; Royal Family of Broadway,
Paramount, 1930.
RUBY (Lea David Freeman); Lazy River,
M-G-M, 1934.
RUINED LADY (Frances Notrdstrom) ; One
Woman to Another, Paramount, 1927.
RUNAWAY ENCHANTRESS (Mary Heaton
Vorse) ; Sea Tiger, First National, 1927.
SACRED FLAME (W. Somerset Maugham) ;
The Right to Live, Warner Bros., 1935.
SACRIFICE (Stephen French Whitman): Drums
of Fate, Paramount, 1923.
SADIE OF THE DESERT (Mildred Cram) :
Subway Sadie, First National, 1926.
SAGA OF BILLY THE KID (Walter Noble
Burnes) ; Billy the Kid, M-G-M, 1930.
SAID WITH SOAP (Gerald Beaumont): Babe
Comes Home. First National, 1927.
SAINT OF CALAMITY GULCH (Bret Harte):
Taking a Chance, Fox, 1929.
SAINT JOHNSON (W. R. Burnett): Law and
Order. Universal. 1932.
SALAMANDER (Owen Johnson); Enemy Sex,
Paramount, 1924.
SALOMY JANE'S KISS (Paul Armstrong, Bret
Harte) ; Wild Girl, Fox, 1932.
SALT OF THE EARTH (George Weston): Eyes
of the Soul, Artclass, 1919.
SALUTE TO HATE (John McCarthy, Faith
Thomas): Conspiracy. RKO, 1939.
SALUTE TO THE GODS (Sir Malcolm Camp
bell); Burn 'Em Up O'Connor. M-G-M, 1939.
SALVAGE (Izola Forrester) ; Wreckage, Banner.
1925.
SATURDAY'S CHILDREN (Maxwell Anderson);
Maybe It's Love, Warner Bros., 1930.
SCARECROW (Percy Mackaye): Puritan Pas-
sions, Hodkinson. 1923.
SCENT OF SWEET ALMONDS (Monckton Hof-
fe) : Pleasure Crazed, Fox, 1929.
SCOOP (unknown); That's My Story, Universal.
1937.
SCOTCH VALLEY (Mildred Cram): Amateur
Daddy. Fox, 1932.
SCOURGE OF THE LITTLE C (J. E. Grin-
stead) : Tumbling River, Fox, 1927.
SCOURGE OF FATE (Dwart Adamson) : Flam
ing Fury, FBO, 1926.
SEA WOMAN (William Robertson): Barriers
Aflame, First National, 1925.
SEANCE MYSTERY (Norton Parker) ; Sinister
Hands, Kelly, 1932.
SEARCH FOR THE SPRING (Eleanor Gates);
Once to Every Bachelor, Liberty, 1934.
SECOND CHANCE (Mrs. Wilson Woodrow) :
Her Second Chance, First National, 1926.
SECOND LIFE, THE (Rudolf Bernauer, Ru-
dolf Oesterreicher) ; Once to a Lady, Para-
mount, 1931.
SECOND LIFE (B. Oesterreicher): Three Sin-
ners. Paramount, 1928.
SECOND MAN (S. N. Behrman) ; He Knew
Women, RKO, 1930.
SECRETS OF THE BLUE ROOM (Erich Philippi) ;
The Missing Guest, Universal, 1938.
SEEING EYE. THE (William Joyce Cowan):
Blind Alibi, RKO Radio, 1938.
SEE NAPLES AND DIE (Elmer Rice); Oh!
Sailor, Behave!. Warner Bros., 1931.
SEE-SAW (Sophie Kerr): Invisible Bond, Para-
mount, 1919.
SEND ANOTHER COFFIN (F. G. Presnell):
Slightly Honorable, United Artists. 1939.
SENOR JINGLE BELLS (Bax Brand): Best
Bad Man, Fox, 1925.
SENTIMENTALIST, THE (Dale Collins): Sal
of Singapore, Pathe, 1929.
SENTIMENTALIST, THE (Dale Collins): His
Woman, Paramount, 1931.
SERVICE (C. L. ANTHONY) ; Looking For-
ward, M-G-M, 1933.
SERVICE FOR LADIES (Ernest Vajda) : Re-
served for Ladies, Paramount, 1932.
SHANGHAI DEADLINE (Lynn Root, Frank Fen-
ton) : International Settlement, 20th Century-
Fox, 1938.
SHANNONS OF BROADWAY (James Gleason):
Goodbye Broadway, Universal, 1938.
SHAPE OF THINGS TO COME (H. G. Wells) ;
Things to Come, United Artists. 1936.
SHEBA (Vina Delmar) ; Playing Around, First
National, 1930.
SHE SANG FOR HER SUPPER (Anna Jordan);
Night Spot, RKO Radio. 1938.
305
PAUL TERRY
Producer of
Studios
271 NORTH AVENUE
NEW ROCHELLE NEW YORK
91
306
Original Title
and Author
Release Title
and Distributor
Original Title
and Author
Release Title
and Distributor
SHE'S GOT THAT SWING (unknown); She's
Got Everything, RKO Radio, 1937.
SHOESTRING (George Bradshaw) ; New Faces
of 1937, RKO Radio, 1937.
SHORE LEAVE (Hubert Osborne, Allan Scott) :
Follow the Fleet, RKO, 1936.
SHORN LAMB, THE (William J. Locke) ;
Strangers in Love, Paramount, 1932.
SHOW-OFF, THE (George Kelly): Men Are
Like That, Paramount, 1929.
SHULAMITE, THE (Claude and Alice Askew);
Under the Lash, Paramount, 1921.
SIDEWALKS OF NEW YORK (Unknown); Swell
Head, Columbia, 1935.
SIGN ON THE DOOR (Channing Pollock):
Locked Door, United Artists, 1930.
SILENT CALL (E. M. Royle) ; Squaw Man's
Son, Paramount, 1917.
SILENT THUNDER (Andrew Soutar) : Man
Called Back, Tilfany, 1932.
SILVER LANTERNS (Ethel Donaher) ; Prin-
cess of Broadway, Pathe, 1927.
SIMSON TETLOW'S SHADOW (Jennette Lee) ;
Ruler of the Road, Pathe, 1918.
SINCERITY (John Erskine) ; A Lady Sur-
renders, Universal, 1930.
SIN FLOOD (Hemming Berger) ; Way of All
Men, First National, 1930.
SINGLE LADY (John Monk Saunders); Last
Flight. First National, 1930.
SIR PIEGAN PASSES (W. C. Tuttle) : Chey-
enne Kid, RKO, 1933.
SISTER ACT (Fannie Hurst); Four Wives, War-
ners, 1939.
SISTER ACT (Fannie Hurst) ; Four Daughters,
Warners, 1938.
SITRION (Anonymous): Black Cruise, Bertad,
1929.
SIXTEEN HANDS (Homer Croy, Julian Street) :
I'm from Missouri, Paramount, 1939.
SIXTY-FOUR, NINETY-FOUR (R. H. Mottram):
Roses of Picardy, Excellent, 1928.
SKIDDING (Aurania Rouverol) ; A Family Af-
fair, M-G-M, 1937.
SKIN DEEP (Frank R. Adams); Almost a
Lady. PDC, 1926.
SKINNER'S DRESS SUIT (William Irving
Dodge) ; Skinner Steps Out, Universal, 1929.
SKY HIGH (Elliott White Springs) ; Young
Eagles, Paramount, 1930.
SKY LIFE (Charles Kenyon, Maude Fulton).
Under Eighteen, Warner Bros., 1932.
SKY POLICE (Lester Cole); Pirates of the Skies,
Universal, 1939.
SKYSCRAPER (Faith Baldwin); Skyscraper
Souls, M-G-M, 1932.
SMALL MIRAGE (Norman Krasna) ; Four Hours
to Kill, Paramount, 1935.
SNAKE BITE (Robert Hichens) ; Lady Who
Lied, First National. 1925.
SNAKE'S WIFE (Wallace Smith) ; Upstream,
Fox, 1927.
SNOWBLIND (Arthur Stringer) ; Unseeing Eyes,
Goldwyn, 1923.
SNOW DUST (Howard E. Morgan): Mystery
Valley. Rayart, 1928.
SOCIAL PIRATES (Ralph Spence) : Going High-
brow, Warner Bros., 1935.
SOLVING OF JOHN SOMERS (John Fleming
Wilson) ; Bonded Woman, Paramount, 1922.
SOMETHING TO BRAG ABOUT (Edward Sel-
wyn, William LeBaron); Baby Face Har-
rington, M-G-M, 1935.
SONG OF SONGS (Herman Sudermann) ; Lily
of the Dust, Paramount, 1924.
SONG OF THE DAMNED (Fred De Gresac) ;
Escape from Devil's Island, Columbia, 1935.
SONG OF THE DRAGON (John Taintnor Foote) ;
Convoy, First National, 1927.
SONG WRITER, THE (Crnae Wilbur) : Children
of Pleasure, M-G-M, 1930.
SON OF ANAK (Ben Ames Williams); Masked
Emotions, Fox, 1929.
SOUR GRAPES (Vincent Lawrence) ; Let's
Try Again, RKO, 1934.
SOUTHERNER (Bess Meredyth, Wells Root):
The Prodigal. M-G-M, 1931.
SOWING GLORY (J. D. Newsom): Trouble In
Morocco, Columbia, 1937.
SPANISH ACRES (Hal G. Evarts) ; Santa Fc
Trail, Paramount, 1930.
SPANISH FARM. THE (R. H. Mottram):
Roses of Picardy. Excellent. 1930.
SPANISH SUNLIGHT (Anthony Pryde) ; Girl
from Montmartre. First National. 1926.
SPELL OF THE YUKON (Robert W. Service):
Shooting of Dun McGrew, Metro-Goldwyn,
1924.
SPHINX HAS SPOKEN, THE (Maurice de Ko-
bra) : Friends and Lovers. RKO, 1931.
SPICE OF LIFE (Dorothy Howell); The Quit-
ter, Chesterfield, 1934.
SPINNER IN THE SUN (Myrtle Reed): Veiled
Woman, Fox. 1929.
SPINSTER DINNER (Faith Baldwin); Love
Before Breakfast, Universal, 1936.
SPIRIT OF THE ROAD (Kate Jordan): In
Search of a Thrill, Metro, 1923.
SPLINTER FLEET (Ray Milholland) ; Subma-
rine Patrol, 20th Century-Fox. 1938.
SPLURGE (Evelyn Campbell): Early to Wed.
Fox, 1926.
SPOOK HOUSE (Richard Flournoy) ; Beware,
Spooks!. Columbia, 1939.
SPORTS WRITER (George Bricker) ; The Pay-
Off, Warner Bros., 1935.
SPLENDID CRIME, THE (George Goodschild):
Public Defender, RKO, 1931.
SPRING CLEANING (Frederick Lonsdale): Fast
Set. Paramount, 1924.
SPRING DANCE (Philip Barry); Spring Madness.
M-G-M, 1938.
SPRING FEVER (Vincent Lawrence): Love in
the Rough, M-G-M, 1930.
SPURS (Tod Robbins) ; Freaks, M-G-M, WXl.
SQUARE PEG (Lewis Beach): Denial, Metro-
Goldwyn, 1925.
SQUADRONS (Elliott White Spring, A. E.
Thomas) ; Body and Soul, Fox, 1931.
SQUEAKERS, THE (Edgar Wallace); Murder on
Diamond Row, United Artists, 1937.
STADIUM (Francis Wallace); Touchdown, Par-
amount, 1931.
STAGE DOOR (Rita Weiman): After the Show.
Paramount, 1921.
STAGE COACH STOPS AT PINYON GULCH.
THE (Bernard McConville) ; Arizona Legion,
RKO, 1939.
STAGE TO LORDSBURG (Ernest Haycox) ; Stage-
coach, United Artists, 1939.
STAIRS OF SAND (Zane Grey): Arizona Ma-
honey, Paramount, 1937.
STARLIGHT (Gladys Unger) ; Divine Woman.
M-G-M. 1929.
STATE TROOPER (Georger Waggner) ; State Po-
lice, Universal, 1938.
STATE VS. ELINOR NORTON (Mary Roberts
Rinehart); Elinor Norton, Fox, 1935.
STAY HOME (Edgar Franklin): I Can Ex-
plain, Metro, 1922.
STEPCHILD OF THE MOON (Fulton Oursler) ;
Second Wife, RKO, 1936.
STEPPING HIGH (Gene Markey); Syncopation.
RKO, 1929.
STEEL HIGHWAY (Maude Fulton) ; Other Men's
Woman, Warner Bros., 1931,
STILL SMALL VOICE (Karl Detzezr) ; Car
99, Paramount, 1935.
307
During 7939 RKO
earned more 01
time than for
in its history . I
WATC
—
RKO
RADIO PICTURES
uncf better playing
ny previous year
H1940
RADIO
PAT HE NEWS
The recognized leader for more than a quarter of a century
. . . Yesterday, today, tomorrow . . . TWICE WEEKLY -
AS USUAL!
INFORMATION PLEASE
Most sensational shorts series on the screen. 13 one-re elers,
presenting Clifton Fadiman, John Kieran, Oscar Levant,
Franklin P. Adams, and a famous guest artist each issue.
Program Director, Dan Golenpaul.
PATHE SPORTSCOPES
Sportsmen, spectators and just plain folks have found them
among the most exciting shorts on the screen. Each of 13
one-reelers presenting a new phase of sports.
PATHE REELISMS
\ ^HM| A one-reel series that follows no pattern, knows no limits,
X^J" / covers any phase of interest or activity that makes an
extraordinarily interesting subject. 13 one-reel releases.
PRODUCED BY FREDERIC ULLMAN, Jr. • SUPERVISED BY FRANK DONOVAN
Original Title
and Author
Release Title
and Distributor
Original Title
and Author
Release Title
and Distributor
STOLEN LADY (Unknown); Come Across.
Universal. 1929.
STONES CRY OUT, THE (Richard Wormser) :
Let Them Live!, Universal, 1937.
STORY OF A COUNTRY BOY (Dawn Powell):
Man of Iron, Warner Bros., 1935.
STRAIGHT SHOOTIN' (W. C. Tattle); Border
Sheriff, Universal. 1926.
STRICTLY BUSINESS (Wallace Smith); Beau
Bandit. RKO. 1930.
STRONGHEART (William deMille) ; Bravehe^rt.
PDC, 1926.
STUFF OF HEROES (Harold Titus) ; How Bax-
ter Butted In. Warner Bros.. 1925.
STUMBLING HERD (John A. Moroso) ; Rose of
the Tenements, FBO, 1926.
SUBURB (Vera Caspary) ; Night of June 13,
Paramount, 1932.
SUCCESS STORY (John Howard Lawson) ;
Success at Any Price, RKO, 1934.
SUICIDE CLUB, THE (Robert L. Stevenson);
Trouble for Two. M-G-M, 1936.
SUNBURST VALLEY (Victor Rousseau) ;
Where Dreams Come True. Rayart. 1929.
SUNNY DACROW (Henry St. John Cooper) ;
Sunnyside Up. Fox, 1929.
SUPPER OF THE GAIETY (Alfred Savoir) :
His Tiger Lady, Paramount, 1928.
SURPRISE PARTY (The Edingtons) : Studio
Murder Mystery, Paramount. 1929.
SUSANNAH. A LITTLE GIRL WITH THE
MOUNTIES (Muriel Denison) ; Susannah of the
Mounties, 20th Century-Fox, 1939.
SUSPICION (Ladislaus Fodor) ; Wives Under
Suspicion, Universal, 1938.
SWAN. THE (Fernac Molnar) : One Romantic
Night. United Artists. 1930.
SWEEPINGS (Lester Cohen); Three Sons, RKO,
1939.
SWEET ALOES (Jay Mallory) ; Give Me Your
Heart, Warner Bros., 1936.
SWEET MYSTERY OF LIFE (Richard Mai-
baum. Michael Wallach, George Haight) ; Gold
Diggers of 1937, First National, 1936.
SWIFT LIGHTNING (James Oliver Curwood) ;
Call of the Yukon, Republic, 1938.
SWING FEVER (Burt Kelly): Swing, Sister,
Swing, Universal, 1938.
SYBIL (Max Brody, Franz Martos) : Duchess of
Buffalo, First National, 1926.
SYNDOFLODEN (Henning Berger) ; Sin Flood.
Goldwyn, 1921.
TAKE THE HEIR (Lawrence Pohle. Thomas
Ahearn); The Big Shot. RKO Radio, 1937.
TALE OF RED ROSES (George Randolph
Chester) ; My Man, Vitagraph, 1924.
TALE OF TWO CITIES (Charles Dickens) :
Only Way. United Artists, 1926.
TALE OF TRIONA (William J. Locke): Fool's
Awakening, Metro-Goldwyn, 1924.
TALISMAN, THE (Sir Walter Scott): Richard
the Lion-Hearted, Allied Producers, 1923.
TAMING OF ZENAS HENRY (Sarah Wan-
Bassett) ; Captain Hurricane, RKO, 1935.
TAMPICO (Joseph Hergesheimer) : Woman I
Stole, Columbia. 1933.
TATTERLY (Tom Gallon); Off the Highway.
PDC. 1926.
TECHNIC (Dana Burnett); Marriage Clause.
Universal, 1926.
TELL ENGLAND (Ernest Raymond) ; Battle
of Gallipoli. Capitol. 1931.
TEMPLE OF THE GIANTS (Robert W. Ritchie):
Not for Publication. FBO. 1927.
TEMPLE TOWER (H. ('. McNeile I ; Bulldog
Drummond's Secret Police, Paramount, 1939.
TEMPTING OF TAVERNAKE (E. Phillips Op-
penheim) ; Sisters of Eve, Rayart, 1928.
TENNESSEE'S PARTNER (Bret Harte) ; Flam
ing Forties. PDC. 1925.
TERRE INHUMAINE (Francois de Curel) ;
This Mad World. M-G-M, 1930.
TERWILLIGER (Tristam Tupper) ; Children <>f
Dust, First National, 1923.
TESCH (Countess Barcynska) ; Woman in the
Night, World Wide. 1929.
TESSIE OF THE LITTLE SHOP (Sewell Ford) ;
Tessie, Arrow. 1925.
THARON OF LOST VALLEY (Vingie E. Roe);
Crimson Challenge. Paramount, 1922.
THAT LASS O'LOWRIES (Frances Hodgson
Burnett) : Flame of Life. Universal. 1923.
THAT MAKES US EVEN (Paul Allison); Main
Event, Pathe, 1927.
THAT PIG OF A MORIN (Guy De Maupassant) ;
Red Hot Papa, Arnaud. 1926.
THERE WAS A KING IN EGYPT (Norma
Lorimer) ; Lure of Egypt, Pathe, 1921.
THERESE RAQUIN (Emil Zola); Shadows
of Fear, First National, 1928.
THESE DAYS (David Hempstead); Finishing
School. RKO. 1934.
THEY CAN'T HANG ME (James Ronald); Tin-
Witness Vanishes, Universal, 1939.
THEY MET IN CHICAGO (Karl Tunberg, Don
Ettlinger) ; My Lucky Star, 20th Century-Fox,
1938.
THEY WANTED TO KNOW WHAT THEY
WANTED (Sidney Howard): Secret Hour,
Paramount, 1928.
THEY'RE OFF (D. C. Lancaster): Bred in
Old Kentucky. FBO, 1926.
THICKER THAN WATER ( Bucleigh Fitz Ox-
ford); Other Kind of Love, Goldstone, 1924.
THIN AIR (Mildred Cram): Stars Over Broad
way, Warner Bros.. 1935.
THIRD ROUND, THE (H. C. McNeile) : Bull-
dog Drummond's Peril, Paramount, 1938.
THIS IS NEW YORK (Robert E. Sherwood):
Two Kinds of Women. Paramount. 1932.
THIS WOMAN AND THIS MAN (Selma Lager-
lof ) : Guilty of Love, Paramount. 1920.
THOROUGHNESS (W. A. Fraser) : Million Dol
lar Handicap, PDC, 1920.
THOUSAND DOLLAR BILL. THE (Manuel Kom-
roff): Small Town Boy. Grand National. 1937.
THRALL OF LIEF THE LUCKY (Ottalie J.
Liljencrantz) : The Viking, M-G-M, 1928.
THREE BEARS (Edward Childs Carpenter);
Three Men and a Girl. Paramount, 1919.
THREE'S COMPANY (David Butler, Herbert
Polesie); East Side of Heaven, Universal, 1930.
THREE CORNERED KINGDOM (Irene D. Ra
bel); If I Were Queen, FBO. 1922.
THREE GODFATHERS (Peter B. Kyne) ; Hell's
Heroes, Universal, 1929.
THREE FLIGHTS UP (Henry Fried); Danc-
ing Sweeties, Warner Bros., 1930.
THREE IN EDEN (W. Somerset Maugham):
Isle of Fury. Warner Bros.. 1936.
THREE MEN IN THE SNOW (Erich Kaestner) ;
Paradise for Three. M-G-M. 1938.
TIN PAN ALLEY (Hugh Stanislaus Stange) ;
New York Nights, Warner Bros.. 1930.
THREE MINUTES TO GO (Wesley Ruggles) ;
Kick-Off. Excellent, 1926.
THREE MUSKETEERS (Alexander Dumas) :
The Iron Mask, United Artists, 1929.
THY SOUL SHALL BEAR WITNESS (Selm.i
Lagerlof); The Stroke of Midnight. Metro.
1922.
TIDY TOREADOR (Peter B. Kyne); Galloping
Fury, Universal, 1927.
TIGER VALLEY (Reginald Campbell): Girl
from Mandalay, Republic, 1936.
TILLIE, A MENNON1TE MAID (Helen R. Mar
tin); Tillie, Paramount, 1922.
TIMBER (Harold Titus); Hearts Aflame, Metro.
1922.
311
Original Title
and Author
Release Title
and Distributor
Original Title
and Author
Release Title
and Distributor
TIN PAN ALLEY (Hush Stanislaus Strange);
New York Nights. United Artists, 1930.
TIZONA. THE FIREBRAND (Burke Jenkins
Clifford Howard); Lady Robinhood. FBO. 1925
TOBY TYLER (James Otis); Circus Days, First
National. 1923.
TOINETT'S PHILIP (Mrs. C. V. Jamison) :
Rainbow on the River. RKO. 1936.
TOM BROWN OF CULVER (George Green. Tom
Tuckingham, Clarence Marks) ; Spirit of Cul-
ver. Universal, 1939.
TOMMY (Howard Lindsay. Bertram Robinson)
She's My Weakness, RKO. 1930.
TOMMY CARTARET (Justus M. Forman); Face
Between. Metro, 1922.
TONG WAR (Samuel Ornitz); Chinatown Nights.
Paramount, 1929.
TOO CLEVER TO LIVE (unknown) : The
Man Who Cried Wolf, Universal, 1937.
TOOMAI OF THE ELEPHANTS (Rudyard Kip
ling) ; Elephant Boy, United Artists, 1937.
TORCH BEARERS (George Kelly); Doubting
Thomas, Fox, 1935.
TORCH SONG (Kenyon Nicholson); Laughing
Sinners. M-G-M, 1931.
l'OTO (Maurcie Hennequin. Felix du Quesnel) :
The Gay Deceiver, M-G-M. 1920.
TOU.IOURS L'AUDACE (Ben Ames Williams) :
Always Audacious, Paramount. 1920.
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN (Rita Weiman) ;
Social Code, Metro, 1923.
TO YOU MY LIFE (Zoe Akins) : Accused,
United Artists. 1936.
TOWER OF IVORY (Gertrude Atheiton): Out
of the Storm, Tiffany, 1926.
TRAGEDY OF THE KOROSKA (A. Conan
Doyle) : Desert Sheik, Truart, 1924.
TRAILIN' (Max Brand): Holy Terror. Fox.
1931.
TRANSLATION OF A SAVAGE (Sir Gilbert
Parker): Behold My Wife. Paramount, 1935.
TRAVELING SALESMAN (James Forbes) :
Sporting Goods, Paramount. 1928.
TRELAWNEY OF THE WELLS (Arthur Wing
Pinero) ; The Actress. M-G-M. 1928.
TREVE (Albert Payson Torhune) ; The Mighty
Treve. Universal. 1937.
TKIANGLE (Walter Reisch); Men Are Not Gods.
United Artists, 1937.
TRIGGER (Lulu Vollmer) : Spitfire. RKO. 1934.
TRILBY (George du Maurier) ; Svengali, War
ner Bros., 1931.
TRIPLE CROSS FOR DANGER (WaDter J.
Coburn) ; Fighting Fury, Universal, 1924.
TROUBLE TWINS (George R. Bilson); We're
in the Money, Warner Bros., 1935.
TRUTH GAME, THE (Ivar Novello) : But the
Flesh is Weak. M-G-M, 1932.
TRIPLE TROUBLE (Harry O. Hoyt) ; Adorable
Deceiver. FBO, 1926.
TUMBLE IN (Mary Roberts Rinehart, Avery
Hopwood) : Seven Days, PDC, 1925.
TU M'EPOUSERAS (Louis Verneuil) : Get
Your Man. Paramount, 1927.
TWELVE COINS OF CONFUCIUS (Harry Ste-
phen Keeler) ; Mysterious Mr. Wong, Mono
gram, 1935.
TWENTY GRAND (Eva K. Flint. Martha Madi-
son); Reckless Living, Universal, 1931.
TWO BENJAMINS (Juliet Wilbur Tompkins) :
Little Comrade, Paramount, 1919.
TWO BLACK CROWS IN THE A. E. F. (Charles
E. Mack) ; Anybody's War, Paramount, 1930.
TWO BLACK SHEEP (Arthur Lubin) ; Two
Sinners, Republic, 1935.
TWO BLOCKS AWAY (Aaron Hoffman): Co-
hens and Kellys. Universal, 1926.
TWO GATES (Henry Chapman Ford) ; Shadow
of the Law, Paramount, 1930.
TWO-GUN MAN, THE (Stewart Edward White);
Under a Texas Moon, Warner Bros., 1930.
TWO ON A TOWER (Dwight Taylor); Paris
in Spring, Paramount, 1935.
TWO O'CLOCK COURAGE (Gelett Burgess); Two
in the Dark, RKO, 1936.
TWO ORPHANS (Kate Claxton) : Orphans of
the Storm, United Artists, 1922.
TWO TIME MARRIAGE (Jack Townley) : Di-
vorce Among Friends. Warner Bros., 1931.
UMBRELLA. THE (Will Scott); London By
Night. M-G-M, 1937.
UNDERSTANDER, THE (Jo Swelling); Melody
Lane, Universal, 1929.
INDER WESTERN EYES (Joseph Conrad):
Razumov (French), Distributor unknown. 1937.
UNDYING PAST, (Hermann Sudermann); Flesh
and the Devil, M-G-M, 1927.
UNFORBIDDEN FRUIT (Warner Fabian); Wild
Party, Paramount, 1929.
UNITED STATES SMITH (Gerald Paul Beau
mont) : Pride of the Marines, Columbia, 1936.
UNTAMED, THE (Max Brand).; Fair Warning.
Fox, 1931.
UNTAMED HEART (Dorothy Yost): Hills of
Kentucky, Warner Bros., 1927.
UNWANTED (Bella Muni. Abem Finkel) : TIM
Deceiver, Columbia, 1931.
UP AND AT 'EM, (Buckleigh Fitz Oxford):
Cowboy Musketeer, FBO. 1925.
UPSTAGE (Rita Weiman); Rouged Lips. Metro.
1923.
UPTOWN WOMAN (Vina Del mar) : Uptown New
York, World Wide, 1932.
URIAH'S SON (Stephen Benet) : Necessary Evil.
First National, 1925.
VALE OF PARADISE ( Vingie E. Roe); North
of the Rio Grande. Paramount. 1922.
VALLEY OF CONTENT (Blanche Upright):
Pleasure Mad, Metro. 1923.
VALLEY OF THE WOLF (John Fox); Bill
Billy, A-l Producers, 1924.
VANITY FAIR (W. M. Thackeray); Becky
Sharp, RKO. 1935.
VENEER (Hugh Stanislaus Strange) ; Young
Bride, RKO. 1932.
VENGEANCE 0 F JEFFERSON G A W N K
(Charles Alden Silzer) ; Riddle Gawne. Art-
class. 1918.
VERGIE WINTERS (Louis Bromfleld) ; Lite «.f
Vergie Winters. RKO, 1934.
VESSEL OF WRATH (Somerset Maugham); The
Beachcomber. Paramount, 1939.
VICISSITUDES OF EVANGELINE (Elinor
Glynn) ; Red Hair. Paramount. 1928.
VICTORY (Joseph Conrad): Dangerous Para
dise. Paramount. 1930.
VIENNESE CHARMER (W. Carey Wonderly):
Street Girl. RKO. 1929.
VIENNESE CHARMER (W. Carey Wonderly):
That Girl from Paris. RKO Radio. 1937.
VIENNESE MEDLEY (Edith O'Shaughnessy ) :
Greater Glory, First National, 1926.
VILLAGE CUT-UP (George Weston): Putting
It Over, Paramount, 1919.
VINEGAR TREE (Paul Osborne) ; Should Ladies
Behave, M-G-M, 1933.
VIRGIN OF SAN BLAS (Julia Sabello) ; The
Virgin, Goldstone. 1924.
WALTZ DREAM. THE (Leopold Jacobson. Fe-
lix Dormann, Hans Muller) ; Smiling Lieuten
ant. Paramount. 1931.
WALLINGFORD STORIES (George Randolph
Chester) ; New Adventures of Get Rich Quick
Wallingford. M-G-M, 1931.
WALLS OF SAN QUENTIN (Norton S. Parker):
Prison Break, Universal, 1938.
WANTED A BLEMISH (Jesse E. Henderson.
Henry J. Buxton); Amateur Devil, Paramount
1920.
313
* o w& v+ £4?
o
GREGORY LA CAVA
Producer-Directoi
Directed:
BOX OFFICE CHAMPIONS
April, 1933
GABRIEL OVER THE
WHITE HOUSE
September, 1934
AFFAIRS OF CELLINI
Annual Box Office Champions
1935-1936
SHE MARRIED HER BOSS
1937
MY MAN GODFREY
Bex Office Champions
October-November, 1937
STAGE DOOR
September, 1939
FIFTH AVENUE GIRL
o
H K O
V
Coming Release:
PRIMROSE PATH
314
Origkial Title
and Author
Kelease Till*'
and Distributor
Original Title
and Author
Release Title
anil Distributor
WAR IN THE DARK (Ludwig Wolff): Mysteri
ous Lady. M-G-M. 1928.
WASHINGTON AND HIS COLLEAGUES (Henr.v
Jones Ford) : Alexander Hamilton, Warner
Bros., 1931.
WATCH DOG. THE (P. G. Wodehouse) : Dizzy
Dames. Liberty. 1936.
WAY. THE (Zona Gale): When Strangers Meet.
Liberty. 1934.
WEAK SISTERS (Lynn Starling): Dumbbells in
Ermine. Warner Bros.. 1930.
WE ARE FRENCH (P. P. Sheehan. R. H.
Davis) : Love and Glory, Universal, 1924.
WE ARE FRENCH (P. P. Sheehan. R. H.
Davis) : Busier of Algiers. Bluebird. 1916.
WE CAN'T BE AS BAD AS ALL THAT (Henr.v
Arthur Jones) ; Society Exile. Paramount.
1919.
WEEK END GIRL (Warner Fabian); Week Ends
Only. Fox. 1932.
WELCOME IMPOSTER (Channing Pollock): Mid-
night Intruder, Universal, 1938.
WEST OF THE GREAT DIVIDE (William
Vaughn Moody): The Groat Divide. First Na-
tional. 1930.
WEST SIDE MIRACLE (Quentin Reynolds); Se-
crets of a Nurse, Universal, 1938.
WHAT'S TOUR WIFE DOING (Herbert Hall):
Reckless Romance. PDC, 1924.
WHEELS OF FATE (James Oliver Cur wood) :
Code of the Mounted: Ambassador, 1935.
WHEN THE CYCLONE BLOWS ( G. Marion
Burton): Untamed Youth. FBO. 1924.
WHEN THE DEVIL WAS SICK (E. J. Rath):
Clear the Decks, Universal. 1929.
WHEN THE LAW RIDES (Oliver Drake): Gun
Law. RKO Radio. 1938.
WHERE IS THE TROPIC OF CAPRICORN?
(Richard Connell) : East of Broadway. Asso-
ciated Exhibitors. 1924.
WHERE THE PAVEMENT ENDS (John Rus-
sell) : The Sea God. Paramount. 1930.
WHICH SHALL IT BE (Mrs. E. L. Beers): Not
One to Spare. PDC. 1924.
WHIFF OF HELIOTROPE (Richard Washburn
Child): Heliotrope, Paramount. 1920.
WHIPPING. THE (Roy Flannagan); Ready for
Love, Paramount. 1934.
WHISPER MARKET (Kenneth J. Saunders) :
Lady Who Dared. First National. 1931.
WHISPERING PINES (Edith S. Tupper) ; Wil-
ful Youth. Peerless. 1928.
WHISPERING SHADOW. THE (Cortland Fitz-
simmons): The Longest Night. M-G-M. 1936.
WHITE COLLARS (Edith Ellis) ; Idle Rich.
M-G-M. 1929.
WHITE COLLARS (Edith Ellis); Rich Man, Poor
Girl. M-G-M, 1938.
WHITE FRONTIER (Jeffrey Deprend) ; First
National. 1923.
WHITE HANDS (Arthur Stringer): Half a Bride.
Paramount. 1928.
WHOLE TOWN'S TALKING (Anita Loos. John
Emerson): Ex-Bad Boy. Universal, 1931.
WIFE OF STEPHEN TROMHOLD (Herman
Sudermann): Wonder of Women, M-G-M, 1929.
WIFE OF THE PARTY (Len D. Hollister) :
Gold Dust Gertie, Warner Bros., 1931.
WILD APPLES (G. Cooke. A. MacGowan) :
Twenty-One. First National, 1923.
WILD BEAUTY (Matee Howe Farnhan) ; Way-
ward, Paramount, 1932.
WILD BILL HICKOK (Frank Wilstach) ; The
Plainsman, Paramount. 1936.
WILD BIRDS (Dan Totheroh) ; Two Alone. RKO.
1934.
WILD CAT (Manuel Penella) : Tiger Love. Para-
mount, 1924.
WILDCAT, THE (Wellyn Totman) : Eternal
Woman. Columbia, 1929.
WILDFIRE (Zane Grey); When Romance Ridos.
Guldwyn. 1922.
WINDS OF DESTINY (Martin Justice): Secret
Orders, FBO, 1926.
WINGS OF MERCY (Alice F. Curtis): The Man
Who Found Himself. RKO Radio. 1937.
WINNER'S CIRCLE (Gerald Beaumont): Reek
less Living. Universal. 1938.
WITHIN THE LAW (Bayard Voiller) : Paid.
M-G-M-, 1931.
WITHOUT ARMOR (James Hilton): Knighl With
out Armor. United Artists, 1907.
WITHOUT CONSENT (Carl Erickson) ; Stranger
in Town. Warner Bros., 1932.
WIVES (Jack Cunningham) ; A Wile's Awaken
ing, R. C. 1921.
WOLF HUNTERS (James Oliver Curwood) : Trail
Beyond, Monogram. 1934.
WOMAN ALONE (Fedor Oztep) : Two Who
Dared, Grand National, 1937.
WOMAN DECIDES (Wallace Smith): Delightful
Rogue, RKO, 1929.
WOMAN, THE (William C. deMille); Secret Call.
Paramount. 1931.
WOMAN. THE (William C. deMille): Telephone
Girl. Paramount, 1927.
WOMAN AND THE PUPPET (Pierre Lollys):
The Devil is a Woman. Paramount. 1 !).'!.").
WOMAN IN PURPLE PAJAMAS (Willis Kent):
A Scarlet Week End. M-G-M. 1932.
WOMAN IN THE CASE (Clyde Fitch): Law
and the Woman, Paramount. 1922.
WOMAN LIES. A (Ladislaus Fedor): Thunder
in the Night, Fox, 1935.
WOMAN OF THE KNOCKALOE (Hall Cainel;
Barbed Wire, Paramount, 1927.
WOMAN OF THE JURY (Bernard K. Burns):
Love Racket. First National, 1930.
WOMAN WHO NEEDED KILLING (Margery II.
Lawrence) ; A Dangerous Woman, Paramount.
1929.
WOMAN WHO SQUANDERED MEN (May Edin-
ton) : Crossroad of Love. Hi-Mark. 1928.
WOMAN WITH THE MASK (Franz Molnar) ;
Masked Dancer: Principal, 1924.
WOMAN WITH THE TIGER SKIN (Ernest
Klein) ; Carnival of Crime. Ufa, 1929.
WOMEN ARE BUM NEWSPAPERMEN (Richard
Macauley): Front Page Woman, Warner Bros..
1935.
WOMEN LIKE MEN (Gertrude Orr. Doris Mal-
loy) ; Mad Parade, Paramount, 1931.
WORLD AND HIS WIFE (Charles F. Ninllinger) ;
Lovers. M-G-M, 1927.
WRECKAGE (H. H. Van Loan): Stormswept,
FBO, 1923.
WRECKING BOSS (Frank Packard); The Crash.
First National, 1932.
WRONG COAT (Harold MacGrath): Pleasures of
the Rich, Tiffany. 1926.
YACONNA LILLIES (Herschel S. Hall): Chick-
ens, Paramount, 1921.
YELLOW DOVE (George Gibbs) ; Great Deeep
tion. First National, 1926.
YELLOW HANDKERCHIEF (Jack London):
Stormy Waters, Tiffany, 1928.
YELLOW MAGIC (E. Britten Austin); Buried
Treasure, Paramount, 1921.
YELLOW SEAL (W. C. Tuttle) ; Prairie Pirate.
PDC. 1925.
YONDER GROW THE DAISIES (Walter Lipp-
man): Double Cross Roads, Fox, 1930.
YOU AND I (Philip Barry): The Bargain, Para-
mount, 1914.
YOU CAN'T ALWAYS TELL (Harold Mac-
Grath): Womanpower. Fox, 1925.
YOU CAN'T JUST WAIT (Oscar Grace): Home
town Girl, Paramount, 1919.
YOUNG APOLLO, THE (Anthony Gibbs) : Men
of Tomorrow, Mundas. 1935.
ZENOBIA'S INFIDELITY (H. C. Bunner) ; Zeno-
bia. United Artists, 1939.
315
* MUSIC *
COMPOSERS, LYRICISTS, SUPERVISORS
ACTMAN, IRVING
SWING THAT CHEER — Chasm' You Around.
(DAMSON, HAROLD
MAT) ABOUT MUSIC — A Serenade to the Stars:
Chapel Bells: I Love to Whistle.
THAT CERTAIN AGE — My Own: Be a Good
Seout: You're As Pretty as a Picture: That Cer-
tain Age.
YOUTH TAKES A FLING — For the First Time.
ROAD TO RENO — Ridin' Home: I Gave My
Heart Away; Tonight is the Night.
RECKLESS LIVING — When the Stars Go to
Sleep: Heigh -Ho, the Merry-O.
THE DEVIL'S PARTY — Things Are Coming My
Way.
AGEK, MILTON
LISTEN, DARLING — A Lullaby: Ten Pins in
the Sky.
AKST, HARRY
UP THE RIVER — It's the Strangest Thing:
Song of Rockwell.
WALKING DOWN BROADWAY — Good-Bye My
Heart; (Good Luck to You).
BATTLE OF BROADWAY — Daughter ol Mad-
emoiselle.
INTERNATIONAL SETTLEMENT — You Make
Me That Way.
RASCALS — Blue is the Evening; Take a Tip
from a Gypsy: Song of the Gypsy Band.
BOY FRIEND — Doin' the Socialite.
ALTSCHULER, MODEST
"IT'S ALL IN YOUR MIND — (Arranged and
conducted) .
ANTHEIL, GEORGE
Origiinal Music: The Buccaneer.
ARLEN, HAROLD
WIZARD OF OZ — Ding Dong The Witch Is
Dead; If I Only Had a Heart; Over the Rain-
bow; If I Only Had a Brain; Munchkin Musical
Sequence; If I Only Had the Nerve; If I Were King
of the Forest: The Merry Old Land of Oz: We're
Off To See the Wizard.
BABES IN ARMS — God's Country.
A DAY AT THE CIRCUS — Lydia the Tattooed
Lady; Two Blind Loves; Step Up and Take a
Bow; Swingali.
ARNAUD, LEO
ROSALIE — Musical Arrangements.
BOYS TOWN- — Musical Arrangements.
EVERYBODY SING — Musical Arrangements.
ICE FOLLIES OF 1939 — Musical Arrangements.
ASTAIRE, FRED
I'm Building Up for an Awful Let Down: I'll
Never Let You Go: Just One More Dance, Madame.
AUTRY, GENE
GOLD MINE IN THE SKY — Dude Ranch Cow-
hands; As Long as I Have My Horse.
MAN FROM MUSIC MOUNTAIN — Love, Burning
Love.
THE OLD BARN DANCE — You're The Only Star
in My Blue Heaven.
RHYTHM OF THE SADDLE — The Old Trail;
Oh! Ladies: Merry-Go-Roundup.
UNDER WESTERN STARS — Listen to the
Rhythm of the Range.
AXT, DR. WILLIAM (Musical Score)
WOMAN AGAINST WOMAN: THE BAD MAN
OF BRIMSTONE: EVERYBODY SING: LISTEN
DARLING: SPRING MADNESS: RICH MAN.
POOR GIRL: FAST COMPANY; THE FIRST 100
YEARS : UNTAMED: TELL NO TALES: THE
KID FROM TEXAS; STAND UP AND FIGHT.
BAKALEINTKOFF, (ONSTANTIN
Musical Director: Meet Dr. Christian. Fast and
Furious.
ItAKER, PHIL
START CHEERING — My Heaven on Earth.
BARRY, HARRY
FRESHMAN YEAR — Ain't That Marvelous;
Swing That Cheer.
IS ASSMAN, GEORGE
ICE FOLLIES OF 1939 — Orchestrations.
BATH, HERBERT
A YANK AT OXFORD.
BENJAMIN, ARTHUR
WINGS OF THE MORNING — Music Arranre
ment.
BENNETT, RUSSELL
Orchestral Arrangements: Joy of Living; Fifth
Avenue Girl; Career.
BERLIN, IRVING
CAREFREE — Carefree; I Used to Be Color
Blind: Change Partners and Dance With Me; The
Night is Filled With Music; What the Well Dressed
Man Will Wear; Let's Make the Most of Our
Dream; You Can Be My Cave Man; The Yam.
ALEXANDER'S RAGTIME BAND — Now It Can
317
Je Told: My Walking: Stick: Marching- Along- With
Time: Old Songs: Alexander's Ragtime Band: Rag-
time Violin: That International Rag: Everybody's
Doin* It Now: This is the Life: When the Mid-
night Choo-Choo Leaves for Alabam': For Your
Country and My Country: I Can Always Find a
Little Sunshine in the Y.M.C.A.: Oh! How I Hate
to Get Up in the Morning: We're On Our Way to
France: In My Harem: When I Lost You: Say It
With Music: A Pretty Girl is Like a Melody: Some
Sunny Day: Blue Skies: Everybody Step: What'll I
Do?: Remember: Pack Up Your Sins and Go to the
Devil: All Alone: Heat Wave: Easter Parade:
Cheek to Cheek: Lazy: Marie.
SECOND FIDDLE — Back to Back: I Poured
My Heart Into a Song: An Old Fashioned Tune:
When Winter Came: I'm Sorry For Myself.
BIANDI, REMO
SOME LIKE IT HOT — Some Like It Hot.
BOLAND, CLAY
GANGSTER'S BOY — Stop Beatin' 'Round the
Mulberry Bush.
BOUTEL.IE, PHIL
BLOSSOMS ON BROADWAY — Olympiad.
ARTISTS AND MODELS — Musical Advisor.
GIVE ME A SAILOR — Musical Advisor.
STOLEN HEAVEN — Musical Advisor.
ROMANCE IN THE DARK — Blue Dawn.
THE GREAT VICTOR HERBERT — Musical
Supervisor.
HOTEL IMPERIAL, — Musical Advisor.
THE MAGNIFICENT FRAUD — Musical Di-
rector.
BKAININ, JEROME
THAT'S RIGHT. YOU'RE WRONG — Chatter
box.
BROOKS, SHELTON
DOUBLE DEAL — Songs.
BROWN, LEW
TARNISHED ANGEL — It's a Doctor's Orders.
STRAIGHT, PLACE AND SHOW — With You On
My Mind: Why Not String Along with Me.
HOLD THAT CO-ED — Heads High.
BROWN, NACIO HERB
BABES IN ARMS — Good Morning.
BULLOCK, WALTER
SALLY, IRENE AND MARY — Half Moon on the
Hudson: I Could Use a Dream; This Is Where I
Came In; Who Stole the Jam?; Help Wanted —
Female.
HAPPY LANDING — You Appeal to Me.
LITTLE MISS BROADWAY — We Should Be To
gether; Be Optimistic: How Can I Thank You; If
All the World Were Mine; Swing an Old Fashioned
Song; Little Miss Broadway: I'll Build a Broadway
tor You.
JUST AROUND THE CORNER — This Is a Happy
Little Ditty; Brass Buttons and Epaulets; I Love
to Walk in the Rain.
THE THREE MUSKETEERS — Song of the
Musketeer: My Lady; Voila.
WIFE, HUSBAND AND FRIEND — Drink from
the Cup of Tomorrow.
BURKE, JOHNNY
DOCTOR RHYTHM — Only a Gypsy Knows; On
the Sentimental Side: This is My Night to Dream;
My Heart is Taking Lessons.
SING YOU SINNERS — A Pocketful of Dreams:
Laugh and Call It Love: Don't Let That Moon
Get Away.
Music Composers
THE ROAD TO SINGAPORE — The Moon and
the Willow Tree: Captain Custard: Too Ro-
mantic; Sweet Potato Piper: Kaigoon.
THE STAR MAKER — A Man And His Dream:
Go Fly a Kite: Still the Bluebird Sings; An Apple
For the Teacher.
EAST SIDE OF HEAVEN — That Sly Old Gen-
tleman: East Side of Heaven: Sing a Song- of
Sunbeams: Hans' Your Heart on a Hickory Limb.
BURNETTE, SMILEY
BILLY THE KID RETURNS — Dixie Instrumental
Sonp.
GOLD MINE IN THE SKY — That's How Don-
keys Were Born: Tumbleweed Tenor.
BUTTOLPH, DAVID
Musical Director: Second Honeymoon: You
Can't Have Evreything: The Gorilla.
( AKBONANA, GERARD
Music: Geronimo; Dr. Cyclops.
CARMICHAEL, HOAGIE
COLLEGE SWING — College Swing.
SING YOU SINNERS — Small Fry.
MEN WITH WINGS — Men With Wings.
TWO SLEEPY PEOPLE — Thanks for the Mem
ory.
SAY IT IN FRENCH — April in My Heart.
CARTER, EVERETT
CHIP OF THE FLYING U — Mr. Moon: Ride
On: Git Along.
WEST OF CARSON CITY — On the Trail of
Tomorrow.
VIGILANTE WAR — Sons.' of the Prairie: I'm
Tying Up My Bridle; To the Door of Your Heart.
CASTLE, NICK
HOLD THAT CO ED — Limpy. Dimp.
CHARIG, PHIL
Merrily We Live.
CHEROSE, EDDIE
PRAIRIE MOON — The Girl in the Middle of
My Heart: The Story of Trigger Joe: Welcome
Song.
SHINE ON HARVEST MOON — Let Me Build a
Cabin; Headin' for the Open Plain.
UNDER WESTERN STARS — Campaign Song-.
WESTERN JAMBOREE — Balloon Song-; I Love
I he Morning.
MAN FROM MUSIC MOUNTAIN — Men from
Music Mountain.
ORPHANS OF THE STREET — Yo-Ho-Ho.
GOLD MINE IN THE SKY — Humin' When We're
Oomin' Round the Bend: That's How Donkeys
Were Born; Tumbleweed Tenor.
HEROES OF THE HILLS — Back to the Soil.
BILLY THE KID RETURNS — Trail Blazin':
When the Sun Is Setting on the Prairie.
BORN TO THE SADDLE — Sing a Little Song
About Anything: Parade Song; Dixie Instrumental
Song.
COME ON RANGERS — Song of the West: Let
Me Hum a Western Song.
A DESPERATE ADVENTURE — We Live for
Art.
DOWN IN AHKANSAW — The Farmer Is Not in
I he Dell.
319
Music Composers
DOWNING, fiKORC.F.
Arrangements: That's Right, You're Wrong.
CHUDNOW, DAVID
PRISON TRAIN.
CHURCHILL,, FRANK
FISHERMAN'S WHARF — Songs of Italy.
CIIAI'IN, FREDERIC
UNASHAMED — (Musical Score).
CLARE, SIDNEY
WALKING DOWN BROADWAY — Goodby My
Love (Good Luck to You).
UP THE RIVER — It's the Strangest Thing:
Song of Rockwell.
HOLD THAT CO-ED — Limpy. Dimp.
BATTLE OF BROADWAY — Daughter of Made-
moiselle.
FIVE OF A KIND — All Mixed Up.
INTERNATIONAL SETTLEMENT — Shrug: You
Make Me That Way.
RASCALS — -Blue is the Evening: Take a Tip
from a Gypsy: Song of the Gypsy: What a Gay
Occasion.
WHILE NEW YORK SLEEPS — Ain't He Good
Lookin': I'll Never Change.
PACK UP YOUR TROUBLES — Who'll Buy My
Flowers.
COLLINS, ANTHONY
Musical Scores: Nurse Edith Cavell: Swiss
Family Robinson: Allegheny Frontier.
COLOMBO, albf:rto
Musical Director: Gold Mine in the Sky: Call
of the Yukon.
BILLY THE KID RETURNS — When the Sun is
Setting on the Prairie.
A DESPERATE ADVENTURE — We Live for
Art.
GOLD MINE IN THE SKY — Humin' When We're
Coming' Round the Bend.
HEROES OF THE HILLS — Back to the Soil;
La Immaculada.
COSLOW, SAM
LOVE ON TOAST — I'd Love to Play a Love
Scene: I Want a New Romance.
YOU AND ME— The Right Guy for Me.
SOCIETY LAWYER — The Honorable Mr. So
and So.
CUTTER, MURRAY
ROSALIE — Arrangements.
EVERYBODY SING — Arrangements.
DAVIS, JIMMIE
DOWN THE WYOMING TRAIL — It Makes No
Difference Now.
DE RECAT, EMILE
THE GIRL FROM RIO — The Singing Burro.
deutsch, adolph
MUSICAL DIRECTOR: Swing Your Lady; Fools
for Scandal: Cowboy from Brooklyn; Racket
Busters; Valley of the Giants; Heart of the
North: Off the Records.
ORCHESTRAL SCORES — Tovarich; Submarine
D-l; Four's a Crowd: Broadway Musketeers.
DONALDSON, WALTER
THAT'S RIGHT. YOU'RE WRONG — I'm Fit
to be Tied.
BROADWAY SERENADE — Time Changes Every-
thing But Love.
DRAKE, MILTON
START CHEERING — Start Cheering.
LITTLE MISS ROUGHNECK — As Long as I
Love; Pickanniny Paradise.
ALL AMERICAN SWEETHEART — Pop Goes
the Bottle: Turn on the Tap: My Kid Sister.
MURDER IN SWINGTIME — The Greatest At-
traction in the World: 12 O'clock and All's Not
Well.
THE LADY OBJECTS — Sky High; Naughty-
Naughty.
DUBIN, AL
GOLD DIGGERS IN PARIS — I Wanna Go Back
to Bali: A Stranger in Paree; Latin Quarter.
GARDEN OF THE MOON — Love is Where You
Find It: The Lady on the Two-Cent Stamp: Gar-
den of the Moon.
EDENS, ROGERS
Musical Arrangements: Everybody Sing.
LOVE FINDS ANDY HARDY — In Between.
FAIN, SAMMY
TARNISHED ANGEL — It's the Doctor's Orders
FEUER, CY
I Stand Accused: Shine On Harvest Moon: Come.
Rangers : I Was a Convict : Forged Passport :
Mickey the Kid: She Married a Cop: The Zero
Hour; The Covered Trailer: Woman Doctor: Pride
of the Navy.
FIELDS, DOROTHY
THE JOY OF LIVING — Jusl Let Me Look at
You: You Couldn't Be Cuter: What's Good Abont
Goodnight: A Heavenly Party.
FINDLAY. HAL
Musical Director: Long Shot.
FORBES, LOU
Musical Director: Adventures of Tom Saw
yer: Let Them Live: Little Orphan Annie: Inter
mezo — A Love Story: Gone With the Wind: Made
for Each Other.
FOKBSTEIN, LEO F.
Musical Director: A Slight Case of Murder: Gold
Diggers in Paris: Adventures of Robin Hood:
Brother Rat: The Sisters: Garden of the Moon:
Hard to Get: Four Daughters: Four's a Crowd:
Boy Meets Girl: Amazing Dr. Clitterhouse: Going
Places: Dawn Patrol: Swing Your Lady: White
Banners; Gold Is Where You Find It: Four Wives:
Each Dawn I Die: Daughters Courageous: The
Roaring Twenties: The Old Maid: Dark Victory:
Yes — My Darling Daughter.
FORREST, CHET
BAD MAN OF BRIMSTONE — Save That Last
Grave for Me.
VACATION FROM LOVE — Let's Pretend It's
Love.
YOU'RE ONLY YOUNG ONCE — You're Only
Young Once.
THREE COMRADES — Yankee Ragtime College
Jazz: Comrade Song: How Can I Leave Thee:
Mighty Forest.
TOY WIFE — Dancing by the Moonlight.
MARIE ANTOINETTE — Amour Eternal Amour.
SWEETHEARTS — Mademoiselle: Gala Perform-
ance Celebration: Summer Serenade: On Parade:
Pretty as a Picture.
BOY'S TOWN — Boys Town on Parade.
BROADWAY* SERENADE — High Flyin': One
Look at Y'ou.
LET FREEDOM RING — Love Serenade.
320
THE WOMEN — Porevermore.
BALALAIKA— Tanya: Ride. Cossack. Ride; At
the Balalaika: Shadows On the Sand.
THESE GLAMOUR GIRLS — -Loveliness.
FRANKLIN, ARTHUR
Arrangements: Big Briadeast of 1938: Paris
Honeymoon.
FRANKLIN. DAVE
THAT'S RIGHT — YOU'RE WRONG — Happy
Birthday To Love.
FREED ARTHUR
BAD MAN OP BRIMSTONE — Save That Last
Grave for Me.
BABES IN ARMS — I Cried For Yon: Good
Morning'.
FREED, RALPH
HIDEAWAY GIRL — Two Birdies Up a Tree.
HER HUSBAND LIES — No More Tears: You
Gambled with Love.
KING OP GAMBLERS — I'm Feelin' High.
DOUBLE OR NOTHING — Listen My Children:
Smarty.
DAUGHTER OP SHANGHAI — It's Raining m
Shanghai.
JUNGLE LOVE — Coffee and Kisses: Lovelight in
the Starlight.
SONS OF THE LEGION — Sons of the Legion.
STOLEN HEAVEN — Stolen Heaven.
YOU AND ME — You and Me.
COCOANUT GROVE — You Leave Me Breathless.
HOTEL IMPERIAL — There's Something Magic
Saying 'Nitchevo.'
MIDNIGHT — Midnight.
RIO — Love Opened My Eyes; Heart of Mine;
After the Rain.
SHE MARRIED A COP — I Can't Imagine: I'll
Remember; Here's to Love.
FRIEDHOFER. HUGO
Arranger: Adventures of Robin Hood: Pour
Wives; The Old Maid.
GERSHWIN, GEORGE (deceased)
SHALL WE DANCE — Slap That Base: Shall We
Dance: They All Laughed: I've Got Beginner's
Luck: Let's Call the Whole Thing Off; They Can't
Take You Away From Me.
A DAMSEL IN DISTRESS — Foggy Day: Nice
Work If You Can Get It; I Can't Be Bothered Now.
GOLDWYN FOLLIES — Love Walked In; I Love
to Rhyme.
GERSHWIN, IRA
GOLDWYN FOLLIES — Love Walked In; I Love
to Rhyme.
GILBERT, L. WOLFE
ETERNALLY YOURS — Eternally Yours.
WINTER CARNIVAL— Winter Blossoms.
<; LUSKIN, LI D
Musical Director: The Man in the Iron Mask:
The Housekeeper's Daughter.
GOLDEN, RAY
LIFE BEGINS IN COLLEGE — Ritz Bros. Spe
cialties.
GOLDWYN FOLLIES —
STRAIGHT PLACE AND SHOW — International
Cowboys.
KENTUCKY MOONSHINE — Kentucky Opera.
GONZALES, AARON
BACHELOR MOTHER — Timbalero.
GIRL AND THE GAMBLER — Timbalero.
Music Cnmposers
GORDON, MACK
HOLD THAT CO-ED — Here I Am Doing It; Hold
That Co-Ed.
JOSETTE — Where in the World; In Any Lan-
guage; May I Drop a Petal in Your Glass of Wine.
MY LUCKY STAR — -By a Wishing Well: Could
You Pass in Love: This May Be the Jsight: I've
Got a Date with a Dream; Classy Clothes Chris:
Plymouth Rock; Marching Along; Plymouth Fare-
well Song.
REBECCA OF SUNNYBROOK FARM — An Old
Straw Hat.
SALLY, IRENE AND MARY — Got My Mind on
Music; Sweet as a Song.
THANKS FOR EVERYTHING — You're the
World's Fairest: Thanks for Everything; Puff-a-
Puff: Three Cheers for Henry Smith.
LOVE FINDS ANDY HARDY — Meet the Beat
of My Heart; It Never Rains But What it Pours.
YOU CAN'T HAVE EVERYTHING — Afraid to
Dream: You Can't Have Everything; The Loveli-
ness of You: Please Pardon Us — We're in Love;
Danger Love at Work; North Pole Sketch; Intro-
duction to North Pole Sketch.
IN OLD CHICAGO — In Old Chicago.
THIS IS MY" AFFAIR — I Hum a Waltz; Fill It
Up; Put Down Your Glass — Pick Up Your Girl
and Dance.
THIN ICE — I'm Olga from the Volga.
DANGER — LOVE AT WORK — Danger — Love
at Work.
CAFE METROPOLE — Fond of You.
TAILSPIN — Are You in the Mood for Mischief.
ROSE OF WASHINGTON SQUARE— I Never
Knew Heaven Could Speak.
GOULDING, EDMUND
DARK VICTORY — Oh Give Me Time for Ten-
derness.
GRIER, JIMMY
Musical Arrangements: Nobody's Baby.
GUIZAR, TITO
BIG BROADCAST OF 1938 — Zuni. Zuni.
GUMP, RICHARD
UNASHAMED — Back to Nature.
GUTTMAN, ARTHUR
MUSICAL DIRECTION — The Great Waltz:
Countess Maritza.
MUSICAL DIRECTION AND COMPOSITIONS —
Karneval und Liebe; Verklungene Zeiten; Un-
sterbliche Melodien; Three Tage Mittlearrest ;
Alles Fur Die Pirmey; Sindende Jugende; Salto
Mortale; Meine Cousine Aus Warschaw; Danton:
Der Letgle Walze: Nocturno; The Dream from
Schonbum; The Life of Johann Strauss; Der
Wahre Jacob.
HAGEMAN, RICHARD
Musical Score: Hotel Imperial: Rulers of the
Sea: Stagecoach.
HAMMERSTEIN, OSCAR, II
THE GREAT WALTZ — Tales of Vienna Woods;
Voice of Spring; Du Unt Du; The Bat: I'm In Love
with Vienna; One Day When We Were Young;
Polka; Revolutionary March; Monastery Sequence;
There'll Come a Time.
THE LADY OBJECTS — A Mist Over the Moon;
That Week in Paris; Home in Your Arms; When
You're in the Room.
HAN LEY, JOSEPH
Listen, Darling — Zing ! : With the Strings of My
Heart.
321
CUidfioM Studio.
IRVING CHIDNOFF
'Portraitiere to the Industry
5 5 0 FIFTH AVENUE
NEW YORK CITY
322
HARBURG, E. T.
WIZARD OF OZ — Ding! Dong! the Witch is
Dead: If I Only Had a Heart; Over the Rainbow;
If I Only Had a Brain; Munehkin Musical Se-
quence; If I Only Had the Nerve: If I Were
King- of the Forest; We're Off to See the Wizard;
Merry Old Land of Oz.
BABES IN ARMS — God's Country.
AT THE CIRCUS — Lydia the Tattooed Lady:
Two Blind Loves; Step Dp and Take a Bow:
Swingali.
HARFORD, FRANK
WHERE THE BUFFALO ROAM — Where the
Buffalo Roam: Troubadour of the Prairie.
SONG OF THE BUCKAROO — I Promise You.
HART, LORENZ
BABES IN ARMS — Babes in Arms; Where or
When.
HATLEV, MARVIN
Musical Score: There Goes My Heart: Block
Heads; Swiss Miss; Merrily We Live; Captain
Fury; Zenobia.
HEATH, HY
THAT'S RIGHT. YOU'RE WRONG — The Little
Red Fox.
HEGLIN, WALLY
Vocal and Orchestral Arrangements: These
Glamour Girls.
HEINDORF, RAY
Orchestral Arrangements: Garden of the Moon:
Gold Diggers in Paris; Going Places: Four Wives:
Daughters Courageous; The Roaring Twenties.
HENDERSON, CHARLES
Vocal Arranger: Swing. Sister, Swing; Mad
About Music; Wasn't It You?; The Baltimore
Bubble; That Certain Age: Youth Takes a Fling;
The Star Maker; Spirit of Culver.
HEYMAN, WERNER RICHARD
BLUEBEARD'S EIGHTH WIFE — Bluebeard's
Eighth Wife.
LET FREEDOM RING — Where Else But Here.
NINOTCHKA — Musical Score.
HOFFMAN, All
LISTEN, DARLING — On the Bumpy Road 10
Love.
ZAZA — Zaza: Hello My Darling.
DISPUTED PASSAGE: — Musical Score.
INVITATION TO HAPPINESS — Musical Score.
MIDNIGHT — Musical Score.
REMEMBER THE NIGHT — Musical Score.
THE FARMER'S DAUGHTER — Jungle Jingle.
HOTEL IMPERIAL, — There's Something Magic
Saying 'Nitchevo.'
MAN ABOUT TOWN — Strange Enchantment;
That Sentimental Sandwich.
MIDNIGHT — Midnight.
TYPHOON" — Palms of Paradise.
HOLLANDER, FREDERICK
SONS OF THE LEGION— Sons of the Legion.
STOLEN HEAVEN — Stolen Heaven.
YOU AND ME — You and Me.
COCOANUT GROVE — You Leave Me Breathless.
DESTRY RIDES AGAIN — Little Joe the
Wrangler: You've Got That Look; See What
the Boys in the Back Room Will Have.
INVITATION TO HAPPINESS — Musical Score.
HOWE, WILLIAM
FISHERMAN'S WHARF — Fisherman's Chanty.
Music Composers
HUGHES, ANTHONY
IN OLD CHICAGO — How Many Miles to Dublin
Town.
HUGHES, LANGSTON
WAY DOWN SOUTH — Louisiana: Good
Ground.
IGORBOUCHEN, MOHAMMED
ALGIERS.
JANIS, ELSIE
DARK VICTORY — Oh Give Me Time for Ten-
derness.
JANSSEN, WERNER
Musical Director: Winter Carnival: Eternally
Yours.
JESSEL, GEORGE
VIVACIOUS LADY — You'll Be Reminded of Me.
JOHNSTON, ARTHUR
SAILING ALONG — My River; Souvenir of Love;
My Heart Skips a Beat; I'm Trusting My Luck.
JURMAN, WALTER
EVERYBODY SING — Early Morning Sequence:
Swing Mr. Mendelssohn Swing: The One I Love:
The Show Must Go On: Melody Farm.
THE GREAT COMMANDMENT — Music.
JOHNSON, HALL
Vocal Arrangements: Way Down South.
KAHN, GUS
GIRL OF THE GOLDEN WEST — There's a Brand
New Song in Town; Mariachie; Sun Up to Sun
Down: Soldiers of Fortune: The West Ain't Wild
Anymore: The Golden West; Senorita: Shadows
on the Moon; The Wind in the Trees; Who Are We
to Say.
EVERYBODY SING — Early Morning Sequence:
Swing Mr. Mendelssohn Swing: The One I Love;
The Show Must Go On: Melody Farm.
HONOLULU — Honolulu: This Night; Leader
Doesn't Like Music: Hawaiian Medley.
BRIDAL SUITE— When I Gave My Smile to
You.
IDIOT'S DELIGHT — How Strange.
BROADWAY SERENADE — No Time to Argue;
For Every Lonely Heart: Broadway Serenade.
BALALAIKA — Magic of Your Love.
KALMAR, BERT
EVERYBODY SING — Quainty Dainty Me: Ga-
votte: Why? Because.
THE STORY OF VERNON AND IRENE
CASTLE — Only When You're In My Arms.
KAPER, BRONISLAW
EVERYBODY SING — Early Morning Sequence:
Swing Mr. Mendelssohn Swing; The One I Love:
The Show Must Go On; Melody Farm.
KAY, ARTHUR
Musical Director: The Girl Said No.
Orchestral Director: The Great Victor Herbert.
KAY, EDWARD
Musical Director: Navy Secrets: Mr. Wong in
Chinatown; The Mystery of Mr. Wong: Boy's Re-
formatory; Irish Luck; The Wolf Call; Mutiny
in the Big House: Streets of New York; Mr. Wong
at Headquarters: Front Page Lady; The Girl from
Rio.
323
NED WAYBURN
STAGE, SCREEN, RADIO, AND TELEVISION
PRODUCTION AND INSTRUCTION STUDIOS
What about YOUR child — and
how about yourself?
What are you doing to make it possible for
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324
KAYLIN, SAMUEL
Musical Director: Walking- Down Broadway:
Rascals: Love on a Budget: Five of a Kind: Down
on the Farm: Up the River: Arizona Wildcat: In-
side Story: Road Demon: Always in Trouble:
Meridian 7-1212: One Wild Night: The Honey-
moons Over: Pack Up Your Troubles; 20.000
Men a Year.
KENNY, CHARLES and NICK
GOLD MINF IN THE SKY — There's a Gold
Mine in the Sky.
KENT, WALTER
THE NIGHT HAWK: Never a Dream Goes By.
COME ON RANGERS — Song of the West.
DOWN IN ARKANSAS — The Farmer is Not in
the Dell.
PRAIRIE MOON — The Girl in the Middle of My
Heart: Welcome Son?; The Story of Trigger Joe.
SHINE ON HARVEST MOON — Headin' for the
Open Plain.
KERN, JAMES V.
THAT'S RIGHT, YOU'RE WRONG — The Little
Red Fox.
KILENYI, DR. EDWARD
Musical Score: Zamboanga: Headin' East; Inter
national Crime: The Overland Express: Topa Topa.
KRAUSHNER, R.
SHINE ON HARVEST MOON — Let Me Build a
Cabin.
KKUMGOLD, SIGMUND
Musical Director: Diamonds Are Dangerous:
Union Pacific.
KRUPA, GENE
SOME LIKE IT HOT — Some Like It Hot.
KULLEK. SIDNEY
KENTUCKY MOONSHINE.
GOLDWYN FOLLIES.
STRAIGHT, PLACE AND SHOW.
KURTZ, MANNY
THE NIGHT HAWK — Never a Dream Goes By.
LANE, BURTON
COLLEGE SWING — Howd'ja Like to Love Me?:
What Did Romeo Say to Juliet?: I Fall in Love
with You Every Day: What a Rhumba Does to
Romance: You're a Natural; Moments Like This.
SPAWN OF THE NORTH — I Wish I Was the
Willow; I Like Hump-Backed Salmon.
COCOANUT GROVE — Says My Heart.
CAFE SOCIETY — Kiss Me With Your Eyes.
SOME LIKE IT HOT — Some Like It Hot.
SHE MARRIED A COP — I Can't Imagine; I'll
Remember: Here's to Love.
LANGE, ARTHUR
Musical Director: Keep Smiling: Kidnapped:
Submarine Patrol; Hold That Co Ed: Gateway;
Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm; Married and in
Love.
Musical Score: The Great Victor Herbert.
LANGE, JOHNNY
THAT'S RIGHT. YOU'RE WRONG — The Little
Red Fox.
THE GIRL FROM RIO — Romance in Rio.
DOWN THE WYOMING TRAIL — In Elk Val-
ley.
SONG OF THE BUCKAROO — Little Tenderfoot.
LAVA, BILL
ORPHANS OF THE STREET— Yo-Ho-Ho.
music Composers
LAURA, AGUSTIN
TROPIC HOLIDAY — Lamp on the Corner: To-
night Will Live; My First Love; Tropic Night.
LAWNHURST, LEE
LOVE ON TOAST — I'd Rather Call You Baby.
LAWRENCE. JACK
OUTSIDE OF PARADISE — Outside of Paradise;
Sweet Irish Sweetheart of Mine: Shenanigans; I
Was the Power Behind the Throne; All for One
and One for All; A Little Bit of Everything.
BORN TO BE WILD — Danger Ahead: A Story
as Old as the Hills.
MAN FROM MUSIC MOUNTAIN — Man from
Music Mountain.
UNDER WESTERN STARS — Back to Back-
woods; Send My Mail to the Country Jail: Dust
Over the West; When a Cowboy Sings a Song.
LEIPOLD, JOHN P.
Musical Director: Bluebeard's Eighth Wife; Ge-
ronimo: Disputed Passage; Union Pacific; Flying
Deuces.
LERNER, SAM
LAUGH IT OFF — My Dreams And I; Doin'
the 1940; Laugh It Off; Who's Gonna Keep Your
Wigwam Warm.
LEWIS, AL
LISTEN. DARLING — On the Bumpy Road to
Love.
GRACIE ALLEN MURDER CASE — Snug As a
Bug in a Rug.
HERITAGE OF THE DESERT — Here's a Song.
LOESSER, FRANK
COLLEGE SWING — I Fall in Love with You
Every Day; What a Rhumba Does to Romance:
You're a Natural: Howd'ja Like to Love Me;
Moments Like This: What Did Romeo Say to
Juliet?: College Swing.
SPAWN OF THE NORTH— I Wish I Was the
Willow; I Like Hump-Backed Salmon.
STOLEN HEAVEN — The Boys in the Band.
COCOANUT GROVE — Says My Heart.
SING YOU SINNERS — Small Fry.
MEN WITH WINGS — Men with Wings.
THANKS FOR THE MEMORY — Two Sleepy
People.
THE TEXANS — I'll Come to the Wedding.
FRESHMAN YEAR — Chasin' You Around.
ZAZA — Zaza: Hello My Darling.
HURRICANE — Moon of Manakoora.
ST. LOUIS BLUES — Junior: Blue Nightfall;
Song in My Heart Is a Rhumba: I Go for That.
CAFE SOCIETY — Kiss Me With Your Eyes:
The Park Avenue Gimp.
THE FARMER'S DAUGHTER — Jungle Jingle.
MAN ABOUT TOWN — Strange Enchantment.
That Sentimental Sandwich; Fidgety Joe.
SEVENTEEN — Seventeen.
SOME LIKE IT HOT — The Lady's In Love
with You; Some Like It Hot.
TYPHOON — Palms of Paradise.
HAWAIIAN NIGHTS — Hey Good Looking; I
Found My Love: Hawaii Sang Me to Sleep.
DESTRY RIDES AGAIN — Little Joe, the
Wrangler: You're Got That Look: See What the
Boys in the Back Room Will Have.
MACPHERSON, HARRY
STARLIGHT OVER TEXAS — Ai ! Viva Tequil-
la!
PHOTO
ENGRAVERS
TO THE
MOTION PICTURE INDUSTRY
CITY
PHOTO ENGRAVING CORP.
250 West 54th St., New York, N. Y.
COlumbus 5-6741-2-3
326
MALOTTE, ALBERT HAT
Musical Score: Dr. Cyclops.
U if s i e Composers
McCARTY, JOE
FRESHMAN YEAR — Ain't That Marvelous:
Swing That Cheer.
McCarthy, joseph
LISTEN. DARLING — A Lullaby: Ten Pins in
the Sky.
McHUGH, jimmy
THAT CERTAIN AGE — Be a Good Scout: You're
as Pretty as a Picture: That Certain Age; My Own.
MAD ABOUT MUSIC — I Love to Whistle: Chapel
Bells: A Serenade to the Stars.
RECKLESS LIVING — When the Stars Go to
Sleep.
DEVIL'S PARTY — Things Are Coming My Way.
YOUTH TAKES A FLING — For the First Time.
ROAD TO RENO — Ridin' Home: I Gave My
Heart Away; Tonight Is the Night.
MAGIDSON, HERB
RADIO CITY REVELS — Speak Your Heart:
Take a Tip From the Tulip: I'm Taking a Shine
to You: Goodnight, Angel: Swingin' in the Corn:
There's a New Moon Over the Old Mill.
MALNECK, MATTY
MAN ABOUT TOWN — Fidgety Joe.
HAWAIIAN NIGHTS — Hey Good Looking; I
Have Found My Love; Hawaii Sang Me to Sleep.
GRACIE ALLEN MURDER CASE — Snug As a
Bug in a Rug.
MANNHEIMER, ALBERT
THE KID FROM TEXAS — Right in the Mid-
dle of Texas.
MARVIN, JOHNNY
COME ON RANGERS — I've Learned a Lot About
Women.
GOLD MINE IN THE SKY — Dude Ranch Cow-
hands: As Long as I Love My Horse.
MAN FROM MUSIC MOUNTAIN — Love. Burn-
ing Love; There's a Little Deserted Town; I'm Be-
ginning to Care; Goodbye. Pinto.
THE OLD BARN DANCE — Old Mill.
PRAIRIE MOON — Rhythm of the Hoofbeats.
RHYTHM OF THE SADDLE — The Old Trail:
Oh I Ladies; Merry-Go-Roundup.
UNDER WESTERN STARS — Dust: Listen to the
Rhythm of the Range.
WESTERN JAMBOREE — Balloon Song; Old No
vember Moon; I Love the Morning.
MASSEY, LOUISE
WHERE THE BUFFALO ROAM — In the Heart
of the Prairie; Bunkhouse Jamboree.
MAXWELL, CHARLES
Compositions and Arrangements: Kidnapped:
Three Blind Mice: Gateway; Suez; Submarine
Patrol.
Arrangements: In Old Chicago; Sally, Irene and
Mary; Lost Horizon; The Road Back; Thin lee.
MEINARDI. HELEN
SAY IT IN FRENCH — April in My Heart.
MENCHER, MURRAY
LISTEN. DARLING — On the Bumpy Road to
Love.
MERCER, JOHNNY
GOLD DIGGERS IN PARIS — Day Dreaming.
GARDEN OF THE MOON — Love Is Where You
Find It; The Lady on the Two-Cent Stamp; Garden
of the Moon.
HARD TO GET — You Must Have Been a Beau-
tiful Baby; There's a Sunny Side to Every Situa-
tion.
GOING PLACES — Mutiny in the Nursery; Say It
With a Kiss: Oh I What a Horse Was Charley:
Jeepers Creepers.
COWBOY FROM BROOKLYN — Cowboy from
Brooklyn; Ride, Tenderfoot, Ride: I'll Dream of
You Tonight; Howdy Stranger; I've Got a Heartful
of Music; The Dude Ranger.
MERLIN, MILTON
THE KID FROM TEXAS — Right in the Middle
of Texas.
MESKALL, JACK
VIVACIOUS LADY — You'll Be Reminded of Me.
MEYER, ABE
Musical Supervisor: Peck's Bad Boy with the Cir-
cus; Gangster's Boy; I am a Criminal: Mr. Wong,
Detective; Breaking the Ice: Numbered Women:
Hawaii Calls; Fiesherman's Wharf.
MITCHELL, SIDNEY
IN OLD CHICAGO — I'll Never Let You Cry: I've
Taken a Fancy to You ; Take a Dip in the Sea.
KENTUCKY MOONSHINE — Moonshine Over
Kentucky: Isn't it Wonderful — Isn't it Swell; Reu-
ben, Reuben, I've Been Swingin'; Sing a Song of
Harvest.
REBECCA OF SUNNYBROOK FARM — Crackly
Grain Flakes; Alone with You; Happy Ending:
Toy Trumpet.
MOCKRIDGE, CYRIL J.
Musical Director: Day-Time Wife: The Ad-
ventures of Sherlock Holmes; The Return of the
Cisco Kid.
MONACO, JAMES V.
DOCTOR RHYTHM — Only a Gypsy Knows; On
the Sentimental Side: This is My Night to Dream;
My Heart is Taking Lessons.
SING YOU SINNERS — A Pocketful of Dreams:
Laugh and Call it Love; Don't Let That Moon Get
Away.
THE ROAD TO SINGAPORE — Too Romantic:
Sweet Potato Piper; Kaigoon.
THE STAR MAKER — A Man and His Dream:
Go Fly a Kite; Still the Bluebird Sings; An Apple
for the Teacher.
EAST SIDE OF HEAVEN — That Sly Old Gen-
tleman; East Side of Heaven; Sing a Song of
Sunbeams; Hang Your Heart on a Hickory Limb.
MONTOR, ARTHUR
Musical Director: Swiss Miss.
MORROS, BORIS
Musical Director: Big Broadcast of 1938; The
Buccaneer; College Swing; Bluebeard's Eighth
Wife: Her Jungle Love: Stolen Heaven; Bulldog
Drummond's Peril; Tip Off Girls: Hunted Men:
Give Me a Sailor: Boo Loo; The Texans; Bulldog
Drummond in Africa: Sing You Sinners; Campus
Confessions; If I Were King; Ride a Crooked Mile;
King of Alcatraz; Illegal Traffic: Artists and
Models Abroad: Say It in French; Men with Wings;
Thanks for the Memory: Big Broadcast of 1938:
The Arkansas Traveler: Paris Honeymoon; Persons
in Hiding; Ambush; Unmarried; Never Say Die.
MUSE, CLARENCE
WAY DOWN SOUTH — Louisiana: Good Ground.
327
AT YOU* SERVICE
ARTISTICALLY
MYRKS. FA K LAN
FISHERMAN'S wharf — Fisherman's Chanty.
Music Composers
NEWMAN, ALFRED
Musical Director: Cowboy and the Lady: Gold-
wyn Follies; Adventures of Marco Polo: Wuther-
ing Heights: Trade Winds: Drums Along the Mo-
hawk: The Real Glory: The Star Maker: They
Shall Have Music: The Hunchback of Notre
Dame: Beau Geste.
NEWMAN, CHARLES
THAT'S RIGHT. YOU'RE WRONG — The
Answer Is Love.
FISHERMAN'S WHARF — Sell Your Cares for
a Song.
NATEFORD, J.
SHINE ON HARVEST MOON — Let Me Build a
Cabin.
OAKLAND, REN
START CHEERING — Start Cheering.
LITTLE MISS ROUGHNECK — As Long as I
Love: Pickaninny Paradise.
LIFE OF THE PARTY — Roses in December.
ALL AMERICAN SWEETHEART — Pop Goes the
Bottle: Turn on the Tap: My Kid Sister.
MURDER IN SWINGTIME — The Greatest At-
traction in the World: 12 O'clock and All's Not
Well.
THE LADY OBJECTS — A Mist Over the Moon:
That Week in Paris: Home in Your Arms: When
You're in the Room: Sky High: Naughty, Naughty.
LAUGH IT OFF — My Dreams and I: Doin' the
1940: Laugh It Off: Who's Gonna Keep Your
Wigwam Warm.
PERKINS, FRANK
GARDEN OF THE MOON — Garden of the Moon.
PINCUS, HERMAN
FRONTIER TOWN — Tip Yip Yowee — I'm an
Eagle.
POKKASS, SAMUEL
( Deceased )
REBECCA OF SUNNYBROOK FARM — Come and
Get Y'our Happiness.
FIVE OF A KIND — All Mixed Up.
START CHEERING — My Heaven on Earth.
HAPPY LANDING — Hot and Happy: Yonny
and His Oompah; You Are the Music to the Words
in My Heart.
THE THREE MUSKETEERS — Song of the
Musketeers: My Lady: Voila.
WIFE, HUSBAND AND FRIEND — Drink From
the Cup of Tomorrow.
POLLACK, LEW
KENTUCKY MOONSHINE — Moonshine Over
Kentucky: Isn't It Wonderful — Isn't It Swell: Reu-
ben. Reuben. I've Been Swingin': Sing a Song of
Harvest.
IN OLD CHICAGO — In Old Chicago: I'll Never
Let You Cry: I've Taken a Fancy to You: Take
a Dip in the Sea.
REBECCA OF SUNNYBROOK FARM — Craekly
Grain Flakes: Alone with You; Happy Ending; Toy
Trumpet.
STRAIGHT. PLACE AND SHOW — With You on
My Mind: Why Not String Along with Me?
HOLD THAT CO-ED — Heads High.
PORTER, (OLE
THAT'S RIGHT. YOU'RE WRONG — The Little
Red Fox.
PORTER. LEW
HARLEM ON THE PRAIRIE — Romance in the
Rain; Harlem on the Prairie.
329
DOWN THE WYOMING TRAIL — In Elk Val-
ley.
THE GIRL FROM RIO — Romance in Rio.
POWELL, EDWARD
Orchestral Arrangements: Beau Geste.
PKEVIN, CHARLES
Musical Director: Mad About Music; The Crime
of Dr. Hallet; The Last Express: Swing Sister.
Swing: The Last Warning: Service de Luxe: Nurse
from Brooklyn: State Police; The Storm; Secrets o)'
a Nurse: Danger on the Air; Sinners in Paradise;
Swing that Cheer; Little Tough Guys in Society;
That Certain Age; Youth Takes a Fling: Freshman
Year; Letter of Introduction: Young Fugitive:
Rage of Paris: First Love: Rio: Little Accident:
The Sun Never Sets: The Forgotten Woman;
Unexpected Father: The Tower of London; I
Stole a Million: Hawaiian Nights; Ex-Champ.
PVR, MRRRILL
Honolulu.
QUENZRR, ARTHUR
MERRILY WE LIVE — Merrily We Live.
RABINOWITZ, MAX
FOUR WIVES — Theme.
RAINGER, RALPH
THE BIG BROADCAST OF 1938 — That Moon
Is Here Again: You Took the Words Right Out of
My Heart; This Little Ripple Had Rhythm; The
Waltz Lives On: Thanks for the Memory; Don't
Tell a Secret to a Rose.
ROMANCE IN THE DARK — Tonight We Love.
HER JUNGLE LOVE — Jungle Love.
TROPIC HOLIDAY — Havin' Myself a Time.
THE TEXANS — Silver on the Sage.
GIVE ME A SAILOR — The U.S.A. And You;
A Little Kiss at Twilight; What Goes On Here (In
My Heart).
ARTISTS AND MODELS ABROAD — You're
Lovely. Madame: What Have You Got That Gets
Me: Do The Buckaroo.
PARIS HONEYMOON — The Funny Old Hills:
You're A Sweat Little Headache; I Have Eyes:
Joobalai: The Bulgarian Rose Song.
NEVER SAY DIE — The Tra la la and the
Oom Pah Pah.
$1,000 A TOUCHDOWN — Love With a Capital
U.
RAYNOR, HAL
I'M FROM THE CITY — I'm A Tough Guy: I'm
From the City.
RRDNER, L. H.
DOWN THE WYOMING TRAIL — Little Town
of Bethlehem.
REVEL, HARRY
IN OLD CHICAGO — In Old Chicago.
HOLD THAT COED — Here I am Doing It:
Hold That Co-Ed.
MY LUCKY STAR — By a Wishing Well: Could
You Pass in Love; This May Be the Night; I've Gf t
a Date with a Dream: Classy Clothes Chris; Ply-
mouth Rock; Marching Along; Plymouth Farewell
Song.
REBECCA OF SUNNY'BROOK FARM — An Old
Straw Hat.
SALLY. IRENE AND MARY — Got My Mind on
Music; Sweet as a Song.
THANKS FOR EVERYTHING — You're tr r
World's Fairest: Thanks for Everything; Puff t
Puff; Three Cheers for Henry Smith.
Music Composers
LOVE FINDS ANDY HARDY — -Meet the Beat
of My Heart: It Never Rains But What it Pours.
THIS IS MY AFFAIR— I Hum a Waltz: Fill 1 1
Up: Put Down Your Glass: Pick Up Your Girl
and Dance.
THIN ICE — I'm Olga from the Volga.
JOSETTE — Where in the World: In Any Lan-
guage; May I Drop a Petal in Your Glass of
Wine.
TALLSPIN — Are You in the Mood lor Mischief.
ROSE OF WASHINGTON SQUARE — I Never
Knew Heaven Could Speak.
YOU CAN'T HAVE EVERYTHING — Afraid to
Dream; You Can't Have Everything-; The Loveli-
ness of You: Please Pardon Us — We're in Love:
Danger — Love at Work: North Pole Sketch: In-
troduction to North Pole Sketch.
CAFE METROPOLE — Fond of You.
TAILSPIN — Are You in the Mood for Mis-
chief.
ROSE OF WASHINGTON SQUARE — I Never
Knew Heaven Could Speak.
KIECHNER, BECKLEY
GANGSTER'S BOY — Stop Beating Round the
Mulberry Bush.
KITTEK, TEX
WHERE THE BUFFALO ROAM — Where the
Buffalo Roam.
SONG OF THE BUCKAROO — I Promise You.
ROBERTS, ALLAN
THAT'S RIGHT, YOU'RE WRONG Chatter-
box.
KOBIN, LEO
THE BIG BROADCAST OF 1938 — That Moon Is
Here Again: You Took the Words Right Out of
My Heart: This Little Ripple Had Rhythm; The
Waltz Lives On: Thanks for the Memory: Don't
Tell a Secret to a Rose.
ROMANCE IN THE DARK — Tonight We Love.
HER JUNGLE LOVE — Her Jungle Love.
TROPIC HOLIDAY — Havin' Myself a Time.
THE TEXANS — Silver on the Sage.
GIVE ME A SAILOR — The U.S.A. and You: A
Little Kiss at Twilight: What Goes On Here (In
My Heart).
PARIS HONEYMOON — The Funny Old Hills:
You're a Sweet Little Headache: I Have Eyes;
Joobalai; The Bulgarian Rose Song.
ARTISTS AND MODELS ABROAD — You're
Lovely. Madame: What Have You Got That Gets
Me: Do the Buckaroo.
NEVER SAY DIE — The Tra la la and the
Oom Pah Pah.
SI, 000 A TOUCHDOWN — Love with a Capita]
U.
KOBISON, CARSON
DOWN THE WYOMING TRAIL — Goin' Back
to Texas.
SONG OF THE BUCKAROO — Texas Dan.
ROCK, JACK
ARTISTS AND MODELS ABROAD — You're
Broke You Dope.
RODER, MILAN
THE BUCCANEER — Musical Composition.
JUNGLE LOVE — Arrangements.
ADVENTURES OF ROBIN HOOD — Arrange-
ments.
YOU AND ME — Arrangements.
BULLDOG DRUMMOND IN AFRICA — Arrange-
ments and Compositions.
SPAWN OF THE NORTH — Arrangements and
Composition.
IF T WERE KING — Arrangement and Composi-
tion.
NEVER SAY DIE — Arrangement and Composi
tion.
JUAREZ — Orchestrations.
ELIZABETH AND ESSEX — Orchestrations.
TYPHOON — Orchestrations and Musical Com-
position.
RODGERS, RICHARD
BABES LN ARMS — Babes in Arms: Where Or
When.
ROGERS, ROY
SHINE ON HARVEST MOON — Man in the Moon
is a Cowhand.
ROMBERG, SIGMCJND
GIRL OF THE GOLDEN WEST — Soldiers ol
Fortune: There's A Brand New Song in Town:
Mariachie: Sun Up to Sun Down: The West Ain't
Wild any More: The Golden West: Senorita; Shad-
ows on the Moon: The Wind in the Trees: Who
Are We to say.
BROADWAY SERENADE — No Time to Argue.
LET FREEDOM RING — Where Else But Here.
KONNELL. ANN
ALGIERS — Lyrics.
ROSE, FRED
GOLD MINE IN THE SKY — Dude Ranch Cow-
hands: As Long as I Have My Horse.
MAN FROM MUSIC MOUNTAIN — Love, Burn-
ing Love: There's a Little Deserted Town: I'm
Beginning to Care: Goodbye, Pinto.
PRAIRIE MOON — Rhythm of the Hoofbeata.
RHYTHM OF THE SADDLE — The Old Trail:
Oh ! Ladies: Merry-Go-Roundup.
ROSEN, MILTON
CHIP OF THE FLYLNG U — Mr. Moon: Ride
On; Git Along.
WEST OF CARSON CITY — On the Trail of
Tomorrow.
VIGILANTE WAR — Song of the Prairie: I'm
Tying Up My Bridle: To the Door of Your
Heart.
ROSOFF, CHARLES
ROSE OF THE RIO GRANDE — Ride Amigos
Ride: What Care I?: Song of the Rose.
PORT OF MISSING GIRLS — One Night. One
Kiss and You: Dream Cargo: I Changed My Rou-
tine.
TOUGH KID — All for You.
PANAMINT'S BAD MAN — Old Friends: Last
Rose of Summer.
RAWHIDE — A Cowboy's Life.
UNDER WESTERN STARS — Campaign Son*.
RCBY, HERMAN
THE STORY OF VERNON AND IRENE
CASTLE — Only When You're In My Arms.
RUTHVEN, ORMOND
THE KID FROM TEXAS — Right in the Mid
die of Texas.
SALTEE, HANS
Music: The Great Commandment.
SAMUELS. WALTER G.
FLIRTING WITH FATE — Music.
THE GLADIATOR — On to Victory.
330
SANDERS, TROY
Musical Advisor: Man About Town; The Star
Maker.
Music Composers
SANUCCI, FRANK
STARLIGHT OVER TEXAS — Musical Director.
WHERE THE BUFFALO ROAM — (Musical Di-
rector): also song Where the Buffalo Roam: Song
of the Buckaroo: Down the Wyoming- Trail.
SAWTELL, PAUL
Musical Director: Mexican Spitfire.
SCHERTZINGER, VICTOR
THE ROAD TO SINGAPORE — The Moon and
the Willow Tree: Captain Custard.
SCOTT, RAYMOND
REBECCA OF SUNNYBROOK FARM — Toy
Trumpet.
SOOTTO, VINCENT
ALGIERS.
SETANO, ANDREA
Musical Advisor: The Cat and t.hfi Canary.
SEYMOUR, TOT
LOVE ON TOAST — I'd Rather Call You Baby.
SHAPIRO, TED
VIVACIOUS LADY — You'll Be Reminded of Me.
SHEIMAN, AL
THE NIGHT HAWK — Never a Dream Goes By.
SHERWIN, MANNING
STOLEN HEAVEN — The Boys in the Band.
SHILKRET, NATHANIEL
Musical Director: The Toast of New York.
SHUKEN, LEO
CAFE SOCIETY — The Park Avenue Gimp.
SILVERS, LOUIS
Musical Director: In Old Chicago: The Baroness
and the Butler: Just Around the Corner: Thanks
for Everything: Straight. Place and Show; Little
Miss Broadway: Kentucky Moonshine: Four Men
and a Prayer; Kentucky: Susannah of the Moun-
ties; The Little Princess: Tail Spin; Jesse James.
SKINNER, FRANK
Orchestrations: Swing Sister, Swing: That Cer-
tain Age: Youth Takes a Fling; First Love: The
Tower of London.
MAD ABOUT MUSIC — Wasn't it You?
SPIRIT OF CULVER — You Are the Words to
a Song.
SMITH, 3. W.
WHERE THE BUFFALO ROAM — In the Heart
of the West.
SNELL. DAVID
Musical Score: You're Only Young Once; Ma-
dame X; Young Dr. Kildare: The World Is Ours.
Musical Supervisor: Joe and Ethel Turp; The
Secret of Dr. Kildare; Judge Hardy and Son:
Stranger Than Desire: Thunder Afloat; These
Glamour Girls.
SPENCER, VERN
BILLY THE KID RETURNS — When I Camped
Under the Stars.
SPINA, HAROLD
SALLY. IRENE AND MARY — Half Moon on
the Hudson; I Could Use a Dream; This is Where
I Came In; Who Stole the Jam?; Help Wanted —
Male.
HAPPY LANDING — You Appeal to Me.
LITTLE MISS BROADWAY — We Should Be To-
gether; Be Optimistic: How Can I Thank You; If
All the World Were Paper: Swing Me an Old Fash-
ioned Song; Little Miss Broadway: I'll Build a
Broadway for You; Introduction to Court Room
Finale.
JUST AROUND THE CORNER — This is a Happy
Little Ditty; Brass Buttons and Epaulets; I Love
to Walk in the Rain.
SPRAGUE, HOWARD
UNASHAMED — Back to Nature.
STEINER, MAX
Musical Director: Tovarich; The Sisters; Four
Daughters: Dawn Patrol: White Banners; Each
Dawn I Die; Four Wives: Gone With the Wind:
The Old Maid; Dark Victory.
STEPT, SAM H.
THAT'S RIGHT, YOU'RE WRONG — The
Answer is Love.
STOLL, GEORGE
Musical Director: Everybody Sing: Radio City
Revels; Ice Follies of 1939; Honolulu.
STOLOFF, MORRIS
Musical Director: It's All Yours; Penitentiary:
There's Always a Woman; Start Cheering: Girls
School; Blondie; I Am the Law: You Can't Take
It With You: Holiday; There's That Woman Again:
The Amazing Mr. Williams: Blondie: Blondie
Brings Up Baby; Blondie Takes a Vacation; Good
Girls Go to Paris: Beware Spooks!: Mr. Smith
Goes to Washington; Golden Boy; Blondie Meets
the Boss; Let Us Live; The Lone Wolf Spy Hunt.
STONE, GREGORY
Musical Score: Girls' School; Her Jungle Love.
STOTHART, HERBERT
Musical Director: Of Human Hearts.
MARIE ANTOINETTE — Amour Eternal Amour.
SWEETHEARTS — Mademoiselle; Gala Perform-
ance Celebration; Summer Serenade: On Parade;
Pretty as a Picture.
GIRL OF THE GOLDEN WEST — The Wind in
the Trees; Shadows on the Moon.
IDIOT'S DELIGHT — How Strange.
BROADWAY SERENADE — High Flyin': For
Every Lonely Heart; One Look at You; Broadway
Serenade.
BALALAIKA — Tanya: Ride Cossack, Ride;
Magic Of Your Love; At the Balalaika.
STYNE, JULE
Vocal Supervision: In Old Chicago: Rebecca
of Sunnybrook Farm; Straight, Place and Show;
International Cowboys.
HOLD THAT CO-ED — Limpy Dimp.
KENTUCKY MOONSHINE — Kentucky Opera.
STOP LOOK AND LOVE — Let's Start Where
We Left Off.
PACK UP YOUR TROUBLES — Who'll Buy My
Flowers.
TERR, MAX
Vocal Supervision: The Great Victor Herbert;
Fisherman's Wharf.
TILLMAN, FLOYD
DOWN THE WYOMING TRAIL — It Makes No
Difference Now.
TINTURIN, PETER
OUTSIDE OF PARADISE — Outside of Paradise.
UNDER WESTERN STARS — Back to the Back-
331
Music Composers
woods: Send My Mail to the County Jail: Dust
Over the West: When a Cowboy Sines a Song.
BORN TO BE WILD — Dansrer Ahead: A Story
as Old as the Hills.
MAN FROM MUSIC MOUNTAIN — Man from
Musie Mountain.
DOUBLE DEAL — Songs.
TIOMKIN. niMITRI
Musical Score: You Can't Take It With You:
The Great Waltz.
TOBIAS, HARRY
STARLIGHT OVER TEXAS — Starlight Over
Texas.
DOUBLE DEAL — Songs.
TOBIAS, CHARLES
START CHEERING — My Heaven On Earth.
TOCH. ERNST
Musical Arrangement : The Cat and the Canary:
Dr. Cyclops.
TOURS, FRANK
Musical Director: Fight for Your Lady: Tar-
nished Angel: Mother Carey's Chickens: Joy of
Living.
VASILESAl , ION
STARLIGHT OVER TEXAS — A Garden in Gra-
nada.
VON TILZEK. AL
STARLIGHT OVER TEXAS — Ai ! Viva Te-
quilla !
WARD, EDWARD
Musical Score: Stablemates : Boys Town: The
Crowd Roars: Hold That Kiss: Love is a Headache:
Paradise for Three: A Yank at Oxford: The Toy-
Wife: Vacation from Love — also song "Let's Pre-
tend It's True.''
GOLD DIGGERS IN PARIS — Day Dreaming: I
Wanna Go Back to Bali: A Stranger in Paree.
GARDEN OF THE MOON — Love Is Where You
You Find It: The Lady on the Two Cent Stamp:
Garden of the Moon.
HARD TO GET — You Must Have Been a Beau-
tiful Baby: There's a Sunny Side to Every Situa-
tion.
COWBOY FROM BROOKLYN — Cowboy from
Brooklyn.
GOING PLACES — Mutiny in the Nursery: Say
It With a Kiss; Jeepers Creepers; Oh, What a
Horse Was Charley.
BROADWAY SERENADE — High Flyin' : For
Every Lonely Heart: One Look at You: Broadway
Serenade.
THE WOMEN — Forevermore.
THESE GLAMOUR GIRLS — Loveliness.
Musical Scores: Remember: Nick Carter. Master
Detective: Joe and Ethel Turp: Stronger Than
Desire: Maisie: Another Thin Man: Bad Little
Angel; Thunder Afloat: These Glamour Girls.
WASHINGTON, NED
ROMANCE IN THE DARK — Blue Dawn.
WAX. MAN, FRANZ
Musical Director: Man Proof: The Shining
Hour: Arsene Lupin Returns: Young in Heart; Too
Hot to Handle: A Christmas Carol: Three Com-
rades; Ice Follies of lU.'lO; Honolulu.
332
WEBB, ROY
Musical Supervisor: The Mad Miss Manton: The
Law West of Tombstone: A Man to Remember:
Room Service: I'm from the City: The Affairs of
Annabel: Vivacious Lady: The Great Man Votes:
Having Wonderful Time: The Girl from Mexico:
The Flying Irishman: Bachelor Mother: The Girl
and tin- Gambler: in Name On'v: Five Came
Back; Career: Panama Lady: Two Thorough-
breds: Badlands: Full Confession: Three Sons;
Vigil in the Night: Reno: Abe Lincoln in Illinois-
That's Right, You're Wrong.
WEBSTER, PAUL FRANCIS
FISHERMAN'S WHARF — Songs of Italy.
WEILL, KURT
Composer: You and Me: The Right Guy for Me.
WHITING. RICHARD A.
SING. BABY, SING — When Did You Leave
Heaven ?
READY. WILLING AND ABLE — Too Marvel
ous for Words.
WARREN, HARRY
COWBOY FROM BROOKLYN — -Ride. Tender-
foot. Ride: I'll Dream of You Tonight: Howdy
Stranger: I've Got a Heartful of Music: The Dude
Ranger.
HONOLULU — Honolulu: This Night: Leader
Doesn't Like Music.
WOLLINGTON, LARRY
WHERE THE BUFFALO ROAM — Bunkhouse
Jamboree.
WRIGHT. BOB
TOY WIFE — Dancing by the Moonlight.
MARIE ANTOINETTE — Amour Eternal Amour.
SWEETHEARTS — Mademoiselle: Gala Perform-
ances Celebration: Summer Serenade: On Parade:
Pretty as a Picture.
BOYS TOWN — Boys Town on Parade.
BROADWAY SERENADE — High Flyin'; One
Look at You.
LET FREEDOM RING — Love Serenade.
THE WOMEN— Forevermore.
BALALAIKA — Tanya: Ride Cossack. Ride: At
the Balalika: Shadows on the Sand.
THESE GLAMOUR GIRLS — Loveliness.
WKl'BEL. ALLIF.
RADIO CITY REVELS — Speak Your Heart: Take
a Tip from the Tulip: I'm Taking a Shine to You:
Good-Night, Angel: Swingin" in the Corn; There's
A New Moon Over the Old Mill.
YACHT CLUB BOYS
ARTISTS AND MODELS ABROAD — You're
Broke You Dope.
YEI.LEN. JACK
HAPPY LANDING — Hot and Happy: Yonny and
His Oompah: You Are the Music to the Words in
My Heart.
REBECCA OF SUNNYBROOK FARM — Come
and Get Yours.
YOUNG. VICTOR
Musical Score: The Light That Failed; Night
of Nights: Our Neighbors, the Carters.
Musical Director: Man About Town: The Road
to Singapore: Way Down South: Fisherman's
Wharf.
HERITAGE OF THE DESERT — Here's a Heart.
FISHERMAN'S WHARF — Fisherman's Wharf.
Dance Directors
Their Work in 1938 and 1939
AUDL, AGGIE
Hawaii Calls.
KING, MATTY
Swing, Sister. Swing.
BALANCHINE, GEORGE
Goldwyn Follies; On Your Toes.
LARKIN, EDDIE
Babes in Arms.
BERKELEY, BUSBY
Gold Diggers in Paris: Broadway Serenade:
Babes in Arms.
BELCHER, ERNEST
The Little Princess.
LEE, SAMMY
New Faces of 1938; Goldwyn Follies: Honolulu.
LOSEE, HARRY
Shall We Dance (Ballet): Thin Ice; You Can't
Have Everything:.
CASTLE, NICK
Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm: Up the River;
The Arizona Wildcat; Josette: Just Around the
Corner; Straight, Place and Show; Hold That
Co-Ed: My Lucky Star: Little Miss Broadway:
The Little Princess; Swanee River: Everything
Happens at Night: The Blue Bird.
MATREY, MR. & MRS. ERNST
Balalaika.
PAN, HERMES
Radio City Revels; The Story of Vernon and
Irene Castle.
CLAUDET, FRANCES
Ice Follies of 193!).
CONNOLLY, BOBBY
Ice Follies of 1939; Swing Your Lady; Hono-
lulu; A Day at the Circus: Wizard of Oz : Broad-
way Melody of 1940.
CROSBY, JACK
Doctor Rhythm.
DE MARCO
The Shining Hour.
PRINZ, EDDIE
Gone With the Wind: That's Right — You're
Wrong.
PRINZ, LE ROY
Artists and Models Abroad; Big Broadcast of
1938; Give Me a Sailor; Stolen Heaven: Zaza;
The Great Victor Herbert: The Magnificent
Fraud; Man About Town: I'm from Missouri:
Cafe Society: Never Say Die: The Star Maker:
Union Pacific; Midnight; Buck Benny Rides
Again; Road to Singapore.
DREIFIJSS, ARTHUR
Hats Off.
DUKE, VERNON
Goldwyn Follies.
FELIX, SEYMOUR
Alexander's Ragtime Band: Broadway Serenade.
FLOYD, FRANK
Gone With the Wind.
FREEMAN, NED
Winter Carnival.
KING. GEORG
Idiot's" TJelight.
RASCH, ALBERTINA
You're a Sweetheart; The Great Waltz; Marie
Antoinette: Sweethearts.
RASET, VAL
Ice Follies of 1939.
SANTLEY, JOSEPH
Radio City Revels.
SAWYER, GENEVA
Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm: Up the River;
The Arizona Wildcat: Just Around the Corner:
Josette: Straight, Place and Show: Hold That
Co-Ed; My Lucky Star; Little Miss Broadway;
The Little Princess: Swanee River; Everything
Happens at Night.
333
FRANK LLOYD
JACK H. SKIRBALL
Announce
FRANK LLOYD PICTURES, INC.
In Preparation
"TREE OF LIBERTY"
for
"A COLUMBIA RELEASE"
T. R. WILLIAMS
Producer
MONOGRAM
334
PRODUCERS
Associate Producers — Supervisors
Their Work in 1938 and 1939
Credits on pictures released prior to 1938 may be had from previous
editions of the Year Book or from the Film Daily information service.
K8 =
ALEXANDER. ARTHUR
1938 : International Crime, Six
Shootin' Sheriff.
ALEXANDER, MAX
1938 : International Crime, Six
Shootin' Sheriff.
ARTHUR, GEORGE M.
1938: Her Jungle Love, Co-
coanut Grove, The Arkansaw
Traveler.
1939 : Grade Allen Murder
Case, Our Leading Citizen.
AUER, JOHN H.
1938 : I Stand Accused.
1939 : Forged Passport, Smug-
gled Cargo.
BADGER, CLARENCE G.
1939: Rangle River.
BALCON, MICHAEL
1938: A Yank at Oxford.
1939: The Ware Case.
BARTON, CHARLES
1938: Titans of the Deep.
BERKE, WILLIAM
1938: Call the Mesquiteers,
Outlaws of Sonora, Riders of
the Black Hills, Heroes of the
Hills, Santa Fe Stampede, Ov-
erland Stage Raiders, Pals of
the Saddle Red River Range.
1939 : The Night Riders, Three
Texas Steers, Wyoming Out-
law, Rovin' Tumbleweeds, New
Frontier, Colorado Sunset,
South of the Border.
BERMAN, PANDRO S.
Producer
1938 : Having Wonderful Time,
Mother Carey's Chickens,
Carefree, Room Service.
1939 : The Story of Vernon and
Irene Castle, Boy Slaves, The
Flying Irishman, Hunchback
of Notre Dame.
BIGELOW, CHARLES J.
1938 : Under the Big Top.
BILSON, GEORGE
1938: Freshman Year.
BISCHOFF, SAMUEL
Associate Producer
1938: A Slight Case of Mur-
der, Swing Your Lady, Gold
Is Where You Find It, Boy
Meets Girl, Hard to Get, An-
gels with Dirty Faces, Gold
Diggers in Paris.
1939: The Roaring Twenties.
BISHOP, KENNETH J.
1939 : Special Inspector, Man-
hattan Shakedown.
BLAKE, SID
1939: Monkey Business, The
Price of Love, Shulamuth, For
Business Reasons, The Life of
Florence Mills, The Life of
George Washington Carver,
The Life of Booker T. Wash-
ington.
BLANKE, HENRY
Producer
1938: Jezebel, The Adventures
of Robin Hood, White Ban-
ners, Four Daughters.
1939 : Juarez, Daughters Cour-
ageous, Four Wives, We Are
Not Alone, The Old Maid,
Four Wives, Four Heirs.
BORZAGE, FRANK
1938: Three Comrades.
BREN, MILTON
Producer
1938: Merrily We Live,
There Goes My Heart.
1939: Topper Takes a Trip,
Remember?
335
BROWN, HARRY JOE
Producer
1938: Alexander's Ragtime
Band, Thanks for Everything,
My Lucky Star.
1939: Tail Spin, The Gorilla,
Here I Am a Stranger, Holly-
wood Cavalcade, Everything
Happens at Night, The Rains
Came, Johnny Apollo.
BUCHMAN, SIDNEY
1938: She Married an Artist
BUELL, JED
1938 : Harlem on the Prairie,
Rangers Roundup, Song and
Bullets, Terror of Tiny Town.
BURR, C. C.
1939: In Old Montana, Code
of the Fearless.
BUTLER, DAVID
1939 : That's Right— You're
Wrong.
CAPRA, FRANK
1938 : You Can't Take It With
You.
1939: Mr. Smith Goes to
Washington.
CARR, TREM
1938 : The Spy Ring, State
Police, Midnight Intruder, Pri-
son Break, Air Devils, State
Police.
CHODOROV. EDWARD
1938 : Woman Against Woman,
Rich Man-Poor Girl, Spring
Madness.
1939: Tell No Tales.
Producers' Work
COHEN, EMANUEL
1938: Love on Toast, Dr.
Rhythm.
COHEN, MAURY
Producer
1938: Quick Money, Double
Danger.
CONN. MAURICE H.
193S: Code of the Rangers.
Two-Gun Justice, Phantom
Ranger, Frontier Scout.
CONSIDINE. JOHN W.. JR.
1938: Of Human Hearts, Ar-
sene Lupin Returns, Hold that
Kiss. Roys Town.
1939 : Society Lawyer. Strong-
er Than Desire. Blackmail.
COOPER, MERIAN C.
Producer
1938: The Toy Wife.
COWAN. LESTER
1939 : You Can't Cheat an
Honest Man.
COYLE. JOHN T.
1939: The Great Command-
ment.
CUMMINGS, JACK
1938 : Yellow Jack, Listen
Darling.
1939: Honolulu.
CZINNER. PAUL
1939: Stolen Life.
DARMOUR, LARRY
1938: The House of Mystery,
Crime Takes a Holiday, Re-
formatory, Outside the Law,
Making the Headlines, Flight
Into Nowhere.
1939 : Whispering Enemies.
Tra""ed in the Sky, Hidden
Power, Fugitive at Large.
DAVIS. FRANK
1938: Lord Jeff, The Chaser.
1939: It's a Wonderful World.
DAWN, NORMAN
1939: Taku.
DECKER, HARRY L.
1938: Outlaws of the Prairie.
Cattle Raiders.
1939 : Stranger from Texas.
deMILLE. CECIL B.
1938: The Buccaneer.
1939: Union Pacific.
DENIS, ARMAND
1938: Dark Rapture.
DERR, E. B.
1938: My Old Kentucky
Home, Female Fugitive, Num-
bered Women, I Am a Crimi-
nal, Gang Bullets, Barefoot
Boy.
1939: Should a Girl Marry.
DeSYLVA, B. G.
Producer
1938: The Rage of Paris.
1939: Bachelor Mother.
DIEGE, SAMUEL
CDeceased)
1938: Tell Your Children.
Sunset Murder Case.
DISNEY, WALT
1939: Pinocchio.
DREIFUSS. ARTHUR
1939: Ride 'Em Cowgirl.
DUNLAP, SCOTT R.
1938: The Marines Are Here.
Gangster's Boy, Mr. Wong —
Detective.
1939: Streets of New York.
Mystery Plane. Tough Kid.
Boy's Reformatory, Mr. Wong
in Chinatown. Irish Luck.
EDELMAN. LOUIS F.
1938: Love Honor and Be-
have, Cowboy from Brooklyn.
1939: Wings of the Navy,
Espionage Agent.
ELLIOTT, CLYDE E.
1938: Booloo.
ENGEL. JOSEPH W.
1939: Law of the Pampas.
ENGEL. SAMUEL G.
Associate producer
1938: Gateway.
1939: Grand Jury Secrets.
FARALLA, DARIO
1938: Radio Troubadour.
Bachelor Father, The Prodi
gal Returns.
FAY, FRANK
1938: Meet the Mayor.
FINEMAN, B. P.
1938 : Smashing the Rackets,
Tarnished Angel.
336
1939: Beauty for the Asking.
FINNEY, EDWARD F.
1938: Frontier Town, Where
the Buffalo Roam, Starlight
Over Texas. Rolling Plains.
Utah Trail.
1939: Song of the Buckaroo,
Down the Wyoming Trail,
Sundown on the Prairie, Roll-
ing Westward, Man from Tex-
as, Riders of the Frontier,
Roll Wagons Roll.
FLEISCHER. MAX
1939: Gulliver's Travels.
FLOTHOW. RUDOLPH
1939 : Trapped in the Sky,
Hidden Power. Fugitive at
Large.
FORD. CHARLES E.
1938: Man from Music Moun-
tain, Gold Mine in the Sky,
Billy the Kid Returns. Come
on Rangers, Shine on Harvest
Moon.
FOY, BRYAN
1938 : She Loved a Fireman,
The Invisible Menace, Torchy
Gets Her Man.
1939: Hell s Kitchen. On Dress
Parade.
FRANCES. SARA
1939: Reform School.
FRANKLIN. SIDNEY
1939: On Borrowed Time.
FREED. ARTHUR
1939 : Babes in Arms.
FRENKE. EUGEN
1939: Exile Expiess.
FRIEDRICH, REV. JAMES K.
1939: The Great Command-
ment.
FUTTER, WALTER
1938: Dark Sands.
GARMES. LEE
1939: Dreamy Lips, Lilac
Domino, Beyond Tomorrow.
GARNETT, TAY
1938: Trade Winds.
1939: Eternally Yours, Slightly
Honorable, World Cruise.
GENSLER. LEWIS E.
1938: College Swing.
GILROY, BERT
1938: Gun Law, Painted Des-
ert.
1939: The Renegade Ranger.
Racketeers of the Range, The
Fighting Gringo.
GLAZER, BENJAMIN
1938: Four Daughters, Going
Places.
1939: They Made Me a Crim-
inal, Yes — My Darling Daugh-
ter.
GOETZ, CHARLES
1939: Gentleman from Arizona.
GOLDBERG, BERT
1939: Double Deal.
GOLDEN, MAX
Associate Producer
1938 : Love on a Budget, A
Trip to Paris, Little Tough
Guys in Society, Personal Sec-
retary, Swing that Cheer, Ex-
posed.
1939: The Family Next Door,
For Love or Money.
GOLDMAN, MAX H.
1939: Hawaiian Nights.
GOLDSMITH, KENNETH
1938 : Saleslady, Sinners in
Paradise, Little Tough Guy,
The Storm.
1939: Society Smugglers, Big
Town Czar, Unexpected Fa-
ther, Hero for a Dav Call a
Messenger.
GOLDWYN. SAMUEL
Producer
1938: The Adventures of Mar-
co Polo, The Goldwyn Follies,
The Cowboy and the Lady.
1939 : Wuthering Heights, They
Shall Have Music, The Real
Glory.
GRAINGER, JAMES
EDMUND
Producer
1938: Nurse from Brooklyn,
The Jury's Secret, Wives under
Suspicion, The Road to Reno,
Service de Luxe.
1939 : The House of Fear, The
Forgotten Woman.
GREEN, HOWARD J.
1938: Meridian 7-1212, Inside
Story, Meet the Girls, Time
Out for Murder.
GREY, HARRY
1938: Ladies in Distress,
Tenth Avenue Kid, Prairie
Moon, Western Jamboree,
Rhythm of the Saddle.
1939: Mexicali Rose, Home on
the Prairie, Blue Montana
Skies, Mountain Rhythm. Cow-
boys from Texas, The Kansas
Terrors.
GRIFFITH, RAYMOND
1938: Rebecca of Sunnybrook
Farm, Always Goodbye, Three
Blind Mice.
1939: The Three Musketeers,
Drums Along the Mohawk,
Hotel for Women, Day-Time
Wife.
GROSS, EDWARD
Associate Producer
1938: The Gladiator, Flirting
with Fate.
HACKEL, A. W.
Producer
1938: Paroled— To Die, Thun-
der in the Desert, Desert Pa-
trol.
HAIGHT, GEORGE
Associate Producer
1938: The Goldwyn Follies,
The Adventures of Marco
Polo.
1939: The Story of Vernon
and Irene Castle, In Name
Only.
HELLINGER, MARK
1939 : Hell's Kitchen.
HELLMAN, MARCEL
1938: Crime Over London.
HEMPSTEAD, DAVID
1938: Happy Landing, Little
Miss Broadway, Just Around
the Corner, Hold that Co-ed,
Straight Place and Show.
1939: It Could Happen to
You.
HENIGSON, HENRY
1938: Port of Seven Seas.
HOFFMAN, JERRY
1938: Speed to Burn, Road
Demon.
1939: Winner Take All.
HORNBLOW, ARTHUR, JR.
Producer
1938: Artists and Models
Abroad, Midnight, Zaza.
1939: Midnight, Man About
Town, The Cat and the Ca-
nary.
HOWARD, WILLIAM K.
1939: Back Door to Heaven.
337
Producers9 Work
HUBBARD. LUCIEN
Associate Producer
1938: The Texans.
1939 : 6,000 Enemies, Nick
Carter — Master Detective.
JOHNSON, NUNNALLY
1939 : Jesse James, Wife Hus-
band and Friend, Rose of
Washington Square.
JONES, PAUL
1938: Give Me a Sailor.
1939: Never Say Die, I'm from
Missouri.
KAHANE, B. B.
1938: There's That Woman
Again.
KAHN, RICHARD C.
1939: The Bronze Buckaroo.
Harlem Rides the Range, Two-
Gun Man from Harlem, Son
of Ingagi.
KANE, JOSEPH
1939: Frontier Pony Express.
Rough Rider's Round-up, In
Old Caliente, Wall Street Cow-
boy, Saga of Death Valley.
Arizona Kid, Days of Jesse
James.
KANN, GEORGE E.
1938: Rose of the Rio Grande.
KANE, ROBERT T.
1939: Smiling Along.
KATZMAN, SAM
Producer
1938: Flying Fists, Silks and
Saddles, Lightning Carson
Rides Again.
KAUFMAN, EDWARD
1938 : Radio City Revels.
1939 : News Is Made at Night.
Charlie Chan at Treasure Isl-
and, Barricade.
KELLY, BURT
1938 : Swing Sister Swing, Se-
crets of a Nurse.
1939: Risky Business, Spirit
of Culver, Ex-Champ, Two
Bright Boys, I -Stole a Mil-
lion.
KENDIS, J. D.
1938: Wolves of the Sea, Pa-
roled from the Big House.
Producers' Work
KLINE, HERBERT
1939: Crisis.
KORDA, ALEXANDER
1938: The Divorce of Lady
X, Drums.
1939: Four Feathers.
KRASNA, NORMAN
1938: The First Hundred
Years, Three Loves Has
Nancy.
KRASNA, PHILIP N.
1939: Crashing Thru.
KRASNE, PHIL
1939: Trigger Pals.
LA CAVA, GREGORY
1939: Fifth Avenue Girl, The
Primrose Path.
LACKEY, WILLIAM T.
1938: Mr. Wong— Detective,
Gangster's Boy.
1939: Mystery of Mr. Wong,
Navy Secrets, Streets of New
York, Mr. Wong in China-
town.
LAMONT, CHARLES
1938: Shadows Over Shang-
hai, Cipher Bureau, Long
Shot.
1939: Panama Patrol, Little
Accident.
LANG, FRITZ
1938: You and Me.
LAZARUS, JEFF
1938: Give Me a Sailor, Ride
a Crooked Mile.
1939: Cafe Society, The Lady's
from Kentucky, Honeymoon
in Bali.
LEE, ROWLAND V.
1939: Son of Frankenstein,
The Sun Never Sets, Tower of
London.
LEONARD, ARTHUR
1939: Poncomania.
LEONARD, L. G.
1938 : The Overland Express
LEONARD, ROBERT Z.
1939: Broadway Serenade.
Le ROY, MERVYN
1938: Fools for Scandal, Dra-
matic School.
1939: Stand Up and Fight.
The Wizard of Oz, At the
Circus, Ziegfeld Girl.
LESSER, SOL
Producer
1938: Hawaii Calls, Hawaiian
Buckaroo, Tarzan's Revenge,
Rawhide, Breaking the Ice,
Peck's Bad Boy with the Cir
cus, Panamint's Bad Man.
1939: Fisherman's Wharf, Ev-
erything's On Ice, Way Down
South.
LEVINE, NAT
1939: Four Girls in White.
LEVOY. ALBERT E.
1939: Bad Little Angel.
LEWIN, ALBERT
Producer
1938 : Spawn of the North.
1939: Zaza.
LEWIS, ALBERT
Producer
1938: She's Got Everything.
LEWIS, DAVID
1938: Four's a Crowd, Th«
Sisters.
1939: Dark Victory.
LIGHTON. LOUIS D.
Producer
1938: Test Pilot, Man-Proof
1939: Lucky Night.
LLOYD, FRANK
1938: If I Were King.
1939 : Rulers of the Sea.
LLOYD, HAROLD
1938 : Professor Beware.
LOEW, DAVID L.
1938: Wide Open Faces, The
Gladiator, Flirting with Fate.
LORD, ROBERT
Producer
1938: Brother Rat.
1939: Dodge City, The Pri
vate Lives of Elizabeth and
Essex.
338
LOWE, EDWARD T.
Associate Producer
1938: Bulldog Drummond in
Africa, Touchdown Army, Tip-
Off Girls, Dangerous to Know.
1939: Persons in Hiding, Tele-
vision Spy, Tom Sawyer De-
tective, Parole Fixer, All Wom-
en Have Secrets, Texas Rang-
ers Ride Again, The Woman
from Hell.
LUBITSCH, ERNST
1938: Bluebeard's Eighth
Wife.
1939: Ninotchka.
LUSTY, LOU
1938: The Affairs of Annabel.
Annabella Takes a Tour, Fugi-
tives for a Night.
MacDONALD, WALLACE
1938: When G-Men Step In
MacRAE, HENRY
1938: Forbidden Valley.
McCAREY, LEO
1939: Love Affair.
McGUIRE, WILLIAM
1938: Girl of the Golden West.
MACGOWAN,
KENNETH
Producer
1938: In Old Chicago, Four
Men and a Prayer, Kentucky
Moonshine, Kidnapped, I'll
Give a Million.
1939: The Story of Alexander
Graham Bell, Return of the
Cisco Kid, Young Mr. Lin-
coln, Susannah of the Moun-
ties, Stanley and Livingstone,
Swanee River.
MALVERN, PAUL
1938: Border Wolves, State
Police.
1939: Mystery Plane, Wolf
Call, Stunt Pilot, Danger
Flight, Sky Patrol.
MANKIEWICZ, JOSEPH L.
1938 : Three Comrades, The
Shopworn Angel, A Christmas
Carol, The Shining Hour.
1939 : Huckleberry Finn.
MANUEL, ALVIN G.
1938: Prison Train.
MARCUS, LEE
Producer
1938: Next Time I Marry.
Annabella Takes a Tour.
1939: Pacific Liner, Conspir-
acy.
MARKEY, GENE
1938: Sally Irene and Mary,
Josette, Kentucky, Submarine
Patrol.
1939: The Hound of the Bas-
kervilles, The Little Princess,
Second Fiddle, The Adventures
of Sherlock Holmes.
MARX, SAMUEL
1938: Girl's School.
MELFORD, FRANK
1938: Numbered Woman, I
Am a Criminal, Gang Bullets,
Barefoot Boy, Female Fugi-
tive, Exiled to Patrol, Con-
victs Code, Star Reporter.
1939: Undercover Agent,
Should A Girl Marry?
MENDES, LOTHAR
1938: Moonlight Sonata.
MERCADER, G. R.
1938: Fury Below.
MERWIN, DIXON R.
1939: Double Deal.
MEYER, ABE
1938: Terror of Tiny Town.
MILESTONE, LEWIS
1939: Of Mice and Men.
MILSTEIN, J. J.
1938: The Fight for Peace.
MORROS, BORIS
1939: The Flying Deuces.
MURPHY, DUDLEY
1939: One Third of a Nation.
NEUFELD, SIG
1938: Crashin' Thru Danger.
NEWFIELD, SAM
1939: Six-Gun Rhythm.
NORTH, ROBERT
1938: Penitentiary.
1939: Main Street Lawyer.
PARSONS, LINDSLEY
1938: Wanted by the Police.
1939: Tough Kid.
PASCAL, GABRIEL
1938: Pygmalion.
PASTERNAK, JOE
1938: Mad About Music,
Youth Takes a Fling, That
Certain Age.
1939: Three Smart Girls Grow
Up, The Under-Pup, First
Love, Destry Rides Again.
PERCIVAL, HUGH
1938 : I Married a Spy, Dan-
gerous Secrets.
PERLBERG, WILLIAM
1938: There's Always a Worn
an, The Lady Objects.
1939: Let Us Live, Good
Girls Go to Paris, Golden
Boy.
PERRIN, NAT
1938: Start Cheering.
PHILIPS, KIER
1938: Clipped Wings.
PINE, WILLIAM H.
1938: The Buccaneer.
PIVAR, BEN
1938: Mr. Boggs Steps Out.
1939: Mutiny on the Black-
hawk, Tropic Fury, Legion of
Lost Flyers.
POLESIE, HERBERT
1939: East Side of Heaven.
POMMER, ERICH
1938: Troopship, The Beach
comber.
1939 : Jamaica Inn.
POPKIN, LEO
1938: Life Goes On.
POPKIN, HARRY M.
1939: Reform School, One
Dark Night.
PORT, M,
1939: Double Deal.
PRESNELL, ROBERT
1938: That's My Story.
RANDOL, GEORGE
1938: Dark Manhattan.
1939 : Midnight Shadows.
RAPF, HARRY
1938: Everybody Sing, the
Bad Man of Brimstone, Stable-
mates.
1939: Ice Follies of 1939, Let
Freedom Ring, Burn 'em up
O'Connor.
RAY, ALBERT
1939: Desperate Trails, Okla-
homa Frontier.
339
Producers' Work
RAY, BERNARD B.
1938: It's All in Your Mind.
REED, JAY THEODORE
1939: What a Life.
REID, CLIFF
Associate Producer
1938: Bringing Up Baby,
Crashing Hollywood, This
Marriage Business, Blind
Alibi, Crime Ring, Law West
of Tombstone.
1939 : The Great Man Votes,
Panama Lady, Fixer Dugan,
The Spellbinder, Mexican Spit-
fire.
REVIER, HARRY
1938: Child Bride.
RICHARDS, B. W.
1938: The Headleys at Home.
RISKIN, EVERETT J.
1938: Holiday, I Am the Law.
1939: The Amazing Mr. Wil-
liams.
RISKIN, ROBERT
1939: They Shall Have Music,
The Real Glory.
ROACH, HAL
1938 : Swiss Miss, Blockheads,
There Goes My Heart.
1939 : Zenobia, Topper Takes
a Trip, Captain Fury, The
Housekeeper's Daughter, Of
Mice and Men.
ROACH, HAL, JR.
1938: Blockheads.
ROGELL, ALBERT S.
1939: Laugh It Oft.
ROGERS, CHARLES R.
Producer
1938: The Rage of Paris.
1939: Our Neighbors the Car
ters, The Star Maker.
ROSEN, PHIL
1939 : Missing Evidence.
ROSS, FRANK
1939: Of Mice and Men.
ROWLAND, WILLIAM
1938: He Loved an Actress.
1939: Perfida.
ROYER, FANCHON
1938 : Religious Racketeers,
Crime Afloat.
RUBEN, J. WALTER
1939: Sergeant Madden,
Maisie, Thunder Afloat.
Producers' Work
RUGGLES, WESLEY
1938: Sing You Sinners.
1939: Invitation to Happiness,
Too Many Husbands.
SACKHEIM, JERRY
1939: Charlie McCarthy De-
tective.
SANFORTH, CLIFFORD
1938 : I Demand Payment.
SARECKY, BARNEY
1938: Trouble at Midnight,
Young Fugitives, The Missing
Guest, Mars Attacks the
World.
SAUBER, HARRY
1938 : Outside of Paradise.
SAVILLE, VICTOR
1938: Action for Slander,
South Riding, The Citadel.
1939: Goodbye Mr. Chips.
SCHAEFER, ARMAND
1938: Call of the Yukon, Hol-
lywood Stadium Mystery,
Gangs of New York, Army
Girl, Down in Arkansaw,
Storm Over Bengal.
1939: Streets of Missing Men.
S. O. S. Tidal Wave, leepers
Creepers, Flight at Midnight.
Calling All Marines, In Old
Monterey, Federal Man-Hunt,
Fighting Thoroughbreds.
SCHLOM, HERMAN
Associate Producer
1938 : Prison Nurse, Romance
on the Run, Come on Leather-
necks, The Night Hawk, Or-
phans of the Street.
1939: The Mysterious Miss X.
I Was a Convict, Pride of
the Navy, Mickey the Kid,
Sabotage.
SELWYN, EDGAR
1939 : The Kid from Texas.
Bridal Suite, Joe and Ethel
Turp, Dancing Co-ed.
SELZNICK, DAVID 0.
Producer
1938: The Adventures of Tom
Sawyer. The Young in Heart.
1939: Made for Each Other,
Intermezzo — A Love Story,
Gone With th
SHEEHAN, WINFIELD
1939: Florian.
SHERMAN, HARRY
1938: Cassidy of Bar 20,
Heart of Arizona, Bar 20 Jus-
tice, In Old Mexico, Pride of
the West, Sunset Trail, The
Frontiersman, Mysterious
Rider.
1939: Heritage of the Desert,
Silver on the Sage, Renegade
Trail, The Llano Kid, Range
War, Law of the Pampas.
SHUBERT, MILTON I.
1938: Sweepstakes Winner.
On Trial.
SHUMATE, HAROLD
1938: Born to Be Wild.
SHYER, MELVILLE
1938 : Delinquent Parents,
Slander House.
SIEGEL, SOL C.
1938: The Purple Vigilantes,
The Old Barn Dance, Wild
Horse Rodeo, Under Western
Stars, Army Girl, The Higgins
Family.
1939: My Wife's Relative/!,
Man of Conquest, Woman
Doctor, Zero Hour. She Mar-
ried a Cop, Should Husbands
Work?
SIMMONDS, LESLIE
1938: Crashin' Thru Danger.
SISK, ROBERT
1938: Night Spot, Condemned
Women, Go Chase Yourself,
Law of the Underworld, Maid's
Night Out, Sky Giant, Mr.
Doodle Kicks Off, A Man to
Remember.
1939: Twelve Crowded Hours,
They Made Her a Spy. The
Saint Strikes Back, Pacific
Liner, Sorority House, Girl
from Mexico, Five Came Back.
Career. Reno, Bad Lands,
The Day the Bookies Wept.
Full Confession, Three Sons.
SISTROM, JOSEPH
'939: The Lone Wolf Spy
Hunt.
SISTROM, WILLIAM
Producer
1938: Everybody's Doing It,
The Saint in New York, I'm
from the City.
1939 : The Saint in London.
SMITH, LOU
1938: If I Were King.
1939: Rulers of the Sea.
SPARKS, ROBERT
1938: Blondie.
1939: Blondie Brings up Baby.
SPEAKS, JOHN
1938: Little Orphan Annie.
STAHL, JOHN M.
1938: Letter of Introduction.
1939 : When Tomorrow Comes.
STARR. IRVING
Associate Producer
1938: The Black Doll, Lady
in the Morgue, Danger on the
Air, The Last Express, Gambl-
ing Ship. The Last Warning.
1939: Mystery of the White
Room. Inside Information,
The Witness Vanishes.
STEINER, WILLIAM
1938: Topa Topa.
STEPHANI, FREDERICK
1938: Love Is a Headache,
Fast Company.
1939: Fast and Loose, Fast
and Furious.
STEPHENS, WILLIAM
1939: Meet Dr. Christian.
STERN, ALFRED
1938: International Crime.
STERNBACH, BERT
1938: Rangers Roundup, Ter-
ror of Tiny Town.
STEVENS, GEORGE
1938: Vivacious Lady.
1939: Gunga Din, Vigil in the
Night.
STONE, ANDREW L.
1938: Stolen Haven, Say It
in French.
1939: The Great Victor Her-
bert.
STONE, JOHN
Associate Producer
193S: Rascals, Keep Smiling,
One Wild Night, Always in
Trouble, Safety in Numbers,
Arizona Wildcat, Down on the
Farm, Charlie Chan in Hono-
lulu.
becca.
SHAFF, MONROE
1939 : Meet Dr. Christian.
SHAUER, MEL
1938 : Thanks for the Memory.
SMALL, EDWARD
Producer
1938: The Duke of West
Point.
1939: King of the Turf, The
Man in the Iron Mask, My
Son My Son.
1939: Down on the Farm.
Mr. Moto in Danger Island,
Charlie Chan in Reno, Boy
Friend, Quick Millions, Too
Busy to Work, Charlie Chan
in the City in Darkness. High
School, Cisco Kid and the
Lady, Charlie Chan in Pan-
ama, Young As You Feel.
540
STROMBERG, HUNT
Producer
1938: Marie Antoinette, Sweet-
hearts.
1939: Idiot's Delight, Another
Thin Man, The Women.
SUTHERLAND, A. EDWARD
1939: Zenobia.
TANSEY, ROBERT
1938: Man's Country, The
Mexicali Kid, Gun Packer.
1939: Wild Horse Canyon,
Overland Mail.
THOMAS, WILLIAM C.
Associate Producer
1938: Illegal Traffic, Campus
Confessions.
1939: Some Like It Hot.
$1000 a Touchdown, King of
Alcatraz. The Farmer's Daugh-
ter, Golden Gloves.
THOMPSON, HARLAN
1938: Big Broadcast of 1938,
Romance in the Dark.
1939: Paris Honeymoon, The
Magnificent Fraud, Disputed
Passage.
TORRES, MIGUEL G.
Juarez and Maximilian.
TROP, J. D.
1938: Heart of Arizona, Bar
20 Justice.
- 1939: Heritage of the Desert,
Silver on the Sage.
TUTTLE. FRANK
1939: Charlie McCarthy De
tective.
VAN KEUREN, S. S.
1938: Swiss Miss.
VIDOR, KING
1939: Northwest Passage.
VOGEL, WILLIAM M.
1938 : Topa Topa.
VORHAUS, BERNARD
1938 : King of the Newsboys.
WALKER, JOHNNIE
1939: Back Door to Heaven.
WALKER, STUART
1938: Bulldog Drummond's
Peril, Hunted Men, Prison
Farm, Sons of the Legion.
1939: Disbarred, Bulldog
Drummond's Bride.
WALLIS, HAL B.
1938 : Gold Is Where You
Find It, A Slight Case of Mur-
I] der, Love Honor and Behave,
I Swing Your Lady, The Ad-
. ventures of Robin Hood, Cow-
boy from Brooklyn, Gold Dig-
gers in Paris, White Banners,
Four Daughters, Boy Meets
Girl, The Dawn Patrol, Hard
to Get, The Sisters, Brother
Rat, Going Places.
1939: Yes — My Darling
Daughter, They Made Me a
Criminal. Wings of the Navy,
Juarez. Daughters Courageous,
The Roaring Twenties, On
Dress Parade, The Private
Lives of Elizabeth and Essex.
We Are Not Alone, The Old
Maid, Four Wives.
WANGER, WALTER
Producer
1938: I Met My Love Again,
Blockade, Algiers, Trade
Winds.
1939: Stagecoach. Winter Car-
nival, Eternally Yours, Slightly
Honorable.
WARNER, FRANKLYN
1938: Shadows Over Shanghai,
Frontier Scout, Cipher Bu-
reau, Long Shot.
1939 : Panama Patrol.
WARNER, JACK L.
1939: Yes — My Darling
Daughter, They Made Me a
Criminal, Wings of the Navy,
On Dress Parade.
WEBB, HARRY S.
1939: Smoky Trail. Port of
Hate, El Diablo Rides.
WEI N GARTEN, LAURENCE
1938: Too Hot to Handle.
1939 : Balalaika.
WELLMAN, WILLIAM A.
1938: Men with Wings.
1939: Beau Geste, The Light
That Failed.
WHITE, MERRILL G.
1939: Nurse Edith Cavell.
WILCOX, HERBERT
1938: The Rat, Girl in the
Street, The Show Goes On,
Sixty Glorious Years, This'll
Make You Whistle.
1939 : Torpedoed, Nurse Edith
Cavell.
WILLIAMS, T. R.
1939: Heroes in Blue, Hidden
Enemy.
WITHERS. GRANT
1939: Mutiny in the Big
House, Irish Luck.
WOLFSON, J. P.
1938: The Mad Miss Manton.
341
Producers9 Work
1939 : Boy Slaves, Allegheny
Uprising.
WOOD, SAM
1938: Lord Jeff.
WOODARD, STACY &
HORACE
1938: The Adventures of
Chico.
WRIGHT, WILLIAM H.
Associate Producer
1938: The Adventures of Tom
Sawyer, The Young in Heart.
WURTZEL, SOL M.
Producer
1938: Change of Heart, Walk-
ing Down Broadway, Interna-
tional Settlement, Island in the
Sky, Mr. Moto Takes a
Chance, Passport Husband,
Sharpshooters, Mysterious Mr.
Moto of Devil's Island, Up
the River, Five of a Kind.
1939: Mr. Moto's Warning,
20,000 Men a Year, Stop.
Look and Love, The Escape,
Pack Up Your Troubles,
Frontier Marshal, Mr. Moto
Takes a Vacation, The Honey-
moon's Over.
YOHALEM, GEORGE
1939: One Hour to Live.
YOUNG, FELIX
1938: Joy of Living.
YOUNG, LON
Supervisor
1938: Telephone Operator,
Port of Missing Girls.
ZANUCK, DARRYL F.
Producer
1938 : Rebecca of Sunnybrook
Farm, The Baroness and the
Butler, Kentucky Moonshine,
Four Men and a Prayer, Al-
exander's Ragtime Band, Gate-
way, Little Miss Broadway,
Suez, Just Around the Cor-
ner, Straight Place and Show,
Hold that Co-ed.
1939: Jesse James, The Little
Princess, Return of the Cisco
Kid, The Rains Came, Day-
Time Wife, Hollywood Caval-
cade, Swanee River.
ZEIDMAN, B. F.
1938: Prison Train.
2IMBALIST, SAM
1938: Paradise for Three, The
Crowd Roars.
1939: Tarzan Finds a Son,
Lady of the Tropics, These
Glamour Girls.
ZUKOR, EUGENE
1939: Island of Lost Men, The
Way of All Flesh, Women
Without Names.
EDWARD LUDWIG
Director
"SWISS FAMILY ROBINSON"
"THAT CERTAIN AGE"
S. SYLVAN SIMON
DIRECTOR
•
"Dancing Co-Ed"
"These Glamour Girls"
IN PRODUCTION
"Two Girls On Broadway"
•
UNDER CONTRACT TO
METRO-GOLD WYN-MAYER
342
IM It ECTOR S
Their Work in 1938 and 1939
Credits on pictures released prior to 1938 may be had from previous
editions of the Year Book or from the Film Daily information service.
AMY, GEORGE
1939: Kid Nightingale.
ARCH AIN BAUD, GEORGE
1938: Her Jungle Love,
Thanks for the Memory, Cam-
pus Confessions.
1939: Some Like It Hot,
Night Work.
ASQUITH,. ANTHONY
1938: Pygmalion.
ALTER, JOHN H.
1938: Invisible Enemy, Out-
side of Paradise, A Desperate
Adventure, Orphans of the
Street, I Stand Accused.
1939: Forged Passport, S. O.
S. Tidal Wave, Calling All
Marines, Smuggled Cargo.
BACON, LLOYD
1938: A Slight Case of Mur-
der, Cowboy from Brooklyn,
Boy Meets Girl, Racket Bust-
ers.
1939: The Oklahoma Kid,
Wings of the Navy, Indianap-
olis Speedway, Espionage
Agent.
BADGER, CLARENCE G.
1939 : Rangle River.
BALCON, MICHAEL
1939: The Ware Case.
BANKS, MONTY
1939 : Smiling Along.
BARSHA, LEON
1938: Who Killed Gail Pres-
ton? Convicted.
1939 : Manhattan Shakedown,
Special Inspector.
BARTON, CHARLES
1938: Born to the West, Car
99, Titans of the Deep.
1939: Behind Prison Gates,
Five Little Peppers.
BEAL, SCOTT E.
1938 : Convicts at Large.
BEAUDINE, WILLIAM
1938: Sez O'Reilly to McNab,
Torchy Gets Her Man.
1939: Torchy Blane in China-
town.
BEEBE, FORD
1938: Trouble at Midnight,
Mars Attacks the World.
1939: Oklahoma Frontier.
BERKELEY, BUSBY
1938: Men Are Such Fools,
Garden of the Moon, Comet
Over Broadwav.
1939: They Made Me a Crim-
inal, Babes in Arms, Fast
and Furious.
BEUTE, CHRIS
1938: The Headleys at Home.
BLYSTONE, JOHN G.
(Deceased)
1938: Swiss Miss, Blockheads.
BORZAGE, FRANK
1938: Three Comrades, The
Shining Hour.
1939 : Disputed Passage.
BRAHM, JOHN
1 9 3 8 : Penitentiary, Girl's
School.
1939: Let Us Live, Rio.
BRETHERTON, HOWARD
1938: Wanted by the Police.
1939: Navy Secrets, Tough
Kid, Boy's Reformatory, Sky
Patrol, Irish Luck, Danger
Flight.
BRICKER, CLARENCE
1938: Held for Ransom.
BROUGHTON, CLIFFORD
1938: The Lady Objects.
BROWER, OTTO
1938: Speed to Burn, Road
Demon.
1939: Winner Take All, Stop,
Look and Love, Too Busy to
Work.
BROWN, CLARENCE
1938: Of Human Hearts.
1939: Idiot's Delight, The
Rains Came.
BROWN, KARL
1938 : Port of Missing Girls,
Numbered Woman, Barefoot
Boy, Under the Big Top.
BROWN, MELVILLE
(Deceased)
1938: He Loved an Actress.
BROWNING, TOD
1939: Miracles for Sale.
BUCQUET, HAROLD S.
1938: Young Dr. Kildare.
1939: Calling Dr. Kildare, On
Borrowed Time, Secret of Dr.
Kildare.
BUTLER, DAVID
1938: Kentucky Moonshine,
Kentucky, Straight Place and
Show.
1939: East Side of Heaven,
That's Right — You're Wrong.
BUZZELL, EDWARD
1938: Paradise for Three, Fast
Company.
1939: Honolulu, At the Cir-
cus.
CABANNE, CHRISTY
1938: Night Spot, Everybody's
Doing It, This Marriage Busi-
ness.
1939 : Smashing the Spy Ring,
Legion of Lost Flyers, Muti-
ny on the Blackhawk, Tropic
Fury.
CAPRA, FRANK
1938: You Can't Take It With
You.
1939: Mr. Smith Goes to
Washington.
343
Producers* Work
CLINE, EDWARD F.
1938: Hawaii Calls, Go Chase
Yourself, Breaking the Ice,
Peck's Bad Boy at the Circus.
1939: My Little Chickadee.
CONWAY, JACK
1938 : A Yank at Oxford, Too
Hot to Handle.
1939: Let Freedom Ring, Lady
of the Tropics.
CARSTAIRS, JOHN PADDY
1939: The Saint in London.
CARTIER, HENRI
1938: Return to Life.
CEDER, RALPH
1938: Meet the Mayor.
CHRISTIE, AL
1938: Birth of a Baby.
CLEMENS, WILLIAM
1938 : Torchy Blane in Pan-
ama, Accidents Will Happen,
Mr. Chump, Nancy Drew —
Detective.
1939: Nancy Drew— Trouble
Shooter, Nancy Drew and the
Hidden Staircase, On Dress
Parade.
CLIFTON, ELMER
1938: Wolves of the Sea, Pa-
roled from the Big House, Law
of the Texan, California Fron-
tier, Crime Afloat, Stranger
from Arizona.
1939: Crashing Thru.
COLEMAN, C. C, Jr.
1938: When G-Men Step In,
Squadron of Honor, Highway
Patrol, Flight to Fame.
1939: Homicide Bureau, My
Son Is a Criminal, Spoilers of
the Range, Missing Daughters,
Outpost of the Mounties.
COLLINS, ARTHUR G.
1938: Saleslady.
COLLINS, LEWIS D.
1938: The House of Mystery,
Making the Headlines, Crime
Takes a Holiday, Flight into
Nowhere, Reformatory, Out-
side the Law.
1939: Trapped in the Sky,
Whispering Enemies, Hidden
Power, Fugitive at Large.
CONNOLLY, BOBBY
1938: The Patient in Room 18.
CORTEZ, RICARDO
1938: Inside Story.
1939: Chasing Danger, The
Escape.
COYLE, JOHN T.
1938 : Call of the Yukon.
CROMWELL, JOHN
1938: Algiers.
1939: Made for Each Other,
In Name Only, Abe Lincoln
in Illinois.
CRUZE, JAMES
1938 : Prison Nurse, Gangs of
New York, Come on Leather
necks.
CUKOR, GEORGE
1938: Holiday.
1939: Zaza, The Women.
LEIGH JASON
344
CUMMINGS, IRVING
1938 : Little Miss Broadway,
Just Around the Corner.
1939: The Story of Alexander
Graham Bell, Hollywood Cav-
alcade, Everything Happens at
Night.
CURTIZ, MICHAEL
1938: Gold Is Where You
Find It, The Adventures of
Robin Hood, Four Daughters,
Four's a Crowd, Angels with
Dirty Faces.
1939: Dodge City. Daughters
Courageous, The Private Lives
of Elizabeth and Essex, Four
Wives, Virginia City.
CZINNER, PAUL
1939: Stolen Life.
DARE, DANNY
1938: The Main Event.
DAWN, NORMAN
1939: Taku.
DEL RUTH, ROY
1938: Happy Landing, My
Lucky Star.
1939: Tail Spin, The Star
Maker, Here I Am a
Stranger, He Married His
Wife.
DeMILLE, CECIL B.
1938: The Buccaneer.
1939: Union Pacific.
DEMING, NORMAN
1939 : Riders of Black River,
Taming of the West.
DIEGE, SAMUEL
( Deceased)
1938 : Water Rustlers, Singing
Cowboy, Ride 'em Cowboy.
1939: Ride 'Em Cowgirl.
DIETERLE, WILLIAM
1938: Blockade.
1939: Juarez, Hunchback of
Notre Dame.
DMYTRYK, EDWARD
1939: Television Spy, Emer-
gency Squad, Golden Gloves.
DOUGLAS. GORDON
1939: Zenobia.
DREIFUSS, ARTHUR
1939: Double Deal.
DU PONT, E. A.
1938: Love on Toast.
1939 : Hell's Kitchen.
DUVIVIER, JULIEN
1938 : The Great Waltz.
DWAN, ALLAN
1938: Rebecca of Sunnybrook
Farm, Josette, Suez.
1939: The Three Musketeers,
The Gorilla, Frontier Marshal.
EASON, REEVES B.
1938 : Call of the Yukon, The
Daredevil Drivers, The Kid
Comes Back, Sergeant Mur-
phy.
1939: Blue Montana Skies,
Mountain Rhythm.
EBERSON, DREW
1938 : The Overland Express.
ELLIOTT, CLYDE E.
1938: Booloo.
ENGLISH, JOHN
1938: Call the Mesquiteers.
ENRIGHT, RAY
1938: Swing Your Lady, Gold
Diggers in Paris, Going
Places, Hard to Get.
1939: Naughty But Nice, On
Your Toes, Angels Wash Their
Faces.
FARROW, JOHN V.
1938 : The Invisible Menace,
She Loved a Fireman, Little
Miss Thoroughbred, My Bill,
Broadway Musketeers.
1939: The Saint Strikes Back,
Women in the Wind, Sorority
House, Five Came Back, Reno,
Full Confession, Married and
in Love.
FAYE, RANDAL L
1938: Mr. Stringfellow Says
Xo, Such Is Life, Scruff &
Company.
FENTON, LESLIE
1939 : Tell No Tales, Stronger
Than Desire.
FITZ MAURICE, GEORGE
1938 : Arsene Lupin Returns,
Vacation from Love.
FLEMING, VICTOR
1938 : Test Pilot.
1939: The Wizard of Oz, Gone
With the Wind.
FLOOD, TAMES
1939: Off the Record.
FLOREY, ROBERT
1938: Dangerous to Know,
King of Alcatraz.
1939: Disbarred, Hotel Im-
perial, The Magnificent Fraud,
Death of a Champion.
345
Directors* Worh
FORD, JOHN
1938 : Four Men and a Prayer,
Submarine Patrol.
1939: Stagecoach, Young Mr.
Lincoln, Drums Along the
Mohawk.
FORDE, EUGENE
1938 : International Settlement,
One Wild Night, Meet the
Girls.
1939: The Honeymoon's Over.
FOSTER, NORMAN
1938: Walking Down Broad-
way, Mr. Moto Takes a
Chance, Mysterious Mr. Moto
of Devil's Island.
1939: Mr. Moto's Last Warn-
ing, Charlie Chan in Reno,
Mr. Moto Takes a Vacation,
Charlie Chan at Treasure
Island.
FOX, WALLACE
1938 : The Mexicali Kid, Gun
Packer, Mr. Sheldon Goes to
Town.
FRASER, HARRY
1938 : Fury Below, Six Shoot-
in' Sheriff.
FREELAND, THORNTON
1938: The Gaiety Girls, Dark
Sands.
FRIEDMAN, DAVID
1938 : Convicts at Large.
GARMES, LEE
1939 : Dreamy Lips, Sky Is
the Limit.
GARNETT, TAY
1938: Joy of Living, Trade
Winds.
1939 : Eternally Yours, Slight-
ly Honorable, World Cruise.
GARRETT, OTIS
1938: The Black Doll, Lady
in the Morgue, Danger on the
Air, The Last Express, Per-
sonal Secretary.
1939 : Exile Express, Mystery
of the White Room, The Wit-
ness Vanishes.
GERING, MARION
1938: She Married an Artist.
GODFREY, PETER
1939: The Lone Wolf Spy
Hunt.
GITTENS, WYNDHAM
1938: Forbidden Valley.
Directors' Work
GOODWINS, LESLIE
1938 : Crime Ring, Mr. Doodle
Kicks Off, Tarnished Angel,
Fugitives for a Night.
1939: The Girl from Mexico,
The Day the Bookies Wept,
Mexican Spitfire.
GOULDING, EDMUND
1938: White Banners, The
Dawn Patrol.
1939: Dark Victory, We Are
Not Alone, The Old Maid, We
Shall Meet Again.
GREEN, ALFRED E.
1938: The Duke of West
Point, Ride a Crooked Mile.
1939: King of the Turf,
Gracie Allen Murder Case,
20,000 Men a Year.
GREEN, JOSEPH
1939 : Mamele.
GRIFFITH, EDWARD H.
1939 : Cafe Society, Honey-
moon in Bali.
GRINDE. NICK
1938: Down in Arkansaw.
1939: Federal Man - Hunt.
King of Chinatown, Million
Dollar Legs, The Man They
Could Not Hang, A Woman
Is the Judge.
GRUNE, KARL
1939 : Prisoner of Corbal.
HALEY, EARL
1939 : Gentleman from Arizona.
HALL. ALEXANDER
1938: There's Always a Wom-
an, I Am the Law, There's
That Woman Again.
1939 : The Lady's from Ken-
tucky, Good Girls Go to Paris,
The Amazing Mr. Williams.
HALPERIN. VICTOR
1939: Torture Ship.
HARLAN, RICHARD
1938: Radio Troubador, Bach-
elor Father, Papa Soltero.
HATHAWAY, HENRY
1938: Spawn of the North.
1939: The Real Glory, Johnny
Apollo.
HAWKS. HOWARD
1938: Bringing up Baby
1939: Only Angels Have
Wings.
HERMAN, ALBERT
1938: Starlight Over Texas.
Where the Buffalo Roam.
1939 : Song of the Buckaroo,
Down the Wyoming Trail, Roll
Wagons Roll.
HIGGINS, AL
1938: Child Bride.
HILL. ROBERT F.
1938 : Silks and Saddles, Fly-
ing Fists, The Painted Trail,
Man's Country, Mars Attacks
the World.
1939: Wild Horse Canyon,
Overland Mail.
HILLYER, LAMBERT
1938: My Old Kentucky
Home, Ail-American Sweet-
heart. Women in Prison. Ex-
tortion, Gang Bullets.
1939: Should a Girl Marry,
The Girl from Rio.
HITCHCOCK, ALFRED
1938: The Lady Vanishes.
1939: Jamaica Inn, Rebecca.
HIVELY, JACK
1939: They Made Her a Spy,
Harold Schuster
346
Panama Lady, Three Sons,
The Spellbinder.
HOGAN, JAMES P.
1938: Scandal Street, Bulldog
Drummond's Peril, The Tex
ans, Sons of the Legion.
1939: Arrest Bulldog Drum-
mond, Bulldog Drummond's
Secret Police, Grand Jury
Secrets, Bulldog Drummond's
Bride, $1000 a Touchdown.
HOLMES, BEN
1938: The Saint in New York,
Maid's Night Out, I'm from
the City, Little Orphan Annie.
HOWARD, DAVID
1938: Hollywood Stadium
Mystery, G<an Law, Painted
Desert.
1939: The Renegade Ranger.
The Fighting Gringo.
HOWARD, LESLIE
1938 : Pygmalion.
HOWARD, WILLIAM K.
1939: Back Door to Heaven.
HUMBERSTONE, H. BRUCE
1938: Rascals, Meridian 7-
1212, Charlie Chan in Hono-
lulu, Time Out for Murder.
1939 : Pack Up Your Troubles.
HUTCHISON, CHARLES
1938: Topa Topa.
JAMES, ALAN
1938: Two-Gun Justice, Call
of the Rockies.
JASON, LEIGH
1938: The Mad Miss Manton.
1939: The Flying Irishman,
Career.
JOHNSON, RAYMOND
1939: In Old Montana, Daugh-
ter of the Tong.
JOHNSTON, R. K.
1939: Code of the Fearless.
KAHN, RICHARD C.
1939 : The Bronze Buckaroo,
Harlem Rides Again, Two-Gun
Man from Harlem.
KANE, JOSEPH
1938 : The Old Barn Dance,
Born to Be Wild, Arson Gang
Busters, Under Western Stars,
Man from Music Mountain,
Gold Mine in the Sky, Shine
On Harvest Moon, Come On
Rangers, Billy the Kid Re
turns.
1939: Frontier Pony Express,
Rough Riders' Round-Up. Tn
Old Caliente, Saga of Death
Valley, The Arizona Kid, Wall
Street Cowboy, Southward
Ho, In Old Monterey, Days
of Jesse James.
KANIN, GARSON
1938 : Next Time I Marry, A
Man to Remember.
1939 : The Great Man Votes.
Bachelor Mother.
KEIGHLEY, WILLIAM
1938: The Adventures of
Robin Hood, Valley of the
Giants, Secrets of an Actress,
Brother Rat.
1939: Yes — My Darling
Daughter, Each Dawn I Die,
The Fighting 69th.
KELLINO, ROY
1939: I Met a Murderer.
KENTON, ERLE C.
1938: Little Tough Guys in
Society.
1939 : Everything's On Ice.
KILLY, EDWARD
1938: Quick Money.
KING, HENRY
1938: In Old Chicago, Alex-
ander's Ragtime Band.
1939 : Jesse James, Stanley
and Livingstone, Little Old
New York.
KING, LOUIS
1938: Tip-Off Girls, Hunted
Men, Prison Farm, Bulldog
Drummond in Africa, Illegal
Traffic, Tom Sawyer — Detec-
tive, Federal Offense, Paroles
for Sale.
1939 : Persons in Hiding,
Undercover Doctor.
KLINE, HERBERT
1939: Crisis.
KORDA, ZOLTAN
1938: Drums.
1939: Four Feathers.
KOSTER, HENRY
1938: The Rage of Paris.
1939 : Three Smart Girls Grow
Up, First Love.
347
Directors' Worlc
KULL. EDWARD
1938 : Tarzan and the Green
Goddess.
LA CAVA, GREGORY
1939: Fifth Avenue Girl, Prim
rose Path.
LACHMAN. HARRY
1938 : No Time to Marry.
LAMONT, CHARLES
1938: International Crime,
Shadows Over Shanghai, Slan-
der House, Long Shot, Cipher
Bureau, Metropolitan Police.
1939: Pride of the Navy, Pan-
ama Patrol, Inside Informa-
tion, Unexpected Father, Little
Accident.
LANDERS, LEW
1938: Double Danger, Con-
demned Women, Crashing Hol-
lywood, Law of the Under-
world, Blind Alibi, Sky Giani,
Smashing the Rackets, Anna-
bella Takes a Tour.
1939: Twelve Crowded Hours,
Pacific Liner, Fixer Dugan,
Bad Lands.
LANFIELD, SIDNEY
1938 : Always Goodbye.
1939: The Hound of the
Baskervilles. Second Fiddle,
Swanee River.
LANG. FRITZ
1938: You and Me.
LANG, WALTER
1938: The Baroness and the
Butler, I'll Give a Million.
1939: The Little Princess, The
Bluebird, Star Dust.
LEDERMAN, D. ROSS
1938 : Tarzan's Revenge, The
Little Adventuress, Adventure
in Sahara, Juvenile Court.
1939 : Racketeers of the Range.
LEE, ROWLAND V.
1938: Mother Carey's Chick-
ens, Service de Luxe.
1939: Son of Frankenstein,
The Sun Never Sets, Tower of
London.
Directors9 Work
LEEDS, HERBERT I.
1938: Love on a Budget, Isl-
and in the Sky, Keep Smiling,
The Arizona Wildcat, Five of
a Kind.
1939: Mr. Moto in Danger
Island, Return of the Cisco
Kid, Chicken Wagon Family,
Charlie Chan in the City in
Darkness.
LEISEN, MITCHELL
1938: Big Broadcast of 1938,
Artists and Models Abroad.
1939: Midnight, Remember the
Night.
LEONARD, ARTHUR
1939: Poncomania.
LEONARD, ROBERT Z.
1938: Girl of the Golden
West.
1939: Broadway Serenade.
LE ROY, MERVYN
1938: Fools for Scandal.
1939: Waterloo Bridge.
LEVERING. JOSEPH
1938: Pioneer Trail, Phan-
tom Gold.
LEWIS, JOSEPH H.
1938: The Spy Ring, Border
Wolves, The Last Stand.
LITVAK, ANATOL
1938: The Amazing Dr. Clit-
terhouse, The Sisters.
1939: Confessions of a Nazi
Spy.
LLOYD, FRANK
1938: If I Were King.
1939: Rulers of the Sea.
LOGAN, JOSHUA
1938: I Met My Love Again.
LOGAN, STANLEY
1938 : Love Honor and Be-
have, Women Are Like That.
LUBIN, ARTHUR
1938: Midnight Introducer,
Beloved Brat, Prison Break,
Secrets of a Nurse.
1939: Risky Business, Big
Town Czar, Mickey the Kid,
Call a Messenger.
LUBITSCH, ERNST
1938: Bluebeard's Eighth
Wife.
1939: Ninotchka.
LUDWIG, EDWARD
1938: That Certain Age.
1939: Coast Guard. Swiss
Family Robinson, The Last
Gangster.
LYNN. HENRY
1939: Mothers of Today.
McCAREY, LEO
1939: Love Affair.
McCAREY, RAYMOND B.
1938: The Devil's Party,
Goodbye Broadway.
Frank Me Bonaljd
Director
"VILLAGE BARN DANCE"
(Republic )
"JEEPERS, CREEPERS"
(Republic)
"RANCHO GRANDE"
(Starring Gene Autry — Republic)
"FIRST OFFENDERS"
(Columbia )
"OVER THE WALL"
(Cosmopolitan Prods. — Warner Bros.)
"RECKLESS LIVING"
(Universal )
"FRESHMAN YEAR"
(Universal )
348
Mcdonald, frank
1938 : Blondes at Work, Reck-
less Living, Over the Wall,
Freshman Year, Flirting with
Fate, First Offenders.
1939: They Asked for It,
Jeepers Creepers, Death Goes
North, Village Barn Dance.
McGANN, WILLIAM H.
1938 : Alcatraz Island, Penrod
and His Twin Brother, When
Were You Born? Girls on
Probation.
1939 : Blackwell's Island,
Sweepstakes Winner, Every-
body's Hobby, Pride of Blue-
grass.
McLEOD, NORMAN
1938: Merrily We Live, There
Goes My Heart.
1939: Topper Takes a Trip.
Remember?
MACHATY, GUSTAV
1939 : Within the Law.
MAMOULIAN, ROUBEN
1939 : Golden Boy.
MARIN, EDWIN L.
1938: Everybody Sing, Hold
that Kiss, The Chaser, A
Christmas Carol, Listen Darl-
ing.
1939: Fast and Loose, Society
Lawyer, Maisie.
MARSHALL, GEORGE
1938: The Goldwyn Follies,
Battle of Broadway, Hold that
Co-ed.
1939: You Can't Cheat An
Honest Man, Destry Rides
Again.
MAY, JOE
1939: Society Smugglers. The
House of Fear.
MAYO, ARCHIE
1938: The Adventures of Mar-
co Polo, Youth Takes a Fling.
1939: They Shall Have Music.
MEINS, GUS
1938: Romance on the Run,
The Higgins Family, Ladies
in Distress.
1939 : The Mysterious Miss X,
My Wife's Relatives, The
Covered Trailer, Should Hus-
bands Work?
MEYER, HERBERT
1939: Bad Boy, Son of Ingagi.
MILESTONE, LEWIS
1939: Of Mice and Men.
MOORE. VIN
1938: Topa Topa.
MORSE, TERRY
1939 : On Trial, Smashing the
Money Ring. Waterfront, No
Place to Go.
MURPHY, DUDLEY
1939: One Third of a Na-
tion, Main Street Lawyer.
MURPHY, RALPH
1939: Our Neighbors the
Carters.
NEILL, ROY WILLIAM
1939: Hoot Mon, Murder Will
Out, His Brother's Keeper.
NELSON, SAM
1938: Outlaws of the Prairie,
Cattle Raiders, Law of the
Plains, West of Cheyenne,
South of Arizona, Colorado
Trail.
1939 : West of Sante Fe, West-
ern Caravans, Parents on
Trial, Man from Sundown.
Stranger from Texas.
NEUMANN, KURT
1938: Wide Open Faces,
Touchdown Army.
1939: Ambush, Unmarried,
Island of Lost Men.
NEWFIELD, SAM
1938 : Rangers Roundup, Har-
lem on the Prairie, Code of
the Rangers, Paroled — to Die,
Thunder in the Desert, Song
and Bullets, Desert Patrol,
Phantom Ranger, Terror of
Tiny Town, Frontier Scout,
Lightning Carson Rides Again,
Crashin' Thru Danger.
1939: Trigger Pals, Six-Gun
Rhythm.
NICHOLS, GEORGE, JR.
(Deceased)
1938: Army Girl.
1939: Man of Conquest.
NIGH, WILLIAM
1938: Rose of the Rio Grande,
Female Fugitive, Romance of
the Limberlost, Mr. Wong —
Detective, Gangster's Boy, I
Am a Criminal.
1939: The Mystery of Mr.
Wong, Streets of New York,
Mr. Wong in Chinatown, Mu-
tiny in the Big House.
NOLTE, WILLIAM
1938: Life Goes On.
349
Producers3 Work
NUGENT, ELLIOTT
1938 : It's All Yours, Profes-
sor Beware, Give Me a Sailor.
1939: Never Say Die, The
Cat and the Canary.
O'CONNOR, FRANK
1938: Religious Racketeers.
1939 : Mystic Circle Murder.
PATON, STUART
1938: Clipped Wings.
PEMBROKE, SCOTT
1938: Telephone Operator.
PICHEL, IRVING
1939: The Great Command-
ment.
POMMER, ERICH
1938: The Beachcomber.
POPKIN, LEO C.
1939: Reform School, One
Dark Night.
POTTER, HENRY C.
1938 : Romance in the Dark,
The Shopworn Angel, The
Cowboy and the Lady.
1939: The Story of Vernon
and Irene Castle, Blackmail.
RATOFF, GREGORY
1939: Wife, Husband and
Friend, Rose of Washington
Square, Day-Time Wife, In-
termezzo^— A Love Story, Ho-
tel for Women, Barricade.
RAWLINS, JOHN
1938: State Police, Young Fu-
gitives, The Missing Guest,
Air Devils.
RAY. ALBERT
1939: Desperate Trails.
RAY, BERNARD B.
1938: It's All in Your Mind,
Ambush Valley, Sante Fe
Rider.
1939: Smoky Trail.
REED, THEODOR
1939 : I'm from Missouri,
What a Life.
RIESNER, CHARLES F.
1939: Winter Carnival.
RIPLEY, ARTHUR
1938 : I Met My Love Again.
ROACH, HAL
1939: Captain Fury, The
Housekeeper's Daughter.
ROGELL. ALBERT
1938 : Start Cheering, The
Lone Wolf in Paris, City
Streets, The Last Warning.
Directors9 Work
1939: For Love or Money,
Hawaiian Nights, Laugh It
Off.
ROOSEVELT, ANDRE
1938: Man Hunters of the
Caribbean.
ROSEN, PHIL
1938: Roaring Timber, The
Marines Are Here.
1939: Ex - Champ, Missing
Evidence.
ROTHMAN, JOSEPH
1938: Dynamite Delaney.
ROWLAND, WILLIAM
1939: Perfida.
RUBEN. J. WALTER
1938: The Bad Man of Brim-
stone.
RUGGLES, WESLEY
1938: Sing You Sinners.
1939 : Invitation to Happiness,
Too Many Husbands.
ST. CLAIR, MALCOLM
1938: A Trip to Paris, Safety
in Numbers.
1939: Down on the Farm,
Quick Millions.
SALKOW, SIDNEY
1938: That's My Story, Storm
Over Bengal, The Night
Hawk.
1939: Woman Doctor, Fight-
ing Thoroughbreds, Streets of
Missing Men, Zero Hour, She
Married a Cop, Flight at Mid-
night.
SANDRICH, MARK
1938: Carefree.
1939 : Man About Town.
SANFORTH, CLIFFORD
1938: I Demand Payment.
SANTELL, ALFRED
1938: Cocoanut Grove, Hav-
ing Wonderful Time, The Ar-
kansas Traveler.
1939: Our Leading Citizen.
SANTLEY, JOSEPH
1938: She's Got Everything,
Always in Trouble, Swing Sis-
ter Swing.
1939: The Family Next Door,
Spirit of Culver, Two Bright
Boys.
SAVILLE, VICTOR
1938: South Riding, Dark
Journey.
SCHERTZINGER, VICTOR
1939 : The Mikado.
SCHOEDSACK,
ERNEST B.
1939: Dr. Cyclops.
SCHUNZEL, REINHOLD
1938: Rich Man-Poor Girl.
1939: Ice Follies of 1939,
Balalaika.
SCHUSTER, HAROLD
1938: Swing that Cheer, Ex-
posed.
1939 : One Hour to Live,
Framed, Zanzibar.
SCOTT, EWING
1938: Man Hunters of the
Caribbean.
SCOTT, SHERMAN
1939 : Beasts of Berlin.
SCOTTO, AUBREY H.
1938: Little Miss Roughneck,
Gambling Ship.
1939: I Was a Convict.
ROY WILLIAM NEILL
"HOOT MON"
"MURDER WILL OUT'
"HIS BROTHER'S KEEPER"
350
Directors9 Work
SEDGWICK, EDWARD
1938: The Gladiator.
1939: Burn 'Em Up O'Connor,
Beware Spooks 1
SEILER, LEWIS
1938: He Couldn't Say No,
Crime School, Penrod's Double
Trouble, Heart of the North.
1939: King of the Underwold,
You Can't Get Away with
Murder, The Kid from Koko-
mo, Hell's Kitchen, Dust Be
My Destiny.
SEITER, WILLIAM A.
1938: Sally Irene and Mary,
Three Blind Mice, Thanks for
Everything, Room Service.
1939 : Susannah of the Moun-
ties, Allegheny Uprising, It's
a Date.
SEITZ, GEORGE B.
1938: You're Only Young
Once, Judge Hardy's Children,
Yellow Jack, Love Finds Andy
Hardy, Out West with the
Hardys.
1939: The Hardys Ride High,
6,000 Enemies, Thunder Afloat,
Judge Hardy and Son.
SELANDER, LESLEY
1938: Cassidy of Bar 20, Bar
20 Justice, Heart of Arizona,
Pride of the West, The Fron-
tiersman, Sunset Trail, Mys-
terious Rider.
1939: Heritage of the Desert,
Silver on the Sage, Range
War, Renegade Trail.
SELMAN, DAVID
1938: Woman Against the
World.
SHERMAN, GEORGE
1938: Outlaws of Sonora, The
Purple Vigilantes, Wild Horse
Rodeo, Riders of the Black
Hills, Heroes of the Hills,
Overland Stage Raiders, Rhy-
thm of the Saddle, Santa Fe
Stampede, Pals of the Saddle,
Red River Range.
1939: Mexicali Rose, The
Night Riders, Three Texas
Steers, Wyoming Outlaw, Col-
orado Sunset, Cowboys from
Texas, The Kansas Terrors,
New Frontier, Rovin' Turn-
bleweeds. South of the Border.
SHERMAN, VINCENT
1939: The Return of Dr. X.
SIMON, S. SYLVAN
1938: Nurse from Brooklyn,
The Crime of Dr. Hallet, The
Road to Reno, Spring Mad-
ness.
1939: The Kid from Texas,
Four Girls in White, These
Glamour Girls, Dancing Co-
ed.
SINCLAIR, ROBERT B.
1938 : Woman Against Wom-
an, Dramatic School.
1939: Joe and Ethel Turp.
SLOANE, PAUL H.
1939 : Geronimo.
SLOMAN, TED
1938: The Jury's Secret.
SMITH, NOEL
1938: Mystery House.
1939 : Secret Service of the
Air, Code of the Secret Serv-
ice, Torchy Plays with Dyna-
mite, Cowboy Quarterback.
STAHL, JOHN M.
1938 : Letter of Introduction.
1939 : When Tomorrow Comes.
STAUB, RALPH
1938: Prairie Moon, Western
Jamboree.
STEVENS, GEORGE
1938: Vivacious Lady.
1939 : Gunga Din, Vigil in the
Night.
STOLOFF, BEN
1938 : Radio City Revels, The
Affairs of Annabel.
1939: The Lady and the Mob.
STONE, ANDREW L.
1938 : Stolen Heaven, Say It
in French.
1939: The Great Victor Her-
bert.
STRAYER, FRANK
1938: Blondie.
1939: Blondie Meets the Boss,
Blondie Brings Up Baby,
Blondie Takes a Vacation.
STUART, ALLEN
1938: Unashamed.
TAUROG, NORMAN
1938: Mad About Music, The
Adventures of Tom Sawyer,
Boys Town.
1939: The Girl Downstairs,
Lucky Night.
TAYLOR, RAY
1938 : Sudden Bill Dorn, Fron-
tier Town, Hawaiian Bucka-
roo, Rawhide, Panamint's Bad
Man.
THIELE, WILLIAM
1939: Bridal Suite, Bad Little
Angel.
THORPE, RICHARD
1938 : Love Is a Headache,
The First Hundred Years,
Man-Proof, The Toy Wife,
The Crowd Roars, Three Loves
Has Nancy.
1939: Huckleberry Finn, Tar-
zan Finds a Son.
TINLING, JAMES
1938: Mr. Moto's Gamble,
Change of Heart, Passport
Husband, Sharpshooters.
1939: Boy Friend.
TORRES, MIGUEL G.
1939: Juarez and Maximilian.
TOURNEUR, JACQUES
1939: They All Come Out,
Nick Carter — Master Detec-
tive.
TOWNLEY, JACK
1939: Home on the Prairie.
TRYON, GLENN
1938: Law West of Tomb-
stone.
1939 : Beauty for the Asking.
TUTTLE, FRANK
1938: Dr. Rhythm.
1939 : Paris Honeymoon, I
Stole a Million, Charlie Mc-
Carthy Detective.
ULMER, EDGAR G.
1938 : The Singing Blacksmith.
VAN DYKE, W. S.. II
1938: Marie Antoinette, Sweet-
hearts.
1939: Stand Up and Fight,
It's a Wonderful World, Andy
Hardy Gets Spring Fever, An-
other Thin Man.
VENTURINI, ED. D.
1938 : In Old Mexico.
1939: The Llano Kid.
VIDOR, CHARLES
1939: Romance of the Red-
woods, Blind Alib", Tbos»
High Grey Walls.
SUTHERLAND, EDWARD
1939: The Flying Deuces.
351
VIDOR, KING
1938: The Citadel.
1939: Northwest Passage.
von STERNBERG, JOSEF
1939: Sergeant Madden.
VORHAUS, BERNARD
1938 : King of the Newsboys,
Tenth Avenue Kid.
1939: Fisherman's Wharf,
Meet Dr. Christian, Way
Down South.
WAGGNER, GEORGE
1938: Outlaw Express, Black
Bandit.
1939: Mystery Plane, Wolf
Call, Stunt Pilot.
WALLACE, RICHARD
1938: The Young in Heart.
1939: The Under-Pup.
WALSH. RAOUL
1938: College Swing.
1939: St. Louis Blues, The
Roaring Twenties.
WATSON, WILLIAM
1939: Heroes in Blue.
WATT, NATE
1939: Law of the Pampas.
WEBB, HARRY S.
1939: Port of Hate.
WEBB, IRA
1939: El Diablo Rides.
WELLMAN, WILLIAM A.
1939: Men With Wings, Beau
Geste, The Light That Failed.
WERKER, ALFRED L.
1938: Kidnapped, Gateway,
Up the River.
1939: It Could Happen to
You, News Is Made at Night.
The Adventures of Sherlock
Holmes.
WHALE, JAMES
1938 : Wives Under Suspicion,
Sinners in Paradise, Port of
Seven Seas.
1939: The Man in the Iron
Mask.
WHELAN, TIM
1938: Divorce of Lady X,
Action for Slander, Troop-
ship.
WILBUR, CRANE
1938: The Patient in Room 18,
Hero for a Day.
1939: The Man Who Dared.
WILCOX, HERBERT
1938 : Girl in the Streets, The
Show Goes On, This'll Make
Directors9 Work
You Whistle, Sixty Glorious
Years.
1939: Nurse Edith Cavell.
WILES, GORDON
1938: Mr. Boggs Steps Out,
Prison Train.
WOLFSON, P. J.
1939: Boy Slaves.
WOOD, SAM
1938: Lord Jeff, Stablemates.
1939: Goodbye Mr. Chips.
WOODARD, STACY &
HORACE
1938: The Adventures of
Chico.
WYLER, WILLIAM
1938: Jezebel.
1939: Wuthering Heights.
YARBOROUGH, JEAN
1938: Rebellious Daughters.
YOUNG. HAROLD M.
1938: Little Tough Guy, The
Storm.
1939 : Newsboys' Home, The
Forgotten Woman, Sabotage.
Hero for a Day.
ED. D. VENTURINI
352
SHORT SUBJECT
DIRECTORS
Their Work in 1938 and 1939
AMY, GEORGE
1939: The Royal Rodeo, Ride
Cowboy Ride.
BEEBE, FORD
Serials :
1938: Flash Gordon's Trip to
Mars, Red Barry.
1939: Buck Rogers, Oregon
Trail, The Phantom Creeps.
BLAKE, B. K.
1938: Cuckoorancho, Bermuda
— Islands of Paradise, Prov-
ince of Quebec.
1939: World of 1960.
BOWEN, EDWARD G.
1939: Fisherman's Luck.
BROCK, LOUIS
1938 : Major Difficulties.
1939: Blamed for a Blonde,
Ranch House Romeo, Cupid
Rides the Range, Bandits and
Ballads, The Wrong Room.
BUCQUET, HAROLD S.
1938: What Price Safety?
Come Across, They're Always
Caught.
CAHN, EDWARD
1938: Bravest of the Brave,
The Man on the Rock, Grid
Rules.
1939: Joy Scouts, Auto Antics,
Captain Spanky's Showboat,
Dad for a Day, Time Out for
Lessons, Angel of Mercy,
Giant of Norway.
CARLISLE, ROBERT
1939: Popular Science, (seven
subjects) ; Unusual Occupa-
tions (five subjects).
CEBALLOS, LARRY
1939: Rhumba Land, Snow
Follies.
CHASE, CHARLEY
1938: The Old Raid Mule,
Tassels in the Air, Half Way
to Hollywood, Ankles Away,
A Nag in the Bag, Violent is
the Word for Curly, Mutts to
You, Flat Foot Stooges.
1939: Mutiny on the Body,
Boom Goes the Groom, Static
in the Attic, Saved by the
Belle.
CHRISTIE, AL
1938: Air Parade, Wanna Be
a Model? The Miss They
Missed, Sing for Sweetie, Cute
Crime, Air Parade, Beautiful
But Dummies, Getting an Eye
ful.
CLIFTON, ELMER
Serial :
1938: Secret of Treasure Isl-
and.
CONNOLLY, BOBBY
1938: Out Where the Stars
Begin, The Littlest Diplomat,
Romance Road.
CURTIZ, MICHAEL
1939 : Sons of Liberty.
D'ARCY, HARRY
1939 : Marriage Go - Round,
Home Boner, Coat Tails.
DAVIS, EDDIE M.
1939: Circus Co-ed.
DEMING, NORMAN
1939: Overland With Kit Car-
son (S) ; Mandrake the Ma-
gician (S).
DONOVAN, FRANK
1939: Bow String, Snow Falls,
Sporting Wings, Big Leaguers,
Smoot Approach, Devil Driv-
ers, Riding the Crest, Kennel
Kings, Gun Play, Hunting
Hounds, Ice Cutters, Winter
Playground, Sky Game, Five
Times Five, Pilot Boat, Gold,
Air Waves, Soldiers of the
Sea, Television, Swinguet, The
World of Tomorrow, Zoo,
Pack Trip, Nevada Unlimited,
Acres of Plenty, American
Royal, West Wall, Information
Please (Nos. 1-5).
DOUGLAS, GORDON
1938: Bear Facts, Canned
Fishing, Came the Brawn,
Feed 'em and Weep, Hide and
Shriek, The Little Ranger, Al-
ladin's Lantern.
DREIFUSS, ARTHUR
1939 : A Night in a Music
Hall, A Night at the Troc,
Yankee Doodle Home, Mont-
martre Madness.
DUNN. HENRY K.
1939: Miracle at Lourdes, The
Story of Dr. Jenner.
EATON, JACK
1939: Iwo Boys and a Dog,
Hold Your Breath, The Sport-
ing Irish, Good Skates, Dia-
mond Dust, Death Valley
Thrills, Watch Your Step,
Hydro-Maniacs, A Desert Ad-
venture, Catching Whoppers,
A Dog is Born, Aqua Rhythm,
Judo Experts.
ENGLISH, JOHN
Serials :
1938: The Lone Ranger,
Fighting Devil Dogs, Dick
Tracy Returns, Hawk of the
Wilderness.
1939: The Lone Ranger Rides
Again, Daredevils of the Red
Circle, Dick Tracy's G-Men,
Zorro's Fighting Legion.
FAIRBANKS, JERRY
1939: Popular Science (seven
subjects) ; Unusual Occupa-
tions (five subjects).
FEHER FREDERICK
1939: The Unfinished Sym-
phony, Farewell Vienna, Blue
Danube Waltz, Merry Wives
of Windsor, Willam Tell.
FEIST, FELIX
1938: The Magician's Daugh-
ter, Follow the Arrow.
1939: Pound Foolish, Happily
Buried, Prophet Without
Honor, Double Diving, Radio
Hams, Culinary Carving, Take
a Cue, Set 'Em Up, Let's
Talk Turkey.
FENTON, LESLIE
1938: Captain Kidd's Treas-
ure, Miracle Money, The For-
gotten Step, A Criminal Is
Born.
FISCHINGER, OSKAR
1938: An Optical Poem.
353
Short Subject
Directors
FITZPATRICK,
JAMES A.
1939: A Dream of Love,
Mendelssohn's Wedding March,
Marine Circus.
FRAZIER, DEL
1939 : American Saddle Horses.
FREEMAN, MERVYN
1939: Poetry of Nature.
FRENCH, LLOYD A.
1938: Leon Navara and Or-
chestra, Enric Madriguera and
Orchestra, Freddie Rich and
Orchestra, The Juggling Fool,
Doctor Cupid, Calling All
Kids, Wedding Yells, Under
the Wire, Stocks and Blondes,
My Pop, One on the House,
Waiting Around, Hold that
Ball, Milt Britton and Or-
chestra, Mai Hallet and Or-
chestra, Henry King and Or-
chestra, Mike Riley and Or-
chestra, Carl Moore and Or-
chestra, A Necking Party,
Puppet Love, Mr. and Mrs.
Jesse Crawford.
1939: Home Cheap Home, A
Fat Chance, Seeing Spots, The
Broadway Buckaroo. Clyde
Lucas & Orchestra, Jerry Liv-
ingston & Orchestra, Satur-
day Night Swing Club, Eddie
De Lange & Orchestra, Tax
Trouble, The Crawfords at
Home, Dean of the Paste-
boards, Witness Trouble, Vote
Trouble, Ice Frolic, Swing
Styles.
GENET, IRA
1938: Mechanix Illustrated.
1939: Mechanix Illustrated
(seven subjects); Modern
Methods, For Your Conveni-
ence, The Roaming Camera.
GOODKIND, SAUL
Scnsls
1939: Buck Rogers, The
Phantom Creeps.
GILROY, BERT
1938: Kennedy's Castle.
GOODWINS. LESLIE
1938: False Roomers, His
Pest Friend, 20 Girls and a
Band, The Jitters, Stage
Fright, Ears of Experience,
Kennedy's Castle, Fool Cov-
erage, A Western Welcome.
GRAHAM, WALTER
1938 : Jitter Bugs.
HAESELER, JOHN A.
1938: Jungle Tuveniles, Xo. 2.
1939: Busy Little Bears.
HALL. ROBERT
1938: All's Fair.
HENABERY, JOSEPH
1938: Dear Old Dad, The
Bolted Door, Clyde Lucas and
Orchestra, Starlets, Got a
Match, Arnold Johnson and
Orchestra, Jan Rubini and
Orchestra, Carl Hof and Or-
chestra, Rubinoff and Orches
tra, Clyde Lucas and Orches
tra, Don Bestor and Orches-
tra, Clyde McCoy and Or
chestra.
1939: Identified, Toils of the
Law, Defying Death, Treach-
erous Waters, The Human
Bomb, High Peril, A Minute
from Death, Chained, Voodoo
Fire. Haunted House, Lives
in Peril, Three Minute Fuse,
Verge of Disaster, Blue Bar-
ron and Orchestra, Clyde Mc-
Coy & Orchestra, Larry
Clinton & Orchestra, Gadget-
eers, World's Fair, Jr., Vin-
cent Lopez & Orchestra, Sym-
phony of Swing.
HILL, ROBERT
Serial :
1938: Flash Gordon's Trip to
Mars.
HOFFMAN, JULIAN
1938: Datelines.
HORNE, JAMES W.
Serials :
1938: The Spider's Web.
1939: Flying G-Men.
JAMES, ALAN
Serials :
1938: Flaming Frontiers, Red
Barry.
1939: Scouts to the Rescue.
JASON, WILL
1938 : The Canary Comes
Across, Snow Gets in Your
Eyes, Once Over Lightly,
Penny's Picnic, Anaesthesia.
1939: A Failure at SO.
KEATON, BUSTER
1938: Life in Dometown-U.
S. A., Hollywood Handicap,
Streamlined Swing.
LAMONT, CHARLES
1938: Fiddling Around, A
Doggone Mixup.
LEE, SAMMY
1938: Men of Steel.
1939: Somewhat Secret, The
Greener Hills, R h u m b a
Rhythm, Romance of the Po-
tato.
LEMAN, JAN
1939: Elias Howe, Charles
Goodyear.
LEWIN, LOUIS
1938 : Hollywood Handicap.
LORD, DEL
1938: Termites of 1938, Man
Bites Lovebug, Wee Wee Mon-
sieur, Time Out for Trouble,
The Soul of a Heel, Healthy
Wealthy and Dumb, Jump
Chump Jump, The Mind Need-
er, Many Sappy Returns, Not
Guilty Enough. Pie a la Maid.
Home on the Rage.
1939: The Sap Takes a Wrap,
A Star is Shorn, The Chump
Takes a Hump. Now It Can
Be Sold, Pest from the West.
Rattling Romeo, Skinny the
Moocher, All American
Blondes, Teacher's Pest, The
Awful Goof, Three Little
Sew and Sews, We Want Our
Mummy, A Ducking They Did
Go, Yes — We Have Xo Bonan-
za, The Parade of Hits,
Strauss Waltzes, Songs of
Romance. Old Time Songs,
College Songs, Stephen Foster
Songs, Gypsy Songs.
McCarthy, john p.
1939: Bits of Life.
McGANN, WILLIAM
1939: Lincoln in the White
House.
MACHATY, GUSTAV
1938 : The Wrong Way Out.
MACK, ROY
1938 : The Candid Kid, Forget
Me Knots, Rise and Sing,
Postal Union, Ups and Downs,
Script Girl, Little Me, Prison-
er of Swing, Here's Your Hat,
Rainbow's End, Up in Lights,
Toot Sweet, Rise and Sing,
There Goes the Bride, Russ
Morgan and Orchestra, Benny
Meroff and Orchestra, Alibi
Time, Swing Cat's Jamboree.
1939: Sophomore Swing, Sun-
dae Serenade, Projection Room.
Rollin' in Rhythm, You're
Next to Closing, Wardrobe
Girl, A Swing Opera, Russ
Morgan and Orchestra, Will
Osborne and Orchestra, See-
ing Red, Rubinoff and Or-
chestra.
MILLER, DAVID
1938: It's in the Stars, The
Great Heart, Xostradamus, La
Savate, Penny's Party, Model-
ing for Money, Fisticuffs.
1939: Drunk Driving, Ice
Antics.
MILLER, PALMER
1939: Land of Inca Memories,
Republic of Panama, Jamaica.
Colombia, Ecuador, Peru,
Chile.
1939: Land of Inca Memories.
Republic of Panama, Jamaica,
Colombia, Ecuador, Peru,
Chile.
NAGEL, CURTIS
1939: Land of Inca Memories,
Republic of Panama, Jamaica,
Colombia, Ecuador, Peru,
Chile.
NATHAN, MANNY
1938 : Miracles of Sports.
NELSON. SAM
Serials :
1938: The Great Adventures
of Wild Bill Hickok.
1939: Overland with Kit Car-
son, Mandrake the Magician.
Shorts :
1939: Friendship Songs, Moon-
light Melodies, Songs of the
West, Crosby Hit Songs.
354
NEWMAN, JOE
1938: Man's Greatest Friend.
1939 : Money to Loan, The
Story That Couldn't Be
Printed, The Story of Alfred
Nobel.
REED, ROLAND
1938: Steel — Man's Servant.
ROBERTS, CHARLES E.
1938: The Stupor- Visor, Hunt-
ing Trouble, Beaux and Er-
rors. A Clean Sweep.
1939: Don Gone, Maid to
Order, Clock Wise, Baby Daze,
Feathered Pests, Act Your
Age, Kennedy the Great, Sage
Brush Serenade, Sales Slips,
Truth Aches.
ROSS, NAT
1938 : Stroke of Genius.
ROUSH, LESLIE M.
1938: Queens of Harmony,
From the Minuet to the Big
Apple, Oh Kay Rhythm, Him-
ber Harmonies, Listen to Lu-
cas, Hall's Holiday, Bob
Crosby and His Orchestra,
Easy on the Ice, Queens of
the Air, Moments of Charm,
Lights Action Lucas! Busse
Rhythm, Orrin Tucker and
Orchestra, Hal Kemp and Or-
chestra, A Song is Born, Mu-
sic Through the Years, The
Bike Parade, Find What's
Wrong, Rube Goldberg's Trav-
elgab.
1939: A Song is Born, Music
Through the Years, Cham-
pagne Music of Lawrence
Welk, Three Kings and a
Queen, Paramount Presents
Hoagy Carmichael, Tempo of
Tomorrow, Sweet Moments,
Artie Shaw's Class in Swing,
Ted Rio Riot and Orchestra,
Moments of Charm of 1940,
Here's Hal, Frankie Masters
and Orchestra, Paramount Pic-
torials (seven subjects).
ROWLAND, ROY
1938 : How to Figure Income
Tax, Music Made Simple, An
Evening Alone, How to Raise
a Baby, The Courtship of the
Newt, How to Read, Opening
Day, How to Watch Football,
Mental Poise.
1939: Think First, How to
Sublet, An Hour for Lunch,
Dark Magic, Home Early,
How to Eat.
SCHWALB, BEN
1938 : Snow Foolin', Feminine
Fun, Unusual Hunting, Play
Ball, Sport Stamina, Thrilling
Moments, Fistic Fun, Athletic
Youth, Demons of the Deep,
Football Giants, Ski Rhythm.
SCHWARZWALD, MILTON
1938 : Maids and Music, A
Radio Hook-Up, Latin Rhy-
thm, Somewhere in Paris, No
Sale, Skyline Review, Latin
H-Hattin, High-Jink V the
Show, Music and Flowers, Salt
Shakers, Internation Rhythms,
Carnival Show, Hockshop
Blues, Under a Gypsy Moon,
Styles and Smiles, Talent Auc-
t i o n , Venetian Moonlight,
Cafe Rendezvous.
1939: Tropical Topics, Read-
in'-Ritin' and Rhythm, Samo-
var Serenade, Hello Mama,
Arcade Varieties.
SEILER, LEWIS
1939 : Old Hickory.
SIDNEY, GEORGE
1938 : Billy Rose's Casa Ma-
nana Review, Party Fever,
Men in Fright, Football Ro-
meo, Practical Jokers.
1939: Alfalfa's Aunt, Tiny
Troubles, Duel Personalities,
Clown Princess, Cousin Wil-
bur, Dog Daze, Love on Tap,
Hollywood Hobbies.
SMITH, NOEL
1939 : Slapsie Maxie's.
SMITH, PETE
1938: Football Thrills.
1939 : Football Thrills of 1938.
SPARLING, GORDON
1938 : Kingdom for a Horse,
Music from the Stars.
STAUB, RALPH
1938: Jimmy Fidler's Person-
ality Parade.
1939 : Boy Meets Joy, Swing
Hotel.
TAYLOR. RAY
S crisis *
1938 : ' The Spider's Web,
Flaming Frontiers.
1939: Flying G-Men, Scouts
to the Rescue.
TOURNEUR. JACQUES
1938 : The Ship that Died, The
Face Behind the Mask, Tupa-
paoo, Think it Over, What
Do You Think — No. 3, Strange
Glory.
1939: Yankee Doodle Goes to
Town.
TOWNLEY. JACK
1938 : Prairie Pappas.
TREGO, CHARLES
1938: Surf Heroes.
1939: Heroes at Leisure, Ski
Birds.
VAN der VEER, WILLARD
1938 : Three on a Rope, Hot
on Ice.
von KELLER, COUNTESS
ELEANOR
1939 : Eternal Fire, Fox Hunt-
ing, Rome Symphony, Jeru-
salem, Wanderers of the Des-
ert, Patra, Arabian Bazaar,
Ruins of Palmyra and Baal-
bek, River Thames, Lebanon
Coast.
WATSON, WILLIAM
1938 : Love and Onions, Cupid
Takes a Holiday, Hi-Ho Hol-
lywood, Money on Your Life,
Cactus Caballeroes, Winner
Lose All.
WATT, NATE
1938 : Three Men in a Tip,
The Awful Tooth.
WHITBECK, FRANK
1938: The City of Little Men.
WHITE, JULES
1938: Sue My Lawyer, The
Short Subject
Directors
Nightshirt Bandit, Three Mis-
sing Links.
1939: Swing You Swingers,
Trouble Finds Andy Clyde,
Mooching Through Georgia,
Glove Slingers, Andy Clyde
Gets Spring Chicken, Calling
All Curs, Oily to Bed-Oily to
Rise, Three Sappy People.
WILBUR, CRANE
1938: Sons of the Plains,
Swingtime in the Movies, The
Declaration of Independence.
1939: Swingtime in the Mov-
ies, Quiet Please, Bill of
Rights, The Monroe Doc-
trine.
WILCOX, FRED
1938: Joaquin Murrieta.
WITNEY, WILLIAM
Serials :
1938 : The Lone Ranger, Fight-
ing Devil Dogs, Dick Tracy
Returns, Hawk of the Wilder-
ness.
1939 : The Lone Ranger Rides
Again, Daredevils of the Red
Circle, Dick Tracy's G-Men,
Zorro's Fighting Legion.
WRANGELL, BASIL
1938: The Miracles of Salt
Lake, Passing Parade — No. 1.
1939: The Day of Rest, See
Your Doctor, New Roadways,
Unseen Guardians.
WRIGHT MACK V.
Scritils i
1938: The Great Adventures
of Wild Bill Hickok.
YARBROUGH, JEAN W.
1938: A Buckaroo Broadcast,
Berth Quakes, Picketing for
Love, Russian Dressing, Music
Will Tell, Sea Melody, Ro-
mancing Along, The Dummer
Owners, The Jutters, The
Photografter, Hectic Honey-
moon.
1939: Plumb Crazy, Crime
Rave.
YORKE, EMERSON
1939: On the Spot, Dartmouth
Winter Carnival, I Pledge My
Heart, In the Hills of Old
New Hampshire, Winter Won-
derland, The Capital of the
Nation, Couriers of the Na-
tion, Labor of the Nation,
Business Pulse of the Nation,
Social Security for the Na-
tion, The Ninth State, New
Hampshire.
ZINNEMANN, FRED
1938: That Mothers Might
Live, Friend Indeed, The
Story of Dr. Carver, Track-
ing the Sleeping Death, They
Live Again.
1939: While America Sleeps.
Help Wanted, The Ash Can
Fleet, Weather Wizards, One
Against the World, Forgot-
ten Victory.
355
JO SWERLING
UNDER CONTRACT
SAMUEL GOLDWYN, INC.
JOHN TWIST
Screen Plays
"THE GREAT MAN VOTES"
"PACIFIC LINER"
"THREE SONS"
"RENO"
"TWELVE CROWDED HOURS"
Management
SMALL COMPANY
356
WRITERS
SECTION
Writers of original stories and screenplays for features released during 1938
and 1939 are included in the following pages with pictures credited to each.
AUTHORS
Their Work in 1938 and 1939
Credits on pictures released prior to 1938 may be had from previous
editions of the Year Book or from the Film Daily information service.
ADAMS, FRED R.
1938 : The Cowboy and the
Lady.
ADAMSON, VICTOR
1939: Roll Wagons Roll.
ADLER, FELIX
1938: Blockheads.
AHEARN, THOMAS
1938: Freshman Year, Swing
that Cheer.
AINSLEE, MARIAN
1938: Carefree.
AKINS, ZOE
1938: The Toy Wife.
1939: The Old Maid.
ALLHOFF, FRED
1938: I Am the Law.
ALTEMUS, HENRY
1938: Crime Takes a Holiday.
ALTSCHULER, ALICE
1939: Woman Doctor, Mick-
ey the Kid.
ANDERSON, MAXWELL
1939: The Private Lives of
Elizabeth and Essex.
ANDREWS, ROBERT D.
1938: Gangster's Boy.
1939: I Was a Convict, Streets
of New York.
ANTHONY, JOSEPH
1939 : The Spellbinder.
ANTHONY, STUART
1938: Tip-Off Girls, Illegal
Traffic.
ARENT, ARTHUR
1939: One Third of a Nation.
ASBURY, HERBERT
1938 : Gangs of New York.
ASHELBE, DETECTIVE
1938: Algiers.
AUSTIN, EDWARD R.
1939: Death Goes North.
BAHR, HERMANN
1938 : Romance in the Dark.
BAKER, GRAHAM
1939: Eternally Yours.
BALDWIN, FAITH
1938 : Men Are Such Fools,
Comet Over Broadway.
BANNING, MARGARET C.
1938 : Woman Against Wom-
an.
BARRINGER. BARRY
1938: Held for Ransom.
BARRY, PHILIP
1938: Holiday, Spring Mad-
ness.
BARRY, TOM
1938: My Bill.
BARTLETT, CY
1938: Sergeant Murphy, Co-
coanut Grove.
1939: The Amazing Mr. Wil-
liams.
BAUM, L. FRANK
1939: The Wizard of Oz.
BEAHAN, CHARLES
1938 : Dynamite Delaney.
357
BEAUMONT. GERALD
1938 : Reckless Living.
BECK, GEORGE
1938: Everybody's Doing It.
BEDFORD-JONES, H.
1938: Garden of the Moon.
BEEBE, FORD
1939: Riders of Black River,
Stranger from Texas.
BEIN, ALBERT
1939: Boy Slaves.
BELASCO, DAVID
1938 : Girl of the Golden West.
BELDEN. CHARLES S.
1938 : Charlie Chan in Hono-
lulu.
BELGARD, ARNOLD
1938: Blockheads.
1939: Zenobia.
BENEFIELD, BARRY
1939: Chicken Wagon Family.
BENET, STEPHEN V.
1938: Love Honor and Be-
have.
BENNETT, DOROTHY
1939: Daughters Courageous.
BENNETT, ROBERT
CHALMERS
1938: When G-Men Step In.
BERCOVICI, LEONARDO
1938 : Prison Train, Racket
Busters.
1939 : Chasing Danger.
BERESFORD, HARRY
1938 : Long Shot.
Authors' Work
BERG, LOUIS
1938 : Prison Nurse.
BERKELEY, CAPT.
REGINALD
1939: Nurse Edith Cavell.
BERNSTEIN, I.
1938: City Streets.
BERTON, PIERRE
1939: Zaza.
BIBERMAN, HERBERT
1939: King of Chinatown.
BIGELOW, JOE
1938 : Annabella Takes a Tour.
BILSON, GEORGE
1938: Exposed.
BINYON, CLAUDE
1938: Sing You Sinners.
BIRINSKI, LEO
1939: Full Confession.
BIRO, LAJOS
1938: The Divorce of Lady
X.
1939 : Hotel Imperial.
BLANDING, DON
1938: Hawaii Calls.
BLAUSTEIN, JULIAN
1939: For Love or Money.
BLOCH, BERTRAM
1939: Dark Victory.
BLOOM, WILLIAM
1938: Flight into Nowhere.
BOGLE, CHARLES
1939: You Can't Cheat an
Honest Man.
BOHEM, ENDRE
1938: Lord Jeff, Little Orphan
Annie.
1939: Four Girls in White,
Blackmail, Television Spy.
BOOTH, CHARLES
1939: The Magnificent Fraud.
BOOTHE, CLARE
1939: The Women.
BORDEN, MATTHEW
1938: Prison Train.
BORETZ, ALLAN
1938: Room Service.
BRADSHAW. GEORGE
1939: The Lady and the Mob,
Second Fiddle.
BRAND, MAX
1938: Young Dr. Kildare.
1939: Calling Dr. Kildare,
Secret of Dr. Kildare, Destry
Rides Again.
BRAUS, MORTIMER
1938: Women in Prison, Three
Loves Has Nancy.
1939: Laugh It Off.
BREN, J. ROBERT
1939: Parents on Trial.
BRENNAN, FREDERICK H.
1938: Big Broadcast of 1938,
College Swing.
BRESLOW, LOU
1938: Five of a Kind.
1939 : Pack Up Your Troubles.
BREUER, BESSIE
1939: In Name Only.
BREWER, GEORGE, JR.
1939: Dark Victory.
BRICKER, GEORGE
1938: Accidents Will Happen.
1939: They Made Her a Spy,
Mr. Moto in Danger Island,
Missing Daughters.
BRINIG, MYRON
1938: The Sisters.
BROCKWAY, W. W.
1939: Everybody's Hobby.
BROMFIELD, LOUIS
1939 : The Rains Came.
BRONTE, EMILY
1939: Wuthering Heights.
BROOKS, MATT
1938 : Radio City Revels.
BROWN, CHARLES M.
1939: Irish Luck.
BROWN, G. CARLETON
1938: Gambling Ship.
BROWN, KARL
1938: Gangster's Boy.
BROWN, ROLAND
1938 : Angels with Dirty
Faces.
1939: The Lady's from Ken-
tucky.
WALLACE SULLIVAN
Original Stories
"THE BIG GUY"*
(Universal)
"FOUR'S A CROWD"
(Warner)
"LIBELED LADY"
(M-G-M)
"THE MIRACLE MILE" "PARTY LEADER"
"SECOND ACT CURTAIN" "THIS IS A MUST"
"Q.E.D." "WILD BOYS OF THE ROAD"
"PICTURE SNATCHER"
In collaboration
358
BROWNE, BARTON
1938: Garden of the Moon.
CAESAR, IRVING
1938: Straight Place and
Show.
Authors9 Work
BRUCE, GEORGE
1938: The Crowd Roars, The
Duke of West Point.
1939 : King of the Turf, Navy
Xurse, Kit Carson, South of
Pago Pago.
BRUCKMAN, CLYDE
1938: Professor Beware.
BRUSH, KATHARINE
1938: Listen Darling.
1939: Honeymoon in Bali.
BUCHANAN, WILLIAM
1938: Silks and Saddles.
BUCKINGHAM, TOM
1939: Spirit of Culver.
BUCKLEY, HAROLD
1938 : Sinners in Paradise.
1939: Nick Carter— Master De-
tective.
BUCKNALL, NATHALIE
1939: Four Girls in White.
BUCKNER, ROBERT
1939: Dodge City, Espionage
Agent.
BUFFI NGTON, ADELE B.
1938: Prison Nurse, Tenth
Avenue Kid.
BURBRIDGE, BETTY
1938: The Purple Vigilantes,
Riders of the Black Hills,
Gold Mine in the Sky, Prairie
Moon, Pals of the Saddle.
1939: Three Texas Steers,
Rovin' Tumbleweeds.
BURKE, MARCELLA
1938: Mad About Music.
BURNET, DANA
1938 : The Shopworn Angel.
1939: The Great Command-
ment.
BURNETT, FRANCES H.
1939: The Little Princess.
BURNETT, W. R.
1939 : King of the Underworld.
BURROUGHS, EDGAR RICE
1938: Tarzan's Revenge, Tar-
zan and the Green Goddess.
BURTON, VAL
1938: Lord Jeff.
BUS-FEKETE, LADISLAUS
1938 : The Baroness and the
Butler.
BUSCH, NIVEN
1938 : In Old Chicago.
BUTLER, DAVID
1939: East Side of Heaven,
That's Right-You're Wrong.
BUTLER, FRANK
1939: Island of Lost Men.
CADY, JERRY
1938: Island in the Sky.
1939: Winner Take All.
CAESAR, ARTHUR
1939: The Star Maker.
CAIN, JAMES M.
1939: Wife, Husband and
Friend, When Tomorrow
Comes.
CALLAGHAN, GEORGE
1938: Long Shot.
CAMP, WADSWORTH
1939: The House of Fear.
CAMPBELL, SIR MALCOLM
1939 : Burn 'Em Up O'Con-
nor.
CARR, ALBERT
1938: Women Are Like That.
CARROLL, RICHARD
1939: Five Came Back.
CARTER, HARRISON
1939 : Calling All Marines.
CASEY, ROSEMARY
1938: Fools for Scandal.
CASPARY, VERA
1938: Scandal Street, Service
de Luxe.
CASTLE, IRENE
1939: The Story of Vernon
and Irene Castle.
CAVEN. TAYLOR
1939: Should Husbands Work?
CAVETT, FRANK
1939: Rulers of the Sea.
CHAPIN, ROBERT
1939: Blondie Takes a Vaca-
tion, Blondie Brings Up Baby.
CHARTERIS, LESLIE
1938: The Saint in New York.
1939 : The Saint Strikes Back.
The Saint in London.
CHASE, BORDEN
1938: The Devil's Party.
CHASE, MARY COYLE
1939: Sorority House.
CLARKE, DONALD
HENDERSON
1939: The Housekeeper's
Daughter.
CLAXTON, OLIVER
1939: Lucky Night.
CLIFFORD, CHARLES L.
1938: Army Girl.
1939: The Real Glory.
COBB, IRVIN S.
1939 : Our Leading Citizen.
COCKRELL, FRANCIS M.
1938: Professor Beware.
COFFEE, LENORE
1939: Good Girls Go To Paris.
COHAN, GEORGE M.
1939 : Invisible Quarterback.
COHEN, ALBERT J.
1938: Invisible Enemy.
COHEN, BENNETT
1938: Female Fugitive, South
of Arizona.
1939: West of Santa Fe, The
Renegade Ranger.
COHEN, LESTER
1939 : Three Sons.
COLDEWAY. ANTHONY
1939: Pacific Liner, Smashing
the Money Ring.
COLE, LESTER
1938: The Crime of Dr. Hal-
let, The Jury's Secret.
1939: I Stole a Million.
COLLIER, WILLIAM, SR.
1938 : Going Places.
COLLINS, RICHARD
1939: Rulers of the Sea.
COLLISON, WILSON
1938: There's Always a Worn
an, There's That Woman
Again, The Mad Miss Man-
ton.
1939 : Maisie.
CONDON, CHARLES
1938: The Daredevil Drivers.
CONNOLLY, MYLES
1938 : Wives Under Suspicion.
CONSELMAN, WILLIAM
1939: That's Right-You're
Wrong.
COOPER, OLIVE
1938 : Cocoanut Grove.
1939 : She Married a Cop.
COOPER, WILLIS
1938 : Mr. Moto Takes a
Chance, Son of Frankenstein.
CORLISS, ALLENE
1938 : I Met My Love Again.
CORRIGAN, LLOYD
1938 : Touchdown Army, Cam-
pus Confessions.
COSGRIFF, JAMES
1938 : Roaring Timber.
COWEN. WILLIAM JOYCE
1938: Blind Alibi.
1939 : Good Girls Go To Paris.
COXE, GEORGE HARMON
1938: Arsene Lupin Returns.
CRAM, MILDRED
1939: Love Affair.
CRONIN, A. J.
1938: The Citadel.
CROUSE, RUSSEL
1938: Artists and Models
Abroad.
CROY, HOMER
1938: Down on the Farm.
1939: Down on the Farm, I'm
from Missouri.
CUMMINGS, HUGH
1939: Sweepstakes Winner.
CUNNINGHAM. JACK
1938 : Professor Beware, The
Arkansas Traveler.
CURRAN, CHARLES
1939: Heroes in Blue.
CURWOOD, JAMES OLIVER
1938 : Call of the Yukon.
359
Authors9 Worh
DAVIS, FORREST
1938: Smashing the Rackets.
DAVIS, OWEN, SR.
1938: Jezebel.
DAY, PRICE
1939: The Lady and the Mob.
DE GRESAC, FRED
1938 : Sweethearts.
de KRUIF, PAUL
1938: Yellow Jack.
DE LEON, WALTER
1939: Zenobia.
DELF, HARRY
1939 : Stop, Look and Love.
DELL, FLOYD
1939: Little Accident.
DE MILLE, WILLIAM
1939 : Captain Fury.
DE MOND. ALBERT
1938 : Blondes at Work, Little
Miss Thoroughbred, Torchy
Gets Her Man.
1939: Sweepstakes Winner.
DENISON, MURIEL
1939: Susannah of the Moun-
ties.
DEVAL, JACQUES
1938: Say It in French.
DE WOLF, KAREN
1939: Saga of Death Valley,
Blondie Brings Up Baby,
Blondie Takes a Vacation.
DICKENS, CHARLES
1938: A Christmas Carol.
DICKEY, PAUL
1938: Crashing Hollywood.
DILTZ, CHARLES
1938: Topa Topa.
DINNEEN, JOSEPH F.
1939: Let Us Live.
DIX, BEULAH MARIE
1939: They Made Me a
Criminal.
DION, PETER
1939: Down the Wvoming
Trail.
DOTY, DOUGLAS
1938: Always Goodbye.
DOUGLAS. LLOYD
1938: White Banners.
1939: Disputed Passage.
DOYLE, A. CONAN
1939: The Hound of the Bas-
kervilles.
DRAKE. OLIVER
1938: The Purple Vigilantes,
Wild Horse Rodeo. Gun Law.
1939: Racketeers of the Range,
The Fighting Gringo.
DREHER, CARL
1938 : The Crime of Dr. Hal-
let.
DUFFY, ALBERT
1938 : Hunted Men.
DUMAS, ALEXANDRE
1939: The Three Musketeers,
The Man in the Iron Mask.
DUNCAN, SAM
1938 : Suez.
EDEN, ROB
1938: I Demand Payment.
EDMONDS, WALTER D.
1939: Drums Along the Mo-
hawk.
EDWARDS, EDGAR
1938 : Woman Against the
World.
EDWARDS, JAMES G.
1939: Mystery of the White
Room.
EDWARDS, WESTON
1938 : Six Shootin' Sheriff.
EGYED, ZOLTAN
1938: Dramatic School.
ELISCU, EDWARD
1938: Little Tough Guys in
Society.
ELKINS. SAUL
1938: Tarnished Angel.
1939: Off the Record.
ELLIS, EDITH
1938: Rich Man-Poor Girl.
ELLIS, ROBERT
1938 : Rascals, A Trip to Paris.
Road Demon.
1939: The Escape.
EMERY, GILBERT
1938: Always Goodbye.
EMMETT, ROBERT
1938 : The Painted Trail, Man's
Country, The Mexicali Kid,
Gun Packer, Where the Buf-
falo Roam.
1939: Wild Horse Canyon,
Overland Mail.
ENDORE, GUY
1938 : Carefree.
ENGLISH, RICHARD
1938: The Higgins Family.
ERSKINE, LAURIE Y.
1939: Crashing Thru.
ETTLINGER, DON
1938 : Sally Irene and Mary.
My Lucky Star, Hold that
Co ed.
FALKENSTEIN, FRITZ
1938: Breaking the Ice.
FALLON, THOMAS
1939: The House of Fear.
FAULKNER, VIRGINIA
1939: Bridal Suite.
FAUST, FREDERICK
1938: Young Dr. Kildare.
FAY, FRANK
1938: Meet the Mayor.
FAYE, RANDALL
1938: This Green Hill, Mr.
Stringfellow Says No, That
Crucial Light.
FEINS, BERNARD
1939 : For Love or Money.
FELTON. EARL
1938: The Night Hawk, Or-
phans of the Street, Extortion.
FENTON, FRANKLYN
1938: International Settlement,
Keep Smiling, Down on the
Farm.
1939: Down on the Farm.
FERBER. EDNA
1939: No Place to Go.
FESSIER. MICHAEL
1939: Wings of the Xavy.
FIELDS, DOROTHY
1938: Joy of Living.
FIELDS, HERBERT
1938: Joy of Living.
1939: Honolulu.
FIELDS. JOSEPH A.
1939: Mexican Spitfire.
FINKLEHOFFE, FRED F.
1938: Brother Rat.
FINN, JONATHAN
1939: You Can't Get Away
With Murder, Angels Wash
Their Faces.
FISHER, STEVE
1938: Nurse from Brooklyn.
1939: Navy Secrets.
FITZ-RICHARD, ARTHUR
1939: The Sun Never Sets.
FLANAGAN, E. J.
1938: The Kid Comes Back.
FLAVIN, MARTIN
1938: Penitentiary.
FLOURNOY, RICHARD
1938: Wide Open Faces.
1939: Beware Spooks!, Blondie
Brings Up Baby.
FODOR. LADISLAUS
1938: Wives Under Suspicion.
FOOTE, BRADBURY
1939: Young Tom Edison,
Edison the Man.
FOOTE, JOHN TAINTOR
1938: Kentucky.
1939: Broadway Serenade.
FORD, COREY
1938: Start Cheering.
1939: Remember?
FORT, GARRETT
1939: Twelve Crowded Hours,
Panama Lady, Zero Hour.
FOSTER. LEWIS
1938: Illegal Traffic, Sons of
the Legion.
1939: Mr. Smith Goes to
Washington, Million Dollar
Legs.
FOSTER, NORMAN
1938: Mr. Moto Takes a
Chance.
1939: Mr. Moto's Last Warn-
ing.
FOWLER, GENE
1939: Some Like It Hot.
FRANCIS, OWEN
1939: Pack Up Your Troubles.
FRANK, BRUNO
1938: Storm in a Teacup.
360
FRANK, PAUL
1938: Josette.
GORDON, HARRY
1939: El Diablo Rides.
Authors9 Worh
FRANKLIN, DEAN
1939: Code of the Secret Ser-
vice.
FRANKLIN, EDGAR
1938: Rich Man —Poor Girl.
FRANKLIN, PAUL
1938: Rhythm of the Saddle.
1939: Blue Montana Skies,
Spoilers of the Range.
FRASER, GEORGE
1938: Josette.
FUCHS, DANIEL
1939: The Day the Bookies
Wept.
FULLER, SAM
1938: Gangs of New York,
Adventure in Sahara.
1939: Federal Man-Hunt.
FUTTER, WALTER
1938 : Dark Sands.
GALLICO, PAUL
1938 : No Time to Marry.
GAMET, KENNETH
1938: Broadway Musketeers.
GARNETT, TAY
1938: Trade Winds.
1939: World Cruise.
GARTH, DAVID
1938: Four Men and a Prayer.
GATES, HARVEY
1939: Meet Dr. Christian.
GATZERT. NATE
1938: Phantom Gold, Pioneer
Trail.
GEIGER, MIRIAM
1939: Woman Doctor.
GELSEY, ERWIN
1938 : Campus Confessions,
Touchdown Army.
GEORGE, ZENA
1938: Safety in Numbers.
GERAGHTY, GERALD
1938: Her Jungle Love, Come
on Rangers.
1939: In Old Caliente, In Old
Monterey.
GERAGHTY, MAURICE
1938: Law of the Plains.
GILBERT & SULLIVAN
1939: The Mikado.
GILLIATT, SIDNEY
1938: A Yank at Oxford.
GITTENS, WYNDHAM
1938: Mars Attacks the World.
GLASMON, KUBEC
1938 : Saleslady.
GLEASON, JAMES
1938: Goodbye Broadway.
GOLDSMITH, CLIFFORD
1939: What a Life.
GOODRICH, FRANCES
1938 : Thanks for the Memory.
GORDON. HOMER KING
1939: In Old Montana.
GORDON, LEON
1938: A Yank at Oxford.
GOULD, WALLY
1938 : Little Miss Fix-it, Pay
Off and Sing.
GRANET, BERT
1938: Annabella Takes a Tour.
GRANT, JAMES EDWARD
1938: We're Going to He
Rich.
GRANT, MARION
1938: Hunted Men.
GRANT, MAXWELL
1938: International Crime.
GRANT, MORTON
1938: She Loved a Fireman.
GRAYSON, CHARLES
1938: Personal Secretary.
1939: Newsboy's Home, Un-
expected Father.
GREEN, GEORGE
1939: Spirit of Culver.
GREEN, HOWARD J.
1938: The House of Mystery,
Making the Headlines.
GREENE, EVE
1939: Little Accident.
GREY, JOHN
1939: Hawaiian Nights.
GREY. ZANE
1938 : Born to the West, Mys-
terious Rider.
1939: Heritage of the Desert,
Rangle River.
GREGORY, JADSSON
1938: Sudden Bill Dorn.
GRIFFIN, ELEANORE
1938: Boys Town.
1939: St. Louis Blues, Streets
of Missing Men.
GROSSMAN, F. MAURY
1938: Freshman Year, Swing
That Cheer.
GRUBER, FRANK
1939 : Death of a Champion.
GRUN, BERNARD
1939: Balalaika.
GUIHAN, FRANCES
1938 : Frontier Scout.
HACKETT, ALBERT
1938: Thanks for the Memory.
HAISLIP, HARVEY
1939: Thunder Afloat.
HALEY, EARL
1939 : Gentleman from Arizona.
HALL, JAMES
1939: These Glamour Girls.
HALL, MANLEY P.
1938: When Were You Born?
HALL, NORMAN S.
1938: Mars Attacks the World.
1939: Blue Montana Skies.
HALPERIN, EDWARD
1939: Yukon Flight, Danger
Ahead, Phantom Pilot, Land's
End, Blonde Slave, Code of
the Cactus.
HAMILTON, HARRY
1939 : Main Stret Lawyer.
HAMILTON, NANCY
1938 : Fools for Scandal.
HAMMETT, DASHIELL
1939: Another Thin Man.
HAMMOND, LEN
1938: Too Hot to Handle.
HAPER, PAT
1938 : Western Jamboree.
HARDING, BERTITO
1939: Juarez.
HARDY, STUART
1938: Forbidden Valley.
HARRIS, CRAMPTON
1938 : Professor Beware.
HARRIS, RAY
1939 : The Story of Alexan-
der Graham Bell.
HART, LORENZ
1939 : On Your Toes, Babes
in Arms.
HART, MOSS
1938: You Can't Take It With
You.
HARTMANN, EDMUND L.
1939: Beauty for the Asking.
HAVILAND-TAYLOR,
KATHARINE
1938: A Man to Remember.
HAWKEY, ROCK
1938: Flying Fists.
HAWKS, HOWARD
1939: Only Angels Have
Wings, Indianapolis Speed-
way.
HAYCOX, ERNEST
1939 : Stagecoach, Union Pa-
cific.
HAYES, WILLIAM E.
1938: The Black Doll.
HAYWARD, LILLIE
1938 : Sons of the Legion.
HECIIT BEN
1938: The Goldwyn Follies.
1939: Let Freedom Ring, It's
a Wonderful World. Some Like
It Hot, Lady of the Tropics.
HEILBRON, ADELAIDE
1938 : It's All Yours.
HELLINGER, MARK
1938: Walking Down Broad-
way.
1939: The Roaring Twenties.
HELLMAN, SAM
1939 : Stanley and Livingstone.
HERBERT, F. HUGH
1938 : That Certain Age, The
Road to Reno.
361
Xitthors' Work
HERRICK, KIMBALL
1938: Trouble at Midnight.
HERSHEY, BURNET
1939: Inside Information.
HIGGINS, JOHN C.
1939: They All Come Out.
HILL, NORMAN S.
1939: Boy's Reformatory.
HILLMAN, GORDON M.
1939: The Great Man Votes,
Here I Am a Stranger.
HILLYER, LAMBERT
1938: Highway Patrol.
1939: Parents on Trial.
HILTON, JAMES
1939: Goodbye Mr. Chips, We
Are Not Alone.
HOERL, ARTHUR
1938: California Frontier, Ci-
pher Bureau, Law of the
Texan.
1939: Ride 'Em Cowgirl,
Panama Patrol.
HOFFMAN, CHARLES
1938: The Affairs of Annabel.
1939: Pride of the Navy, It
Could Happen to You.
HOFFMAN, JOSEPH
1938: Man Hunters of the
Caribbean.
1939: Pride of the Navy,
Quick Millions.
HOFFMAN, RENAUD
1938: Wanted by the Police.
1939: Our Neighbors the Car-
ters.
HOGAN, MICHAEL
1938: A Yank at Oxford.
HOLMES, BEN
1938 : I'm From the City.
HOLMES, BROWN
1939: Hollywood Cavalcade.
HOOVER, J. EDGAR
1939: Persons in Hiding, Un
dercover Doctor.
HORMAN, ARTHUR
1938: When G-Men Step In,
Double Danger, Quick Money.
1939: My Son is a Criminal.
HORMAN, CHARLES T.
1939: Behind Prison Gates.
HORWIN, JERRY
1938: Gold Diggers in Paris.
1939: Rose of Washington
Square, The Sun Never Sets.
HOUGH, EMERSON
1938: The Texans.
HOUSER, LIONEL
1938 : Condemned Women, Sky
Giant, Smashing the Rackets.
1939: They Made Her a Spy,
Girl from Mexico.
HOUSTON, NORMAN
1938: Battle of Broadway,
Crashin' Thru Danger.
1939: In Old Caliente.
HOWARD, SIDNEY
1938: Yellow Jack.
HOWARD, WILLIAM K.
1939: Back Door to Heaven.
HUBBARD, LUCIEN
1939: The Man Who Dared.
HUGHES, LANGSTON
1939: Way Down South.
HUGO, VICTOR
1939: Hunchback of Notre
Dame.
HUNYADY, SANDOR
1939: The Girl Downstairs.
HURST, FANNIE
1938: Four Daughters.
1939: Four Wives.
HYLAND, FRANCES
1938: The Arizona Wildcat.
INGSTER, BORIS
1938: Happy Landing.
JACKSON, FELIX
1938 : The Rage of Paris.
1939: Three Smart Girls
Grow Up, Bachelor Mother.
JACOBS, HARRISON
1938 : I Am a Criminal.
JAMES, EDWARD
1938: Young Fugitives.
JAMIESON, HAZEL
1939 : Reform School.
JARRETT, DAN
1938: Hawaiian Buckaroo,
Rawhide, Flirting with Fate.
JARRICO, PAUL
1938: The Little Adventuress.
JENKINS, WILL
1939: Torchy Blane in China-
town.
JENNINGS, TALBOT
1939: Rulers of the Sea.
JEROME, MARK
1939: Invitation to Happiness.
JEVNE, JACK
1939: Captain Fury.
JOHNSON, NUNNALLY
1939: Jesse James.
JOHNSON, R. L.
1939: Taming of the West.
JOHNSON, RAYMOND
1939: In Old Montana.
JONES. GROVER
1939 : Captain Fury, Unmar-
ried.
JORDAN, ANNE
1938: Night Spot.
KAESTNER, ERICH
1938: Paradise for Three.
KAHN. GORDON
1938: Tenth Avenue Kid.
1939: Newsboy's Home, Ex-
Champ.
KAHN, RICHARD C.
1939: The Bronze Buckaroo,
Bad Boy.
KATZ, LEE
1939: Blackwell's Island, Code
of the Secret Service, Kid
Nightingale.
KAUFMAN, GEORGE S.
1938: You Can't Take It with
You.
1939: No Place to Go.
KEATON. BUSTER
1939: Quick Millions.
KEENE, CAROLYN
1938: Nancy Drew — Detective.
KELLAND, CLARENCE B.
1938 : Mr. Boggs Steps Out.
KELLINO PAMELA
1939: I Met a Murderer.
KELLY, BURT
1938: Swing Sister Swing.
KELLY, MARK
1938 : Mr. Doodle Kicks Off.
KELSO, EDMUND
1938: Panamint's Bad Man,
Overland Stage Raiders.
1939: Roll Wagons Roll.
KENDRICK, BAYARD
1938: The Last Express.
KENT, ROBERT E.
1938 : All-American Sweet-
heart, Who Killed Gail Pres
ton? Juvenile Court.
KENYON, CHARLES
1938: The Road to Reno.
KING, HUGH
1938: The Storm.
1939: Flight at Midnight.
KIPLING, RUDYARD
1939: Gunga Din.
1939: The Light That Failed.
KLEIN, WALLY
1938: Hard to Get.
KLINE, WALLY
1939: The Oklahoma Kid.
362
KOBER. ARTHUR
1938: Having Wonderful Time.
KOBLER, JOHN
1939: The Forgotten Woman.
KOHNER, FREDERICK
1938 : Mad About Music.
KRAFFT, JOHN W.
1938: Telephone Operator,
Slander House, Rebellious
Daughters.
KRAIKE, MICHEL
1939: Call a Messenger.
KRALY, HANS
1938: A Desperate Adventure.
1939: Broadway Serenade.
KRASNA, NORMAN
1938: The First Hundred
Years, You and Me.
KURNITZ, HARRY
1939: Fast and Loose.
KYNE, PETER B.
1938: Valley of the Giants.
LAIDLAW, BETTY
1938: Personal Secretary.
LAIT, JACK. JR.
1938: Kentucky Moonshine.
LAKE, STUART N.
1939: Frontier Marshal.
LANGDON, HARRY
1938 : Blockheads.
1939: The Flying Deuces.
LARDNER, RING
1939: Cowboy Quarterback.
LARKIN, JOHN
1939: Rose of Washington
Square, News is Made at
Night, Charlie Chan at Treas-
ure Island.
LATIMER, JONATHAN
1938: Lady in the Morgue,
The Last Warning, The West-
land Case.
LAWES, LEWIS E.
1938 : Over the Wall.
1939: You Can't Get Away
With Murder.
LAWSON, JOHN HOWARD
1938 : Blockade.
LE BLANC, MAURICE
1938 : Arsene Lupin Returns.
LEE, CONNIE
1939: Mexicali Rose, Moun-
tain Rhythm.
LEE, FANNY HEASLIP
1938: Man-Proof.
LEE, ROBERT N.
1939: Tower of London.
LEHMAN, GLADYS
1938 : There's That Woman
Again.
LEINSTER, MURRAY
1939 : Torchy Blane in China-
town.
LENGYL, MELCHIOR
1939: Ninotchka.
LEO, MAURICE
1938: Gold Diggers in Paris.
LINDSAY. HOWARD
1938: A Slight Case of Mur-
der, Artists and Models
Abroad.
LIPTON, LEW
1939: Broadway Serenade.
LITTLETON, SCOTT
1939: Torchy Plays with
Dynamite.
LIVELY. ROBERT
1938: Personal Secretary.
1939: The Great Victor Her-
bert.
LIVELY, WILLIAM
1939: Federal Man-Hunt.
LOEB, LEE
1938: Three Loves Has
Nancy.
1939: Forged Passport, Laugh
It Off.
LOGAN, HELEN
1938 : Rsacals, A Trip to Paris,
Road Demon.
1939 : The Escape.
LOGUE, CHARLES
1938 : The Marines Are Here.
LONDON, JACK
1939: Romance of the Red-
woods, Wolf Call.
LONDON, PAULINE
1939: Tell No Tales.
LONG, HAL
1939: Stanley and Livingstone.
LOWELL, JAMES B.
1939 : They Asked for It.
LYNDON, BARRE
1938 : The Amazing Dr. Clit-
terhouse.
LYNN, HILARY
1939 : Hollywood Cavalcade.
MacDONALD, PHILIP
1939: Mr. Moto's Last Warn-
ing.
McCAREY, LEO
1938: The Cowboy and the
Lady.
1939: Love Affair.
McCarthy, john
1939 : Conspiracy.
McCarthy, justin h.
1938: If I Were King.
363
Authors9 Work
McCONVILLE, BERNARD
1938: Call the Mesquiteers,
The Old Barn Dance, Riders
of the Black Hills, Man from
Music Mountain, Overland
Stage Raiders.
McCOY, HORACE
1938 : King of the Newsboys.
McCULLEY, JOHNSTON
1938: Rose of the Rio Grande.
McEVOY, J. P.
1938: Artists and Models
Abroad.
McGOWAN, DORRELL
1938: Under Western Stars,
Down in Arkansaw.
1939: Smashing the Spy Ring.
My Wife's Relatives, Rovin'
Tumbleweeds, Missing Evi-
dence, South of the Border.
McGOWAN, ROBERT F.
1938: Sons of the Legion.
McGOWAN, STUART E.
1938: Under Western Stars,
Down in Arkansaw.
1939 : Rovin' Tumbleweeds,
Missing Evidence, Smashing
the Spy Ring, My Wife's Rela-
tives, South of the Border.
McGUINNESS, JAMES K.
1938: Arsene Lupin Returns.
McGUIRE, WILLIAM
ANTHONY
1939: Risky Business. The
Honeymoon's Over, Ziegfeld
Girl.
McLEOD, NORMAN Z.
1939 : Remember?
McNEILE, H. C. (Sapper)
1938: Bulldog Drummond's
Peril, Bulldog Drummond in
Africa.
1939: Arrest Bulldog Drum-
mond, Bulldog Drummond's
Secret Police, Bulldog Drum-
mond's Bride.
McNUTT, PATTERSON
1938 : Vacation from Love.
McNUTT, WILLIAM
SLAVENS
1939: Unmarried.
McPHERSON, HARRY
1938: Starlight Over Texas.
MACAULEY, RICHARD
1938: Gold Diggers in Paris.
MAKIN, W. J.
1939: The Return of Dr. X..
MANHEIM, EMANUEL
1938: Gambling Ship, Love
on Patrol.
Authors9 Worh
MANKIEWICZ. HERMAN J.
1939: It's a Wonderful World.
MANNEY, DOROTHY
1938 : Safety in Numbers.
MANNING, BRUCE
1938: The Rage of Paris, Ser-
vice de Luxe.
1939: Three Smart Girls Grow-
Up.
MAPES. VICTOR
1938 : Going Places.
MARKS, CLARENCE
1939: Fighting Thoroughbreds,
Spirit of Culver.
MARQUAND, J. P.
1938: Mr. Moto's Gamble,
Mysterious Mr. Moto of Dev-
il's Island.
1939: Mr. Moto in Danger
Island.
MASON, A. E. W.
1938: Drums.
MASON. GRACE S.
1939: Honeymoon in Bali.
MASON. JAMES
1939: I Met a Murderer.
MAYER, EDWIN JUSTUS
1939: Exile Express, Midnight.
MAXWELL, ELSA
1939 : Hotel for Women.
MENARD, WILMON
1939: 6,000 Enemies.
MERCADER, G. F.
1938: Fury Below.
MERLIN, MILTON
1939: The Kid from Texas.
MERTEN, ROGER
1939 : Down the Wyoming
Trail, Roll Wagons Roll.
MILES, WILLIAM
1938: The Headleys at Home.
MILHAUSER, BERTRAM
1938: They Made Me a
Criminal.
1939: Nick Carter — Master De-
tective.
MILHOLLAND, RAY
1938: Submarine Patrol.
MILLER, F. E.
1939: Harlem Rides the Range.
MILLER, SETON I.
1938: The Adventures of Rob-
in Hood.
MITCHELL. MARGARET
1939: Gone With the Wind.
MITCHELL, THOMAS
1939 : Little Accident.
MOFFITT, JEFF
1938: Always in Trouble.
MOFFITT, JOHN C.
1938: Ride a Crooked Mile.
MOLANDER, GUSTAV
1939: Intermezzo — A Love
Story.
MONDAINI, G.
1938: I'll Give a Million.
MONKS, JOHN, JR.
1938 : Brother Rat.
MONTAIGUE, JOSEF
1939: Range War.
MOONEY, MARTIN
1938: Squadron of Honor,
Special Agent. Bullets or
Ballots, Exclusive Story.
1939 : Inside Information, Mu-
tiny in the Big House.
MOORE, DANIEL
1938 : The Storm.
1939: Flight at Midnight.
MOORE, LOUIS
1939: Boy Friend.
MORGAN, BYRON
1939: The Kid from Texas.
MORROW, HONORE
1938: Of Human Hearts.
MORSE, N. BREWSTER
1938: Breaking the Ice.
MOWERY, WILLIAM B.
1938: Heart of the North.
MULFORD, CLARENCE E.
1938 : Heart of Arizona, Bar
20 Justice, Cassidy of Bar 20,
In Old Mexico, Pride of the
West, Sunset Trail, The Fron-
tiersman.
1939 : Silver on the Sage.
MULLALY, DON
1938 : Wanted by the Police.
MURRAY, JOHN
1938: Room Service.
MUSE, CLARENCE
1939: Way Down South.
MUSSELMAN, M. M.
1938 : Kentucky Moonshine.
MYERS. ZION
1939 : Man About Town.
MYTON, FRED
1938: Desert Patrol, Two-Gur
Justice, Terror of Tiny Towt.
NATTEFORD, JOHN F.
1938 : Come on Rangers, Billy
the Kid Returns, Shine on
Harvest Moon.
1939: Wyoming Outlaw,
Southward Ho, Colorado Sun-
set, Days of Jesse James.
NEGULESCO, JEAN
1938: Beloved Brat, Swiss
Miss.
1939 : Rio.
NEVILLE, GRACE
1938: Little Miss Roughneck.
NEVILLE, JOHN T.
1938: Female Fugitive, My
Old Kentucky Home, Num-
bered Woman, Barefoot Boy.
1939 : The Girl from Rio.
NEWBURY, GAYL
1939: Should a Girl Marry.
NIBLO, FRED, JR.
1938: Little Miss Roughneck.
NICHOLS, ANNE
1938: Give Me a Sailor.
NICHOLS, DUDLEY
1938: Carefree.
NICHOLSON, KENYON
1938 : Swing Your Lady.
1939: Waterfront.
NORTH, CARRINGTON
1938: The Headleys at Home.
O'CONNOR, FRANK
1938: Religious Racketeers.
1939 : Mystic Circle Murder.
ODETS, CLIFFORD
1939 : Golden Boy.
ODLUM, JEROME
1939 : Each Dawn I Die, Dust
Be My Destiny.
ODONNELL, JOSEPH
1938: Phantom Ranger.
1939: Reform School.
O'DAISI, E. R.
1938: Lightning Carson Rides
Again.
OLMSTEAD, HARRY F.
1938: Outlaws of the Prairie,
Paroled — To Die.
OFFNER, MORTIMER
1938: Little Tough Guys in
Society.
1939 : The Family Next Door.
O'HENRY
1938: Dr. Rhythm.
O'KEEFE, WALTER
1938: Go Chase Yourself.
ORNITZ, SAMUEL
1938 : King of the Newsboys.
Little Orphan Annie.
ORR, GERTRUDE
1938: Slander House.
ORTH, MARION
1938: Under the Big Top.
OSBORNE, PAUL
1939: On Borrowed Time.
364
OTVOS, A. DORIAN
1938: Flirting with Fate.
POSFORD, GEORGE
1939: Balalaika.
Authors* Work
OWEN, REGINALD
1938: Stablemates.
PAGE, MANN
1938: Crashing Hollywood.
PAGE, MARCO
193S: Fast Company
PAGNOL, MARCEL
1938 : Port of Seven Seas.
PALMER, STUART
1938: Hollywood Stadium
Mystery.
PARAMORE, EDWARD
1939: The Oklahoma Kid.
PARKER, NORTON S.
1938: Border Wolves, Outlaw
Express, Prison Break.
PARKHILL, FORBES
1939: Stand Up and Fight.
PARKS, JACKSON
1939: In Old Montana.
PARLSEN, AMBROSE
1938: Convicts at Large.
PARROTT, JAMES
1938: Blockheads.
PARSONS, EDWIN C.
1938: The Marines Are Here.
PARSONS, LINDSLEY
1938: Panamint's Bad Man.
PARTOS, FRANK
1939: Honolulu.
PATRICK, JOHN
1938: Five of a Kind.
PELETIER, LOUIS, JR.
1938: Cowboy from Brooklyn.
PERLMAN, VEE T.
1938: That's My Story.
PHILIPPI, ERICH
1938: The Missing Guest.
PIVAR, BEN
1939: Mutiny on the Black-
hawk, Tropic Fury, Legion
of Lost Flyers.
PLYMPTON, GEORGE
1938 : Rangers Roundup,
Thunder in the Desert, Pa-
roled from the Big House.
1939: Smoky Trail, Trigger
Pals.
POGSON, N. A.
1938: The Adventures of Mar-
co Polo.
POLESIE, HERBERT
1939: East Side of Heaven.
POLLOCK, CHANNING
1938: Midnight Intruder.
POST, WILLIAM H.
1939 : Never Say Die.
POTTER, H. C.
1939: Fixer Dugan.
POWYS, STEPHEN
1939: Ice Follies of 1939.
PRESCOTT-RICHARDSON,
C. P.
1938: Unashamed.
PRASKINS, LEONARD
1938: Three Blind Mice.
RAINE, NORMAN REILLY
1938: Adventures of Robin
Hood.
1939 : Island of Lost Men.
RAISON, MILTON
1939: The Girl from Rio.
RANKIN, WILLIAM
1939: St. Louis Blues, Streets
of Missing Men.
RAPF, MAURICE
1938: The Bad Man of Brim-
stone, Sharpshooters.
RATHMELL, JOHN
1939: Song of the Buckaroo,
Southward Ho.
RAUH, STANLEY
1938: Hold that Kiss.
RAWLINS, JOHN
1939 : Whispering Enemies.
RAWSON CLAYTON
1939: Miracles for Sale.
RAY, ALBERT
1938: The Arizona Wildcat.
RAY, BERNARD B.
1938 : It's All in Your Mind.
RAY, ROBERT
1939: Ambush.
REED, MARK
1939 : Yes — My Darling
Daughter.
REINHARDT, GOTTFRIED
1939: Bridal Suite.
REINHARDT, JOHN
1939: Mr. Moto in Danger
Island.
REINH ART, GOTTFRIED
1938: The Great Waltz.
REIS, IRVING
1938: King of Alcatraz, Time
Out for Murder, Sweepstakes.
1939 : Grand Jury Secrets.
REISCH, WALTER
1938 : Gateway.
REMARQUE, ERICH MARIA
1938: Three Comrades.
365
RENALDO, DUNCAN
1938: Crime Afloat.
REPP, ED EARL
1938: West of Cheyenne.
REYHER, FERDINAND
1938: Ride a Crooked Mile.
REYNOLDS, Q.UENTIN
1938 : Secrets of a Nurse.
RICE, ELMER
1939: On Trial.
RICHMOND, TED
1939: Trigger Pals, Six-Gun
Rhythm.
RIDDLE, MEL
1938: This Marriage Business.
RIGBY, GORDON
1938: Reformatory, Outside
the Law.
1939: Hidden Power.
RIPLEY, CLEMENTS
1938: Gold Is Where You
Find It.
ROBERTS, STANLEY
1938: Code of the Rangers,
Phantom Ranger, Prairie
Moon, Pals of the Saddle.
1939: Three Texas Steers.
ROBINSON, CHARLES
1938: Swing Your Lady.
ROCHE, ARTHUR SOMERS
1939: Society Lawyer.
RODGERS, RICHARD
1939 : On Your Toes, Babes
in Arms.
ROGERS, CAMERON
1938: Belle Stair.
ROGERS, CHARLES
1938: Swiss Miss, Blockheads.
1939: The Flying Deuces.
ROGERS, HOWARD
EMMET
1938: Arsene Lupin Returns,
The Chaser.
RONALD, JAMES
1939: The Witness Vanishes.
ROOT, LYNN
1938: International Settlement,
Keep Smiling, Down on the
Farm,
1939: Down on the Farm.
ROOT, WELLS
1939: Man of Conquest.
ROPES, BRADFORD
1938 : Lord Jeff.
ROSSEN, ROBERT
1938 : Racket Busters.
Authors' Work
ROTHMAN, JOSEPH
1938: Dynamite Delaney.
ROUVEROL, AURANIA
1938: You're Only Young
Once.
ROYAL, CHARLES
FRANCIS
1938: The Old Barn Dance,
Colorado Trail, Rio Grande,
Texas Stampede, Knight in
Ghost Town.
RUBEN, ALEX
1938 : This Marriage Business.
RUBEN, J. WALTER
1938: The Bad Man of Brim-
stone.
RUN YON, DAMON
1938: A Slight Case of Mur-
der, Straight Place and Show.
1939: Joe and Ethel Turp.
RURIC, PETER
1939: Twelve Crowded Hours.
RYAN, DON
1938: Broadway Musketeers.
RYERSON, FLORENCE
1938: Everybody Sing.
RYSKIND, MORRIE
1939: Man About Town.
SABATINI, RAFAEL
1939: Prisoner of Corbal.
ST. JOSEPH, ELLIS
1939: Reno.
SALE, R. B.
1938: Shadows Over Shanghai.
SALKOW, SIDNEY
1938 : Come on Leathernecks.
SAND, CARLTON
1938: She Loved a Fireman,
Outside the Law .
SANDLIN, SALLY
1939: Call a Messenger, Off
the Record.
3AUBER, HARRY
1938: Outside of Paradise.
1939: Disbarred.
SAUNDERS, JOHN MONK
1938: A Yank at Oxford, The
Dawn Patrol.
SAVOIR, ALFRED
1938: Bluebeard's Eighth
Wife.
SAXON, LYLE
1938: The Buccaneer.
SCHARY, DORE
1938: Boy's Town.
SCHILLER, ALFRED
1939: The Flying Deuces.
SCHNEIDER, CLARENCE J.
1938 : Flight Into Nowhere.
SCHRANK, JOSEPH
1938: Hard to Get.
SCHROCK, RAYMOND
1939: Secret Service of the
Air, Smashing the Money Ring.
SCHROEDER, DORIS
1939: Wall Street Cowboy.
SCHULBERG, BUDD
1939: Winter Carnival.
SCHULZ, FRANZ
1939: Midnight.
SCOLA, KATHERINE
1939: Hotel for Women.
SCOTT, ALLAN
1939: Man About Town.
SEGALL, HARRY
1938: She's Got Everything.
SEYMOUR, JAMES
1938: Gold Diggers in Paris.
SHAFF. MONROE
1938: The Overland Express,
Man Hunters of the Carib-
bean, Law of the Texan, Ci-
pher Bureau, California Fron-
tier, Stranger from Arizona.
SHANE. MAXWELL
1938: Tip-Off Girls, She's Got
Everything.
1939: Grand Jury Secrets.
SHANNON, ROBERT T.
1938: Invisible Enemy.
SHAW, BERNARD
1938: Pygmalion.
SHERMAN, GEORGE
1939: In Old Monterey.
SHERWOOD, ANGELA
1939: Paris Honeymoon.
SHERWOOD, ROBERT
1939: Idiot's Delight.
SHUMATE, HAROLD
1938: The Main Event.
1939: Man of Conquest.
SHUTE, JAMES
1938: Fools for Scandal.
SIDNEY, MARGARET
1939: Five Little Peppers.
SILVERSTEIN, DAVID
1939: Should a Girl Marry.
SIMMONS, MICHAEL
1938: The Little Adventuress,
Flight to Fame, Juvenile
Court.
1939: Missing Daughters.
SIMON CHARLES
1939: Zaza.
SIODMAK, KURT
1938: Her Jungle Love.
366
SLESINGER, TESS
1938: Girl's School.
SLOAN, ROBERT
1938 : Cowboy from Brooklyn.
SMITH, HARRY D.
1938: Sweethearts.
SMITH, ROBERT B.
1938 : Sweethearts.
SMITH, PAUL GERARD
1938 : Just Around the Corner.
SMITH, THORNE
1939: Topper Takes a Trip.
SNELL, EARLE
1939 : Homicide Bureau.
SPENCE, RALPH
1938 : The Gang's All Here.
1939: The Gorilla, The Fly-
ing Deuces.
SPERLING, MILTON
1938: Happy Landing.
SPEYER, WILLOUGHBY
1938: Maid's Night Out.
SPEWACK, BELLA
1938: Boy Meets Girl.
SPEWACK, SAMUEL
1938 : Boy Meets Girl.
SPIEGELGASS, LEONARD
1939: Unexpected Father.
SPRAGUE, CHANDLER
1938: The Chaser.
STANLEY, LEO
1939: 6,000 Enemies.
STEINBECK, JOHN
1939: Of Mice and Men.
STEVENS, GOSTA
1939 : Intermezzo — A Love
Story.
STEVENSON, ROBERT L.
1938: Kidnapped.
STONE, ANDREW L.
1938: Stolen Heaven.
1939 : The Great Victor Her-
bert.
STONE, HILDA
1938 : Passport Husband.
STONG, PHIL
1939: Career.
STRAKOSCH, AVERY
1938: She Married an Artist.
STRATTON-PORTER, GENE
1938: Romance of the Limber-
lost.
STREET, JULIAN
1939: I'm from Missouri.
SULLIVAN, C. GARDNER
1939: Big Family.
SULLIVAN, ED
1938: There Goes My Heart.
1939: Big Town Czar.
SULLIVAN, WALLACE
1938: Four's a Crowd.
1939: The Big Guy.
TOWNLEY, JACK
1939: Should Husbands Work?
The Covered Trailer.
TRAMPE, RAY
1938: Mars Attacks the World.
1939: Boy's Reformatory.
TRAUPE, SHEPARD
1939: Beasts of Berlin.
TREYNOR, ALBERT
1938: Always in Trouble.
1939: Dancing Co-ed.
TROTTI, LAMAR
1939: Young Mr. Lincoln.
TRUMBO, DALTON
1939: The Kid from Kokomo.
TUNBERG, KARL
1938: Sally Irene and Mary,
My Lucky Star, Hold that
Co-ed.
TURNBULL, MARGARET
1939: Bad Little Angel.
TWAIN, MARK
1938 : The Adventures of Tom
Sawyer.
1939: Huckleberry Finn.
ULLMAN, WILLIAM A.
1939: Sergeant Madden, Those
High Grey Walls.
VADNAI, LADISLAUS
1938: Josette.
VANCE. LOUIS JOSEPH
1938 : The Lone Wolf in Paris.
1939 : Lone Wolf Spy Hunt.
VAN DINE, S. S.
1939: Gracie Allen Murder
Case.
VANDERCOOK, JOHN W.
1939 : Mr. Moto in Danger
Island.
VAN UPP, VIRGINIA
1938 : Cafe Society.
1939: Cafe Society.
VEILLER, BAYARD
1939: Within the Law.
VON CUBE, IRMGARD
1939: They Shall Have Music.
WAGGNER, GEORGE
1938 : The Spy Ring, State
Police, Air Devils.
WALD, JERRY
1938: Gold Diggers in Paris.
WALKER, GRANVILLE
1939: Barricade.
WALLACE, EDGAR
1938 : Dangerous to Know.
WALTON, FRANCIS
1939: Women in the Wind.
367
I ul h or s' W ork
WARD, LUCI
1938: Santa Fe Stampede.
1939: Mexicali Rose, The Kan
sas Terrors, The Arizona Kid,
Colorado Sunset.
WARE, DARRELL
1939: Charlie McCarthy De-
tective.
WARE, HARLAN
1938: Vacation from Love.
WATKINS, MAURINE
1938: Up the River.
WARWICK, JAMES
1939: Blind Alibi.
WASCHWITZ, ERIC
1939: Balalaika.
WATKIN, LAWRENCE E.
1939 : On Borrowed Time.
WEAD, FRANK
1938 : Test Pilot.
1939: 20,000 Men a Year,
Tail Spin.
WEBB, JAMES
1939 : Forged Passport, Pride
of the Navy, S. O. S. Tidal
Wave.
WEBSTER, M. COATES
1938: A Desperate Adventure.
1939 : The Covered Trailer.
WEISBERG, BRENDA
1938: Little Tough Guy.
1939: Tough Kid.
WERFEL, FRANZ
1939 : Juarez.
WEST, JOSEPH
1938: Black Bandit.
WEST, NATHANIEL
1938 : Born to Be Wild.
WESTRATE, EDWIN V.
1938 : Prison Farm.
WHARTON, EDITH
1939: The Old Maid.
WHEELWRIGHT, RALPH
1939: Thunder Afloat.
WHITE, IRVING
1939: Daughters Courageous.
WHITE, LESLIE T.
1939: Behind Prison Gates.
WHITE, ROBERTSON
1939: Charlie McCarthy De-
tective.
WIGGIN, KATE D.
1938 : Rebecca of Sunnybrook
Farm, Mother Carey's Chick-
ens.
SWANSON, NEIL H.
1939: Alleghany Uprising.
SYMONDS, HENRY R.
1939: Pacific Liner.
SZEKELY, HANS
1938: Dramatic School.
TARADASH, DANIEL
1939: For Love or Money.
TARKINGTON, BOOTH
1938: Penrod and His Twin
Brother, Penrod's D o u b 1 t
Trouble.
TARSHIS, HAROLD
1939: Whispering Enemies.
TAVENER, REGINALD
1938: Crime Ring.
TAYLOR, ALFRED
1939 : Tell No Tales.
TAYLOR, ERIC
1938: Romance on the Run.
1939: Trapped in the Sky,
Fugitive at Large.
TAYLOR, HENRY
1938: Who Killed Gail Pres-
ton? Juvenile Court.
TAYLOR, MATT
1939 : Hero for a Day.
TERWILLIGER, GEORGE
1939: Poncomania.
TAYLOR, REX
1939: Day-Time Wife.
THIELE, WILLIAM
1938: Stablemates.
THOMAS, FAITH
1939: Conspiracy.
TINSLEY, THEODORE
1939: Manhattan Shakedown.
TOMBRAGEL, MAURICE
1939: Tropic Fury.
TORGERSON, EDWIN DIAL
1938: Speed to Burn, One
Wild Night.
TORRES, MIGUEL G.
1939: Juarez and Maximilian.
TOWNE, GENE
1939: Eternally Yours.
Authors9 WorU
WILBUR. CRANE
1938: Crime School, Girls on
Probation.
1939: Blackwell's Island, Hell's
Kitchen.
WILDE, HAGER
1938: Bringing Up Baby,
Carefree.
WILEY, HUGH
1938 : Mr. Wong — Detective.
1939: Mystery of Mr. Wong,
Mr. Wong in Chinatown.
WILLARD, JOHN
1939: The Cat and the Canary.
WILLIAMS, BEN AMES
1938: Inside Story.
WILLIAMS, C. B.
1939: Heroes in Blue.
WILLIAMS, SPENCER, Jr.
1939: Harlem Rides the
Range.
WILLIAMSON, THAMES
1938: Next Time I Marry.
WILLOUGHBY, BARRETT
1938: Spawn of the North.
WILSON, CAREY
1939 : Judge Hardy and .Son.
WINTER, KEITH
1938: The Shining Hour. •
WOODWARD, W. E.
1939: Stronger Than Desire.
WOOLF, EDGAR ALLAN
1938: Everybody Sing.
WOOLRICH, CORNELL
1938: Convicted.
WORMSER, RICHARD
1938: Fugitives for a Night.
WREN. PERCIVAL C.
1939: Beau Geste.
WRIGHT, GILBERT
1938: Wild Horse Rodeo,
Thanks for Everything.
WYLER, ROBERT
1939: Fighting Thorough-
breds.
WYLIE, I. A. R.
1938: Vivacious Lady, The
Road to Reno, The Young in
Heart,
1939: The Under-Pup.
WYLIE, PHILIP
1938: The Gladiator.
1939: Charlie Chan in Reno.
XANTIPPE
1938: Danger on the Air.
YATES, GEORGE, Jr.
1939: The Mysterious Miss X.
YAWiTZ. PAUL
1939: Little Accident.
YOST, DOROTHY
1939: Blackmail.
YOST, ROBERT
1938: Tip-Off Girls, Illegal
Traffic.
YOUNG, CHIC
1938: Blondie.
1939 : Blondie Meets the Boss.
YOUNG, CLARENCE U.
1938: The Law West of Tomb-
stone.
1939: Bad Lands.
YOUNG, HOWARD IRVING
1938: Sez O'Reilly to Mac
Nab.
ZAVATTINI, C.
1938: I'll Give a Million.
ZIFFREN, LESTER
1938: Sharpshooters.
1939: Boy Friend.
ZINK, R. SPENCER
1938: The Invisible Menace.
ZWEIG, STEPHAN
1938 : Marie Antoinette.
C. GARDNER SULLIVAN
BIG FAMILY
(Original Story)
NORTH WEST MOUNTED POLICE
(Paramount)
KIT CARSON
(Edward Small Productions)
UNION PACIFIC
(Paramount)
368
SCREENPLAY
WRITERS
Their Worh in 1938 and 1939
Credits on pictures released prior to 1938 may be had from previous
editions of the Year Book or from the Film Daily information service.
ADAMS, CLAY
1939 : The Honeymoon's Over.
ADAMS, FRANK R.
1938: Trade Winds.
ADAMSON, EWART
1938: Long Shot.
ADAMSON, VICTOR
1939: Roll Wagons Roll.
ADLER, FELIX
1938: Swiss Miss, Blockheads.
AKINS ZOE
1939: Zaza.
ALTEMUS, HENRY
1938: Crime Takes a Holiday.
ANDERSON. DORIS
1938 : Give Me a Sailor.
1939: Beauty for the Asking.
ANDREWS, ROBERT
1'938 : Gangster's Boy.
1939: Streets of New York,
I Was a Convict, Mutiny
in the Big House.
ALTSCHULER, ALICE
1939: Sabotage.
ANTHONY, EDWIN
1938: Crime Afloat.
ANTHONY, STUART
1938: Born to the West, Tip-
Off Girls, Prison Farm, Ille-
gal Traffic, Highway Patrol.
1939: Saga of Death Valley.
ARLISS, LESLIE
1938: Sez O'Reilly to Mac
Nab.
ARTHUR. ART
1938: Kentucky Moonshine,
Thanks for Everything.
1939: Day-Time Wife. Every-
thing Happens at Night.
ATTEBERRY, DUKE
1939: I'm from Missouri.
ATWATER, GLADYS
1938: Crashing Hollywood,
This Marriage Business, Crime
Ring.
1939: Parents on Trial.
AUSTIN, EDWARD R.
1939: Death Goes North.
AVERY, STEPHEN AVERY
1938: Hard to Get.
1939: Rio.
BAKER, GRAHAM
1938: Joy of Living.
1939: Eternally Yours.
BAKER, MELVILLE
1938: The First Hundred
Years.
1939: Joe and Ethel Turp.
BALDWIN, EARL
1938: A Slight Case of Mur-
der, Gold Diggers in Paris,
Cowboy from Brooklyn.
1939: Off the Record.
BARANGON, ELOISE
1938: Spring Madness.
BARRAUD, GEORGE
1938 : Dark Sands.
BARRINGER, BARRY
( Deceased)
1938: Held for Ransom.
BARROWS, NICHOLAS
1938: I'm From the City.
BART, JEAN
1939: Juarez and Maximilian.
BARTLETT, CY
1938 : Cocoanut Grove.
1939: The Amazing Mr. Wil-
liams.
BARTLETT, WILLIAM
1938 : Call of the Yukon.
BEAHAN, CHARLES
1938: Dynamite Delaney.
BEEBE, FORD
1938: Trouble at Midnight.
1939 : Oklahoma Frontier.
BEIN, ALBERT
1939: Boy Slaves.
BELA, NICHOLAS
1938 : The Headleys at Home,
Twenty Million Witnesses.
BEHRMAN, S. N.
1938: The Cowboy and the
Lady.
BELDEN, CHARLES S.
1938: Mr. Moto's Gamble, One
Wild Night, Charlie Chan in
Honolulu.
1939 : On Dress Parade,
Torchy Plays with Dynamite,
Kid Nightingale.
BELGARD, ARNOLD
1938: Bar 20 Justice, Block-
heads.
BENNETT, CHARLES
1938: The Young in Heart.
1939: Balalaika.
BENNISON. ANDREW
1939: Desperate Trails.
BERCOVICI, LEONARDO
1938 : Racket Busters.
BETTINSON, RALPH
1938 : Rose of the Rio Grande.
BIGELOW, JOE
1938: Wide Open Faces.
BINYON, CLAUDE
1938: Sing You Sinners.
1939 : Invitation to Happiness.
BIRO, LAJOS
1938: The Divorce of Lady
X, Return of the Scarlet Pim-
pernel.
BLANKFORT, MICHAEL
1939: Blind Alibi.
BLUM, EDWIN
1938 : Kidnapped.
BOEHM, DAVID
1938: Peck's Bad Boy with
the Circus.
BOLTON, WHITNEY
1939: Spirit of Culver.
BOOTH, ERNEST
1938 : Penrod's Double Trouble.
BOYLAN, MALCOLM S.
1938: A Yank at Oxford.
1939: St. Louis Blues, The
Lady's from Kentucky.
BRACKETT. CHARLES
1938: Bluebeard's Eighth Wife.
1939: Midnight, Ninotchka,
What a Life.
369
Screenplay
Writers
BRANCH, HOUSTON
1938: Mr. Wong — Detective.
BRECHER, IRVING
1939: At the Circus.
BREN, J. ROBERT
1938: Everybody's Doing It,
Double Danger, This Marriage
Business. Crime Ring.
1939: Parents on Trial.
BRESLOW, LOU
1938 : International Settlement,
Battle of Broadway, Mr. Moto
Takes a Chance, City Street,
Up the River, Five of a Kind.
1939: It Could Happen to
You, 20,000 Men a Year, Pack
Up Your Troubles.
BRICE. MONTE
1939: Night Work.
BRICKER, GEORGE
1938: Over the Wall, The
Kid Comes Back, Torchy
Blane in Panama, Accidents
Will Happen, Little Miss
Thoroughbred, Mr. Chump.
1939: King of the Under-
world, Torchy Blane in China-
town, Missing Daughters.
BRIGHT, JOHN
1939: Back Door to Heaven.
BROCKWAY, W. W.
1939: Everybody's Hobby.
BROOKS, MATT
1938: Radio City Revels.
BROWN, GILSON
1938 : Little Tough Guy.
BROWN. KARL
1938: Port of Missing Girls.
1939: The Man They Could
Not Hang, A Woman is the
Judge.
BROWN, LEW
1938: Straight Place and
Show.
BRUCE, GEORGE
1938: The Duke of West
Point, The Crowd Roars.
1939: King of the Turf, The
Man in the Iron Mask, Navy
Nurse, Kit Carson, Two Years
Before the Mast.
BUCHANAN, WILLIAM
1938: Silks and Saddles.
BUCHMAN, HAROLD
1939 : The Forgotten Woman,
Hero for a Day.
BUCHMAN, SIDNEY
1938: Holiday.
1939: Mr. Smith Goes to
Washington.
BUCKLEY, HAROLD
1938: The Black Doll, Sin-
ners in Paradise, Air Devils.
BUCKNALL, NATHALIE
1939: Five Little Peppers.
BUCKNER, ROBERT
1938: Gold Is Where You
Find It, Love Honor and Be-
have, Comet Over Broadway.
1939: The Oklahoma Kid,
Dodge City, You Can't Get
Away with Murder, Angels
Wash Their Faces.
BURBRIDGE, BETTY
1938: Under Western Stars,
Outlaws of Sonora, The Pur-
ple Vigilantes, Riders of the
Black Hills, Gold Mine in the
Sky, Pals of the Saddle, Santa
Fe Stampede, Prairie Moon,
Heroes of the Hills, Man from
Music Mountain.
1939: The Night Riders, Wy-
oming Outlaw, Colorado Sun-
set, The Kansas Terrors, New
Frontier, Rovin' Tumbleweeds.
South of the Border.
BURNSTINE, NORMAN
1938 : Arson Gang Busters,
Invisible Enemy.
BURTON, V.
1939: Two Bright Boys.
BUSCH, NIVEN
1939: Off the Record, Angels
Wash Their Faces.
BUTLER. FRANK
1938 : Give Me a Sailor.
1939 : Paris Honeymoon, Nev-
er Say Die, The Star Makes.
BUTLER, HUGO
1938: A Christmas Carol.
1939: Huckleberry Finn, So-
ciety Lawyer.
CADY, JERRY
1938 : Mr. Moto's Gamble, One
Wild Night, Meridian 7-1212,
Inside Story, Time Out for
Murder, Arizona Wildcat,
Winner Take All.
1939 : Five Came Back, Full
Confession.
CAESAR, ARTHUR
1939: The Star Maker.
CAIN, JAMES M.
1938: Algiers.
1939: Stand Up and Fight.
CAMPBELL, ALAN
1938: Sweethearts, Trade
Winds.
CARSON, DAVID
1939: Beau Geste.
CARSON, ROBERT
1938 : Men with Wings.
1939 : The Light That Failed.
CAVEN, TAYLOR
1939: Should Husbands Work?
CAVETT, FRANK
1939: Rulers of the Sea.
CHANSLOR, ROY
1938 : Nurse from Brooklyn,
The Devil's Party, Goodbye
Broadway, The Road to Reno.
1939 : One Hour to Live.
CHAPIN, ANNE MORRISON
1938: Romance in the Dark,
Listen Darling.
CHAPIN, ROBERT
1938: Walking Down Broad-
way, Safety in Numbers, Pass-
port Husband, Always in
Trouble, Everybody's Baby.
CHENEY. J. BENTON
1938: The Marines Are Here.
CHODOROV, EDWARD
1938: Yellow Jack, Woman
Against Woman, Spring Mad-
ness.
CHODOROV, JEROME
1938: Rich Man-Poor Girl.
1939 : Juarez and Maximilian,
Conspiracy.
CLIFTON, ELMER
1938: Wolves of the Sea.
CLORK, HARRY
1938: Flirting with Fate.
1939: Laugh It Off.
COEN, FRANKLIN
1938: Quick Money, Exposed.
1939: Forged Passport.
COFFEE. LENORE J.
1938: White Banners, Four
Daughters.
COHEN, ALBERT J.
1938 : Invisible Enemy.
COHN, BENNETT
1938 : South of Arizona.
1939: The Renegade Ranger,
West of Santa Fe, Western
Caravans, Riders of Black
River.
COLDEWAY, ANTHONY
1938: Accidents Will Happen,
When Were You Born?
1939: Smashing the Money
Ring.
COLE. LESTER
1938: The Jury's Secret, The
Crime of Dr. Hallet, Midnight
Intruder, Sinners in Paradise,
Secrets of a Nurse.
1939: Winter Carnival.
COLLINS, RICHARD
1939: Rulers of the Sea.
COMANDINI, ADELE
1938: The Road to Reno.
CONDON, CHARLES R.
1938 : Religious Racketeers.
CONNELL, RICHARD
1938: Love on Toast, Dr.
Rhythm.
CONNOLLY, MYLES
1938: Wives Under Suspicion,
Youth Takes a Fling.
CONSELMAN, WILLIAM
1939: East Side of Heaven,
Smiling Along, That's Right-
You're Wrong.
COOPER, OLIVE
1938 : Cocoanut Grove, Or-
phans of the Street, Annabella
Takes a Tour.
1939: The Mysterious Miss X.
She Married a Cop.
COOPER, WILLIS
1938: Mr. Moto Takes a
Chance.
1939: Son of Frankenstein.
370
CORRIGAN, LLOYD
1938: Touchdown Army, Cam-
pus Confessions.
1939 : Night Work.
COSGRIFF, JAMES
1938: Roaring Timber.
COSGRIFF, ROBERT J.
1938: Roaring Timber.
COWAN, SADA
1939: Stop, Look and Love.
COXE, GEORGE HARMON
1938: Arsene Lupin Returns.
CROUSE, RUSSEL
1938: Artists and Models
Abroad, Big Broadcast of
1938.
1939: The Great Victor Her
bert.
CUMMINGS, HUGH
1938: Penrod and His Twin
Brother.
CUNNINGHAM, JACK
1939: Union Pacific.
CURRAN, CHARLES
1938: Adventures of Jane Ar-
den.
DALRYMPLE, IAN
1938: The Divorce of Lady
X, The Citadel.
DARLING, W. SCOTT
1938 : Telephone Operator.
1939: The Mystery of Mr.
Wong, Stunt Pilot, Mr. Wong
in Chinatown.
DAVES, DELMAR
1938: She Married an Artist,
Professor Beware.
1939: Love Affair, $1,000 a
Touchdown.
DAVIS, EDDIE
1938: Radio City Revels.
DAWN, ISABEL
1938: Girl of the Golden
West.
DeGAW, BOYCE
1938: Girl of the Golden West.
DE LEON, WALTER
1938: Big Broadcast of 1938,
College Swing.
1939: Union Pacific, The Cat
and the Canary.
DE MILLE, WILLIAM
1939: Captain Fury.
DE MOND, ALBERT
1938: Blondes at Work, Little
Miss Thoroughbred, Torchy
Gets Her Man.
1939: Women in the Wind,
Sweepstakes Winner^
DUVAL, JACQUES
1939: Balalaika.
DE WOLF, KAREN
1938: Walking Down Broad-
way, Always in Trouble, Pass-
port Husband, Safety in Num-
bers, Everybody's Baby.
1939: Saga of Death Vally.
DICKEY. BASIL
1938: Flying Fists.
DIXON, PETER
1939 : Down the Wyoming
Trail.
DOLAN, FRANK
1939: Strets of Missing Mn.
DONAGHUE, FRANK
1939: Espionage Agent.
DOUGLAS, GORDON
1939: The Housekeeper's
Daughter.
DRAKE, OLIVER
1938 : The Purple Vigilantes,
Wild Horse Rodeo, Gun Law,
Painted Desert.
1939: Racketeers of the Range,
Cowboys from Texas, The
Fighting Gringo.
DRAKE, WILLIAM A.
1939: The Three Musketeers
DUFF, WARREN
1938: Gold Is Where You Find
It, Gold Diggers in Paris,
Angels with Dirty Faces.
1939: The Oklahoma Kid, Each
Dawn I Die, Espionage Agent.
DUFFY, ALBERT
1939: Blind Alibi, Coast
Guard, Beware Spooks !
DUNHAM, PHIL
1938: Fury Below, Life Goes
On.
DUNNE, PHILIP
1938: Suez.
1939: Stanley and Livingstone,
The Rains Came, Swanee
River.
EDWARDS, EDGAR
1938: Woman Against the
World, Convicted.
1939: Manhattan Shakedown,
Special Investigator.
EDWARDS, WESTON
1938: Six Shootin' Sheriff.
ELISCU, EDWARD
1938: Little Tough Guys in
Society.
1939: Charlie McCarthy De-
tective.
ELKINS, SAUL
1938: Women in Prison, Tar-
nished Angel.
1939: Pride of the Navy.
ELLIS, ROBERT
1938: Love on a Budget, Ras-
cals, Speed to Burn, A Trip
to Paris, Road Demon, Sharp-
shooters.
1939: Down on the Farm.
Chasing Danger, Susannah of
the Mounties, The Escape,
Charlie Chan in the City in
Darkness, Too Busy to Work,
Man Who Wouldn't Talk, Star
Dust.
EMMETT, ROBERT
1938: Man's Country, Gun
Packer, Where the Buffalo
Roam, The Mexicali Kid.
1939: Wild Horse Canyon,
Overland Mail.
Screenplay
Writers
ENGLISH, RICHARD
1938: Mr. Boggs Steps Out.
1939 : Million Dollar Legs.
ENGLUND, KEN
1938: Big Broadcast of 1938,
Artists and Models Abroad,
There's That Woman Again.
1939: Good Girls Go to Paris.
EPSTEIN, JULIUS
1938: Secrets of an Actress,
Four Daughters.
1939: Daughtrs Courageous,
Four Wivs.
EPSTEIN, PHILIP G.
1938: There's That Woman
Again, The Mad Miss Man-
ton.
1939: Daughters Courageous,
Four Wives.
ETTINGER, DON
1938: Rebecca of Sunnybrook
Farm, Hold that Co-ed.
FAYE, RANDALL
1938: At the Villa Rose.
FELTON, EARL
1938: Extortion, Prison Nurse.
1939: Society Smugglers, Call-
ing All Marines, Smuggled
Cargo.
FENTON, FRANKLYN
1339: The Saint in London.
FERGUSON, RON
1938: Blind Alibi.
FERGUSSON, HARVEY
1939: Stand Up and Fight.
FERRIS, WALTER
1938: A Yank at Oxford, Four
Men and a Prayer.
1939: The Little Princess,
Susannah of the Mounties, The
Magnificent Fraud.
FESSIER, MICHAEL
1938: Valley of the Giants.
1939 : Wings of the Navy,
Angels Wash Their Faces,
Espionage Agent.
FIELDS, HERBERT
193S: Fools for Scandal.
1939 : Honolulu.
FIELDS, JOSEPH A.
1938 : Fools for Scandal, Rich
Man-Poor Girl.
1939: Girl from Mexico, The
Spellbinder, Mexican Spitfire.
FINKEL, ABEM
1938 : Jezebel, White Banners.
FITZGERALD, EDITH
1939 : Within the Law.
FITZGERALD, F. SCOTT
1938: Three Comrades.
FITZSIMMONS. CORTLAND
1939 : Death of a Champion.
FLOURNOY, RICHARD
1938: Blondie.
1939: Blondie Meets the Boss,
Blondie Takes a Vacation,
Blondie Brings Up Baby, Be-
ware Spooks !
371
Screenplay
Writers
FOOTE, BRADBURY
1938: Of Human Hearts.
1939 : Young Tom Edison,
Edison the Man.
FOOTE, JOHN TAINTOR
1938: Kentuckv.
1939: Swanee River.
FORD, COREY
1939: Topper Takes a Trip,
Zenobia. Remember ?
FORT. GARRETT
1939: Zero Hour.
FORTUNE, JAN
1939: Man of Conauest.
FOSTER. LEWIS B.
1938: Sons of the Legion, Il-
legal Traffic.
1939: Some Like It Hot, Mil-
lion Dollar Legs, Night Work.
FOSTER. NORMAN
1938: Mysterious Mr. Moto of
Devil's Island.
1939: Mr. Moto Takes a Vaca-
tion.
FRANCIS, OWEN
1939 : Pack Up Your Troubles.
20,000 Men a Year.
FRANK, BRUNO
1939: Hunchback of Notre
Dame.
FRANKLIN, DEAN
1939: Code of the Secret Ser-
vice.
FRANKLIN, PAUL
1938: Roaring Timber. Man
Hunters of the Caribbean.
1939 : Home on the Prairie,
Spoilers of the Range. Man
from Sundown, Stranger from
Texas.
FREEMAN, EVERETT
1938: The Chaser.
1939: You Can't Cheat an
Honest Man.
FULLER, SAM
1938: Gangs of New York.
FULLMAN, S.
1939: Prisoner of Corbal.
l'URTHMAN, JULES
1938: Spawn of the North.
1939: Only Angels Have
\V ings.
GABRIEL, GILBERT
1939: Hotel Imperial, The
Magnificent Fraud.
GAMET, KENNETH
1938: Broadway Musketeers,
Nancy Drew — Detective.
1939: You Can't Get Awav
With Murder, Everybody's
Hobby, Nancy Drew and the
Hidden Staircase, Nancy Drew
— Trouble Shooter.
GARRETT, OLIVER H. P.
1939 : One Third of a Nation.
GATES. HARVEY
1939: Navy Secrets, Meet Dr.
Christian, Fugitive at Large.
GATZERT, NATE
1938: Pioneer Trail, Phantom
Gold.
GELSEY. ERWIN S.
1938: Touchdown Army, Cam
pus Confessions.
GERAGHTY, GERALD
1938: Western Jamboree.
1939: Mexicali Rose, Blue
Montana Skies, Mountain
Rhythm, In Old Caliente,
Southward Ho, The Arizona
Kid, Wall Street Cowboy, In
Old Monterey, South of the
Border
GERAGHTY, MAURICE
1938: Trouble at Midnight,
Law of the Plains, Mysterious
Rider.
1939: Silver on the Sage.
GIBBONS. ELIOT
1939: Flight at Midnight.
GIBNEY, SHERIDAN
1938: Letter of Introduction
1939: Disputed Passage.
GILLIAT, SIDNEY
1938: Strange Borders, The
Lady Vanishes.
GITTENS, WYNDHAM
1938: Forbidden Valley, Mars
Attacks the World.
GOLDBECK, WILLIS
1938: Young Dr. Kildare.
1939: Calling Dr. Kildare,
Secret of Dr. Kildare.
GOLDEN, ELEANOR
1938: Spring Madness.
GOLDEN, RAY
1938: Kentucky Moonshine.
GOLDMAN, HAROLD
1939: The Girl Downstairs.
GOODRICH, FRANCES
1939 : Society Lawyer, Another
Ihin Man.
GORDON, LEON
1939: Society Lawyer, Bala
laika.
GOTTLIEB, ALEX
1938: Invisible Enemy, Arson
Gang Busters, Gambling Ship,
I Stand Accused, Metropoli-
tan Police, Ex-Champ.
1939: Mystery of the White
Room, Inside Information.
GOULD, WALLY
193S: Jonathan.
GRANET, BERT
1938: Go Chase Yourself,
Quick Money, Law of the
Underworld, Maid's Night
Out, Annabella Takes a Tour,
Mr. Doodle Kicks Off, The
Affairs of Annabella.
1939: Fixer Dugan, Career,
The Day the Bookies Wept.
GRANT, JAMES EDWARD
1938 : Josette, There's That
Woman Again.
1939: Miracles for Sale.
372
GRANT, MORTON
1938: She Loved a Fireman.
GRAYSON, CHARLES
1938: Reckless Living, Young
Fugitives, Freshman Year,
Personal Secretary, Swing that
Cheer, Swing Sister Swing.
1939: Risky Business, For
Love or Money, Unexpected
Father. Hawaiian Nights.
GREEN, EVE
1938: Stolen Heaven.
GREEN, HOWARD J.
1938: The House of Mystery,
Making the Headlines.
GREENE, EVE
1939: Little Accident.
GREENWOOD, EDWIN
1938: The Girl Was Young.
GREY, JOHN
1938: I'm from the City.
GUIHAN, FRANCES
1938: Frontier Scout, Sudden
Bill Dorn.
GUIOL, FRED
1939: Gunga Din.
HACKETT. ALBERT
1939: Society Lawyer, An-
other Thin Man.
HAINES. WILLIAM W.
1938: The Texans.
HAISLIP, HARVEY
1939: Thunder Afloat.
HALEY, EARL
1939: Gentleman from Arizona
HALL, JANE
1939: These Glamour Girls.
HALL, NORMAN
1938: Mars Attacks the World.
1939: Frontier Pony Express.
Wall Street Cowboy.
HALPERIN, EDWARD
1939: Yukon Flight. Danger
Ahead. Phantom Pilot. Land's
End, Blonde Slaves, Code of
the Cactus.
I1AMMERSTEIN. OSCAR. II
1939: The Story of Vernon
and Irene Castle.
HANLINE, MAURICE
1939: Four Wives.
HARARI, ROBERT
1939: Day-Time Wife. Every-
thing Happens at Night.
HARRIS, ELEANOR
1938 : Kidnapped.
HART, HARRY
1938 : The Last Stand.
HARTMAN. DON
1939: Paris Honevmoon. Nev-
er Say Die, The Star Maker.
HARTMANN, EDMUND L.
1938: Law of the Underworld.
The Last Express, The Last
Warning.
1939: Big Town Czar. Two
Bright Boys.
HAYWARD, LILLIE
1938: Her Jungle Love, Sons
of the Legion.
1939: Disbarred. King of
Chinatown, Unmarried, Tele-
vision Spy.
HECHT, BEN
1938 : The Goldwyn Follies.
1939: Gunga Din, Let Free-
dom Ring, Wuthering Heights.
It's a Wonderful World, Lady
of the Tropics.
HEERMAN, VICTOR
1939: Golden Boy.
HEIFETZ, LOU
1938 : Love Is a Headache.
HELLINGER, MARK
1938: Comet Over Broadway.
HELLMAN, SAM
1938: The Baroness and the
Butler, We're Going to Be
Rich.
1939: The Three Musketeers,
Frontier Marshal, Here I Am
a Stranger.
HERTZ, DAVID
1938 : Going Places, Four's a
Three Loves Has Nancy.
1939: Stronger Than Desire,
Blackmail.
HERZIG, SIG
1938 : I Met My Love Again,
Four's a Crowd.
1939: They Made Me a Crim-
inal. Indianapolis Speedway.
HIGGINS, JOHN C.
1939: They All Come Out.
HILL, ELIZABETH
1938 : The Citadel.
HILL, ETHEL
193S: Just Around the Corner.
1939: The Little Princess.
HILLYER, LAMBERT
1939: Parents on Trial.
HILTON. JAMES
1939: We Are Not Alone.
HOERL, ARTHUR
1938: Topa Topa, Law of the
Texan, California Frontier, Ci-
pher Bureau.
1939: Panama PatroJ, Double
Deal.
HOFFEN STEIN, SAMUEL
1938: The! Great Waltz.
1939: Bridal Suite.
HOFFMAN, JOSEPH
1938: She's Got Everything,
Shadows Over Shanghai, Safe-
ty in Numbers.
1939 : Quick Millions, Boy
Friend.
HOFFMAN, LEONARD
1939 : The Honeymoon's Over.
HOGAN, MICHAEL
1939: Nurse Edith Cavell.
HOLMES, BROWN
1938 : The Crime of Dr. Hal-
let, Three Blind Mice.
HORMAN, ARTHUR T.
1938: Quick Money, When
G-Men Step In, Double Dan-
ger, The Lone Wolf in Paris.
1939: Society Smugglers, My
Son is a Criminal, Smashing
the Spy Ring, For Love or
Money, They Asked for It.
Missing Evidence, Call a Mes-
senger, Behind Prison Bars.
HOUSER, LIONEL
1938 : Night Spot, Condemned
Women, Blind Alibi, Smash-
ing the Rackets, Sky Giant.
1939 : Girl from Mexico, Tell
No Tales, The Forgotten
Woman, First Love, Sabotage.
HOUSTON, NORMAN
1938: Heart of Arizona, Cas-
sidy of Bar 20, Sunset Trail,
Crashin' Thru Danger, The
Frontiersman.
1939: Heritage of the Desert,
In Old Caliente.
HOWARD, SIDNEY
1939 : Gone With the Wind.
HUGHES, LANGSTON
1939: Way Down South.
HUME. CYRIL
1938 : The Bad Man of Brim-
stone.
1939 : Tarzan Finds a Son.
HUNTER, IAN
1939: Fisherman's Wharf,
Meet Dr. Christian.
HUSTON, JOHN
1938: The Amazing Dr. Clit-
terhouse.
1939 : Juarez.
HYLAND, FRANCES
1938: Change of Heart, Keep
Smiling, Island in the Sky,
Everybody's Baby, While New
York Sleeps.
1939: Winner Take All, Char-
lie Chan in Reno.
INGSTER, BORIS
1938: Happy Landing, I'll
Give a Million.
JACKSON, FELIX
1938: Mad About Music, The
Rage of Paris.
1939 : The Girl Downstairs.
Destry Rides Again.
JACKSON, FREDERICK
1938: Stolen Heaven, Say It
in French.
JACKSON, HORACE
1938: Women Are Like That.
Men Are Such Fools.
JACOBS, HARRISON
1938: Bar 20 Justice, The
Frontiersman, In Old Mexico.
1939 : Law of the Pampas.
JACOBS. WILLIAM
1938: Sergeant Murphy, Pen-
rod and His Twin Brother.
JACOBY, MICHEL
1938 : Love Honor and Behave.
1939 : Smuggled Cargo.
JAMES, RIAN
1938: Submarine Patrol.
1939: The Gorilla, The House-
keeper's Daughter.
JAMIESON, HAZEL
1939 : , Reform School.
373
Screen play
Writers
JARRICO, PAUL
1938: No Time to Marry.
1939: Beauty for the Asking.
JARRETT, DAN
( Deceased)
1938: Rawhide.
JENNINGS, TALBOT
1938: Spawn of the North.
1939: Rulers of the Sea.
JESKE, GEORGE
1939: The Day the Bookies
Wept.
jEVNE, JACK
1938: Merrily We Live, There
Goes My Heart.
1939: Topper Takes a Trip,
Captain Fury.
JOHNSON, NUNNALLY
1939 : Wife, Husband and
Friend, Jesse James, Rose of
Washington Square.
JOHNSON. ROBERT LEE
1938: Tarzan's Revenge.
1939: Taming of the West.
JOHNSTON, AGNES
CHRISTINE
1938: Out West with the Har-
dys.
1939: the Hardys Ride High.
JONES. GROVER
1939: Lucky Night, Captain
Fury, The Under-Pup.
JOSEPH, EDMUND
1938 : Everybody's Doing It.
JOSEPHSON, JULIEN
1938: Suez.
1939: The Rains Came, Stan-
ley and Livingstone.
KAHN, GORDON
1938: I Stand Accused, Tenth
Avenue Kid.
1939: Newsboy's Home, S. O.
S. Tidal Wave, Mickey the
Kid.
KAHN, RICHARD C.
1939: The Bronze Buckaroo,
Bad Boy.
KANDEL, ABEN
1939: Rio.
KANIN, GARSON
1939: They Made Her a Spy.
KANIN, MICHAEL
1939: Panama Lady.
KATZ, LEE
1938 : Heart of the North.
1939: Women in the Wind.
Code of the Secret Service.
Waterfront, The Return of Dr.
X, No Place to Go, The Man
Who Dared.
KAUFMAN, CHARLES
1938 : The Saint in New York,
Exposed.
Screenplay
Writers
KELLING, ROY
1939: I Met a Murderer.
KELSO. EDMUND
1938: Outlaws of Sonora.
1939: Roll Wagons Roll.
KENT, ROBERT E.
1938 : Who Killed Gail Pres-
ton? Highway Patrol, Juvenile
Court.
1939: Charlie Chan in Reno.
KENYON, CHARLES
1938: The Lady Objects.
KENYON, CURTIS
1938: Thanks for Everything
KERN, JAMES V.
1939 : That's Right - You're
Wrong.
KILPATRICK, TOM
1939: Whispering Enemies.
KIMBLE, LAWRENCE
1938: Love Honor and Be-
have, Beloved Brat.
1939: Off the Record, No Place
to Go.
KING, HUGH
1938 : The Storm.
KLEIN, HERBERT
1938: Love Is a Headache.
KLEIN, WALLY
1939 : Indianapolis Speedway.
KNAPP, JACK
1938 : The Marines Are Here.
KNOBLOCK, EDWIN
1938: Moonlight Sonata.
KOBER, ARTHUR
1938 : Having Wonderful Time.
KOHN, BEN GRAUMAN
1938: He Couldn't Say No,
Young Fugitives.
KRAFFT, JOHN W.
1938: I Am a Criminal, Re-
bellious Daughters, Slander
House.
1939: Sweepstakes Winner.
KRASNA. NORMAN
1939 : Bachelor Mother.
KRIMS, MILTON
1938: The Sisters, Secrets of
an Actress.
1939: Confessions of a Nazi
Spy, We are Not Alone.
KRUMGOLD, JOSEPH
1939: Main Street Lawyer.
KRUSADA, CARL
1939: El Diablo Rides.
KULLER, SID
1938 : Kentucky Moonshine.
KURNITZ. HARRY
19T9: Fast and Loose, Fast
and Furious.
LA BARBA, FIDEL
1939: Susannah of the Moun-
ties.
LA BLANCHE, ETHEL
1938: Man Hunters of the
Caribbean, Flirting with Fate,
Exile Express.
1939: Exile Express.
LA CAVA, GREGORY
1939: Primrose Path.
LAIDLAW, BETTY
1938 : Danger on the Air, Per-
sonal Secretary.
LAMB, HAROLD
1938: The Buccaneer.
LANDIS. ADRIAN
1939: Everything's On Ice.
LANGDON, HARRY
1938: Blockheads.
1939: The Flying Deuces.
LANGLEY, NOEL
1939 : The Wizard of Oz.
LARDNER, RING, Jr.
1939: Meet Dr. Christian.
LARKIN, JOHN
1939: Charlie Chan at Treas-
ure Island.
LASKY, JESSE, Jr.
1939: Union Pacific.
LATIMER, JONATHAN
1939: The Lone Wolf Spv
Hunt.
LAUREN, S. K.
1938: Mother Carey's Chick-
ens.
1939: Our Neighbors the Car-
ters.
LAWRENCE: VINCENT
1938: Man-Proof, Test Pilot.
1939: Lucky Night.
LAWSON, JOHN HOWARD
1938 : Blockade, Algiers.
1939: They Shall Have Music.
LEDERER, CHARLES
1939 : Broadway Serenade,
Within the Law.
LEE, LEONARD
1939: Streets of Missing Men.
LEE, ROBERT N.
1939 : Tower of London.
LEHMAN, GLADYS
1938 : There's Always a Wom-
an, She Married an Artist, The
Lady Objects.
1939: Good Girls Go to Paris,
Blondie Brings Up Baby.
LEIGH, ROWLAND
1938 : Secrets of an Actress.
LENNON, THOMAS
1938: The Crowd Roars, Se-
crets of a Nurse.
1939: The Spellbinder.
LEO, MAURICE
1938: Swing Your Lady, Go-
ing Places, Hard to Get.
LEVIEN, SONYA
1938 : In Old Chicago, Four
Men and a Prayer, Kidnapped,
The Cowboy and the Lady.
374
1939: Drums Along the Mo-
hawk, Hunchback of Notre
Dame.
LEVY, NEWMAN A.
1938: The Jury's Secret.
LEWIS, HERBERT C.
1939: Fisherman's Wharf.
LINDSAY, HOWARD
1938: Artists and Models
Abroad.
LIPMAN, WILLIAM R.
1938 : Dangerous to Know,
Love Is a Headache, Hunted
Men, Persons in Hiding, Fed-
eral Offense, Paroles for Sale.
1939: Persons in Hiding, Un-
dercover Doctor, Television.
Spy, Island of Lost Men.
LIPSCOMB, W. P.
1938: Pygmalion.
1939: The Sun Never Sets.
LIVELY, ROBERT
1938 : Danger on the Air, Per-
sonal Secretary.
1939: The Great Victor Her-
bert.
LIVELY, WILLIAM
1938 : Unashamed.
LOEB, LEE
1938: The Main Event, Swing
that Cheer.
1939: Forged Passport, Ha-
waiian Nights, Laugh It Off.
LOGAN, HELEN
1938 : Love on a Budget, Ras-
cals, Speed to Burn, A Trip
to Paris, Road Demon, Sharp-
shooters.
1939 : Down on the Farm,
Chasing Danger, Susannah of
the Mounties, Charlie Chan in
the City in Light, Too Busv
to Work, Man Who Wouldn't
Talk, Star Dust, The Escape.
LOGUE, CHARLES A.
(Deceased)
1938 : Crime Takes a Holiday.
LOOS, ANITA
1939: The Women.
LOWE, SHERMAN L.
1938: The Daredevil Drivers.
Mystery House, I Demand
Payment.
1939: Everything's On Ice,
Crashing Thru.
LUDWIG, WILLIAM
1938 : Love Finds Andy
Hardy, Out West with the
Hardys.
1939: The Hardys Ride High,
Stronger Than Desire, Black-
mail.
MacARTHUR, CHARLES
1939: Gunga Din, Wuthering
Heights.
MacDONALD, PHILIP
1938 : Mysterious Mr. Moto
of Devil's Island.
1939: Blind Alibi, Mr. Moto
Takes a Vacation.
MacFADDEN, HAMILTON
1939: The Honeymoon's Over.
MacKENZIE, AENEAS
1939: Juarez, The Private
Lives of Elizabeth and Essex.
MacPHERSON, JEANIE
1938: The Buccaneer.
Mac RAE, ARTHUR
1938 : Gaiety Girls.
McCALL, MARY, Jr.
1938 : It's All Yours, Dra-
matic School, Breaking the
Ice.
1939: Maisie.
McCarthy, mary c.
1939 : Irish Luck.
McCONVILLE, BERNARD
1938: The Old Barn Dance.
McCOY, HORACE
1938 : Dangerous to Know,
Hunted Men, Persons in Hid-
ing, Federal Offense, Paroles
for Sale.
1939: Persons in Hiding, Un-
dercover Doctor, Television
Spy, Island of Lost Men.
McEVOY, J. P.
1938: Just Around the Cor-
ner.
McGOWAN, DORRELL
1938: Under Western Stars,
Hollywood Stadium Mystery,
Down in Arkansaw, Ladies in
Distress, Come on Leather-
necks.
1939 : Smashing the Spy Ring,
In Old Monterey, Jeepers
Creepers, Rovin' Tumbleweeds.
McGOWAN, JACK
1939: Babes in Arms.
McGOWAN, ROBERT F.
1938 : Sons of the Legion.
McGOWAN, STUART E.
1938 : Hollywood Stadium
Mystery, Under Western Stars,
Come on Leathernecks, Ladies
in Distress, Down in Arkan-
saw.
1939: Smashing the Spy Ring,
In Old Monterey, Jeepers
Creepers, Rovin' Tumbleweeds.
McGUINNESS, JAMES K.
1938 : Arsene Lupin Returns,
Lord Jeff.
McGUIRE, WILLIAM
ANTHONY
1939: Ziegfeld Girl, Lillian
Russell.
McLEOD, NORMAN Z.
1939: Remember.
McNUTT, PATTERSON
1938 : Vacation from Love.
MACAULAY, RICHARD
1938: Brother Rat, Garden ef
the Moon, Hard to Get.
1939: The Kid from Kokomo,
Naughty But Nice, On Your
Toes, The Roaring Twenties.
MACK. RICHARD
1939 : You Can't Cheat an
Honest Man, Charlie McCarthy
Detective.
MAHIN, JOHN LEE
1938: Too Hot to Handle.
MAHONEY, WILKIE C.
1939: Some Like It Hot.
MAIBAUM, RICHARD
1938 : Bad Man of Brimstone,
Stablemates.
1939: The Lady and the Mob,
Coast Guard, The Amazing Mr.
Williams.
MALLESON, MILES
1938: Victoria the Great, Ac-
tion for Slander, Sixty Glori-
ous Years.
MALLOY, DORIS
1938: Love on Toast.
1939 : Mickey the Kid.
MANNHEIMER, ALBERT
1939: The Kid from Texas,
Dancing Co-ed.
MANNING, BRUCE
1938: Mad About Music, The
Rage of Paris, That Certain
Age.
1939: First Love.
MARCH, JOSEPH M.
1938: Her Jungle Love, Flirt-
ing with Fate.
1939: Woman Doctor.
MARION, GEORGE, Jr.
1938: The Gladiator.
1939: You Can't Cheat an
Honest Man.
MARKS, CLARENCE J.
1938: Wide Open Facei.
MARKSON, BEN
1939: Pride of the Navy, I
Was a Convict.
MARLOW, BRIAN
1939: Unmarried, Beware
Spooks !
MARTIN, AL
1938: Peck's Bad Boy with
the Circus.
MARTIN, CHARLES
1938: The Missing Guest.
MARTIN. FRANCIS
1938: Big Broadcast of 1938,
College Swing.
MASCHWITZ, ERIC
1939: Goodbye Mr. Chips.
MASON, BASIL
1938: I Married a Spy, Dan-
gerous Secrets.
MASON, SARAH Y.
1939 : Golden Boy.
MAYER. EDWIN JUSTUS
1938: The Buccaneer.
1939 : Rio.
MEEHAN, JOHN, JR.
1938: He Loved An Actress.
MEINARDI, HELEN
1938: Next Time I Marry.
MELSON, CHARLES
1938: Swiss Miss, The Gladi-
ator, Flirting with Fate.
375
Screenplay
Writers
MELTZER, LEWIS
1939 : Golden Boy, Those High
Grey Walls.
MERLIN, MILTON
1939: Burn 'Em Up O'Con-
nor.
MERSEREAU, JACK
1939: Hidden Gold.
MERTON, ROGER
1939: Down the Wyoming
Trail, Roll Wagons Roll.
MILLER, ALICE D. G.
1939: On Borrowed Time.
MILLER, SETON I.
1938: Penitentiary, The Ad-
ventures of Robin Hood, Val-
ley of the Giants, The Dawn
Patrol.
MILLHAUSER, BERTRAM
1938: Scandal Street, The
Texans.
1939: 6,000 Enemies, Nick
Carter — Master Detective.
MILNE, PETER
1939: Mr. Moto in Danger
Island, The House of Fear.
MOFFITT, JOHN C.
1938: Ride a Crooked Mile.
1939: I'm from Missouri, St.
Louis Blues, Our Leading
Citizen.
MOONEY, MARTIN
1938: I'll Never Forget, Jun-
ior G-Man, Murder in the
Big House.
MOORE, DANIEL
1938: The Storm.
MORAN, EDDIE
1938 : Merrily We Live, There
Goes My Heart.
1939 : Topper Takes a Trip.
MORGAN. BYRON
1939: Burn 'Em Up O'Con-
nor, Danger Flight.
MULHAUSER, JAMES
(Deceased)
1938: The Gladiator.
MURFIN, JANE
1938 : The Shining Hour.
1939: Stand Up and Fight,
The Women.
MURPHY, DUDLEY
1939: One Third of a Nation.
MUSE, CLARENCE
1939 : Way Down South.
MUSSELMAN, M. M.
1938 : Straight Place and
Show, Kentucky Moonshine.
1939: The Three Musketeers.
MYERS, HENRY
1939: Destry Rides Again.
Screenplay
Writers
MYTON, FRED
1938: Two-Gun Justice, Ter-
ror of Tiny Town, Harlem on
the Prairie.
1939: Six-Gun Rhythm, Code
of the Fearless.
NASH, OGDEN
1938: The Shining Hour.
NATTEFORD, JOHN K.
1938 : International Crime.
Rawhide, Shine on Harvest
Moon, Billy the Kid Returns,
Gold Mine in the Sky.
1939: Rough Riders' Round-
Up, Wyoming Outlaw, The
Kansas Terrors.
NEVILLE. GRACE
1938 : All-American Sweet-
heart, Little Miss Roughneck.
NEVILLE. JOHN T.
1938: My Old Kentucky
Home, Numbered Woman,
Gang Bullets. Barefoot Boy.
1939: The Girl from Rio. '
NEVILLE, ROBERT
1938: Peck's Bad Boy with
the Circus.
NEWBURY. GAYL
1939: Should a Girl Marry.
NIBLO. FRED, Jr.
1938: All-American Sweet-
heart, Penitentiary, Little Miss
Roughneck, City Streets.
1939: Hell's Kitchen, No
Place to Go.
NICHOLS. DUDLEY
1938: Bringing up Baby.
1939: Stagecoach.
NORTH, CARRINGTON
1938: The Headleys at Home.
NOTO, KARL
1939: The Girl Downstairs.
O'CONNOR, FRANK
1938 : Religious Racketeers.
1939: Mystic Circle Murder.
ODASI, E. R.
1938: Lightning Carson Rides
Again.
O'DONNELL, JACK
1939: Gentleman from Arizona.
O'DONNELL. JOSEPH
1938 : Song and Bullets, Phan-
tom Ranger.
1939 : Reform School, Port
of Hate.
OFFNER. MORTIMER
1938: Radio City Revels, The
Saint in New York, Little
Tough Guvs in Society.
1939: The Family Next Door.
O'NEILL. GEORGE
1939: Intermezzo — A Love
Story.
O'NEILL, FRANK
1019 ■ On Borrowed Time.
OPPENHEIMER, GEORGE
1938: Man-Proof, A Yank at
Oxford, Paradise for Three,
Three Loves Has Nancy, The
Crowd Roars.
ORNITZ, SAMUEL
1938: Army Girl, Little Or-
phan Annie.
ORKOW, BEN
1939: Boy Slaves.
ORR, GERTRUDE
1938: Call of the Yukon, Slan-
der House.
ORTH, MARION
1938: Saleslady, Romance of
the Limberlost, Under the Big
Top.
OSBORN, PAUL
1938: The Young in Heart.
OTVOS, DORIAN
1938 : Goodbye Broadway.
PAGANO. ERNEST
1938: Vivacious Lady, Care
free.
1939: The Flying Irishman.
PAGANO, JOE
1938 : Tarnished Angel.
1939: They Made Her a Spy.
PAGE, MARCO
1938: Fast Company.
PALMER, STUART
1938: Bulldog Drummonds
Peril, Hollywood Stadium Mys-
tery.
1939: Arrest Bulldog Drum
mond. Bulldog Drummond's
Bride. Death of a Champion.
PARAMORE, EDW. E., JR.
1938: The Three Comrades.
1939: The Oklahoma Kid.
Man of Conquest.
PARKER. DOROTHY
1938: Trade Winds, Sweet-
hearts.
PARKER. JEFFERSON
1938: The House of Mystery.
Making the Headlines. Flight
into Nowhere, Crime Takes a
Holiday.
1939 : Five Little Peppers.
PARKER, NORTON S.
1938 : Border Wolves, The
Last Stand, Outlaw Express,
Prison Break.
1939: Sky Patrol.
PARROTT, JAMES
( Deceased)
1938: Swiss Miss, Blockheads.
PARSONNET, MARION
1938: Love is a Headache.
1939: These Glamour Girls,
Miracles for Sale.
PARSONS, EDWIN C.
1939: Danger Flight.
PARSONS. LINDSAY
1938: Frontier Town.
PARTOS. FRANK
1938 : Romance in the Dark.
1939 : Honolulu, Rio.
376
PASCAL. ERNEST
1938: Kidnapped.
1939: The Hound of the Bas-
kervilles, Hollywood Caval-
cade.
PATRICK, JOHN
1938: International Settlement.
Battle of Broadway, Mr. Moto
Takes a Chance, Five of a
Kind, Up the River.
PEREZ, PAUL
1938: The Missing Guest.
PERELMAN, LAURA
1939: Ambush.
PERELMAN, S. J.
1939: Ambush.
PERRIN, NAT
1939: Gracie Allen Murder
Case.
PERRY. CHARLES
. 1939: Each Dawn I Die.
PERRY, GEORGE S.
1938: The Arkansas Traveler.
PLYMPTON, GEORGE
1938: Rangers Roundup, Pa-
roled— to Die, Song and Bul-
lets, Thunder in the Desert,
Paroled from the Big House.
1939: Smoky Trail, Trigger
Pals, Daughter of the Tong.
POLAND, JOSEPH
1938: Cattle Raiders, Tar
nished Angel.
POWELL, ARTHUR
1939: Home on the Range.
POWELL, CHARLES
1938: Panamint's Bad Man.
PRASKINS, LEONARD
1938: Stablemates.
1939: Ice Follies of 1939.
PRESNELL, ROBERT
1939: Disbarred, The Real
Glory-
PURCELL. GERTRUDE
1938: Mother Carey's Chick
ens. Service de Luxe.
1939: The Lady and the Mob.
Destry Rides Again.
RAINE, NORMAN REILLY
1938 : The Adventures of Robin
Hood. Men Are Such Fools.
1939 : Each Dawn I Die, Pri-
vate Lives of Elizabeth and
Essex.
RAISON, MILTON
1938 : Radio Troubadour.
Shadow.
1939: The Girl from Rio.
RAPF. MAURICE
1939: Winter Carnival.
RAPP, PHILIP
1938: Start Cheering.
RATHMELL, JOHN
1938: Painted Desert, Star-
lieh' Over Texas.
1939 : Song of the Buckaroo,
Renegade Trail.
RAUH, STANLEY
1938: Hold That Kiss.
1939: Quick Millions, Too
Busy to Work.
RAY, ALBERT
1938 : Change of Heart, Keep
Smiling, Island in the Sky,
Everybody's Baby, While New
York Sleeps.
1939: Winner Take All, Char-
lie Chan in Reno.
REED, TOM
1939: On Dress Parade.
REEVES, THEODORE
1938: The Storm.
REID, DOROTHY
1938: Prison Break.
REINHARDT, WOLFGANG
1939: Juarez.
REIS, IRVING
1938: King of Alcatraz.
1939: King of Chinatown,
Grand Jury Secrets.
REISCH, WALTER
1938: The Great Waltz.
1939: Ninotchka.
REPP, ED EARL
1938: Outlaws of the Prairie,
Cattle Raiders, Call of the
Rockies, West of Cheyenne.
REYHER, FERDINAND
1938 : Ride a Crooked Mile.
RIGBY, GORDON
1938: Flight Into Nowhere,
Reformatory, Outside the Law.
1939: Trapped in the Sky,
Whispering Enemies, Hidden
Power.
RIPLEY, ARTHUR
1939: Waterfront.
RIPLEY, CLEMENTS
1938: Love Honor and Be-
have, Jezebel.
RISKIN, ROBERT
1938: You Can't Take It With
You.
RIVKIN, ALLEN
1938: Straight Place and
Show.
1939: Let Us Live, It Could
Happen to You.
ROBERTS, CHARLES E.
1939: Mexican Spitfire.
ROBERTS, MARGUERITE
1938: Meet the Girls.
ROBERTS, STANLEY
1938: Code of the Rangers,
Prairie Moon, Pals of the Sad-
dle. Heroes of the Hills.
1939: The Night Riders, Colo-
rado Sunset.
ROBINS, SAM
1939: Range War.
ROBINSON, CASEY
1938 : Four's a Crowd.
1939: Dark Victory, Yes-My
Darling Daughter, The Old
Maid.
ROGERS, CAMERON
1938: White Banners.
ROGERS, CHARLES
1938: Blockade.
1939: The Flying Deuces.
ROGERS, HOWARD
EMMETT
1938: Arsene Lupin Returns.
ROOT, LYNN
1939: The Saint in London.
ROOT, WELLS
1939: Man of Conquest, Ser-
geant Madden, Thunder Afloat.
ROSSEN, ROBERT
1938 : Racket Busters.
1939: The Roaring Twenties,
Dust Be My Destiny.
ROTHMAN, JOSEPH
1938: Dynamite Delaney.
ROYAL, CHARLES FRANCIS
1938: The Old Barn Dance,
Gangs of New York, Tarzan
and the Green Goddess, Color-
ado Trail, Rio Grande, Texas
Stampede.
1939: Outpost of the Moun-
ties, Taming of the West.
RUSKIN, HARRY
1938: Paradise for Three, Love
is a Headache, The Chaser,
Young Dr. Kildare.
1939: Calling Dr. Kildare, Se-
cret of Dr. Kildare, Miracles
for Sale.
RYAN, DON
1938 : Broadway Musketeers.
1939: You Can't Get Away
With Murder, On Trial.
RYAN, ELAINE
1938: Listen Darling.
RYERSON, FLORENCE
1938: Everybody Sing.
1939: Ice Follies of 1939. The
Kid from Texas, The Wizard
of Oz.
RYSKIND, MORRIE
1938: Room Service.
1939 : Man About Town.
ST. CLAIR, ROBERT
1938: I'M from the City.
SALKOW, SIDNEY
1938 : Prison Nurse, Come on
Leathernecks.
SALT, WALDO
1938 : The Shopworn Angel.
SAND, CARLTON
1938: She Loved a Fireman.
SAUBER, HARRY
1938 : Outside of Paradise.
SAYRE, JOEL
1939: Gunga Din.
SCHARY, DORE
1938: Boys Town.
SCHILLER, ALFRED
1939 : The Flying Deuces.
SCHOFIELD, PAUL
1939 : Mystery Plane.
377
Screenplay
Writers
SCHRANK, JOSEPH
1938: Swing Your Lady, He
Couldn't Say No, A Slight
Case of Murder.
SCHROCK, RAYMOND
1939: Smashing the Money
Ring, Kid Nightingale.
SCHUBERT, BERNARD
1938: Breaking the Ice.
1939 : Fisherman's Wharf.
SCHULBERG, BUD W.
1938: Little Orphan Annie.
1939: Winter Carnival.
SCOLA, KATHRYN
1938: The Baroness and the
Butler, Alexander's Ragtime
Band, Always Goodbye.
1939 : Hotel for Women.
SCOTT. ALLAN
1938: Joy of Living, Care-
free.
1939 : Fifth Avenue Girl.
SEFF, MANUEL
1938 : Breaking the Ice.
SEGALL, HARRY
1938: Everybody's Doing It,
Blind Alibi.
1939: Coast Guard.
SHAFF, MONROE
1938: She's Got Everything,
The Overland Express, Stranf-
er from Arizona, Law of the
Texan, California Frontier.
SHANE, MAXWELL
1938: Tip-Off Girls, Adventure
in Sahara.
1939: Federal Man-Hunt, S.
O. S. Tidal Wave.
SHEEKMAN, ARTHUR
1938 : The Gladiator.
SHERMAN, RICHARD
1938: Four Men and a Prayer,
Alexander's Ragtime Band,
Girl's School.
1939 : In Name Only, The
Story of Vernon and Irene
Castle.
SHERMAN, VINCENT
1938: Crime School, My Bill,
Heart of the North.
1939: Pride of Bluegrass,
King of the Underworld.
SHERRIFF, R. C.
1939: Goodbye Mr. Chips.
SHERWOOD, ROBERT E.
1938: The Adventures of
Marco Polo.
1939: Idiot's Delight.
SHORE, VIOLA B.
1938 : The Arkansas Traveler.
1939: Chicken Wagon Family.
Screenplay
Writers
SHUMATE, HAROLD
1939: Charlie McCarthy De
tective.
SILVERS, SID
1939: The Gorilla.
SILVERSTEIN. DAVID
1939: Should a Girl Marry.
SIMMONS, MICHAEL
1938 : Ail-American Sweet-
heart, Squadron of Honor, Lit-
tle Miss Roughneck, Juvenile
Court, Flight to Fame, The
Little Adventuress.
1939: Romance of the Red-
woods, Missing Daughters,
Mutiny on the Blackhawk,
. ropic Fury.
SIMPSON, GEORGE H.
1938 : Everything Happens to
Me.
SKOURAS, EDITH
1938: Always Goodbye.
SLESINGER, TESS
1938: Girl's School.
SLOANE, PAUL
1938: The Texans.
1939: Geronimo.
SMITH. PAUL GERARD
1938: The Higgins Family.
SNELL, EARL
1938 : Wide Open Faces, The
Gladiator.
1939: Homicide Bureau,
Torchy Plays With Dynamite,
Days of Jesse James.
SOLOW. EUGENE
1938: The Patient in Room 18,
Start Cheering.
1939: Of Mice and Men.
SPENCE, RALPH
1938: King Solomon's Mines,
Silent Barriers, Smack and
Grab. Sweet Devil, The Gang's
All Here.
1939 : The Flying Deuces, The
Gorilla, Covered Trailer, The
Sky is the Limit.
SPERLING, MILTON
1938 : Happy Landing, I'll
Give a Million.
1939: Return of the Cisco
Kid, Here I Am a Stranger.
SPEWACK, BELLA
1938: Boy Meets Girl, Three
Loves Has Nancy, The Chaser.
SPEWACK, SAMUEL
1938: Boy Meets Girl, Three
Loves Has Nancy, The Chaser.
SPIEGELGASS, LEONARD
1938: Letter of Introduction.
Service de Luxe.
1939 : Unexpected Father.
STALLINGS, LAURENCE
1938: Too Hot to Handle.
STARLING, LYNN
1938: Three Blind Mice.
Thanks for the Memory.
1939: The Cat and the Ca-
nary.
STEVENS, LOUIS
1938: Si nners in Paradise.
STEWART, DONALD
OGDEN
1938: Holiday, Marie Antoin-
ette.
1939 : Love Affair.
STORM, JANE
1938 : Love on Toast.
STURGES, PRESTON
1938: Port of Seven Seas, If I
Were King.
1939 : Never Say Die.
SULLIVAN C. GARDNER
1938: The Buccaneer, Arkan-
sas Traveler.
1939: Union Pacific. Northwest
Mounted Police, Kit Carson.
SWERLING, JO
1938: Dr. Rhythm, I Am the
Law.
1939: Made for Each Other,
The Real Glory, The West-
erner.
TARADASH, DANIEL
1939: Golden Boy.
TARSHIS, HAROLD
1938: Fast Company.
1939: Stop Look and Love,
Jones Family in Hollywood,
High School.
TASKER, ROBERT
1939: Back Door to Heaven.
TAYLOR, DWIGHT
1939 : When Tomorrow Comes,
The Amazing Mr. Williams.
TAYLOR, ERIC
1938: Lady in the Morgue,
Orphans of the Street.
1939: Trapped in the Sky,
Fugitive at Large.
TAYLOR, HENRY
1938: Who Killed Gail Prea
ton?, Juvenile Court.
THOMAS, LOWELL
1938: Titans of the Deep.
THOMPSON, PEGGY
1938: King of the Newsboys.
THOEREN, ROBERT
1939: Hotel Imperial.
TOLNAY, AKOS
1938: The Wife of General
Ling.
TOMBRAGEL, MAURICE
1939: Legion of Lost Flyers.
TORRES, MIGUEL G.
1939: Juarez and Maximilian.
TOTHEROH, DAN
1938: The Dawn Patrol.
TOTMAN, WELLYN
1938: Gangs of New York,
Wanted by the Police.
1939: Fighting Thoroughbreds,
Tough Kid, Boy's Reforma-
tory.
TOWNE, GENE
1938: Joy of Living.
1939: Eternally Yours.
TOWNE, SPENCER
1938: Prison Train.
TOWNLEY, JACK
1938: Romance on the Run,
Orphans of the Street, The
Higgins Family.
1939: My Wife's Relatives,
The Covered Trailer, Should
Husbands Work?
TRAMPE, RAY
1938 : Mars Attacks the World.
1939: Boy's Reformatory.
TRAUBE, SHEPARD
1938: Prison Train.
TRIVERS, BARRY
1938: That's My Story, Ariz-
ona Wildcat, Army Girl.
1939: Boy Friend.
TROTTI, LAMAR
1938: The Baroness and the
Butler, In Old Chicago, Alex-
ander's Ragtime Band, Ken-
tucky, Gateway.
1939: The Story of Alexander
Graham Bell, Young Mr. Lin-
coln, Drums Along the Mo-
hawk.
378
TRUMBO, DALTON
1938: A Man to Remember,
Fugitive for a Night.
1939: The Flying Irishman.
Sorority House, Five Came
Back, Career.
TUCHOCK, WANDA
1938: Hawaii Calls.
1939: The Llano Kid.
TUGEND, H AFRY
1938: Sally Irene and Mary,
My Lucky Star, Little Miss
Broadway, Thanks for Every-
thing.
1939: Second Fiddle.
TUNBERG. KARL
1938: Rebecca of Sunnybrook
Farm, Hold That Co-ed.
TWIST, JOHN
1938: Xext Time I Marry, The
Law West of Tombstone.
1939: Twelve Crowded Hours,
The Great Man Votes, Pa-
cific Liner, The Saint Strikes
Back, Three Sons, Reno.
VAJDA, ERNEST
1938: Marie Antoinette, Dra-
matic School.
VAN RIPER, KAY
1938: Judge Hardy's Children.
You're Only Young Once, Out
West With the Hardys.
1939: The Hardys Ride High,
Andy Hardy Gets Spring
Fever, Babes in Arms.
VAN UPP, VIRGINIA
1938 : You and Me.
1939: Cafe Society, Honey-
moon in Bali.
VANN, JAY
1938: Tarzan's Revenge.
VEILLER, ANTHONY
1938 : Radio Citv Revels.
1939: Let Us Live, Disputed
Passage.
WAGGNER, GEORGE
1938: Midnight Intruder, The
Spy Ring, State Police, Air
Devils.
WALD, JERRY
1938: Hard to Get, Brother
Rat, Going Places, Garden of
the Moon.
1939: The Kid from Kokomo,
Naughty But Nice, The Roar-
ing Twenties, On Your Toes.
WALKER, GRANVILLE
1939: Barricade.
WALSH, ROBERT E.
1938 : Booloo.
WARD, LUCI
1938: Call the Mesquiteers,
Man from Music Mountain,
Sante Fe Stampede, Panamint's
Bad Man, Overland Stage
Raiders.
1939: New Frontier, The
Arizona Kid.
WARE, DARRELL
1938: Just Around the Corner,
Submarine Patrol.
1939: Hotel for Women.
WARE, HARLAN
1938: Vacation from Love.
WATERS, DUDLEY
1938: Storm Over Bengal.
WATT, NATE
1938 : Pride of the West.
WEAD, FRANK
1938: The Citadel.
1939: Tail Spin.
WEAVER, JOHN V. A.
(Deceased)
1938: The Adventures of Tom
Sawyer.
WEISBERG, BRENDA
1938: Little Tough Guy.
WEITZENKORN, LOUIS
1938: King of the Newsboys.
WELCH, EDDIE
1938: Scandal Street, Her Jun-
gle Love, Prison Farm.
WEST, CLAUDINE
1938: Marie Antoinette.
1939: Goodbye Mr. Chips, On
Borrowed Time.
WEST, JOSEPH
1938: Black Bandit.
1939: Mystery Plane, Wolf
Call, Stunt Pilot, Sky Patrol.
WEST. NATHANAEL
1938: Born to be Wild.' fc"'
1939: Spirit of Culver, Five
Came Back, I Stole a Mil-
lion.
WESTON, GARNETT
1938: Bulldog Drummond in
Africa.
1939: Bulldog Drummond's
Secret Police, Bulldog Drum-
mond's Bride.
WEXLEY, JOHN
1938: The Amazing Dr. Clit-
terhouse, Angels With Dirty
Faces.
1939: Confessions of a Nazi
Spy.
WHITE, LESLIE T.
1939 : Behind Prison Gates.
WHITE, ROBERTSON
1938: He Couldn't Say No,
The Patient in Room 18, Mys-
tery House, Lady in the
Morgue. My Bill.
1939: The Witness Vanishes.
WILBUR, CRANE
1938: Over the Wall, The In-
visible Menace, Crime School,
379
Screenplay
Writers
Girls on Probation, Penrod's
Double Trouble, Hell's Kitchen,
Sons of Liberty.
1939: Blackwell's Island, Hell's
Kitchen.
WILDE, HAGER
1938: Bringing Up Baby.
WILDER, BILLY
1938: Bluebeard's Eighth
Wife.
1939: Midnight, What a Life,
Xinotchka.
WILLIAMS, C. B.
1939: Heroes in Blue.
WILLIS, F. McGREW
1938: Let's Make a Night of
It.
WILSON, CAREY
1939: Hunchback of Xotre
Dame, Judge Hardy and Son.
WOLFSON, P. J.
1938: Vivacious Lady.
1939: Alleghany Uprising.
WOOLF. EDGAR ALLAN
1938: Everybody Sing.
1939: The Kid from Texas,
Ice Follies of 1939, The Wiz-
ard of Oz.
WORMSER, RICHARD E.
1938: Start Cheering, Fugi-
tives for a Night.
WRIGHT, GILBERT
1938: Wild Horse Rodeo.
YAWITZ, PAUL
1938: Go Chase Yourself,
Crashing Hollywood, The Af-
fairs of Annabel.
1939 : Fixer Dugan, Little Ac-
cident.
YELLEN, JACK
1938: Sally Irene and Mary,
My Lucky Star, Submarine
Patrol, Hold That Co-ed, Lit-
tle Miss Broadway.
YOST, DOROTHY
1939: Four Girls in White, The
Story of Vernon and Irene
Castle, Bad Little Angel.
YOST, ROBERT M.
1938 : Tip-Off Girls, Born to
the West. Prison Farm, Illegal
Traffic.
1939: Grand Jury Secrets.
YOUNG, CLARENCE U.
1938: The Law West of Tomb-
stone.
1939: Bad Lands.
YOUNG, HILDA MAY
1938: Topa Topa.
YOUNG, WALDEMAR
(Deceased)
1938: Man-Proof, Test Pilot.
YOUNG, ZELLA
1939: Reform School.
HARRY STRADL1NG
Cinematographer
"MY SON, MY SON!"
"JAMAICA INN"
"THE CITADEL"
"PYGMALION"
Under contract to
Gabriel Pascal
STANLEY CORTEZ
A.S.C.
Director of Photography
•
"DANGER ON THE AIR"
"FOR LOVE OR MONEY"
"THE FORGOTTEN WOMAN"
"HAWAIIAN NIGHTS"
"ALIAS THE DEACON"
Universal Productions
Special Sequences
"Of Mice And Men".
"Road Back"
Direction Lewis Milestone
Hal Roach Production
Direction Frank Tuttle
Universal Production
380
CAMERAMEN
Their Work in 1938 and 1939
Credits on pictures released prior to 1938 may be had from previous
editions of the Year Book or from the Film Daily information service.
ANDERSEN, M. A.
1938 : Slander House.
ANDRIOT, LUCIEN
1938 : International Settlement,
Thanks for Everything, Ari-
zona Wildcat, I'll Give a
Million, Always in Trouble.
1939: Mr. Moto in Danger
Island, Boy Friend, Stop Look
and Love, Quick Millions,
Pack Up Your Troubles.
ASH. JEROME
1938 : Trouble at Midnight.
1939: Tropic Fury, Oklahoma
Frontier, Desperate Trails, Le-
gion of Lost Flyers.
AUGUST, JOSEPH
1938: The Saint in New York,
This Marriage Business, Gun
Law.
1939: Man of Conquest, Gunga
Din, Nurse Edith Cavell,
Hunchback of Notre Dame.
BALLARD, LUCIEN
1938 : Penitentiary, The Lone
Wolf in Paris, Squadron of
Honor, Flight to Fame, High-
way Patrol.
1939: Let Us Live, Blind Al-
ibi, Coast Guard.
BARNES. GEORGE
1938 : Love Honor and Be-
have, Beloved Brat, Gold
Diggers in Paris.
1939: Jesse James, Our Neigh-
bors the Carters.
BECKWAY, WILLIAM
1938: Woman Against the
World.
BERGER, CARL
1938: Booloo.
BINGER. RAY
1939: Stagecoach.
BOYLE, CHARLES
1939 : The Great Command-
ment.
BOYLE, JOHN W.
1938: Outlaws o£ the Prairie,
Cattle Raiders, Dark Sands.
1939: Mystery of the White
Room, Society Smugglers, Hero
for a Day, Gentleman from
Arizona.
BREDELL, ELWOOD
1938: That's My Story, Reck-
less Living, Swing Sister
Swing, Secrets of a Nurse,
Swing that Cheer, Little
Tough Guy, Freshman Year.
1939: Spirit of Culver, Big
Town Czar, Ex-Champ, Two
Bright Boys, Call a Messen-
ger.
BRODINE, NORBERT
1938: Merrily We Live, Swiss
Miss, There Goes My Heart.
1939: Topper Takes a Trip.
Captain Fury, The House-
keeper's Daughter, Of Mice
and Men.
BROWN, JAMES S., JR.
1938: Roaring Timber, The
House of Mystery, Flight into
Nowhere, Crime Takes a Holi-
day, Reformatory, Pioneer
Trail, Crashin' Thru Danger,
Outside the Law.
1939: Trapped in the Sky,
Whispering Enemies. Hidden
Power, Fugitive at Large.
CARTIER, HENRI
1938: Return to Life.
CLARK, DANIEL B.
1938: Change of Heart, Five
of a Kind.
CLARKE, CHARLES
1938: Safety _ in Numbers,
Charlie Chan in Honolulu.
1939: Return of the Cisco Kid,
Frontier Marshal, Mr. Moto
Takes a Vacation.
CLINE, ROBERT
1938 : Paroled— To Die, Des-
ert Patrol, Thunder in the
Desert.
COOPER, GEORGE
1939 : Western Caravans.
CORBY, J.
1938 : Starlight Over Texas.
CORLEY, FRANCIS
1938: Where the Buffalo
Roam.
1939: Song of the Buckaroo.
CORTEZ, STANLEY
1938: The Black Doll, Lady
in the Morgue, Danger on the
Air, Personal Secretary, The
Last Express.
1939: For Love or Money, The
Forgotten Woman, They Asked
for It, Hawaiian Nights. Risky
Business. Laugh It Off, Alias
the Deacon.
CREBER, LEWIS
1938: Mysteroius Mr. Moto
of Devil's Island.
CRONJAGER, EDWARD
1938: Rascals, Keep Smiling,
Island in the Sky, Gateway.
1939: Winner Take All. The
Gorilla, Chicken Wagon Fam-
ily, The Escape, Everything
Happens at Night, Too Busv
to Work.
DANIELS, WILLIAM
1938: Dramatic School, Marie
Antoinette, Three Loves Has
Nancy.
1939: Idiot's Delight, Stronger
Than Desire, Another Thin
Man, Ninotchka.
DAVEY, ALLEN
1938 : Sweethearts.
1939: Hollywood Cavalcade.
DAVIS, HARRY
1938 : One Wild Night.
DE GRASSE, ROBERT
1938: Vivacious Lady, Having
Wonderful Time, Carefree.
1939: The Story of Vernon and
Irene Castle, Batchelor Mother,
Fifth Avenue Girl.
DE VINNA, CLYDE
1938: The Bad Man of Brim-
stone, Of Human Hearts, Fast
Company.
1939: The Girl Downstairs,
Bridal Suite, Blackmail, They
All Come Out.
DORAN, ROBERT
1938: Topa Topa, I Demand
Payment.
DYER, ELMER
1939: Code of the Fearless,
Wings of the Navy, Only An-
gels Have Wings.
EDESON, ARTHUR
1938: The Kid Comes Back,
Swing Your Lady, Cowboy
from Brooklyn, Mr. Chump,
Racket Busters.
1939: Wings of the Navy, Each
Dawn I Die, Sweepstakes
Winner, No Place to Go, Kid
Nightingale.
FISCHBECK, HARRY
1938: Big Broadcast of 1938,
Bulldog Drummond's Peril,
Prison Farm, King of Alca-
traz.
1939 : Persons in Hiding, Dis-
barred, Unmarried, Grand Jury
Secrets. Bulldog Drummond's
Bride. Television Spy, Million
Dollar Legs.
FOLSEY, GEORGE
1938: Arsene Lupin Returns,
Hold that Kiss, The Shining
Hour.
1939 : Fast and Loose. Society
Lawyer, Lady of the Tropics,
Remember?
381
Cameramen
FORBES, HARRY
1938: Clipped Wings, Woman
Against the World, The Head-
leys at Home.
1939 : Death Goes North.
FREULICH, HENRY
1938: It's All Yours, There's
Always a Woman, When G-
Men Step In, Who Killed Gail
Preston? I Am the Law, The
Little Adventuress, Blondie.
1939 : Good Girls Go to Paris,
Missing Daughters, Five Little
Peppers, Blondie Takes a Va-
cation, Blondie Brings Up
Baby.
FREUND, KARL
1938: Man-Proof, Port of
Seven Seas, Letter of Intro-
duction.
1939: Rose of Washington
Square, Golden Boy, Barri-
cade, Balalaika.
FRIESE-GREENE, CLAUDE
1939 : The Saint in London.
GARMES, LEE
1939: Gone With the Wind.
GAUDIO. TONY G.
1938: Torchy Blane in Pan-
ama, The Adventures of Robin
Hood, Garden of the Moon.
The Dawn Patrol, The Sisters.
1939: Juarez, We Are Not
Alone, The Old Maid.
GERSTAD, MERRITT
1938 : She Married an Artist.
1939 : Bulldog Drummond's Se-
cret Police, I'm from Missouri,
•Winter Carnival, Eternally
Yours.
GILKS, ALFRED
1939: Calling Dr. Kildare,
These Glamour Girls, Secret
of Dr. Kildare, Dancing Co-ed.
GLENNON, BERT
1939: Stagecoach, Young Mr.
Lincoln, Drums Along the Mo-
hawk, Swanee River.
GOODFRIEND, PLINY
1938 : It's All in Your Mind.
GOULD, HARVEY
1939: In Old Montana.
GREEN, HOWARD
1938: The Adventures of Rob-
in Hood, Men with Wings.
1939: The Private Lives of
Elizabeth and Essex.
GREENHALGH, JACK
1938: Code of the Rangers,
Religious Racketeers, Two-Gun
Justice, Phantom Ranger,
Frontier Scout.
1939: Trigger Pals, Bad Boy.
Torture Ship, Beasts of Berlin.
HALLENBERGER, HARRY
1939 : Night Work.
HALLER, ERNEST
1938: Jezebel, Brother Rat,
Four Daughters, Four's a
Crowd.
1939 : Dark Victory, The Roar-
ing Twenties, Gone With the
Wind.
HARLAN, RUSSELL
1938: Bar 20 Justice, Car-
sidy of Bar 20, Heart of Ari-
zona, Sunset Trail, The Fron-
tiersman, Mysterious Rider, In
Old Mexico.
1939 : Heritage of the Desert,
Silver on the Sage, The Llano
Kid, Law of the Pampas,
Range War, Renegade Trail.
HICKOX, SIDNEY
1938: A Slight Case of Mur-
der, Women Are Like That,
Men Are Such Fools, My Bill,
Secrets of an Actress.
1939 : Women in the Wind,
The Kid from Kokomo, The
Return of Dr. X, Indianapolis
Speedway, Everybody's Hobby.
HOWE, JAMES WONG
1938: The Adventures of Tom
Sawyer, Troopship, Algiers,
Comet Over Broadway.
WILLARD Vfin der V€€ R
A.S.C, F.R.P.S.
DIRECTOR AND CINEMATOGRAPHER
T
382
1939: They Made Me a Crim-
inal, The Oklahoma Kid.
Daughters Courageous, On
Your Tnes, Dust Be My Des-
tiny.
HUNT, J. ROY
1938: Radio City Revels,
Mother Carey's Chickens, A
Man to Remember, Law West
or Tombstone, Room Service.
1939: Boy Slaves, The Flying
Irishman. Panama Lady. Reno,
In Name Only, Full Confes-
sion.
HYER, WILLIAM
1938 : Rangers Roundup, Fly-
ing Fists, Harlem on the
Prairie. Silks and Saddles.
1939: Reform School.
IVANO, PAUL
1938: Fury Below, I Am a
Criminal.
1939 : Should a Girl Marry,
The Girl from Rio.
JACKMAN, FRED, JR.
1939: Wolf Call, Stunt Pilot,
Sky Patrol, Danger Flight.
JENNINGS, J. D.
1938: Born to the West.
JUNE, RAY
1938 : Test Pilot, Woman
Against Woman, Rich Man-
Poor Girl, Vacation from Love,
Enemv Territory.
1939: Honolulu, Lucky Night,
Fast and Furious, Babes in
Arms.
KANTUREK, OTTO
1939: Prisoner of Corbal.
KTLLINO, ROY
1939: I Met a Murderer.
KELLY, BILL
1939: Back Door to Heaven.
KLINE, BENJAMIN
1938 : All-American Sweet-
heart, Women in Prison, Ex-
tortion, Juvenile Court, Little
Miss Roughneck, West of
Cheyenne, Colorado Trail, Call
of the Rockies.
1939: Homicide Bureau, Man
from Sundown. A Woman Is
the Judge, The Man They
Could Not Hang.
KRASNER, MILTON
1938: The Jury's Secret, Mid-
night Intruder, Nurse from
Brooklyn, The Storm, The
Missing Guest.
1939: Newsboys' Home, The
Family Next Door, You Can't
Cheat an Honest Man, The
House of Fear, Missing Evi-
dence. Little Accident, I Stole
a Million.
KULL, EDWARD
1939: Smoky Trail, El Diablo
Rides, Port of Hate
LANG, CHARLES
1938: Dr. Rhythm, You and
Me, Spawn of the North.
1939: Midnight, Zaza, Gracie
Allen Murder Case, The Cat
and the Canary.
LANNING, REGGIE
1938: Heroes of the Hills, Pals
of the Saddle, Santa Fe Stam-
pede.
1939: Home on the Prairie.
Wyoming Outlaw, New Fron-
tier, Sabotage, Days of Jesse
James.
LAWTON, CHARLES
1938: Listen Darling, The
Chaser.
1939 : Within the Law, Mir-
acles for Sale. Nick Carter —
Master Detective.
LINDEN, EDDIE
1938: Wolves of the Sea, Pa-
roled from the Big House.
1939: Crashing Thru.
LLOYD, ART
1938: Blockheads.
1939: The Flying Deuces.
LONGNECKER, BERT
1938: The Painted Trail,
Wanted by the Police, Gun
Packer, The Mexicali Kid,
Man's Country.
1939: Wild Horse Canyon,
Overland Mail.
LYNCH, WARREN
1938: Blondes at Work, Tor
chy Gets Her Man.
1939: Torchy Blane in China-
town.
MacKENZIE, JACK
1938: She's Got Everything,
Radio City Revels, Crime
Ring, Breaking the Ice.
1939: Girl from Mexico. The
Day the Bookies Wept, Mexi-
can Spitfire.
McCORD, TED
1938: Sergeant Murphy, The
Daredevil Drivers.
1939 : Secret Service of the
Air, Code of the Secret Service,
Pride of Bluegrass, Cowboy
Quarterback.
McGILL, BARNEY
1938: Battle of Broadway,
Sharpshooters.
MACKENZIE, JACK
1938: Hawaii Calls, Peck's
Bad Boy with the Circus.
MARLEY, PEVERELL
1938: In Old Chicago. Alexan
der's Ragtime Band, Suez, Up
the River.
1939 : The Hound of the Bas-
kervilles, The Three Musket-
eers, Hotel for Women. Day-
Time Wife.
C u tit era ttt e tt
MARSH, OLIVER T.
1938: Girl of the Golden West.
The Toy Wife, Sweethearts.
1939 : Broadway Serenade, Ice
Follies of 1939, It's a Wonder-
ful World, The Women, An-
other Thin Man.
MARTA, JACK
1938: King of the Newsboys,
Born to be Wild, Outside of
Paradise, Invisible Enemy, He
Loved an Actress, Under
Western Stars, Ladies in Dis-
tress, A Desperate Adventure,
Man from Music Mountain,
The Night Hawk, I Stand
Condemned, Rhythm of the
Saddle, Come on Rangers, The
Higgins Family.
1939: Rough Riders' Round-
up, My Wife's Relatives,
Forged Passport, Fighting
Thoroughbreds, The Night Rid-
ers, Pride of the Navy, Blue
Montana Skies, S. O. S. Tidal
Wave, Mickey the Kid, Saga
of Death Valley, Main Street
Lawyer, Southward Ho, Wall
Street Cowboy, Smuggled Car-
go, Should Husbands Work?
MARTINELLI, ARTHUR
1938: My Old Kentucky
Home, Numbered Woman,
Long Shot, Gang Bullets, Ci-
pher Bureau, Shadows Over
Shanghai.
1939: Panama Patrol, Juarez
and Maximilian, Inside Infor-
mation, The Witness Vanishes,
The Covered Trailer.
MATE, RUDOLPH
1938: The Adventures of Mar-
co Polo, Blockheads, Youth
Takes a Fling, Trade Winds.
1939: Love Affair, The Real
Glory.
MEEHAN, GEORGE
1938 : Tarzan's Revenge, Con-
victed, The Last Warning,
Gambling Ship.
1939: Special Inspector, Man-
hattan Shakedown, Taming of
the West, Riders of Black
River, Outpost of the Moun-
ties, The Stranger from Texas.
MELLOR, WILLIAM C.
1938: Romance in the Dark,
Stolen Heaven, Bulldog Drum-
mond in Africa, Ride a Crooked
Mile.
1939: Ambush, Hotel Imperial,
L'ndercover Doctor, The Mag-
nificent Fraud, $1000 a Touch-
down, Disputed Passage.
MESCALL, JOHN
1938 : Happy Landing, My
Lucky Star.
1939: Exile Express, When
Tomorrow Comes.
383
C a nt e i* « in e n
METTY, RUSSELL
1938: Bringing up Baby, An-
nabella Takes a Tour, The
Affairs of Annabella, Next
Time I Marry.
1939: The Great Man Votes,
The Spellbinder, Three Sons.
That's Right — You're Wrong.
MILLER, ARTHUR
1938 : The Baroness and the
Butler, Rebecca of Sunny-
nrook Farm, Little Miss
Broadway, Submarine Patrol.
1939: The Little Princess, Sus-
annah of the Mounties, Here I
Am a Stranger.
MILLER, ERNEST
1938: Call of the Yukon, The
Purple Vigilantes, Arson Gang
Busters, Hollywood Stadium
Mystery, The Old Barn Dance,
Prison Nurse, Romance on the
Run, Gangs of New York,
Come on Leathernecks, Tenth
Avenue Kid, Army Girl, Storm
Over Bengal, Orphans of the
Street, Down in Arkansaw,
Billy the Kid Returns.
1939 : Woman Doctor, The
Mysterious Miss X, Federal
Man-Hunt, Streets of Missing
Men, Zero Hour, Three Texas
Steers, She Married a Cop,
Mountain Rhythm, The Kansas
Terrors, Jeepers Creepers,
Flight at Midnight. In Old
Monterey, Cowboys from Tex-
as, Calling All Marines.
MILLER, VIRGIL
1938: Walking Down Broad-
way, Meridian 7-1212, Mr.
Moto Takes a Chance, Time
Out for Murder, Inside Story.
1939: Mr. Moto's Last Warn-
ing, Chasing Danger. Charlie
Chan in Reno, Charlie Chan
at Treasure Island, Charlie
Chan in the City in Darkness,
The Honeymoon's Over.
MILLER, WILLIAM
1938: Dynamite Delaney.
1939: One Third of a Nation.
MILNER. VICTOR
1938: The Buccaneer, College
Swing, Hunted Men, Say It
in French, Touchdown Army,
Give Me a Sailor.
1939: Union Pacific, What a
Life, Our Leading Citizen, The
Great Victor Herbert.
MOHR, HAL
1938: I Met My Love Again.
1939: Back Door to Heaven,
Destry Rides Again, The Un-
der-pup, Rio.
MORGAN. IRA H.
1938: The Black Doll.
MUSURACA, NICHOLAS
1938 : Crashing Hollywood,
Condemned Women, Every-
body's Doing It, Night Spot,
Quick Money, Law of the
Underworld, Blind Alibi,
Smashing the Rackets, Tar-
nished Angel, Sky Giant.
1939: Pacific Liner, Twelve
Crowded Hours, Sorority
House, Five Came Back, Gol-
den Boy, Allegheny Uprising.
NEUMAN. HARRY
1938 : State Police, Border
Wolves, The Spy Ring, The
Last Stand, Prison Break, Air
Devils, Mr. Wong — Detective,
Gangster's Boy.
1939: Streets of New York,
Navy Secrets, Tough Kid,
Boy's Reformatory, Mr. Wong
in Chinatown, Heroes in Blue,
Irish Luck, Mutiny in the Big
House.
NOBLES. WILLIAM
1938: Outlaws of Sonora, Call
the Mesquiteers, Wild Horse
Rodeo, Riders of the Black
Hills, Western Jamboree, Shine
On Harvest Moon, Prairie
Moon, Overland Stage Raiders,
Gold Mine in the Sky.
1939: Frontier Pony Express,
Mexicali Rose, In Old Caliente,
Colorado Sunset, The Arizona
Kid, Rovin' Tumbleweeds,
South of the Border.
O'CONNELL, L. WILLIAM
1938: Alcatraz Island, The In-
visible Menace, She Loved a
Fireman, Accidents Will Hap-
pen, When Were You Born?
Mystery House, Little Miss
Thoroughbred, Broadway
Musketeers, Heart of the
North, Nancy Drew — Detec-
tive.
1939 : On Trial, Nancy Drew
and the Hidden Staircase.
PALMER, ERNEST G.
1938: Four Men and a Prayer.
Three Blind Mice, Kentucky,
Straight Place and Show.
1939: Wife Husband and
Friend, News Is Made at
Night, 20.000 Men a Year.
Hollywood Cavalcade.
PETERSON, GUS
1938: Frontier Town.
PHILLIPS, ALEX
1939: Juarez and Maximilian.
PICARD, MARCEL
1938 : International Crime,
Prison Train, Lightning Car-
son Rides Again.
1939: Down the Wvoming
Trail, In Old Montana, Roll
Wagons Roll.
PITTACK, ROBERT
1939: Meet Dr. Christian.
PLANCK, ROBERT
1938: Kentucky Moonshine,
Always Goodbye, The Duke of
West Point, Hold that Co-ed.
1939: King of the Turf, The
Man in the Iron Mask.
PLANER, FRANZ
1938 : Holiday, Adventure in
Sahara, Girl's School.
POLITO, SOL
1938: Gold Is Where You
Find It, The Adventures of
Robin Hood, Gold Diggers in
Paris, Angels with Dirty
Faces, Boy Meets Girl, Valley
of the Giants.
1939: You Can't Get Away
with Murder, Dodge City, Four
Wives, The Private Lives of
Elizabeth and Essex.
PRICE, ROLAND
1939: The Bronze Buckaroo.
Harlem Rides the Range.
RAMSEY, CLARK
1939: Harlem Rides the Range.
REDMAN, FRANK
1938: Double Danger, The
Saint in New York, Maid's
Night Out, Little Orphan An-
nie, Fugitives for a Night,
I'm from the City.
1939: The Saint Strikes Back.
Beauty for the Asking, Career.
Conspiracy, Bad Lands.
REED, ART
1939: Six-Gun Rhythm.
REES, WILLIAM
1938 : Meet the Mayor.
RENNAHAN, RAY
1938: Her Jungle Love.
RESCHER, JAY
1939: Poncomania.
ROBINSON, GEORGE
1938 : Sinners in Paradise,
Wives Under Suspicion, Young
Fugitives, Little Tough Guys
in Society, The Road to Reno,
Service de Luxe.
1939: East Side of Heaven,
Son of Frankenstein, The Sun
Never Sets, Unexpected Father,
One Hour to Live, Tower of
London. Charlie McCarthy De-
tective.
ROSHER, CHARLES
1938: White Banners, Hard
to Get.
1939: Off the Record, Yes —
My Darling Daughter, Espion-
age Agent.
ROSSON, HAROLD
1938: Too Hot to Handle.
1939: The Wizard of Oz.
RUTTENBERG, JOSEPH
1938: The First Hundred
Years, Everybody Sing, Three
Comrades, The Shopworn An-
gel, The Great Waltz, Spring
Madness.
1939 : Ice Follies of 1939, Tell
No Tales, On Borrowed Time,
The Women, Balalaika.
384
SCHNEIDERMAN, GEORGE
1938 : The Gladiator, Flirting
with Fate.
SCHOENBAUM, CHARLES
1938: Love on Toast, Sons of
the Legion.
1939: Fisherman's Wharf, Way
Down South.
SEITZ, JOHN
1938: Love Is a Headache,
Lord JefF, Young Dr. Kildare,
Stablemates, The Crowd Roars.
1939: Huckleberry Finn, Ser-
geant Madden, 6,000 Enemies,
Thunder Afloat, Bad Little
Angel.
SERGEANT, GEORGE
1938: Unashamed.
SHAMROY, LEON
1938: The Young in Heart.
1939 : Made for Each Other,
The Story of Alexander Gra-
ham Bell, The Adventures of
Sherlock Holmes.
SHARP, HENRY
1938: Scandal Street, Booloo,
Campus Confessions, Just
Around the Corner, Illegal
Traffic.
1939 : Geronimo.
SIEGLER, ALLEN
1938 : No Time to Marry, The
Main Event, City Streets, The
Lady Objects.
1939: West of Santa Fe,
Smashing the Spy Ring, My
Son Is a Criminal, The Lone
Wolf Spy Hunt, Spoilers of
the Range, Behind Prison
Gates, Beware Spooks !
SKALL, WILLIAM
1939: The Little Princess.
SMITH, LEONARD
1938: Paradise for Three.
1939: Stand Up and Fight,
Four Girls in White, Maisie,
Tarzan Finds a Son, At the
Circus, Joe and Ethel Turp.
SNYDER, EDWARD
1938 : Love on a Budget, Speed
to Burn, A Trip to Paris,
Passport Husband, Down on
the Farm, Meet the Girls,
Road Demon.
1939: Down on the Farm, I
Was a Convict.
SPARKUHL, THEODOR
1938 : Tip-Off Girls, Danger-
ous to Know, The Texans, If
I Were King.
1939 : The Lady's from Ken-
tucky, Rulers of the Sea, Beau
Geste, The Light That Failed.
STENGLER, MACK
1938 : Song and Bullets, Ter-
ror of Tiny Town.
1939: Ride 'em Cowgirl,
Double Deal.
STRADLING, HARRY
1938: Pygmalion, The Cita-
del.
1939 : Jamaica Inn, My Son
My Son.
STOUT, ARCHIE J.
1938 : Professor Beware.
1939: Mystery Plane, Rulers
of the Sea.
STRUSS, KARL
1938: Thanks for the Mem-
ory, Sing You Sinners.
1939: Zenobia, Paris Honey-
moon, Some Like It Hot, The
Star Maker. Island of Lost
Men.
STUMAR, JOHN
1938: Mr. Boggs Steps Out.
1939 : Those High Grey Walls,
Parents on Trial, The Lady and
the Mob.
TETZLAFF, TED
1938: Fools for Scandal, Art-
ists and Models Abroad.
1939: Arrest Bulldog Drum-
mond, Cafe Society, Man About
Town, Honeymoon in Bali.
THOMPSON, ALLEN
1938: The Overland Express,
Hawaiian Buckaroo, Rawhide,
Panamint's Bad Man.
THOMPSON, STUART
1939: Death of a Champion.
TODD, ARTHUR
1938: He Couldn't Say No,
Penrod's Double Trouble, Tor-
chy Gets Her Man, Going
Places.
1939: Naughty But Nice, The
Amazing Mr. Williams, Angels
Wash Their Faces, On Dress
Parade, The Man Who Dared,
Torchy Plays with Dynamite.
TOLAND, GREGG
1938: The Goldwyn Follies.
Kidnapped, The Cowboy and
the Lady.
1939: Wuthering Heights,
They Shall Have Music, Inter-
mezzo— A Love Story.
TOVER, LEO
1938: Bluebeard's Eighth
Wife, Cocoanut Grove, The
Arkansas Traveler.
1939: King of Chinatown,
Never Say Die, Invitation to
Happiness.
Cameramen
VALENTINE, JOSEPH A.
1938: Mad About Music, The
Rage of Paris, That Certain
Age.
1939 : Three Smart Girls Grow
Up, First Love.
VAN TREES, JAMES C.
1938: The Patient in Room
18, Over the Wall.
1939 : Waterfront, Smashing
the Money Ring.
VOGEL, PAUL C.
1939: They All Come Out.
WAGNER, SIDNEY
1938: Boys Town, A Christ-
mas Carol.
1939: Let Freedom Ring, The
Kid from Texas.
WALKER, JOSEPH
1938: Joy of Living, Start
Cheering, There's That Wom-
an Again, You Can't Take It
With You.
1939: Only Angels Have
Wings, Mr. Smith Goes to
Washington.
WARRENTON, GILBERT
1938: Port of Missing Girls,
Rose of the Rio Grande, Sales-
lady, Telephone Operator, Ro-
mance of the Limberlost, Bare-
foot Boy, The Marines Are
Here, Under the Big Top.
WETZLER, BEN
1938: Booloo.
WHITE, LESTER
1938: Judge Hardy's Children,
You're Only Young Once,
Yellow Jack, Love Finds Andy
Hardy, Out West with the
Hardys.
1939: Burn 'em Up O'Connor,
The Hardys Ride High, Cal-
ling Dr. Kildare, Andy Hardy
Gets Spring Fever, Judge
Hardy and Son.
WILD, HARRY
1938: Painted Desert, Army
Girl.
1939 : The Renegade Ranger,
The Fighting Gringo.
WOODARD, STACY &
HORACE
1938: The Adventures of
Chico.
WRIGLEY, DEWEY
1939 : Union Pacific.
YOUNG, F. A.
1939: Nurse Edith Cavell.
385
REGINALD OWEN
Represented by
WILLIAM MORRIS AGENCY, INC.
THE EARL OF CHICAGO
BALALAIKA
MAIDEN VOYAGE
THE REAL GLORY
BAD LITTLE ANGEL
FLORIAN
FAST AND LOOSE
A CHRISTMAS CAROL
r
f
EDWARD
ARNOLD
★
"MR. SMITH GOES TO
WASHINGTON"
"MAN ABOUT TOWN"
"THE EARL OF CHICAGO"
"JOHNNY APOLLO"
★
and again playing
Diamond Jim Brady
Exclusive Management
Berg & Allenberg
"LILLIAN RUSSELL"
386
PLAYERS
Their Work in 1938 and 1939
Credits on pictures released prior to 1938 may be bad from previous
editions of the Year Book or from the Film Daily information service.
ABEL, WALTER
1938: Law of the Underworld,
Racket Busters, Men with
Wings.
1939: King of the Turf.
ABERT, RICHARD
1938 : Dynamite Delaney.
ACUFF, EDDIE
1938: She Loved a Fireman,
The Invisible Menace, Ladies
in Distress, Four Daughters,
Smashing the Rackets, Rhythm
of the Saddle.
1939: The Mysterious Miss X.
Rough Riders' Round-Up,
Meet Dr. Christian, Two Bright
Boys, Cowboy Quarterback.
ADAMS, ALICIA
1938 : The Headleys at Home.
ADAMS, DOROTHY
1938: Broadway Musketeers.
ADAMS, ERNEST
1938: The Purple Vigilantes,
The Painted Trail, Thunder in
the Desert, Man's Country,
The Mexicali Kid, West of
Cheyenne, Gun Packer.
1939: Song of the Buckaroo.
Trigger Pals, Down the Wy-
oming Trail, Man from Sun-
down.
ADAMS. KATHRYN
1939: Fifth Avenue Girl, That's
Right-You're Wrong.
ADAMS, PEARL
1938 : The Buccaneer.
ADAMS, RICHARD
1938 : Paroled from the Big
House.
ADAMS. TED
1938: Sudden Bill Dorn, Des-
ert Patrol, Pals of the Saddle,
Lightning Carson Rides Again.
1939: Smoky Trail, Six-Gun
Rhythm, Trigger Pals, Three
Texas Steers, El Diablo Rides,
Crashing Thru.
ADDER, JAY
1938: No Time to Marry,
Penrod and His Twin Brother.
ADRIAN, IRIS
1939: One Third of a Nation,
Back Door to Heaven.
AHERNE. BRIAN
1938: Merrily We Live.
1939 : Juarez, Captain Furv.
AHN, PHILIP
1938: Hawaii Calls, Roaring
Timber, Charlie Chan in Hon-
olulu.
1939: King of Chinatown, Dis
puted Passage, Barricade.
AHN, PHILSON
1939 : Disputed Passage.
AINSWORTH, CUPID
1938: Gold Mine in the Sky.
1939 : Cafe Society.
ALBERNI, LUIS
1938: Love on Toast, I'll Give
a Million.
1939: The Great Man Votes,
Naughty But Nice. The House-
keeper's Daughter.
ALBERT. EDDIE
1938- Brother Rat.
1939: On Your Toes, Four
Wives.
ALBERTSON. FRANK
1938: Hold That Kiss, Moth-
er Carey's Chickens, The
Shining Hour, Room Service,
Spring Madness, Fugitive for
a Night.
1939: Bachelor Mother.
ALBERTSON, MABEL
1939: Mutiny on the Black-
hawk.
ALBRIGHT, WALLY
1939: Mexicali Rose.
ALDERSON, ERVILLE
1939: Jesse James, Andy Hardy
Gets Spring Fever.
ALDRIDGE, KATHERINE
1939: Hotel for Women, Here
1 Am a Stranger.
ALEXANDER. BEN
1938: The Spy Ring, Mr.
Doodle Kicks Off.
ALEXANDER. KATHERINE
1938: Rascals.
1939: The Great Man Votes.
Broadway Serenade, Three
Sons, In Name Only, The
Hunchback of Notre Dame.
ALEXANDER. RICHARD
1938: Mars Attacks the World,
Where the Buffalo Roam.
ALEXIS. DMITRI
1939 : Torture Ship.
ALLAN, ANTHONY
1938: Dramatic School, Out
West with the Hardys.
1939: Fast and Loose, The Kid
from Texas, Maisic.
ALLEN, ETHAN
1939: Trigger Pals, Taming
of the West.
ALLEN, FRED
1938: Sally Irene and Mary
ALLEN. GRACIE
1938: College Swing.
1939: Honolulu, Gracie Allen
Murder Case.
ALLEN, HARRY
1938 : Outside of Paradise.
1939: The Little Princess.
ALLEN, JOSEPH
1939: Lucky Night, Our Lead-
ing Citizen.
ALLEN, JOSEPH, JR.
1939: Death of a Champion.
ALLEN. JUDITH
1938: Telephone Operator,
Port of Missing Girls.
1939: Tough Kid.
ALLEN, MAUDE
1938: Painted Desert.
ALLEN, RICCA
1938 : Blcckade.
ALLEN, ROBERT
1938: Keep Smiling, Up the
River, Meet the Girls.
1939 : Fighting Thoroughbreds,
Winner Take All, Winter Car-
nival.
ALLISTER, CLAUD
1938 : Kentucky Moonshine,
Men Are Such Fools, Storm
Over Bengal.
1939 : Arrest Bulldog Drtim-
mond, Captain Fury.
ALLWYN, ASTRID
1938: International Crime.
1939: Love Affair, Miracles
for Sale, Honeymoon in Bali,
Mr. Smith Goes to Washing-
ton, Reno.
ALPER, MURRAY
1938 : Cocoanut Grove, Road
Demon, Next Time I Marry.
1939: Twelve Crowded Hours,
King of the Underworld.
ALVARADO, HON
1938 : Rose of the Rio Grande.
1939: Cafe Society.
AMANN, BETTY
1938: In Old Mexico.
AMECHE, DON
1938: In Old Chicago, Happy
Landing, Josette, Alexander's
Ragtime Band, Gateway.
1939: The Three Musketeers,
.Midnight, The Story of Alex-
ander Graham Bel!, Hollywood
Cavalcade, Swanee River, Lit-
tle Old New York.
AMENDT, RUDOLF
1939: Juarez and Maximilian.
AMES, ADRIENNE
1938: Slander House, Fugi-
tives for a Night.
1939: Panama Patrol, Zero
Hour.
AMES, LEON
1938: International Settlement,
Walking Down Broadway, The
387
Players9 Worh
Spy Ring, Island in the Sky,
Come on Leathernecks, Mys-
terious Mr. Moto of Devil's
Island, Cipher Bureau, Suez,
Secrets of a Nurse.
1939: Risky Business, I Was
a Convict, Mr. Moto in Dan-
ger Island, Panama Patrol,
Man of Conquest, Fugitive at
Large, Legion of Lost Flyers,
Calling All Marines.
ANDERSON, C. E.
1939: Let Freedom Ring.
ANDERSON, ED. (Rochester)
1938 : Jezebel, Reckless Liv-
ing, Gold Diggers in Paris,
You Cant Take It with You,
Kentucky, Going Places, Ex-
posed, Thanks Tor the Mem-
ory.
1939: Honolulu, You Can't
Cheat an Honest Man. Man
About Town, Gone With the
Wind.
ANDERSON, ERVILLE
1939: Nancy Drew — Trouble
Shooter.
ANDERSON, GEORGE
1938 : Born to be Wild.
1939: King of Chinatown, The
Lady's from Kentucky.
ANDERSON, HARRY
1938: Prison Train.
ANDERSON, MARY
1939: Gone With the Wind.
ANDREWS, CHARLES
1939: Reform School.
ANDREWS, STANLEY
1938 : The Buccaneer, When
G-Men Step In, Forbidden
Valley, Cocoanut Grove, Al-
exander's Ragtime Band, I'll
Give a Million, Spawn of the
North, Adventure in Sahara,
Shine On Harvest Moon, Ken-
tucky, Blondie, Mysterious
Rider, Prairie Moon, The Lady
Objects.
1939: Homicide Bureau, The
Lady's from Kentucky, Beau
Geste, Coast Guard.
ANGEL, HEATHER
1938: Army Girl, Bulldog
Drummond in Africa.
1939: Arrest Bulldog Drum-
mond, Bulldog Drummond's
Secret Police, Undercover Doc-
tor, Bulldog Drummond's
Bride.
ANGELUS, MURIEL
1939: The Light That Failed.
ANNABELLA
1938 : The Baroness and the
Butler, Suez.
1939: Bridal Suite.
ANTHONY, WALTER
1938: Paroled from the Big
House, Stranger from Arizona.
APPLEBY. DOROTHY
1938 : The House of Mystery,
Making the Headlines.
1939: The Flying Irishman.
ARCHER, JOHN
1939: Career.
ARDELL, ALICE
1938: Song and Bullets.
ARDEN, EVE
1938: Cocoanut Grove, Letter
of Introduction, Having a
Wonderful Time.
1939: Women in the Wind,
Big Town Czar, The Forgot-
ten Women, Eternally Yours,
At the Circus.
ADLER, STELLA
1938: Love on Toast.
ARLEDGE. JOHN
1938 : Prison Nurse, Number-
ed Woman, Campus Confes-
sions.
1939 : You Can't Cheat an
Honest Man, Twelve Crowded
Hours, 6,000 Enemies, Gone
With the Wind.
ARLEN. RICHARD
1938 : No Time to Marry, Call
of the Yukon, Straight Place
and Show.
1939 : Missing Daughters. Mu-
tiny on the Blackhawk, Tropic
Fury, Legion of Lost Flyers.
ARMETTA, HENRY
1938: Everybody Sing, Speed
to Burn, Road Demon, Sub-
marine Patrol.
1939: Fisherman's Wharf, The
Lady and the Mob, Winner
Take All, I Stole a Million,
Dust Be My Destiny, The
Escape.
ARMS, FRANCES
1939: Never Say Die.
ARMSTRONG, LOUIS
1938: Going Places.
ARMSTRONG. MARGARET
1938: Women in Prison, West-
ern Jamboree, Little Orphan
Annie.
1939: Sorority House.
FRED ASTAIRE
388
ARMSTRONG, ROBERT
1938: She Loved a Fireman,
There Goes My Heart, Night
Hawk.
1939 : The Flying Irishman,
Man of Conquest, Unmarried,
Winter Carnival, Flight at
Midnight, Call a Messenger.
ARNO, SIEGFRIED
1939: The Star Maker.
ARNOLD, DOROTHY
1938: Secrets of a Nurse, The
Storm.
1939 : The House of Fear, Un-
expected Father, Hero for a
Day.
ARNOLD, EDWARD
1938 : The Crowd Roars, You
Can't Take It with You.
1939: Let Freedom Ring, Idi-
ot's Delight, Man About Town,
Mr. Smith Goes to Washing-
ton, Earl of Chicago, Johnny
Apollo, Lillian Russell.
ARNOLD, EDWARD, Jr.
1938: Mr. Doodle Kicks Off.
1939: Million Dollar Legs.
ARNOLD, JACK
1938: This Marriage Business,
Crime Ring, Blind Alibi, Mr.
Doodle Kicks Off, Tarnished
Angel.
1939: Fixer Dugan, The Day
the Bookies Wept.
ARNOLD, WILLIAM
1938: The Overland Express.
ARTHUR, HENRY
1938: Road Demon.
1939 : My Wife's Relatives.
ARTHUR, JEAN
1938: You Can't Take It With
You.
1939: Only Angels Have
Wings, Mr. Smith Goes to
Washington.
ARTHUR, JOHNNY
1938 : Danger on the Air.
ARVIZU, PAULITA
1938 : Trade Winds.
ASH. SAM
1938: You and Me.
ASHLEY, HERBERT
1939: Hotel for Women.
ASKAM, EARL
1939 : Rulers of the Sea.
ASRO, ALEXANDER
1938: Room Service.
ASTAIRE, FRED
1938: Carefree.
1939: The Story of Vernon
and Irene Castle, Broadway
Melody of 1910.
ASTHER, NILS
1939 : Prisoner of Corbal.
ASTOR, MARY
1938: There's Always a Wom-
an, Paradise for Three, No
Time to Marry, Woman
Against Woman, Listen Darl-
ing.
1939: Midnight.
ATCHLEY, HOOPER L.
1938: The Old Barn Dance,
Cipher Bureau, Mr. Wong —
Detective, Trade Winds.
1939: The Mystery of Mr.
Wong, Mountain Rhythm, Too
Busy to Work.
ATES, ROSCO
1938: Riders of the Black
Hills.
1939 : Three Texas Steerj, Gone
With the Wind.
ATWILL. LIONEL
1938: Three Comrades, The
Great Waltz.
1939: The Three Musketeers,
Son of Frankenstein, The
Hound of the Baskervilles,
Juarez and Maximilian, The
Gorilla, The Sun Never Sets,
Mr. Moto Takes a Vacation,
Secret of Dr. Kildare, Balalai-
ka.
AUER, MISCHA
1938 : It's All Yours, The Rage
of Paris, You Can't Take It
With You, Little Tough Guys
in Society, Service de Luxe,
Sweethearts.
1939 : East Side of Heaven,
Unexpected Father, Destry
Rides Again.
AUSTIN, WILLIAM
1938: Dr. Rhythm.
1939 : The Adventures of Sher-
lock Holmes.
AUTRY, GENE
1938 : The Old Barn Dance,
Man from Music Mountain,
Gold Mine in the Sky, Prairie
Moon, Western Jamboree,
Rhythm of the Saddle, Ridin'
the Range.
1939: Home on the Prairie,
Mexicali Rose, Blue Montana
Skies, Mountain Rhythm, Col-
orado Sunset, In Old Monterey,
Rovin' Tumbleweeds, South of
the Border, Shooting High.
AVERILL, ANTHONY
1938 : Torchy Blane in Pan-
ama, Mystery House, When
Were You Born? Girls on
Probation, Heart of the North,
Racket Busters, Broadway
Musketeers.
1939: Blackwell's Island, Se-
cret Service of the Air, Tor-
ture Ship.
AYLESWORTH, ARTHUR
1938: Test Pilot, Of Human
Hearts, Blockade, Outside the
Law.
1939 : The Oklahoma Kid, King
of the Underworld, Jesse James,
Return of the Cisco Kid, 6,000
Enemies, Beau Geste, Drums
Along the Mohawk, What a
Life, The Return of Dr. X.
AYRES, LEW
1938: King of the Newsboys,
Scandal Street, Holiday, Rich
Man-Poor Girl, Young Dr.
Kildare, Spring Madness.
1939: Ice Follies of 1939,
Broadway Serenade, Calling
Dr. Kildare, These Glamour
Girls, Secret of Dr. Kildare,
Remember?
389
Players' Work
BABITT, HARRY
1939 : That's Right— You're
Wrong.
BABY MARIA de la PAZ
1938: Blockade.
BABY SANDY
1939: East Side of Heaven,
Unexpected Father, Little Ac-
cident.
BACON, FAITH
1938 : Prison Train.
BACON, IRVING
1938 : The First Hundred
Years, Midnight Intruder, Tip-
Off Girls, Kentucky Moon-
shine, Sing You Sinners,
Spawn of the North, The
Amazing Dr. Clitterhouse, The
Texans, The Chaser, The Sis-
ters, There Goes My Heart.
1939: Tail Spin, Lucky Night,
I Stole a Million, Blondie
Takes a Vacation, Rio, Blondie
Brings Up Baby, Hollywood
Cavalcade, Too Busy to Work,
Gone With the Wind.
BAILEY, CARMEN
1938 : California Frontier.
BAILEY, RAYMOND
1939: Secret Service of the Air,
S. O. S. Tidal Wave, Hell's
Kitchen, Flight at Midnight.
BAILEY. SHERWOOD
1938: Quick Money.
BAINTER, FAY
1938 : Jezebel, White Banners,
Mother Carey's Chickens, The
Arkansas Traveler, The Shin-
ing Hour.
1939 : Yes — My Darling
Daughter, The Lady and the
Mob, Daughters Courageous,
Our Neighbors the Carters.
BAKER, BENNY
1938: Love on Toast, Tip-Off
Girls, Touchdown Army.
1939: She Married a Cop.
BAKER, BOB
1938 : Border Wolves, The
Last Stand, Outlaw Express,
Black Bandit.
1939 : Desperate Trails, Okla-
homa Frontier.
BAKER, FRANK
1938: The Baroness and the
Butler, Four Men and a
Prayer, Tarzan and the Green
Goddess.
1939 : Arrest Bulldog Drum
mond.
BAKER, KENNY
1938: Radio City Revels, The
Goldwyn Follies.
1939 : The Mikado, At the Cir-
cus.
BAKER, PHIL
1938: The Goldwyn Follies.
BAKER, TOMMY
1939: Saga of Death Valley,
Danger Flight.
BAKEWELL, WILLIAM
1938: The Higgins Family,
Crime Afloat, The Duke of
West Point.
1939: King of the Turf, Gone
With the Wind.
BALDWIN, ALAN
1939: Winter Carnival, The
Girl from Rio.
Player s ' M'or Is
BALDWIN. ANN
1939: Wall Street Cowboy.
BALDWIN, DICK
1938 : International Settlement,
Mr. Moto's Gamble, One Wild
Night, Spring Madness.
BALDWIN, ROBERT
1939: Meet Dr. Christian.
Main Street Lawyer.
BALL. FRANK
1938: Paroled— To Die.
BALL. LUCILLE
1938: Joy of Living, Go Chase
Yourself, Having a Wonder-
ful Time, The Affairs of An-
nabella, Annabella Takes a
Tour, Next Time I Marry,
Room Service.
1939: Beauty for the Asking.
Twelve Crowded Hours, Pana-
ma Lady, Five Came Back.
That's Right — You're Wrong.
BALLEW, SMITH
1938 : Hawaiian Buckaroo.
Rawhide, Panamint's Bad
Man.
BANCROFT. GEORGE
1938: Angels with Dirty Faces.
Submarine Patrol.
1939: Stagecoach. Each Dawn
I Die, Espionage Agent. Rulers
of the Sea.
BANCROFT, ROY
1939: Crashing Thru.
BARBIER, GEORGE
1938 : The Adventures of Mar-
co Polo, Tarzan's Revenge,
Hold That Kiss, Little Mis«
Broadway, My Lucky Star,
Sweethearts, Thanks for Ev-
erything, Hold That Co-Ed.
Straight Place and Show.
1939: Wife Husband and
Friend, S. O. S. Tidal Wave.
News Is Made at Night.
Smuggled Cargo, Remember ?
BARCLAY. DON
1938: The Spy Ring, Acci-
dents Will Happen, Thunder
in the Desert, Outlaw Express.
BARCLAY, JOAN
1938: The Purple Vigilantes.
Two-Gun Justice, Pioneer
Trail, Lightning Carson Ride-
Again.
1939: Six-Gun Rhythm, The
Gentleman from Arizona.
BARCROFT, ROY
1938: Heroes of the Hills.
Stranger from Arizona, The
Frontiersman.
1939: Silver on the Sage, Mex-
icali Rose, Renegade Trail.
BARDETTE, TREVOR
1938, Topa Topa, Mystery
House, In Old Mexico.
1939: Let Freedom Ring, The
Oklahoma Kid. Charlie Chan
at Treasure Island.
BARI, LYNN
1938: The Baroness and the
Butler, Walking Down Broad-
way, Mr. Moto's Gamble, Bat-
tle of Broadway, Speed to
Burn, Always Goodbye, Sharp
shooters, Meet the Girls.
1939: Return of the Cisco
Kid. Chasing Danger. News
Is Made at Night. Pack Up
Your Troubles, Hotel for Worn
en, Charlie Chan in the City
in Darkness.
BARKELEY, BAILLARD
1939 : The Saint in London
BAR LOW. REGINALD
1939: Heritage of the Desert.
The Man in the Iron Mask,
New Frontier, The Witness
Vanishes, Rovin' Tumbleweeds.
Wall Street Cowbov.
BARNES. BINNIE
1938: The First Hundred
Years, The Adventures of
Marco Polo, Holiday, Always
Goodbye, Gateway, Three
Blind Mice, Thanks for Every-
thing.
1939: Wife Husband and
Friend, The Three Musketeers.
Man About Town, Frontier
Marshal, Day-Time Wife.
BARNETT. VINCE
1938 : The Headleys at Home.
1939: Ride 'em Cowgirl, Exile
Express, Overland Trail.
BARRAT. ROBERT
1938: Penitentiary, The Buc-
caneer, Bad Man of Brim-
stone, Forbidden Valley, Break-
ing the Ice, The Texans, Char-
lie Chan in Honolulu, Shad-
ows Over Shanghai.
1939: Heritage of the Desert.
Man of Conquest. Return of
The Cisco Kid. Allegheny Up-
rising, Conspiracy, Bad Lands.
Colorado Sunset.
BARRETT, JUDITH
1938: Illegal Traffic.
1939: Persons in Hiding. Gra
cie Allen Murder Case, Dis
puted Passage. Television Spy.
I'm from Missouri. The Greai
Victor Herbert.
JACK BENNY
i
390
BARRIE, ELAINE
1939: Midnight.
BARRIE. MONA
1938: Love Honor and Be-
have, Men Are Such Fools,
Say It in French.
BARRIE. WENDY
1938 : I Am the Law.
1939: Newsboys' Home, The
Hound of the Baskervilles, Pa-
cific Liner, The Saint Strikes
Back, Five Came Back. The
Witness Vanishes, Day-Time
Wife.
B ARRIS, HARRY
1938 : The Cowboy from
Brooklyn, The Shining Hour.
1939: Some Like It Hot.
BARRY. DONALD
1938 : Sinners in Paradise, The
Crowd Roars, The Duke of
West Point.
1939: Panama Patrol. Calling
Dr. Kildare. Only Angels Have
Wings, S. O. S. Tidal Wave.
Wyoming Outlaw. Saga of
Death Valley, Calling All Ma-
rines, Days of Jesse James.
BARRY. PHYLLIS
1938: The Invisible Menace,
Trade Winds.
BARRY. WESLEY
1938: The Mexicali Kid. Mr.
Doodle Kicks Off.
1939 : Stunt Pilot.
BARRYMORE. JOHN
1938: Bulldog Drummond's
Peril, Romance in the Dark.
Spawn of the North, Marie
Antoinette. Hold That Co-ed.
1939: The Great Man Votes,
Midnight.
BARRYMORE. LIONEL
1938: Test Pilot, A Yank al
Oxford, You Can't Take It
With You, Young Dr. Kil-
dare.
1939: Let Freedom Ring. Call
ing Dr. Kildare. On Borrowed
Time, Secret of Dr. Kildare.
BARTHELMESS, RICHARD
1939: Only Angels Have
Wings.
BARTHOLOMEW. FREDDIE
1938 : Kidnapped, Lord Jeff.
Listen Darling.
1939: Spirit of Culver, Two
Bright Boys.
BARTLETT, BENNIE
1938 : Penrod and His Twin
Brother, Just Around the Cor-
ner, Gang Bullets.
1939: The Great Man Votes.
The Family Next Door, Honey-
moon in Bali, Our Neighbors
the Carters, What a Life.
BARTON. BUZZ
1938: Phantom Gold.
BARTON. CHARLES
1939 : Beau Geste.
BARWYN, MAX
1938: You and Me.
BASQUETTE, LINA
1938 : The Buccaneer, Rose of
the Rio Grande. Four Men
and a Prayer.
BASS, FRED
1938: Woman Against the
World.
BATES. GRANVILLE
1938: The Jury's Secret, Gold
Is Where You Find It, Go
Chase Yourself, Romance on
the Run, Cowboy from Brook-
lyn, The Affairs of Annabel,
Mr. Chump, Youth Takes a
Fling, Garden of the Moon,
Hard to Get, A Man to Re-
member, Next Time I Marry.
1939: The Great Man Votes.
Blackwell's Island, Twelve
Crowded Hours. Naughty But
Nice, Pride of Bluegrass. Our
Neighbors the Carters, Sweep
stakes Winner, Indianapolis
Speedway, Of Mice and Men,
Charlie McCarthy Detective.
BATES, PEGGY
1938 : Alcatraz Island.
BAXLEY, JACK
1938: International Crime.
BAXTER, ALAN
1938 : I Met My Love Again,
Wide Open Faces, Gangs of
New York.
1939: Boy Slaves, Off the
Record, My Son is a Criminal.
Let Us Live, Each Dawn I
Die.
BAXTER, WARNER
1938: Kidnapped, I'll Give a
Million.
1939: Wife Husband and
Friend, Return of the Cisco
Kid, Barricade.
BAYNE, AL
1938: Hollywood Stadium
Mystery.
BEACH, BRANDON
1938: Under Western Stars
BEACH. JOHN
1938 : Heart of Arizona, Bar
20 Justice, Heroes of the Hills,
The Frontiersman.
1939: Home on the Prairie.
Mexicali Rose. Blue Montana
Skies.
BEAL, JOHN
1938: I Am the Law, Port of
Seven Seas, The Arkansas
Traveler.
1939: The Cat and the Canary.
The Great Commandment.
BEARD, STYMIE
1938: Jezebel. Beloved Brat.
1939 : Way Down South.
BEATTY. MAY
1938: She Loved a Fireman.
I Am a Criminal, If I Were
King.
1939: The Adventures of Sher-
lock Holmes, We Are Not
Alone.
BEAUMONT, LEON
1938: Pioneer Trail.
1939: Fugitive at Large.
BEAVERS. LOUISE
1938: Scandal Street, Life
Goes On, Brother Rat, The
Headleys at Home, Peck's Bad
Boy with the Circus.
1939: Made for Each Other.
The Lady's from Kentucky,
Reform School.
BECK. THOMAS
1938: Walking Down Broad-
way, Road Demon, I Stand
Accused.
1939: The Familv Next Door.
They Asked for "it.
BECKER. CHARLES
1938 : The Terror of Tiny
Town.
BECKETT, SCOTTY
1938: The Bad Man of Brim-
stone. Marie Antoinette, Lis-
ten Darling.
1939: The Flying Irishman.
Blind Alibi, Mickey the Kid.
The Escape, Our Neighbors
Players'1 Work
the Carters, Days of Jesse
James.
BEDDOE, DON
1938: There's That Woman
Again.
1939: The Lone Wolf Spy
Hunt. Blondie Meets the Boss,
Romance of the Redwoods.
Missing Daughters, Beware
Spooks!. Taming of the West.
The Man They Could Not
Hang, Golden Boy. Those High
Grey Walls, The Amazing Mr.
Williams.
BEEBE, MARJORIE
1939 : Hollywood Cavalcade.
BEECHER, JANET
1938 : Judge Hardy's Children.
Yellow Jack, Woman Against
Woman. Say It in French.
1939 : The Story of Vernon
and Irene Castle, I Was a
Convict, Man of Conquest,
Career, Laugh 1 1 Off.
BEERY, NOAH
1938 : The Bad Man of Brim
stone, Girl of the Golden West,
Panamint's Bad Man.
1939: Mexicali Rose, Prisoner
of Corbal, Mutiny on the
Blackhawk.
BEERY, NOAH, Jr.
1938: Trouble at Midnight,
Forbidden Valley, Girl's
School. Outside the Law.
1939: Only Angels Have
Wings. Parents on Trial, Flight
at Midnight. Bad Lands, Of
Mice and Men.
BEERY, WALLACE
1938 : The Bad Man of Brim-
stone, Port of Seven Seas,
Stablemates.
1939: Stand Up and Fight,
Sergeant Madden, Thunder
Afloat.
BEFFERT, DAISY
1938 : Love on Toast.
BELASCO, LEON
1939: Fisherman's Wharf.
Broadway Serenade, Topper
Takes a Trip. Legion of Lost
Flyers.
BELL, HANK
1938: Outlaws of the Prairie,
Colorado Trail.
1939: Rough Riders' Round-
Up. West of Sante Fe, Spoilers
of the Range, Western Cara-
vans, Geronimo.
BELL, LULU & SCOTTY
1938 : Shine on Harvest Moon.
BELLAMY. RALPH
1938: The Crime of Dr. Hal-
let, Fools for Scandal, Boy
Meets Girl, Carefree, Girl's
School, Trade Winds.
1939: Let Us Live. Smashing
the Spy Ring, Blind Alibi.
Coast Guard.
BELLAVER, HARRY
1939: Another Thin Man.
BELLIS, GUY
1939: The Little Princess.
BELMONT, LIONEL
1939: Tower of London.
BEMBURY, JOHNNY
1938: The Terror of Tiny
Town.
391
Players9 Worh
BENEDICT, JEAN
1938: A Slight Case of Mur-
der, Blondes at Work, Patient
in Room 18, Little Miss Thor-
oughbred.
BENEDICT, WILLIAM
1938: Walking Down Broad-
way, King of the Newsboys,
Young Fugitives, Little Tough
Guys in Society, Hold That
Co-ed.
1939 : Newsboys' Home, Call
a Messenger.
BENGE, WILSON
1938: Mr. Boggs Steps Out,
Trade Winds.
1939: Rulers of the Sea.
BENNET, HOPE
1938: Life Goes On.
BENNETT, CONSTANCE
1938: Merrily We Live, Ser-
vice de Luxe.
1939: Topper Takes a Trip,
Tail Spin.
BENNETT, ENID
1939: Intermezzo: A Love
Story, Meet Dr. Christian.
BENNETT. JOAN
1938: I Met My Love Again,
The Texans, Trade Winds,
Artists and Models Abroad.
1939 : The Man in the Iron
Mask, The Housekeeper's
Daughter.
BENNETT. RAPHAEL
1938: Female Fugitive, The
Old Barn Dance, Adventure in
Sahara, Prairie Moon.
BENNETT, WILDA
1939: What a Life.
BENNY, JACK
1938: Artists and Models
Abroad.
1939: Man About Town, Buck
Benny Rides Again.
BENSON, ROY
1938: The Lady Objects.
BERANGER, GEORGE A.
1939 : Beauty for the Asking.
BERGEN, CONSTANCE
1938: It's All in Your Mind.
BERGEN, EDGAR
1938: The Goldwyn Follies,
Letter of Introduction.
1939: You Can't Cheat an
Honest Man, Charlie McCarthy
Detective.
BERGEN, JERRY
1938: College Swing.
BERGER, HARRIS
1938: Little Tough Guys in
Society.
1939: Newsboys' Home, Call
a Messenger.
BERGMAN, INGRID
1939 : Intermezzo : A Love
Story.
BERGNER. ELISABETH
1939: Stolen Life.
BERHLE, FRED
1939: Ride 'em Cowgirl.
BERLE, MILTON
1938: Radio City Revels.
BERNARD, JOE
1939: Danger Flight.
BERNARD, SAM
1938: Prison Train, Wanted
By the Police.
BEST, EDNA
1939 : Intermezzo : A Love
Story.
BEST, WILLIE
1938: Merrily We Live, Gold
Is Where You Find It, Viva
cious Lady, Goodbye Broad-
way, Youth Takes a Fling.
1939: Nancy Drew— Trouble
Shooter, The Covered Trailer.
BETZ, MATHEW
(Deceased)
1938: Fury Below.
BEVAN. BILLY
1938: Girl of the Golden West,
Shadows Over Shanghai.
1939: Captain Fury, We Are
Xot Alone.
BEVANS, CLEM
1938: Of Human Hearts, Mr.
Chump, Young Fugitives,
Hold That Co-ed, Comet Over
Broadway.
1939: Ambush, Zenobia, Main
Street Lawyer, Night Work,
Thunder Afloat, The Cowboy
Quarterback.
BIBERMAN, ABNER
1939: Panama Patrol, Gunga
Din, Panama Lady, Another
Thin Man, Balalaika.
BICKFORD, CHARLES
1938: Gangs of New York,
Valley of the Giants, The
Storm.
JEAN ARTHUR
392
1939: Stand Up and Fight,
Streets of Missing Men, Ro-
mance of the Redwoods, Our
Leading Citizen, One Hour to
Live, Mutiny in the Big House,
Of Mice and Men.
BING. HERMAN
1938: Bluebeard's Eighth Wife,
Paradise for Three, Four's a
Crowd, Sweethearts, Vacation
from Love, The Great Waltz.
BIRELL. TALA
1938 : Bringing Up Baby, In-
visible Enemy, Josette.
BLACAMAN, Princess BABA
1939 : You Can't Cheat an
Honest Man.
BLACKMER. SIDNEY
1938: In Old Chicago, Speed
to Burn, Straight Place and
Show, Orphans of the Street,
Sharpshooters, Trade Winds,
Suez.
1939 : Fast and Loose, Trapped
in the Sky, Within the Law,
It's a Wonderful World, Un-
married, Hotel for Women,
Law of the Pampas.
BLAINE, JAMES
1938: Exposed.
1939 : Oklahoma Frontier.
BLAKE, GLADYS
1939: Lucky Night, Fast and
Furious.
BLAKE, LARRY
1938 : Nurse from Brooklyn,
Trouble at Midnight, State
Police, The Jury's Secret,
Young Fugitives, Air Devils.
1939: They Made Her a Spy.
BLAKE, MARIE
1938 : Love Finds Andy Har-
dy, Rich Man-Poor Girl, Dra-
matic School.
1939: Calling Dr. Kildare,
Blind Alibi, Secret of Dr. Kil-
dare, Judge Hardy and Son.
BLAKELY, JAMES
1938: Prison Train.
BLANDICK, CLARA
1938 : My Old Kentucky
Home, Professor Beware,
Crime Ring, Swing Sister
Swing.
1939: I Was a Convict, Huck-
leberry Finn, Drums Along the
Mohawk, The Wizard of Oz.
The Star Maker, Swanee River.
BLANE, SALLY
1938 : Numbered Woman,
Crashin' Thru Danger.
1939: The Story of Alexander
Graham Bell, Charlie Chan at
Treasure Island, Way Down
South.
BLEIFER. JOHN
1938 : Ride a Crooked Mile.
1939: Pacific Liner, Mr. Moto
Takes a Vacation, Full Con-
fession, Everything Happens at
Night.
BLINN, BEATRICE
1939: Golden Boy.
BLONDELL, GLORIA
1938: The Daredevil Drivers,
Accidents Will Happen, Four's
a Crowd.
BLONDELL, JOAN
1938: There's Always a Wom-
an.
1939: Off the Record, East
Side of Heaven, The Kid from
Kokomo, Good Girls Go to
Paris, The Amazing Mr. Wil-
liams.
BLORE, ERIC
1938: The Joy of Living,
Swiss Miss, A Desperate Ad-
venture.
1939: $1000 a Touchdown,
Island of Lost Men.
BLUE, BEN
1938: Big Broadcast of 1938,
College Swing, Cocoanut
Grove.
1939: Paris Honeymoon.
BLUE, MONTE
1938 : Born to the West,
Spawn of the North, Illegal
Traffic, Mysterious Rider, Re-
bellious Daughters.
1939: Dodge City, Frontier
Pony Express, Juarez, Port of
Hate, Our Leading Citizen,
Geronimo, Days of Jesse James.
BLYSTONE, STANLEY
1938: California Frontier,
Si ranger from Arizona.
1939 : Trigger Pals, Three Tex-
as Steers, Torture Ship, Crash-
ing Thru.
BLYTHE, BETTY
1938 : Romance of the Limber-
lost, Gangster's Boy.
BOBETT, CHARLES
1939 : Juarez and Maximilian.
BOGART, HUMPHREY
1938 : Swing Your Lady,
Crime School, Men Are Such
Fools, The Amazing Dr. Clit-
terhouse, Angels with Dirty
Faces, Racket Busters.
1939: Dark Victory, You Can't
Cheat an Honest Man, King
of the Underworld, The Okla-
homa Kid, The Roaring Twen-
ties, The Return of Dr. X.
BOHNEN, ROMAN
1939: Of Mice and Men.
BOIS, CURT
1938: Romance in the Dark,
Gold Diggers in Paris, The
Amazing Dr. Clitterhouse, Gar-
den of the Moon, The Great
Waltz.
1939: Hotel Imperial.
BOLAND. MARY
1938: Little Tough Guys in
Society, Artists and Models
Abroad.
1939: The Magnificent Fraud,
The Women, Night Work.
BOLES, JOHN
1938: She Married an Artist,
Romance in the Dark, Sinners
in Paradise.
BOLEY, MAY
1938: Reckless Living, Cow-
boy from Brooklyn, Prison
Farm.
1939: Persons in Hiding, Death
of a Champion.
BOLGER. RAY
1938 : Sweethearts.
1939: The Wizard of Oz.
BOND, LILIAN
1939: The Housekeeper's
Daughter.
BOND, RICHARD
1938 : Condemned Women,
Double Danger, Law of the
Underworld, Broadway Mus-
keteers.
1939: Torchy Blane in China-
town, Boy Friend, Here I Am
a Stranger.
BOND, TOMMY
1938: City Streets.
1939 : Five Little Peppers.
Players9 Worh
BOND, WARD
1938: Over the Wall, Mr.
Moto's Gamble, Born to be
Wild, Numbered Woman, Pri-
son Break, Professor Beware,
Reformatory, The Amazing
Dr. Clitterhouse, Gun Law,
Law West of Tombstone, Sub-
marine Patrol.
1939: They Made Me a Crim-
inal, Made for Each Other,
Dodge City, The Oklahoma
Kid, Return of the Cisco Kid,
Girl from Mexico, Young Mr.
Lincoln, Drums Along the Mo-
hawk, Waterfront, Frontier
Marshal, Gone With the Wind.
BONDI, BEULAH
1938: Of Human Hearts, Vi-
vacious Lady, The Sisters.
1939 : On Borrowed Time, Mr.
Smith Goes to Washington,
The Under-Pup.
BONN, WALTER
1938: International Crime,
Cipher Bureau.
BORG, VEDA ANN
1938: Over the Wall, She
Loved a Fireman, Alcatraz
Island.
BORLAND, BARLOWE
1938: Dangerous to Know,
Tip-Off Girls, Bluebeard's
Eighth Wife, Gun Packer.
1939: The Hound of the Bas-
kervilles, King of the Turf,
The Witness Vanishes.
BOROS, FERIKE
1939: Stronger Than Desire,
Bachelor Mother, Rio, Dust
Be My Destiny, Fifth Avenue
Girl, The Light That Failed.
BOSWORTH, HOBART
1938: Wolves of the Sea.
BOTELER, WADE
1938: In Old Chicago, Valley
of the Giants, Spawn of the
North, The Marines Are Here,
Little Miss Roughneck, Peck's
Bad Boy with the Circus,
Billy the Kid Returns.
1939 : Ambush, The Mysterious
Miss X, Missing Daughters,
Southward Ho, Man from Sun-
down, Everything's On Ice,
Sabotage, Days of Jesse James.
BOTTILIER, DICK
1938: California Trail.
1939: West of Sante Fe, The
Fighting Gringo, South of the
Border.
BOULTON, MATTHEW
1938: Bulldog Drummond's
Peril, Bulldog Drummond in
Africa, Lord Jeff.
BOURNE, WHITNEY
1938: Double Danger, Blind
Alibi, Mad Miss Manton.
1939: Beauty for the Asking.
BOWDON, DORRIS
1939: Down on the Farm,
Young Mr. Lincoln, Drums
Along the Mohawk.
BOWKER, ALDRICH
1939: Torchy Plays with Dyna-
mite, Nancy Drew — Trouble
Shooter, On Dress Parade,
Angels Wash Their Faces,
Everybody's Hobby, Pride of
Bluegrass, Waterfront, Joe and
Ethel Turp, No Place to Go.
393
Players' W ork
BOWMAN, LEE
1938: The First Hundred
Years. Having a Wonderful
Time. Tarnished Angel, A Man
to Remember, Next Time I
Marry.
1939 : Society Lawyer, Love
Affair, The Lady and the Mob.
Stronger Than Desire, Danc-
ing Co-ed, Miracles for Sale.
The Great Victor Herbert.
BOWMAN. RALPH
1938: Overland Stage Raiders.
BOYD, WILLIAM
1938: Cassidy of Bar 20, Bar
20 Justice, Heart of Arizona,
Pride of the West, In Old
Mexico, The Frontiersman,
Sunset Trail.
1939: Silver on the Sage, Law
of the Pampas, Range War.
Renegade Trail. Same Fe Mar-
shal. Showdown. Hidden Gold.
War Along the Stage Trail.
BOYER. CHARLES
1938: Algiers.
1939: Love Affair. When To-
morrow Comes.
BOYLE. JOHNNY
193S: Born to the West.
BRACY, SIDNEY
1938: The Baroness and the
Butler, Merrily We Live, Mr.
Chump, My Bill, The Dawn
Patrol.
1939: On Trial, Smashing the
Money Ring, Everybody's Hob
by. Sweepstakes Winner.
BRADLEY. GRACE
1938: It's All Yours, Roaring
Timber, Big Broadcast of 1938,
Romance on the Run.
BRADLEY, HARRY
1938: Trouble at Midnight.
The Little Adventuress.
1939: The Star Maker. When
Tomorrow Comes, Should Hus-
bands Work ?
BRADLEY, PAUL
1938: Blockade.
BRADLEY, TRUMAN
1938: Spring Madness, Vaca-
tion from Love, Young Dr.
Kildare.
1939: The Hardys Ride High,
On Borrowed Time.
BRADNA, OLYMPE
1938: Stolen Heaven, Say It
in French.
BRADSHAW, DOROTHY
1939: Death Goes Xorth.
BRADY, ALICE
(Deceased)
1938: The Joy of Living, In
Old Chicago, Goodbye Broad-
way.
1939: Zenobia. Young Mr.
Lincoln.
BRADY. ED
1938: The Buccaneer, Thun-
der in the Desert, Blockade.
BRADY, PAT
1938 : West of Cheyenne.
1939: Man from Sundown.
BRAGDON, CLIFF
1938: The Saint in New York.
BRAHAM, LIONEL
1938: A Christmas Carol.
1939: The Little Princess.
BRANDEN, EDWARD
1938: Harlem on the Prairie.
BRANDON. ARTIE
1938 : Life Goes On.
BRANDON, HENRY
1938: Spawn of the North.
1939: Conspiracy, Nurse Edith
Cavell, Beau Geste.
BRASNO. GEORGE
1938: Little Miss Broadway.
BRASNO. OLIVE
1938: Little Miss Broadway.
BRAZEALE, HAL
1939 : Death of a Champion.
BREAKSTON. GEORGE
1938 : Love Finds Andy Hardy.
1939: Jesse James, Andy Har-
dy Gets Spring Fever, Judge
Hardv and Son, Swanee River.
BRECHER. EGON
1938: Invisible Enemy, The
Spy Ring, You and Me. Co-
coanut Grove, Spawn of the
North.
1939: Juarez. Angels Wash
Their Faces. Espionage Agent.
Xurse Edith Cavell. Judge
Hardv and Son.
BRECKNER. GARY
1938 : Rebecca of Sunnybrook
Farm, Thanks for Everything.
BRECO. BETTY
1939: Winner Take All.
BREEN, BOBBY
1938: Hawaii Calls, Breaking
the Ice.
394
1939 : Fisherman's Wharf, Way
Down South.
BRENDEL, EL
1938: Ha;rpy Landing, Valley
of the Giants, Little Miss
Broadway.
1939: Risky Business, The
House of Fear, Call a Messen-
ger.
BRENN, DORIS
1938: Beloved Brat.
BRENNAN, DONALD
1939: Our Neighbors the Car-
ters.
BRENNAN. WALTER
19.38 : The Adventures of Tom
Sawyer, The Buccaneer, The
Texans, Mother Carey's Chick-
ens, Kentucky, The Cowboy
and the Lady.
1939: The Story of Vernon
and Irene Castle, They Shall
Have Music, Stanley and Liv-
ingstone, Joe and Ethel Turp.
BRENT, EVELYN
1938: Tip-OfF Girls, Sudden
Bill Dorn, Law West of Tomb-
stone, Mr. Wong — Detective.
1939: Juarez and Maximilian.
Panama Lady, Daughter of
the Tong.
BRENT, GEORGE
1938 : Gold Is Where You
Find It, Jezebel, Secrets of an
Actress. Racket Busters.
1939: Dark Victory, Wings of
the Navy, The Rains Came.
The Old Maid.
BRENT, LYNTON
1938: Frontier Town, It's All
in your Mind, Mr. Wong —
Detective.
BRESSART, FELIX
1939 : Bridal Suite, Ninotchka,
Swanee River.
BREWSTER TWINS
1938: Little Miss Broadway,
My Lucky Star, Hold That
Co-ed.
BRIAN, EDWIN
1939: Fighting Thoroughbreds.
Captain Fury, What a Life.
BRIAN, MARY
1939: Two's Company.
BRIAN SISTERS
1938 : Kentucky Moonshine,
Little Miss Broadway.
1939: Second Fiddle.
BRICE. FANNIE
1938: Everybody Sing.
BRIDGE. ALAN
1938 : Two-Gun Justice, High-
way Patrol, Little Miss Rough-
neck, Adventure in Sahara.
Down in Arkansas, Colorado
Trail.
1939: Blue Montana Skies.
Man from Sundown, Romance
of the Redwoods, No Place to
Go.
BRIER, A. J.
1939: Down the Wyoming
Trail.
BRIGGS. DONALD
1938: Blondes at Work, The
Daredevil Drivers, All-Ameri-
can Sweetheart, Love Honor
and Behave, The First Hun-
dred Years, Beloved Brat.
Crime School, Cowboy from
Brooklyn, Men Are Such
Fools, Mr. Chump.
1939 : Whispering Enemies,
Made for Each Other, Wings
of the Navy, The Hardys Ride
High, Panama Lady, Ex-
Champ, The Forgotten Woman,
Unexpected Father.
BRIGGS, HARLAN
1938: Trouble at Midnight,
Dynamite Delaney, ReckUss
Living, That's My Story,
Quick Money, One Wild
Night, You and Me, The
Missing Guest, Having a Won-
derful Time, Meet the Girls,
A Man to Remember.
1939: The Mysterious Miss X,
Calling Dr. Kildare, Tell No
Tales, Maisie, Flight at Mid-
night, Blondie Takes a Vaca-
tion.
BRISBANE, WILLIAM
1938: She's Got Everything,
Everybody's Doing It, Maid's
Night Out.
1939 : Should Husbands Work?
BRISSAC, VIRGINIA
1938: Secrets of a Nurse.
1939: Dark Victory, Jesse
Tames, Woman Doctor, The
Forgotten Woman, Parents on
Trial.
BRISTOW, JIMMY
1939: The Lady's from Ken-
tucky.
BRIX, HERMAN
1938: Silks and Saddles, Fly-
ing Fists, Tarzan and the
Green Goddess.
BRODEL, JOAN
1939: Winter Carnival.
BRODEL, MARY
1939 : Down the Wyoming
Trail.
BROADLEY, EDWARD
1938: Women Are Like That.
BRODERICK, HELEN
1938: Radio City Revels, She's
Got Everything, The Rage of
Paris, The Road to Reno,
Service de Luxe.
1939 : Stand Up and Fight,
Naughty But Nice, Honey-
moon in Bali.
BRODIE. DON
1938: Lady in the Morgue,
The Last Express.
1939 : Exile Express.
BROKAW, CHARLES
1938 : The Buccaneer, Air Dev-
ils, Convicts at Large.
1939 : Second Fiddle.
BROMBERG, J. EDWARD
1938 : Rebecca of Sunnybrook
Farm, The Baroness and the
Butler, Four Men and a
Prayer, One Wild Night, I'll
Give a Million, Mr. Moto
Takes a Chance.
1939: Wife Husband and
Friend, Jesse James, Hollywood
Cavalcade, Three Sons.
BROMLEY, SHEILA
1938: Making the Headlines,
The House of Mystery, Mid-
night Intruder, King of the
Newsboys, Accidents Will
Happen, Mystery House, Re-
formatory, Girls on Probation,
Rebellious Daughters.
1939 : Women in the Wind.
Waterfront, Torchy Plays with
Dynamite, Torture Ship, Death
Goes North.
BROOK, ALLEN
1938: All-American Sweet
heart, Cattle Raiders.
BROOK, CLIVE
1938: Action for Slander.
1939 : The Ware Case.
395
Players' Worh
BROOK, JEAN
1939: Confessions of a Nazi
Spy.
BROOKE, MICHAEL
1938: The Buccaneer, Bulldog
Drummond's Peril, Bulldog
Drummond in Africa, The
Dawn Patrol.
1939 : Zaza.
BROOKE, TYLER
1938 : Bluebeard's Eighth
Wife, In Old Chicago, Alex-
ander's Ragtime Band.
BROOKS. CLARENCE
1939: Th Bronze Buckaroo,
Harlem Rides the Range, Bad
Boy.
BROOKS. HOWARD
1939: The Man in the Iron
Mask.
BROOKS, JESSE
1938: Life Goes On.
BROOKS, LOUISE
1938: Overland Stage Raid-
ers.
BROOKS. LUCIUS
1939 : The Bronze Buckaroo,
Harlem Rides the Range.
BROOKS, PHYLLIS
1938 : Rebecca of Sunnybrook
Farm, In Old Chicago, Walk-
ing Down Broadway, Straight
Place and Show, Up the Riv-
er, Charlie Chan in Honolulu.
1939: Charlie Chan in Reno.
BROOKS, RAND
1938 : Dramatic School.
1939: The Old Maid, Gone
With the Wind, Babes in Arms.
BROOKS, SHELTON
1939: Double Deal.
BROPHY, EDWARD
1938: A Slight Case of Mur-
der, Gold Diggers in Paris,
Romance on the Run, Hold
That Kiss, Come on Leather-
necks, Passport Husband, Va-
cation from Love, Gambling
Ship.
1939: You Can't Cheat an
Honest Man, Society Lawyer,
For Love or Money, The Kid
from Kokomo, Golden Boy,
The Amazing Mr. Williams,
Kid Nightingale.
BROWN, CHARLES D.
1938 : Mr. Moto's Gamble,
Island in the Sky, Speed to
Burn, The Shopworn Angel,
Algiers, The Crowd Roars,
Barefoot Boy, Flight to Fame,
Up the River, Inside Story,
Five of a Kind, The Duke of
West Point, Exposed.
1939: Ice Follies of 1939, Dis-
barred, Mr. Moto in Danger
Island, Charlie Chan in Reno,
Smashing the Money Ring,
Little Accident, Kid Night-
ingale.
BROWN. EVERETT
1939: Gone With the Wind.
BROWN, FREDRIKA
1939 : Zaza.
BROWN. HELEN
1939 : Hidden Power, Should
a Girl Marry.
BROWN. JOE E.
1938: Wide Open Faces, The
Gladiator, Flirting with F«U.
1939: $1000 a Touchdown, Be-
ware Spooks 1
Players9 TVorh
BROWN. JOHN MACK
1938 : Born to the West.
1939: Desperate Trails, Okla
homa Frontier.
BROWN, LAWRENCE
1938: Dark Sands.
BROWN. RAYMOND
1939: King of the Underworld.
They Made Me a Criminal.
BROWN, STANLEY
1938: Adventure in Sahara.
1939: Blondie Meets the Boss,
Blind Alibi, Good Girls Go to
Paris, Taming of the West,
Riders of Black River.
BROWN, TOM
1938 : In Old Chicago, Mer-
rily We Live, Goodbye Broad-
way, The Duke of West Point,
The Storm, Swing That Cheer.
1939: Sergeant Madden, Big
Town Czar, Ex-Champ, These
Glamour Girls.
BRUCE, ALAN
1938: She's Got Everything,
Mr. Doodle Kicks Off.
BRUCE, NIGEL
1938 : The Baroness and the
Butler, Kidnapped, Suez.
1939: The Hound of the Bas-
kervilles, The Adventures of
Sherlock Holmes, The Rains
Came.
BRUCE, VIRGINIA
1938 : The First Hundred
Years, Arsene Lupin Returns,
Bad Man of Brimstone, Yel-
low Jack, Woman Against
Woman, There's That Woman
Again, There Goes My Heart.
1939: Let Freedom Ring, So-
ciety Lawyer, Stronger Than
Desire.
BRUNETTE, FRITZI
1939: The Star Maker, Honey-
moon in Bali.
BRUNO. FRANK
1938: Mr. Wong— Detective.
BRYAN, JANE
1938: A Slight Case of Mur-
der, The Sisters, Girls on Pro-
bation, Brother Rat.
1939: Each Dawn I Die, These
Glamour Girls, The Man Who
Dared, The Old Maid, We Are
Xot Alone.
BRYANT, PAUL
1938: Tenth Avenue Kid.
BRYANT, NANA
1938 : The Adventures of Tom
Sawyer, Man-Proof, Midnight
Intruder, Mad About Music,
Sinners in Paradise, Give Me
a Sailor, Always in Trouble,
Out West With the Hardys,
Peck's Bad Boy with the Cir-
cus, Swing Sister Swing.
1939: Streets of Missing Men,
Parents on Trial, Espionage
Agent, Our Neighbors the Car-
ters.
BUCHANAN. ELSA
1938 : Invisible Enemy.
BUCK, LEON
1938 : Harlem on the Prairie.
BUCKER, WILLIAM
1939: Streets of New York.
BUCKINGHAM, JAN
1938 : The Lady Objects.
BUCKLEY, BUZ
1939: Saga of Death Valley.
BUFFORD, DAISY
1939: The Star Maker.
BUPP, SONNY
1938: Swing Your Lady.
1939 : Renegade Trail, No Place
to Go.
BUPP. TOMMY
1938: Swing Your Lady, Over
the Wall, Blind Alibi, Re-
formatory, Nancy Drew — De-
tective.
1939: Fisherman's Wharf, Mys-
tery Plane.
BURANI. MICHELETTE
1938: Everybody Sing, Fools
for Scandal.
BURGESS, BETTY
1938 : I Demand Payment.
BURKE. BILLIE
1938: Everybody Sing, Merrily
We Live, The Young in
Heart.
1939: Topper Takes a Trip.
Zenobia, Bridal Suite, The
Wizard of Oz, Eternally Yours,
Remember?
BURKE, BRIAN
1938: The Lady in the
Morgue.
BURKE, FRANKIE
1938 : Angels with Dirty Faces.
1939: Women in the Wind,
Hell's Kitchen, Sweepstakes
Winner, Pride of Bluegrass.
BURKE, JAMES
1938: Joy of Living, Flight
Into Nowhere, The Affairs of
Annabel, The Mad Miss Man-
ton, Men with Wings, The
396
Dawn Patrol, Little Orphan
Annie, Orphans of the Street.
1939: I'm from Missouri, The
Saint Strikes Back, Within
the Law, On Borrowed Time.
At the Circus, Beau Geste,
Fast and Furious.
BURKE. KATHLEEN
1938 : Rascals.
BURNABY, DAVY
1939: Prisoner of Corbal.
BURNETTE, SMILEY
(FROG)
1938: The Old Barn Dance,
Hollywood Stadium Mystery,
Under Western Stars, Gold
Mine in the Sky, Man from
Music Mountain, Billy the Kid
Returns, Western Jamboree,
Rhythm of the Saddle, Prai-
rie Moon.
1939 : Home on the Prairie.
Mexicali Rose, Blue Montana
Skies, Mountain Rhythm, In
Old Monterey, Rovin' Tumble-
weeds, Colorado Sunset, South
of the Border.
BURNS, BOB
1938: Radio City Revels, The
Arkansas Traveler.
1939: I'm from Missouri, Our
Leading Citizen.
BURNS. DAVID
1939: The Saint in London.
BURNS. FRED
1939: The Arizona Kid, Days
of Jesse James.
BURNS. GEORGE
1938: College Swing.
1939 : Honolulu.
BURNS, HARRY
1939: Kid Nightingale.
BURNS, PAUL
1939 : Jesse James, Return of
the Cisco Kid, Rose of Wash-
ington Square.
BURRUD, WILLIAM
1938: Night Hawk.
BURT, BENNY
1938: Hawaiian Buckaroo,
Long Shot.
BURTON, FREDERICK
1938 : The Saint in New York,
My Lucky Star, Kentucky,
Flight to Fame.
1939 : Silver on the Sage, Con-
fessions of a Nazi Spy, Inside
Information, Hollywood Caval-
cade, Joe and Ethel Turp.
BURTON, JOHN
1938 : Kidnapped, Lord Jeff,
Storm Over Bengal.
1939: Hound of the Basker-
villes, The Sun Never Sets.
BUSCH. MAE
1938: Nancy Drew — Detective.
BUSH. JAMES
1938 : Topa Topa, Come on
Leathernecks, Sky Giant,
Crashin' Thru Danger.
1939: You Can't Cheat an
Honest Man, The Family Next
Door, Joe and Ethel Turp.
BUSLEY, JESSIE
1938: Brother Rat.
1939: King of the Underworld.
BUSTER. BUD
1938: Code of the Rangers,
Paroled— To Die, Thunder in
the Desert, Song and Bullets,
Desert Patrol, Stranger from
Arizona, Frontier Scout.
1939 : Daughter of the Tong.
BUTLER. JIMMY
1938 : Boys Town.
1939: Winter Carnival, Call a
Messenger, The Escape, Nurse
Edith Cavell.
BUTLER, JOHNNY
1938: Accidents Will Happen,
Exposed.
1939: Pride of Bluegrass.
BUTTERWORTH, CHARLES
1938: Thanks for the Memory.
1939: Let Freedom Ring.
BYINGTON, SPRING
1938 : Love on a Budget, The
Buccaneer, Jezebel, Penrod
and His Twin Brother, A Trip
to Paris, Safety in Numbers,
You Can't Take It With
You, Down on the Farm.
1939: The Story of Alexander
Graham Bell, Down on the
Farm, Chicken Wagon Family,
Quick Millions, Too Busy to
Work.
BYRD, RALPH
1938 : Born to be Wild, Army
Girl, Down in Arkansas.
1939: Fighting Thoroughbreds,
S. O. S. Tidal Wave, Mickey
the Kid.
BYRON, A. S. "Pop"
1939: The Star Maker.
BYRON, GEORGE
1938: Blockade.
BYRON. MARION
1938 : Five of a Kind.
BYRON, WALTER
1938: Mr. Boggs Steps Out,
Frontier Scout, Trade Winds.
1939: Death Goes North,
Crashing Thru.
CABOT. BRUCE
1938: Bad Man of Brimstone,
Sinners in Paradise, Smashing
the Rackets, Tenth Avenue
Kid.
1939 : Homicide Bureau, Mys-
tery of the White Room, Dodge
City, Mickey the Kid.
CAGNEY, JAMES
1938 : Boy Meets Girl, Angels
with Dirty Faces.
1939: The Oklahoma Kid, Each
Dawn I Die, The Roaring
Twenties.
CAHOON, WYNN
1938 : Women in Prison, Who
Killed Gail Preston?
CAINE, GEORGIA
1938: Women Are Like That.
1939: Dodge City, Juarez,
Honeymoon in Bali, No Place
to Go.
CAITS, JOSEPH
1938: A Slight Case of Mur-
der, Reformatory.
1939: The Lady and the Mob.
CALDWELL, BILL
1938 : Her Jungle Love.
CALDWELL, ORVILLE
1938: Just Around the Corner,
The Last Warning.
CALHERN, LOUIS
1938: Fast Company.
1939: Juarez, Fifth Avenue
Girl, Charlie McCarthy De-
tective.
CALLEIA, JOSEPH
1938 : Bad Man of Brimstone,
Algiers, Marie Antoinette.
1939 : Juarez, The Gorilla, Five
Came Back, Golden Boy, Full
Confession.
Players9 Worh
CALLEJO, CECILIA
1938 : Outlaw Express, Dra-
matic School.
1939: The Renegade Ranger,
It's a Wonderful World.
CALLENDER, ROMAINE
1938: One Wild Night, Sharp-
shooters.
1939: Wuthering Heights.
CAMPAGNA, NINA
1938: Call of the Yukon, Out-
law Express.
CAMPBELL, LOUISE
1938: Scandal Street, The
Buccaneer, Bulldog Drum-
mond's Peril, Men with Wings.
1939: The Star Maker.
CAMPBELL. MURIEL
1939: She Married a Cop.
CAMERON, HUGH
1939: One Third of a Nation,
Back Door to Heaven.
CAMPEAU, FRANK
1938: The Painted Trail, Bor-
der Wolves.
CANDIDO, CANDY
1938 : Cowboy from Brooklyn.
CANUTT, YAKIMA
1939 : Stagecoach, Wyoming
Outlaw, The Kansas Terrors,
Cowboys from Texas, Gone
With the Wind.
CAREW, JAMES
1938 : Dark Sands.
CAREY, HAL
1939: El Diablo Rides.
CAREY, HARRY
1938: Port of Missing Girls,
You and Me, Gateway, Sky
Giant, King of Alcatraz, Law
West of Tombstone.
1939 : Burn 'em Up O'Connor,
Streets of Missing Men, In-
side Information, Mr. Smith
Goes to Washington.
CAREY, LEONARD
1939: The Lone Wolf Spy
Hunt, Fast and Loose, Zero
Hour, Five Little Peppers.
CARLE. RICHARD
1938: It's All Yours.
1939 : Persons in Hiding, It's
a Wonderful World, Undercov-
er Doctor, Maisie, Ninotchka,
Remember?
CARLETON, JANE
1938: The Spy Ring.
CARLISLE. MARY
1938: Tip-Off Girls, Dr.
Rhythm, Hunted Men, Touch-,
down Army, Illegal Traffic,
Say It in French.
1939: Fighting Thoroughbreds;
Inside Information, Hawaiian
Nights, Call a Messenger, Rov-
in' Tumbleweeds, Beware
Spooks !
CARLSON, JUNE
1938 : Love on a Budget,
Safety in Numbers, A Trip to
Paris.
1939 : Down on the Farm,
Quick Millions, Too Busy to
Work.
CARLSON, RICHARD
1938: The Young in Heart,
The Duke of West Point.
1939: Winter Carnival, Danc-
ing Co-ed, Little Accident,
These Glamour Girls.
397
Piny <» r s * W © r
CARLYLE. DAVID
19.18 : The Kid Comes Back.
CARMEN. JEAN
1938: Wolves of the Sea, Pa-
roled from the Big House.
1939: In Old Montana, Smoky
Trail, Crashing Thru.
CARMINATI. TULLIO
1938: Girl of the Streets.
CAROL. JOAN
1938: Walking Down Broad-
way.
1939: Mr. Moto's Last Warn
ing, Barricade.
CARR. JACK
1938 : Ladies in Distress, Per-
sonal Secretary.
1939 : One Hour to Live, Way
Down South.
CARR, NAT
193S : Comet Over Broadway,
Torchy Get9 Her Man.
1939: On Trial. Everybody's
Hobby, Torchy Plays with Dy-
namite.
CARR, THOMAS
1938: Cipher Bureau.
CARRADINE, JOHN
1938: Of Human Hearts, In-
ternational Settlement, Four
.Men and a Prayer, Kentucky
Moonshine, Alexander's Rag-
time Band, Kidnapped, Gate-
way, I'll Give a Million, Sub-
marine Patrol.
1939: Jesse James. Stagecoach.
The Three Musketeers, Mr.
Molo's Last Warning, The
Hound of the Baskervilles, Cap
tain Fury, Five Came Back,
Drums Along the Mohawk,
Frontier Marshal.
CARRILLO, LEO
1938 : Girl of the Golden West,
Blockade, Little Miss Rough-
neck, City Streets, Too Hot
to Handle, The Ariozna Wild-
cat, Flirting with Fate.
1939: Fisherman's Wharf, So-
ciety Lawyer, Rio, Chicken
Wagon Family.
CARROLL, JOHN
1938: Rose of the Rio Grande,
I Am a Criminal.
1939: Onlv Angels Have
Wings, Wolf Call.
CARROLL, LEO G.
1938: A Christmas Carol.
1939: Wuthering Heights, Bull
dog Drummond's Secret Po-
lice, Private Lives of Eliza-
beth and Essex, Tower of Lon
don, Charlie Chan in the City
in Darkness.
CARROLL. MADELEINE
1938: It's All Yours, Block-
ade.
1939: Cafe Society, Honey-
moon in Bali.
CARROLL, NANCY
1938: That Certain Age, There
Goes My Heart.
CARSON, FRANK
1938: Law of the Underworld.
CARSON, JACK
1938: Night Spot, Quick
Money, She's Got Everything.
Crashing Hollywood, Viva-
cious Lady, Go Chase Your-
self, The Saint in New York,
This Marriage Business, Care-
free, Having a Wonderful
Time.
1939: The Kid from Texas.
Legion of Lost Flyers, Destry
Rides Again, The Honeymoon's
Over.
CARSON, JAMES B.
1938: Secrets of an Actress.
1939: The Girl Downstairs.
CARTER, GLORIA
1939: Our .Neighbors the Car-
ters.
CARTER. JACK
1939: Poncomania.
CARTER. LOUISE
1938: Inside Story.
1939: Nancy Drew and the
Hidden Staircase.
CARUTH, BURR
1938 : Under Western Stars.
1939: Invitation to Happiness,
Xew Frontier.
CARUTHERS, BRUCE
1938: Heart of the North.
CARVER, LYNNE
1938: Everybody Sing, Young
Dr. Kildare, A Christmas
Carol.
1939: Huckleberry Finn, With-
in the Law, Calling Dr. Kil-
dare.
CASEY, DOLORES
1938: Cocoanut Grove, Illegal
Traffic, Artists and Model*
Abroad.
CASITSKY, KARL
1938: Terror of Tiny Town.
also LAUREL and HARDY Feature Productions
398
CASS, MAURICE
1938: The Baroness and the
Butler, Making the Headlines,
The House of Mystery, Walk-
ing Down Broadway, Josette,
Gangs of New York, The Lone
Wolf in Paris, When Were
You Born? A Desperate Ad-
venture, Breaking the Ice, Ex-
posed, Sunset Trail.
1939: Rose of Washington
Square.
CASSIDY, EDWARD
1938: The Purple Vigilantes,
Border Wolves, Cassidy of Bar
20, Frontier Town, Rawhide,
The Mexicali Kid, Man from
Music Mountain, Outlaw Ex-
press.
1939 : Silver on the Sage, Wild
Horse Canyon, Mountain Rhy-
thm, Desperate Trails, Cow-
boys from Texas.
CASSIDY, JAMES F.
1938: Santa Fe Stampede.
CASTELLANO, DON
1938: Tarzan and the Green
Goddess.
CASTLE, DON
1938 : Love Finds Andy
Hardy, Rich Man-Poor Girl,
Out West with the Hardys.
1939 : These Glamour Girls.
CATLETT. WALTER
1938: Bringing Up Baby, Go-
ing Places.
1939: Exile Express, Zaza.
Kid Nightingale.
CAVAN. ALAN
1938: I Am a Criminal.
1939: In Old Montana.
CAVANAUGH, HOBART
1938: That's My Story, Cow-
boy from Brooklyn, Orphans of
the Street.
1939: Zenobia, Rose of Wash
ington Square, Tell No Tales.
Chicken Wagon Family, Reno.
That's Right — You're Wrong.
The Covered Trailer, The
Honeymoon's Over.
CAVANAUGH, PAUL
1939: Within the Law, Reno,
The Under-Pup.
CAVENNA, ALICE
1938: I Met My Love Again.
CECIL, MARY
1939: The Women.
CECIL, NORA
1938: Mr. Boggs Steps Oui,
King of Alcatraz.
1939: What a Life.
CERNITZ, ARTHUR W.
1939: Balalaika.
CHALIAPIN, FEODOR
1939: Exile Express.
CHANDLER, CHICK
1938: Alexander's Ragtime
Band, Speed to Burn, Merid-
ian 7-1212, Mr. Moto Takes
a Chance, Inside Story, Time
Out for Murder.
1939: The Mysterious Miss X,
Hotel for Women, Hollywood
Cavalcade, Missing Evidence,
Too Busy to Work, Swanee
River.
CHANDLER. EDDIE
1938: She Loved a Fireman,
Over the Wall, Gold Is Where
You Find It.
1939: Torchy Blane in China-
town, The Roaring Twenties,
Gone With the Wind.
CHANDLER, GEORGE
1938: Secrets of a Nurse.
1939: Exile Express, Jesse
James, King of the Turf, Call-
ing All Marines, I Stole a
Million.
CHANDLER, HELEN
1938: Mr. Boggs Steps Out.
CHANDLER. LANE
1938: Heart of Arizona, She
Loved a Fireman, Alcatraz
Island, Two-Gun Justice, Cam-
pus Confessions, Come on
Rangers.
1939: The Man in the Iron
Mask, Outpost of the Moun-
ties.
CHANEY, LON, JR.
1938: Passport Husband, Road
Demon.
1939 : Jesse James, Frontier
Marshal, Charlie Chan in the
Citv in Darkness, Of Mice and
Men.
CHAPMAN, JANET
1938: Little Miss Thorough-
bred, Broadway Musketeers,
Heart of the North.
1939: On Trial.
CHAPMAN, WILLIAM
1939 : Torture Ship.
CHARLES, JOAN
1938 : Unashamed.
CHARTERS, SPENCER
1938 : The Joy of Living, In
Old Chicago, Mr. Boggs Steps
Out, Forbidden Valley, Crime
School, One Wild Night, The
Road to Reno, The Texans,
Professor Beware, Three Blind
Mice, Breaking the Ice, Mr.
Chump, Five of a Kind, In-
side Story.
1939: They Made Her a Spy,
Woman Doctor, Yes — My Dar-
ling Daughter, Topper Takes
a Trip, Jesse James, Exile Ex-
press, The Flying Irishman,
I'm from Missouri, Women
in the Wind, Young Mr. Lin
coin, Second Fiddle, They
Asked for It, Unexpected
Father, The Covered Trailer.
Drums Along the Mohawk.
In Name Only, The Hunch-
back of Notre Dame.
CHASE, ALDEN
1938: Heart of Arizona, Un-
der Western Stars.
CHASE, CHAZ
1938: Start Cheering.
CHASE, GUY
1938: Frontier Scout.
CHASE, HOWARD
1938: Man from Music Moun-
tain.
CHASE, ILKA
1939 : Stronger Than Desire.
CHATBURN. JEAN
1938: Dramatic School.
CHATTERTON. RUTH
1938: The Bat.
CHATTERTON. TOM
1938: Under Western Stars.
CHATTON, SYD
1938 : Rangers Roundup.
CHEAVERS, RUDOLPH
1938 : Gambling Ship.
CHEANEY, LOIS
1938: Women Are Like That.
Beloved Brat.
CHEANEY, LOLA
1938: Torchy Gets Her Man.
Players' Worh
CHERKOSE, EDDIE
1938: Gold Mine in the Sky.
CHERON, ANDRE
1938: Artists and Models
Abroad.
1939 : Navy Secrets.
CHESEBRO, GEORGE
1938: The Purple Vigilante*,
Cattle Raiders, Law of the
Plains, The Mexicali Kid, Call
of the Rockies.
1939: Song of the Buckaroo,
Rough Riders' Round-Up.
CHESEBRO, JACK
1938: Outlaws of Sonora.
CHESTER, HALLY
1938: Little Tough Guy, Ju-
venile Court, Little Tough
Guys in Society.
1939: Newsboys' Home, Call
a Messenger.
CHEVRET, LITA
1938: Rebellious Daughters.
CHIEF BIG TREE
1939: Stagecoach, Susannah of
the Mounties, Drums Along the
Mohawk.
CHIEF THUNDERCLOUD
1939 : Geronimo.
CHISSELL, KID
1939: Ex-Champ.
CHOREE, SONNY
1938: Her Jungle Love.
CHRISTIAN, HELEN
1939: Back Door to Heaven.
CHRISTMAS, LEONARD
1939: Harlem Rides the Range.
CHRISTY. DOROTHY
1938: Woman Against Wom-
an.
1939 : Rough Riders' Round-
Up.
CHUNG, DR. E. Y.
1939: Disputed Passage.
CHURCHILL. BERTON
1938: In Old Chicago, He
Couldn't Say No, Quick
Money, Four Men and a
Prayer, Wide Open Faces,
Kentucky Moonshine, Danger
on the Air, Ladies in Distress,
The Cowboy and the Lady,
Sweethearts, Meet the Mayor,
Down in Arkansaw.
1939: Stagecoach, Daughters
Courageous, On Your Toes,
Angels Wash Their Faces,
Should Husbands Work, Hero
for a Day.
CHURCHILL, BONNIE
JEAN
1938: Give Me a Sailor.
CIANNELLI, EDUARDO
1938 : Law of the Underworld,
Blind Alibi.
1939 : Gunga Din, Society
Lawyer, Risky Business, Bull-
dog Drummond's Bride, Angels
Wash their Faces.
CLAIRE. INA
1939: Ninotchka.
CLANCY, ELLEN
1938: Alcatraz Island, Ser-
geant Murphy.
CLARE, PHYLLIS
1938: Convicted.
1939 : Manhattan Shakedown.
CLARK, BOBBY
1938: The Goldwyn Follies.
399
Players9 Worh
CLARK, BOBBY, JR.
1939: Bad Boy.
CLARK. CLIFF
1938: The Patient in Room 18,
The Daredevil Drivers, Mr.
Moto's Gamble, Cocoanut
Grove, Meridian 7-1212, Ken-
tucky, Time Out for Murder,
In6ide Story.
1939 : Honolulu, They Made
Me a Criminal, Within the
Law, Young Mr. Lincoln,
Torchy Plays with Dynamite,
Missing Evidence, Miracles for
Sale, Fast and Furious.
CLARK. DAVIDSON
1938: The Buccaneer, Born to
be Wild.
CLARK, ETHEL
1938: The Headleys at Home.
CLARK. HARVEY
( Deceased)
1938: Mother Carey's Chick-
ens.
CLARK, JUNIATA
1938 : Hawaii Calls.
CLARK. MAMO
1938: Booloo.
CLARK, PAUL
1938: Boy Meets Girl.
CLARK, RUSS
1939: Million Dollar Legs.
CLARK, STEPHEN
1938: Outlaws of the Prairie,
Paroled — To Die, Thunder in
the Desert, Desert Patrol.
1939: Roll Wagons Roll.
CLARK. WALLIS
1938: The Higgins Family.
1939 : Allegheny Uprising,
Smuggled Cargo, Main Street
Lawyer, Gone With the Wind.
CLARKE, BETTY ROSS
1938: Woman Against Wom-
an, Too Hot to Handle, Judge
Hardy's Children, Love Finds
Andy Hardy.
CLARKE, HARVEY
1938: Spawn of the North.
CLARKE, RICHARD
1939: Charlie Chan in the
City in Darkness, Swanee
River.
CLAYTON, ETHEL
1938: The Buccaneer, Cocoa-
nut Grove.
CLAYTON, JANE
1938: In Old Mexico, Sunset
Trail.
1939: The Llano Kid.
CLAYTON, RICHARD
1939: Our Neighbors the Car-
ters.
CLEMENS, ZEKE
1938: Code of the Rangers.
CLEMENT. CLAY
1938: Arson Gang Busters,
Numbered Woman, A Trip to
Paris.
1939: Disbarred, Societv Smug-
glers, Off the Record, the Girl
from Rio, Allegheny Uprising.
CLEMENT, DORA
1938: Under Western Stars,
Hawaii Calls, Hold That
Co-ed.
CLEVELAND. GEORGE
1938 : Rose of the Rio Grande,
Port of Missing Girls, Ro-
mance of the Limberlost, Un-
der the Big Top.
1939 : Home on the Prairie,
Streets of New York. Wolf
Call, Stunt Pilot, Mutiny in
the Big House, Overland Mail.
CLIFFORD, JACK
1938: Colorado Trail.
CLIFTON, HERBERT
1938: She's Got Everything.
CLISSBY, JACK
1939: Double Deal.
CLIVE, E. E.
1938: Bulldog Drummond's
Peril, The First Hundred
Years, Arsene Lupin Returns,
Kidnapped, Gateway, Bulldog
Drummond in Africa, Subma-
rine Patrol, The Last Warn-
ing.
1939: I'm from Missouri, Ar-
rest Bulldog Drummond, The
Little Princess, The Hound of
the Baskervilles, Bulldog Drum-
mond's Secret Police, Rose of
Washington Square, Man
About Town, Bachelor Mother.
Bulldog Drummond's Bride.
The Adventures of Sherlock
Holmes, The Honeymoon's
Over.
CLUTE, CHESTER
1938: Rascals, Mr. Chump,
Comet Over Broadway, Anna-
bella Takes a Tour, Service de
Luxe, Artists and Models
Abroad.
1939: I Was a Convict, Danc-
ing Co-ed, Laugh It Off.
CLYDE. ANDY
1939: It's a Wonderful World.
Bad Lands.
Edward Everett Horton
400
CLYDE, DAVID
1938 : Bulldog Drummond's
Peril, Kidnapped.
1939: Bulldog Druramond's
Secret Police, Death of a
Champion, Rulers of the Sea.
COBB, EDMUND
1938: Wild Horse Rodeo, Ser-
geant Murphy, Outlaws of the
Prairie, Cattle Raiders, West
of Cheyenne, Law of the
Plains, I'm from the City,
Colorado Trail, Call of the
Rockies. South of Arizona.
1939: West of Sante Fe, Blue
Montana Skies, Spoilers of the
Range, Western Caravans,
Riders of Black River, Outpost
of the Mounties, Stranger from
Texas.
COBB, IRVIN S.
1938: Hawaii Calls, The Ark-
ansas Traveler, The Young in
Heart.
COBB, LEE
1938 : Danger on the Air.
1939 : Golden Boy.
COBURN, CHARLES
1938: Of Human Hearts, Vi-
vacious Lady, Yellow Jack,
Lord Jeff.
1939 : Idiot's Delight, The
Story of Alexander Graham
Bell, Made for Each Other,
Bachelor Mother, Stanley and
Livingstone, In Name Only.
COCHRANE, FRANCH
1938 : Dark Sands.
CODY, BILL
1939: The Fighting Gringo.
CODY. BILL. JR.
1938 : Girl of the Golden West.
1939 : Desperate Trails.
COFFIN, TRISTAM
1939: Overland Mail.
COGHLAN, FRANK, JR.
1939 : Boy's Reformatory, Meet
Dr. Christian.
COHEN. SAMMY
1938: Battle of Broadway.
COLBERT, CLAUDETTE
1938: Bluebeard's Eighth
Wife.
1939: Zaza, Midnight, It's a
Wonderful World, Drums
Along the Mohawk.
COLE, ENID
1938: Woman Against the
World.
COLE, MARY
1938 : He Loved an Actress.
COLEMAN, CHARLES
1938: The Rage of Paris, Al-
exander's Ragtime Band, Gate-
way, Little Miss Broadway,
That Certain Age.
1939: First Love, Mexican
Spitfire.
COLEMAN. CLAUDIA
1938: Test Pilot, Keep Smil-
ing.
COLEMAN, JAMES
1939: Daughter of the Tong.
COLEMAN. RUTH
1938: Topa Topa, Outside of
Paradise.
COLIN, JEAN
1938: He Loved an Actress.
COLLIER. CONSTANCE
1939: Zaza.
COLLIER, LOIS
1938: A Desperate Adventure.
COLLIER. WILLIAM, SR.
1938: Josette, Say It in
French, Thanks for the Mem-
ory.
1939: I'm from Missouri, Per-
sons in Hiding, Invitation to
Happiness, Television Spy, Dis-
puted Passage.
COLLINS. CORA SUE
1938 : The Adventures of Tom
Sawyer.
1939 : Stop Look and Love.
COLLINS, EDDIE
1938: In Old Chicago, Sally
Irene and Mary, Pernod and
His Twin Brother, Kentucky
Moonshine, Alexander's Rag-
time Band, Always in Trouble,
Little Miss Broadway, Up the
River, Charlie Chan in Hono-
lulu.
1939: Down on the Farm,
Young Mr. Lincoln, Charlie
Chan in Reno, News is Made
at Night, Drums Along the
Mohawk, Stop Look and Love,
Hollywood Cavalcade, Quick
Millions.
COLLINS, G. PAT
1939: Charlie McCarthy De-
tective.
COLLINS, TOM
1939: Fast and Loose, Burn
'em Up O'Connor, Tell No
Tales, These Glamour Girls.
COLMAN, RONALD
1938: If I Were King.
1939: The Light That Failed.
COLONNA, CHARLES
1938 : College Swing.
COLONNA. JERRY
1938 : College Swing, Little
Miss Broadway, Valley of the
Giants, Garden of the Moon.
1939: Naughty But Nice,
Sweepstakes Winner.
COLTON, SCOTT
1938 : Women in Prison, All-
American Sweetheart, Extor-
tion, Little Miss Roughneck.
COMPSON, BETTY
1938: A Slight Case of Mur-
der, Port of Missing Girls,
Blondes at Work, Religious
Racketeers, Torchy Blane in
Panama, Two-Gun Justice,
Under the Big Top.
1939: News is Made at Night,
Mystic Circle Murder, Cow-
boys from Texas.
COMPTON, JOYCE
1938 : Love on a Budget, You
and Me, Going Places, Spring
Madness, The Last Warning,
Artists and Models Abroad.
1939: The Flying Irishman,
Rose of Washington Square,
Hotel for Women, Reno, Bala-
laika.
CONKLIN, CHESTER
1939 : Zenobia, Hollywood Cav-
alcade.
CONKLIN, FRANK
1939: Federal Man-Hunt.
CONKLIN, HEINE
1938: Little Miss Broadway.
1939: Hollywood Cavalcade.
CONKLIN, PEGGY
1938:' Having a Wonderful
Time.
CONLIN, JAMES
1938: Crashing Hollywood,
Torchy Blane in Panama, Co-
coanut Grove, Broadway Mus-
keteers.
Planers' Work
CONNOLLY, WALTER
1938 : Penitentiary, Start Cheer-
ing, Four's a Crowd, Too Hot
to Handle.
1939: The Girl Downstairs,
Huckleberry Finn, Bridal Suite,
Good Girls Go to Paris, Coast
Guard, Those High Grey Walls,
Fifth Avenue Girl, The Great
Victor Herbert.
CONNOR, ALLAN
1938: The Duke of West
Point.
CONNOR, BUCK
1939 : West of Sante Fe.
CONRAD, EDDIE
1938: Romance in the Dark,
Happy Landing, Gateway, I'll
Give a Million, Just Around
the Corner.
1939 : Topper Takes a Trip, In
Old Monterey.
CONRIED, HANS
1938: Dramatic School.
1939: It's a Wonderful World.
CONSELMAN, WM. H., JR.
1939: Boy Friend.
CONTE, JOHN
1939: Our Neighbors the Car-
ters.
CONTI, ALBERT
1938: Always Goodbye, Gate-
way.
CONVERSE. ROGER
1939: Calling Dr. Kildare.
CONWAY, MORGAN
1938: Nurse from Brooklyn,
Sinners in Paradise, Crime
Ring, Illegal Traffic.
1939: Blackwell's Island, Off
the Record, Secret Service of
the Air, Grand Jury Secrets,
Charlie Chan in Reno, The
Spellbinder, Television Spy.
COOGAN, JACKIE
1938: College Swing.
1939: Million Dollar Legs, Sky
Patrol.
COOK, BILLY
1938 : Sons of the Legion, Men
with Wings.
1939: Invitation to Happiness,
Disputed Passage, Beau Geste.
COOK. CLYDE
1938 : Bulldog Drummond's
Peril, Kidnapped, Storm Over
Bengal.
1939: Arrest Bulldog Drum-
mond, The Little Princess,
Bulldog Drummond's Secret
Police.
COOK, ELISHA, JR.
1938: My Lucky Star, Sub-
marine Patrol.
1939: Newsboys' Home, Grand
Jury Secrets.
COOKE, V. W.
1938: King of the Newsboys.
COOLEY, MARJORIE
1939 : The Great Command-
ment.
COOPER, ANTHONY K.
1939 : The Adventures of Sher-
lock Holmes.
COOPER. EDWARD
1938: Rascals.
1939: Wife Husband and
Friend.
401
Players' Work
COOPER, GARY
1938 : Bluebeard's Eighth Wife,
The Adventures of Marco
Polo, The Cowboy and the
Lady.
1939: Beau Geste, The Real
Glory, The Westerner.
COOPER. GEORGE
1938: The Missing Guest.
COOPER. JACKIE
1938 : White Banners, Gang-
ster's Boy, That Certain Age.
1939: Newsboys' Home, Spirit
of Culver, Streets of Xew York.
What a Life, Two Bright Boys.
COOPER. LILLIAN K.
1939: Gone With the Wind.
COOPER. MELVILLE
1938: Women Are Like That.
The Adventures of Robin
Hood, Golddiggers in Paris.
Four's a Crowd, Hard to Get.
The Dawn Patrol, Comet
Over Broadway, Dramatic
School. Garden of the Moon.
1939: I'm from Missouri, Blind
Alibi, The Sun Never Sets.
Two Bright Boys.
COOTE. ROBERT
1939: Mr. Motors Last Warn
ing, Gunga Din, The Girl
Downstairs, The House of
Fear. Bad Lands, Nurse Edith
Cavell.
COPELAND. NICK
1938: The Main Event, Meet
the Mayor.
COPLEN. ELBERT, JR.
1939: Bachelor Mother.
CORBETT. BEN
1938 : Six Shootin' Sheriff.
Gold Mine in the Sky, Light-
ning Carson Rides Again.
1939 : Racketeers of the Range.
CORDAY. MARCELLE
1938: Happy Landing, Al-
ways Goodbye.
CORDELL, FRANK
1939: Geronimo.
CORDING. HARRY
1938: The Adventures of Robin
Hood, Crime School, Valley of
the Giants, Painted Desert.
COREY. JIM
1938: Gold Mine in the Sky.
1939: Silver on the Sage.
CORIO. RAFAEL
1939: Code of the Secret Ser-
vice.
CORNER. JAMES
1939: Winter Carnival. What
a Life.
CORRADO. GINO
1938: Rose of the Rio Grande,
Dr. Rhythm.
CORRELL, MADY
1938 : Invisible Enemy.
CORRIGAN. D'ARCY
1938: A Christmas Carol.
1939: The Man in the Iron
Mask, The Great Command
ment.
CORRIGAN, DOUGLAS
1939: The Flying Irishman.
CORRIGAN, LLOYD
1939: The Great Command
ment.
CORRIGAN, RAY
1938: Wild Horse Rodeo. Call
the Mesquiteers, The Purple
Vigilantes, Outlaws of Sonora.
Heroes of the Hills, Riders of
the Black Hills, Santa Fe
Stampede, Overland Stage Rid
ers. Pals of the Saddle.
1939: The High Riders. Three
Texas Steers, Wyoming Out-
law, Xew Frontier.
CORSON. WILLIAM
1938: Double Danger, Sky
Giant, Mr. Doodle Kicks Off.
CORTES, ARMAND
1938: Bluebeard's Eighth
Wife.
CORTEZ. RICARDO
1939: Mr. Moto's Last Warn
ing, Charlie Chan in Reno.
CORTHELL, HERBERT
1938 : Sing You Sinners.
COSBEY, RONALD
1938: Telephone Operator,
The Marines Are Here.
COSSAFT. ERNEST
1939: Three Smart Girls Grow
Up, Zaza, Never Say Die, The
Magnificent Fraud, Lady of
the Tropics, Tower of London,
The Light That Failed.
COSTELLO, DOLORES
1938 : Beloved Brat, Breaking
the Ice.
1939: Whispering Enemies.
King of the Turf.
COSTELLO, DON
1939: Another Thin Man, Joe
and Ethel Turp.
WALTER CONNOLLY
A
"FIFTH AVENUE GIRL"
A
"THE GREAT VICTOR HERBERT"
A
"THOSE HIGH GREY WALLS"
402
COSTELLO. WILLIAM
1938 : Port of Missing Girls,
Wanted by the Police.
1939: Balalaika.
COURTNEY. INEZ
1938: Having a Wonderful
Time, Crime Ring, Five of a
Kind.
1939: Beauty for the Asking.
Blondie Meets the Boss, Miss-
ing Evidence.
COVAN, DE FORREST
1939: Reform School.
COWAN, JEROME
1938 : The Goldwyn Follies,
There's Always a Woman.
1939: The Saint Strikes Hack.
St. Louis Blues, Exile Ex-
press, East Side of Heaven,
Gracie Allen Murder Case, She
Married a Cop, The Old Maid.
The Great Victor Herbert.
COX, BUDDY
1939: Stunt Pilot.
COWEN, ED
1939: Down the Wyoming
Trail.
CKABBE. LARRY "BUSTER''
1938: Tip-Off Girls, Hunted
Men, Illegal Traffic, Mars At-
tacks the World.
1939: Unmarried, Colorado
Sunset, Call a Messenger, Mil-
lion Dollar Legs.
CRAIG, ALEC
1938: Double Danger. Crash-
ing Hollywood, Vivacious
Lady.
1939: They Made Her a Spy.
Confessions of a Nazi Spy,
Rulers of the Sea, Charlie Mc-
Carthy Detective.
CRAIG, JAMES
1938 : Born to the West.
1939: Taming of the West.
The Man They Could Not
Hang.
CRAIG, NELL
1939: Calling Dr. Kildare, Se-
cret of Dr. Kildare.
CRAM, FRANK
1938: Dark Sands.
CRAMER. RICHARD
1938 : Rangers Roundup,
Clipped Wings, Thunder in
the Desert, Song and Bullets,
Phantom Hanger.
1939: In Old Montana.
CRANE, FRED
1939: Gone With the Wind.
CRAVEN, ALAN
1938: Two-Gun Justice.
CRAVEN. EDDIE
1938 : The Invisible Menace.
CRAVEN. FRANK
1938: You're Only Young
Once, Penrod and His Twin
Brother.
1939: Miracles for Sale, Our
Neighbors the Carters.
CRAWFORD, BRODERICK
1938: Start Cheering.
1939: Ambush. Undercover
Doctor. Beau Geste, Eternally
Yours, Island of Lost Men.
The Real Glory.
CRAWFORD. JOAN
1938 : The Shining Hour.
1939: Ice Follies of 1939, The
Women.
CREHAN. JOSEPH
1938 : Midnight Introducer,
Happy Landing, The Kid
Comes Back, Night Spot, Al-
exander's Ragtime Ban 1, Crime
Takes a Holiday, Woman
Against Woman, Four's a
Crowd, Billy the Kid Returns,
Illegal Traffic.
1939 : Pride of the Navy, Whis-
pering Enemies, You Can't
Get Away With Murder, Navy
Secrets, Society Lawyer, Tell
No Tales, Maisie, Hollywood
Cavalcade, Geronimo, The Star
Maker, Behind Prison Gates.
Babes in Arms, The Roaring
Twenties, The Return of Dr
X.
CRESPO, JOSE
1938: Rascals.
CREWS. LAURA HOPE
1938 : Dr. Rhythm, The Sis-
ters. Thanks for the Memory.
1939: Idiot's Delight, Reno.
The Star Maker, The Rain-
Came, Gone With the Wind.
Remember?
CRINER, LAWRENCE
1938: Life Goes On.
1939 : One Dark Night.
CRISP, DONALD
1938: Jezebel, Sergeant Mur-
phy, Beloved Brat, The Amaz
ing Dr. Clitterhouse, Valley
of the Giants, The Dawn Pa-
trol, Comet Over Broadway,
The Sisters.
1939: Wuthering Heights, The
Oklahoma Kid. Juarez, Daugh-
ters Courageous, The Old
Maid, The Private Lives of
Elizabeth and Essex.
CROMWELL. RICHARD
1938: Jezebel, Come on Leath-
ernecks, Storm Over Bengal.
1939: Young Mr. Lincoln.
Torpedoed.
CROSBY, BING
1938: Dr. Rhythm, Sing You
Sinners.
1939: Paris Honeymoon, East
Side of Heaven, The Star
M aker, Road to Singapore.
CROSBY, WADE
1938: Ride a Crooked Mile.
CUMMINGS, ROBERT
1938: College Swing, You and
Me, The Texans, Touchdown
Army, I Stand Accused.
1939 : Three Smart Girls
Grow Up, The Under-Pup.
Reno. Everything Happens ai
Night. Charlie McCarthy De-
tective.
CUNNINGHAM, CECIL
1938: Scandal Street, Four
Men and a Prayer, College
Swing, Kentucky Moonshine,
You and Me, Wives Under
Suspicion, Girl's School.
1939: The Family Next Door.
It's a Wonderful World. Win-
ter Carnival, Lady of the
Tropics. Laugh It Off.
CUNNINGHAM, JOE
1938 : Blondes at Work, Tor-
chy Blane in Panama, Four's
a Crowd, Going Places, Torchy
Gets His Man.
1939: Blackwell's Island, Se-
cret Service of the Air, Torchy
Plays with Dynamite.
CURCI, GENARRO
1939 : Juarez.
CURRIER, MARY
1939: Everything's On Ice,
The Great Victor Herbert.
I» I (i y ers' Wo r h
CURRY, NATHAN
1938: Harlem on the Prairie.
CURTIS. ALAN
1938 : Yellow Jack, The Shop-
worn Angel, The Duke of
West Point.
1939: Burn 'Em Up O'Con-
nor, Sergeant Madden. Good
Girls Go to Paris. Hollywood
Cavalcade.
CURTIS, BILLY
1938: Terror of Tiny Town.
1939: Three Texas Steers,
CURTIS. DICK
1938: Penitentiary, Women in
Prison, Outlaws of the Prairie.
Rawhide, Cattle Raiders, West
of Cheyenne, Law of the
Plains, The Main Event.
Squadron of Honor, Colorado
Trail. Crashin' Thru Danger.
Call of the Rockies, South of
Arizona. Adventures in Sahara.
1939: West df Santa Fe.
Spoilers of the Range, West
ern Caravans. Taming of the
West, Behind Prison Gates,
The Man They Could Not
Hang, Riders of Black River.
Outpost of the Mounties.
Stranger from Texas.
CUSACK, NOEL
1938: Convicted.
CUSHING, PETER
1939: The Man in the Iron
Mask.
DABNEY. VIRGINIA
1938 : King of Alcatraz.
1939: Disbarred.
DAE, FRANK
1939 : The Covered Wagon.
DALE, ESTHER
1938: Condemned Women,
Stolen Heaven, Prison Farm.
Girls on Probation.
1939: Made for Each Other.
Hroadwav Serenade. Big Town
Czar, fell No Tales. The
Women. Blackmail, Swanee
River.
DALE, FRANK
1938 : In Old Chicago, Little
Miss Broadway
DALE, VIRGINIA
1938: No Time to Marry.
Start Cheering.
1939: The Kid from Texas.
Death of a Champion.
DALEY. JACK
1938: Born to thf West, Good-
bye Broadway.
1939: Mutiny in the Big
House.
DALY, PAT
1938: A Slight Case of Mur-
der.
DAMBRICOURT,
ADRIANNE
1938: Artists and Models
Abroad.
1939: Bulldog Drummond's
Bride. Pack Up Your Troubles.
Charlie Chan in the City in
Darkness.
DAMINO, SALVATORE
1938 : Starlight Over Texas.
DAMROSCH, WALTER
1939: The Star Maker.
DANE, BRUCE
1939: Smoky Trail.
403
Players9 Worh
DANIEL, ROGER
1939 : Boy Slaves, King of the
Turf.
DANIELL, HENRY
1938: Holiday, Marie Antoin-
ette.
1939 : The Private Lives of
Elizabeth and Essex, We Are
Not Alone.
DANIELS, BEEBE
1939 : Treachery on the High
Seas.
DANIELS, BILLY
1938: Say It in French.
DANNING, RICHARD
1938: King of Alcatraz.
da PRON. LOUIS
1938: All-American Sweet-
heart.
D'ARCY, ALEXANDER
1938: She Married an Artist,
Flight to Fame.
1939: Topper Takes a Trip,
Good Girls Go to Paris, Fifth
Avenue Girl, Three Sons.
D'ARCY, ROY
1939: Chasing Danger.
DARCY, SHEILA
1938: You and Me, Illegal
Traffic, Artists and Models
Abroad.
1939: The Man in the Iron
Mask, Irish Luck, South of
the Border.
DARE, IRENE
1938 : Breaking the Ice.
1939 : Everything's On Ice.
DARIEN. FRANK
1938: Cassidy of Bar 20, Pri-
son Break, Western Jamboree,
Long Shot, Wanted by the
Police, Juvenile Court.
1939: Panama Patrol, Sabo-
tage.
DARNELL, LINDA
1939: Day-Time Wife, Hotel
for Women.
DARRELL, STEVAN
1939: Code of the Secret Ser-
vice.
DARRIEUX, DANIELLE
1938: The Rage of Paris.
DARRO, FRANKIE
1938: Reformatory.
1939: Tough Kid, Boy's Re-
formatory, Irish Luck.
DARWELL, JANE
1938: The Jury's Secret,
Change of Heart, Battle of
Broadway, Meridian 7-1212,
Three Blind Mice, Little Miss
Broadway, Time Out for Mur-
der, Five of a Kind, Up the
River, Inside Story.
1939: Jesse James, Zero Hour,
Grand Jury Secrets, Unex-
pected Father, The Rains
Came, 20,000 Men a Year,
Gone With the Wind.
D'AUBURN, DENIS
1939: Rulers of the Sea.
DAUGHTON, MARGA ANN
1939: Stagecoach.
DAVENPORT, HARRY
1938 : Reckless Living, The
First Hundred Years, Sales-
lady, Gold Is Where you Find
It, The Rage of Paris, Young
Fugitives, The Higgins Fam-
ily, You Can't Take it With
You, Long Shot, The Sisters,
The Cowboy and the Lady,
Orphans of the Street.
1939: My Wife's Relatives,
Made for Each Other, Exile
Express, Tail Spin, The Story
of Alexander Graham Bell,
Juarez, Death of a Champion,
Should Husbands Work?, The
Covered Trailer, The Hunch-
back of Notre Dame, Gone
With the Wind.
DAVIDO, RAQUEL
1938: My Old Kentucky
Home.
DAVIDSON, BILL
1939: Naughty But Nice.
DAVIDSON, JOHN
1939: Arrest Bulldog Drum-
mond, Mr. Moto's Last Warn-
ing, Mr. Moto Takes a Vaca-
tion.
DAVIDSON. MAX
1939: The Great Command-
ment.
DAVIDSON, WALTER B.
1939 : They Made Me a
Criminal, Off the Record, On
Trail, Hidden Power, Indian-
apolis Speedway, Honeymoon
in Bali, Smashing the Spy
Ring.
DAVIDSON. WILLIAM
1938 : Sergeant Murphy, Love
on Toast, Cocoanut Grove,
Blockade, Cowboy from Brook-
lyn, Mr. Doodle Kicks Off,
Illegal Traffic.
DAVIS. ALAN
1938 : Over the Wall.
\
EDMUND
GWENN
♦
"The Earl of Chicago"
♦
"The Doctor Takes a Wife"
♦
"Pride And Prejudice"
404
1939: Wings of the Navy,
King of the Underworld.
DAVIS, ART
1938: Phantom Gold.
1939: Six-Gun Rhythm.
DAVIS. BETTE
1938: Jezebel, The Sisters.
1939 : Dark Victory, Juarez,
The Old Maid, Private Lives
of Elizabeth and Essex.
DAVIS, CHARLES
1939 : Down the Wyoming
Trail.
DAVIS, DIX
1938 : Cocoanut Grove.
DAVIS. GEORGE
1938 : The Baroness and the
Butler.
1939: Topper Takes a Trip,
Charlie Chan in the City in
Darkness.
DAVIS, JOAN
1938 : Sally Irene and Mary,
Josette, My Lucky Star, Hold
That Co-ed, Just Around the
Corner.
1939: Tail Spin, Day-Time
Wife, Too Busy to Work.
DAVIS, JOHNNY
1938 : Cowboy from Brooklyn,
Men Are Such Fools, Mr.
Chump, Brother Rat, Garden
of the Moon.
1939: Sweepstakes Winner.
DAVIS, OWEN, JR.
1938: Touchdown Army.
1939 : These Glamour Girls.
DAVIS, ROBERT O.
1939: Confessions of a Nazi
Spy, Espionage Agent.
DAVIS, ROGER
1938: Youth Takes a Fling.
DAVIS, RUFE
1938: Big Broadcast of 1938,
Dr. Rhythm, Cocoanut Grove.
1939 : Ambush, Some Like It
Hot.
DAVIS, TIM
1938: Gambling Ship.
DAW, EVELYN
1938 : Panamint's Bad Man.
DAWSON, FRANK
1938 : Four Men and a Prayer,
I'll Give a Million.
1939 : The Adventures of Sher-
lock Holmes.
DAWSON. HAL K.
1938: Keep Smiling, Just
Around the Corner.
1939 : Rose of Washington
Square, Two Bright Boys, The
Great Victor Herbert.
DAY, DORIS
1939: Saga of Death Valley.
DAY, JOHN
1939 : Sky Patrol, Stunt Pilot.
DAY, LARAINE
1939: Calling Dr. Kildare,
Tarzan Finds a Son, Secret
of Dr. Kildare.
DAYTON, DOROTHY
1938 : Cocoanut Grove.
1939: Zaza.
DEAN, EDDIE
1939 : Law of the Pampas.
DEAN, JOEL
1939: Blondie Meets the Boss.
DEANE, RICHARD
1939 : Nurse Edith Cavell.
DEANE. SHIRLEY
1938 : Love on a Budget, Safe-
ty in Numbers, A Trip to
Paris, Prairie Moon.
DEARING, DOROTHY
1938: Up the River.
DEARING, EDGAR
1938: Thanks for Everything.
1939 : Honolulu, Some Like
It Hot.
DE BRIAC, JEAN
1938: Swiss Miss.
DE BRULIER. NIGEL
1939: The Hound of the Bas-
kervilles, Juarez and Maximil-
ian, The Man in the Iron
Mask, Mutiny in the Big
House.
DE CORDOBA. PEDRO
1938: International Settlement,
Keep Smiling, Storm Over
Bengal, Heart of the North.
1939: Winner Take All. Men
of Conquest, Juarez, Chasing
Danger, Law of the Pampas,
Range War, Charlie Chan in
the City in Darkness, The
Light That Failed.
DE CORDOVA, LEANDER
1939: Torture Ship.
DEE. FRANCES
1938: If I Were King.
1939 : Coast Guard.
DEERING, EDGAR
1939: Torchy Plays with Dyna-
mite, Nick Carter-Master De-
tective.
DEERING, SAYRE
1939 : Mystery Plane.
DE FOREST, MARIE
1938: Trade Winds, Artists
and Models Abroad.
DE HAVILAND. OLIVIA
1938: Gold Is Where You
Find It, The Adventures of
Robin Hood, Four's a Crowd,
Hard to Get.
1939: Wings of the Navy,
Dodge City, The Private Lives
of Elizabeth and Essex, Gone
With the Wind.
DEKKER, ALBERT
1938: The Last Warning, She
Married An Artist, The Lone
Wolf in Paris, Extortion,
Marie Antoinette.
1939: Hotel Imperial, The Man
in the Iron Mask, The Great
Commandment, Beau Geste.
DELL, CLAUDIA
1938 : Algiers, Angels with
Dirty Faces.
1939: Juarez and Maximilian.
DELL, GABRIEL
1938: Crime School, Little
Tough Guy.
1939: They Made Me a Crim-
inal, Angels Wash Their Faces,
On Dress Parade.
DEL RIO, DOLORES
1938 : International Settlement.
DE LUGURO, RENE
1939: Juarez and Maximilian.
DEL VAL, JEAN
1939: The Flying Deuces.
DEMAREST. WILLIAM
1938 : Rebecca of Sunnybrook
Farm, Josette, Romance on
the Run, One Wild Night,
Peck's Bad Boy with the Cir-
cus.
1939: The Great Man Votes,
King of the Turf, Gracie Al-
len Murder Case, Miracles for
Sale, Mr. Smith Goes to
Washington, The Cowboy
Quarterback, Laugh It Off.
Players9 Worh
DEMETRIO, ANNA
1938: Born to be Wild, The
Texans, In Old Mexico.
1939: Law of the Pampas, The
Llano Kid.
DE MILLE. KATHERINE
1938: Blockade.
1939 : Trapped in the Sky,
In Old Caliente.
DEMOURELLE, VIC
1939 : Mexicali Rose.
DEMPSEY, JANET
1938 : Tarnished Angel.
D'ENNERY, GUY
1938 : Blockade.
DENNING. RICHARD
1938: Illegal Traffic, Campus
Confessions.
1939: Persons in Hiding, King
of Chinatown, I'm from Mis-
souri, Some Like It Hot, Grand
Jury Secrets, Million Dollar
Legs, The Star Maker, Tele-
vision Spy.
DENNY, REGINALD
1938 : Bulldog Drummond's
Peril, Four Men and a Prayer,
Blockade, Bulldog Drummond
in Africa.
1939: Arrest Bulldog Drum-
mond, Bulldog Drummond's
Secret Police, Bulldog Drum-
mond's Bride.
DENT VERNON
1939: Beasts of Berlin.
DE PALMA, WALTER
1938: Rhythm of the Saddle.
DEPP, HARRY
1938 : Pals of the Saddle.
DERWENT, CLARENCE
1939: The Story of Vernon
and Irene Castle.
DESOUXA, HERBERT
1938 : Booloo.
DESTE, LILI
1938 : She Married an Artist.
DE STEFANI. JOSEPH
1938: Bar 20 Justice, A Man
to Remember.
1939 : Twelve Crowded Hours,
The Man They Could Not
Hang.
DEUTSCH, ERNST
1939: Nurse Edith Cavell,
Prisoner of Corbal.
DE VALDEZ, CARLOS
(Deceased)
1938: Romance in the Dark,
Blockade.
1939: Juarez, The Llano Kid.
DEVINE. ANDY
1938 : In Old Chicago, Dr.
Rhythm, Yellow Jack, The
Storm, Personal Secretary,
Men with Wings, Swing That
Cheer.
1939: Stagecoach, Never Say
Die, The Spirit of Culver,
Geronimo, Mutiny on the
Blackhawk, Legion of Lost
Flyers, Tropic Fury.
DEVLIN, JOE
1939: King of the Under-
world, No Place to Go.
DEWARD, BILLIE
1939: Charlie Chan at Treas-
ure Island.
DEWEY. JANE
1939: Rulers of the Sea.
405
Players* Work
DIAMOND BROTHERS
1938: Freshman Year.
DIAZ. MANUEL
1939: Juarez.
DICKERSON. DUDLEY
1939: Some Like It Hot.
DICKSON. GLORIA
1938: Gold Diggers in Parii,
Secrets of an Actress, Racket
Busters, Heart of the North.
1939: They Made Me a Crim-
inal, Waterfront, On Your
Toes. Xo Place to Go, The
Cowboy Quarterback.
DIETRICH. MARLENE
1939: Destry Rides Again.
DIGGES. DUDLEY
1939: The Light That Failed.
DILLAWAY. DONALD
193S: Dynamite Delaney, Ci-
pher Bureau.
1939: Frontier Pony Express.
DILLON. JOHN WEBB
1938: Trade Winds.
1939: Women in the Wind.
Fixer Dugan, Racketeers of
the Range, A Women is the
Judge.
DILLSON. CLYDE
1938: Secrets of a Nurse.
DILSON. JOHN H.
1938: Women in Prison, Down
in Arkansaw, Hold That Co-ed.
DINEHART, ALAN
193S : Love on a Budget, The
First Hundred Years, Rebecca
of Sunnybrook Farm, Up the
River.
1939: Fast and Loose, King
of the Turf, The House of
Fear. Second Fiddle, Two
Bright Boys, Hotel for
Women. Everything Happens
at Xight.
DINGLE. CHARLES
1939: One Third of a Nation.
DINOVITCH. ABE
1939: Beasts of Berlin.
DIONNE QUINTUPLETS
1938: Five of a Kind.
DIX. RICHARD
1938: Blind Alibi, Sky Giant.
1939: Twelve Crowded Hours,
Man of Conquest. Reno. Here
I Am a Stranger.
DIXON. JEAN
1938 : Joy of Living, Holidav.
DODD. CLAIRE
1938 : Romance in the Dark,
Three Loves Has Nancy, Fast
Company, Charlie Chan in
Honolulu.
1939: Woman Doctor.
DOEHRER. CHARLES
1939: That's Right-You're
Wrong.
DOLAN. JAMES
(Deceased)
1938: Professor Beware.
DON AT. ROBERT
1938: The Citadel.
1939: Goodbve Mr. Chips.
DONLEVY. BRIAN
1938: In Old Chicago, Battle
of Broadway, Sharpshooters.
1939: Jesse James, Union Pa-
cific, Allegheny Uprising, Be-
hind Prison Gates. Beau Geste,
Destry Rides Again.
DONNELLY, BILL
1938 : Double Danger.
DONNELLY. RUTH
1938: Roaring Timber, A
Slight Case of Murder, Array
Girl, The Affairs of Annabel,
Annabella Takes a Tour, Meet
the Girls, Personal Secretary.
1939: The Family Next Door.
The Amazing Mr. Williams.
Mr. Smith Goes to Washing-
ton.
DOOLEY. BILLY
1938: Call of the Yukon, The
Marines Are Here.
DORAN. ANN
1938: Penitentiary, Women in
Prison, Extortion, Highwav
Patrol, You Can't Take it
With You, The Lady Objects.
Blondie.
1939: Smishing the Spv Ring.
Blind Alibi, The Man They
Could Not Hang.
DORR. LESTER
1938: The Main Event.
DORRELL, DICK
1938: Border Wolves.
DOUGLAS. DONALD
1938 : Alexander's Ragtime
Band, Convicted, The Crowd
Roars, The Gladiator, Smash-
ing the Rackets, Fast Com-
pany, Orphans of the Street,
Law of the Texan.
1939: Wings of the Navy, The
Mysterious Miss X, Fast and
Loose, Within the Law, Zero
Hour. The House of Fear,
Fugitive at Large, Manhat-
tan Shakedown. On Dress Pa
rade, Sabotage.
NAN GREY
Under Contract to
UNIVERSAL
Management
M.C.A. Artists, Ltd.
406
DOUGLAS, EARLE
1938: Paroled from the Big
House, Crime Afloat.
1939: Trigger Pals, Wild
Horse Canyon, Down the Wy-
oming Trail, Crashing Thru.
DOUGLAS, GEORGE
1938 : Pals of the Saddle, Re-
bellious Daughters.
1939: The Night Riders, Let
Us Live, The Kansas Terrors.
DOUGLAS, MELVYN
1938: There's Always a Wom-
an, Arsene Lupin Returns, The
Toy Wife, Fast Company,
That Certain Age, The Shin-
ing Hour, There's That Wom-
an Again.
1939: Tell No Tales, Good
Girls Go to Paris, The Amaz-
ing Mr. Williams, Ninotchka.
DOWNING, BARRY
1938: Phantom Gold.
DOWNING, JOSEPH
1938: A Slight Case of Mur-
der, Wide Open Faces, The
Devil's Party, Lady in the
Morgue, Danger on the Air,
Night Hawk, Angels with
Dirty Faces, Racket Busters.
1939: You Can't Get Away
With Murder, The Forgotten
Woman, Each Dawn I Die,
Smashing the Money Ring,
Missing Evidence.
DOWNING, REX
1939: Wuthering Heights,
Nurse Edith Cavell, The Es-
cape.
DOWNS, JOHNNY
1938: Hunted Men, Algiers,
Swing Sister Swing, Hold That
Co-ed.
1939: Bad Boy, Hawaiian
Nights, Parents on Trial,
Laugh It Off.
DOYLE, MARY
1938: Beloved Brat.
DOYLE. MAXINE
1938 : Fury Below.
DRAKE. FRANCES
1938 : There's Always a Wom-
an, She Married an Artist,
The Lone Wolf in Paris.
1939: It's a Wonderful World.
DRAKE, ROGERS
1938: Blockade.
DREW, ELLEN
1938: Sing You Sinners, If I
Were King.
1939: The Lady's from Ken-
tucky, Gracie Allen Murder
Case, Geronimo.
DREW, LILLIAN
1938: Man from Music Moun-
tain.
DREW, LLOYD
1938: Gun Packer.
DREW, ROLAND
1938: Lady in the Morgue,
The Last Warning.
1939: Mystery of the White
Room, Beasts of Berlin.
DRISCOLL, MIKE
1939: Rulers of the Sea.
DROHAM, BENNY
1939: Winter Carnival.
DuBREY, CLAIRE
1938: The Baroness and the
Butler, Little Miss Broadway.
1939: Jesses James, The
Story of Alexander Graham
Bell, South of the Border.
DUDGEON. ELSPETH
1938 : Mystery House.
1939: Bulldog Drummond's
Secret Police.
DUDLEY, ROBERT
1939: Zenobia.
DUFF, AMANDA
1938 : Just Around the Corner.
1939: Mr. Moto in Danger
Island, The Escape, Hotel for
Women.
DUGAN, THOMAS
1938: Sing You Sinners, Four
Daughters, There's That Wom-
an Again, Sons of the Legion.
1939: I'm from Missouri, The
Lone Wolf Spy Hunt, Mystery
of the White Room, The Lady
and the Mob, The House of
Fear, Missing Evidence, $1,000
a Touchdown, Laugh It Off.
DUGGAN. JAN
1938: Midnight Intruder, Scan-
dal Street, Kentucky Moon-
shine, One Wild Night, Thanks
for Everything, Inside Story.
1939: The Story of Alexander
Graham Bell, The House of
Fear.
DUMAS, WADE
1939: Harlem Rides the
Range.
DUMBRILLE. DOUGLAS
1938: The Buccaneer, Stolen
Heaven, Crime Takes a Holi-
day, Fast Company, Storm
Over Bengal, Mysterious
Rider, Sharpshooters, Ken-
tucky.
1939: The Three Musketeers,
Mr. Moto in Danger Island,
Captain Fury, Tell No Tales,
Thunder Afloat, Charlie Chan
at Treasure Island, Rovin'
Tumbleweeds, Charlie Chan in
the City in Darkness.
DUMONT. MARGARET
1938: Dramatic School.
1939 : At the Circus.
DUNA, STEFFI
1938: Rascals, Flirting with
Fate.
1939: Panama Lady, The
Magnificent Fraud, Beasts of
Berlin, Way Down South, Law
of the Pampas.
DUNAGAN, DONNIE
1938: Mother Carey's Chick-
ens.
1939 : The Forgotten Woman.
DUNBAR, DAVID
1939: Rulers of the Sea.
DUNBAR. DIXIE
1938: Walking Down Broad-
way, Rebecca of Sunnybrook
Farm, Love on a Budget, Al-
exander's Ragtime Band,
Freshman Year.
DUNCAN, ARLETTE
1938 : Crime Afloat.
DUNCAN, CHARLES
1938 : Little Tough Guys in
Society.
1939: Newsboys' Home.
DUNCAN. KENNETH
1938: Mars Attacks the World,
Frontier Scout.
1939: Fighting Thoroughbreds,
Roll Wagons Roll.
DUNCAN, LEE
1939 : Hollywood Cavalcade.
DUNCAN, WILLIAM
1938: Bar 20 Justice, The
Frontiersman.
1939: Law of the Pampas.
J* I « y c r s ' Work
DUNDEE, JIMMIE
1938 : You and Me.
1939: The Star Maker.
DUNHAM, PHIL
1938: Fury Below.
DUNN, EDWARD
1938: Rascals.
1939: Let Freedom Ring.
Charlie McCarthy Detective.
DUNN, EMMA
1938: Cowboy from Brooklyn,
Lord Jeff, Three Loves Has
Nancy, The Duke of West
Point, Young Dr. Kildare, The
Cowboy and the Lady, Thanks
for the Memory.
1939: Son of Frankenstein.
Calling Dr. Kildare, Each
Dawn I Die, Hero for a Day,
The Llano Kid, Secret of Dr.
Kildare.
DUNN, JAMES
1938 : Shadows Over Shang-
hai.
1939: Pride of the Navy.
DUNN, RALPH
1938: Numbered Woman.
Tenth Avenue Kid, Come on
Leathernecks.
1939: Desperate Trails.
DUNNAGAN, DONNIE
1939 : Son of Frankenstein.
DUNNE, ELIZABETH
1939: Naughty But Nice,
Blondie Takes a Vacation.
DUNNE. IRENE
1938: Joy of Living.
1939: Love Affair, Invitation
to Happiness, When Tomorrow
Comes.
DUNNE, JIM
1938: The Buccaneer.
DUNSTAN, CLIFF
1938 : Room Service.
DUPREE, MINNIE
1938: The Young in Heart.
DURAN, DOLORES
1938 : Blockade.
DURAND, DAVID
1939: Streets of New York,
Boy's Reformatory.
DURANTE, JIMMY
1938: Start Cheering, Sally,
Irene and Mary, Little Miss
Broadway.
DURBIN, DEANNA
1938: Mad About Music, That
Certain Age.
1939: Three Smart Girls Grow
Up, First Love, It's a Date.
DUVAL, YVONNE
1938 : Artists and Models
Abroad.
DVORAK, ANN
1938: Merrily We Live, Gangs
of New York.
1939: Blind Alibi, Stronger
Than Desire.
DWIRE, EARL
1938: Trouble at Midnight,
The Purple Vigilantes, Under
Western Stars, The Old Barn
Dance, The Daredevil Drivers,
Accidents Will Happen, Two
Gun Justice, Man from Music
Mountain, Six Shootin' Sher-
iff, Mysterious Rider.
1939: The Star Maker, The
Arizona Kid.
407
Players9 Worh
EAGLES. JAMES
1938: The Painted Trail, Ail-
American Sweetheart, Heroes
of the Hills.
EARLE, DR. CRAIG E.
1938: Start Cheering.
EARLE. EDWARD
1938: When G-Men Step In,
Her Jungle Love, The Ma-
rines Are Here, Riders of the
Black Hills, The Headleys at
Home, I Am a Criminal, The
Duke of West Point.
EARLY, MARGARET
1938: Jezebel, The Young in
Heart, Swing That Cheer.
1939: Judge Hardy and Son.
EBSEN, BUDDY
1938: Girl of the Golden West,
Yellow Jack, My Lucky Star.
1939: Four Girls in White,
The Kid from Texas.
EBURNE. MAUDE
1938: Riders of the Black
Hills.
1939 : Exile Express, My
Wife's Relatives, Mountain
Rhythm, Meet Dr. Christian,
Sabotage, The Covered Trailer.
EDDY. HELEN JEROME
1938: City Streets, Outside
the Law.
1939 : Blondie Brings Up Baby.
EDDY, NELSON
1938: Girl of the Golden West,
Sweethearts.
1939: Let Freedom Ring,
Balalaika.
EDEN, ALICE
1939: Career.
EDMUNDS, WILLIAM
1939: Idiot's Delight, Juarez,
Fixer Dugan.
EDWARDS. ALAN
1939: South of the Border.
EDWARDS. CLIFF
1938 : Girl of the Golden West,
Bad Man of Brimstone, The
Little Adventuress.
1939: Maisie, Smuggled Car-
go, Gone With the Wind.
EDWARDS, EDGAR
1938 : Woman Against the
World, Convicted.
1939: Wings of the Navy,
Code of the Secret Service,
Death Goes North, Special In-
spector, Nancy Drew — Trouble
Shooter.
EDWARDS. SARAH
1938: Women are Like That.
1939: Meet Dr. Christian.
EHRHARDT, BESS
1939: Ice Follies of 1939.
EILERS. SALLY
1938: Nurse from Brooklyn,
Everybody's Doing It, Con-
demned Women, Tarnished
Angel.
1939: They Made Her a Spy,
Full Confession.
ELDREDGE. JOHN
1938: Women Are Like That.
1939: King of the Underworld.
Persons in Hiding, Blind
Alibi, Undercover Doctor, Tel-
evision Spy.
ELDRIDGE, GEORGE
1938: Paroled from the Big
House.
1939: The Star Maker.
ELIOT, KATHLEEN
1938: Paroled— To Die.
ELLIOTT, BILL
1939: Taming of the West.
ELLIOTT, DICK
1938 : Under Western Stars,
Penitentiary.
1939: Mr. Smith Goes to
Washington, Nancy Drew and
the Hidden Staircase.
ELLIOTT, EDITH
1938: Double Danger.
1939: Fixer Dugan.
ELLIOTT, FRANK
1938: Dr. Rhythm.
ELLIOTT, GORDON
1938 : The Devil's Party, Lady
in the Morgue.
ELLIOTT. JOHN
1938: Cassidy of Bar 20,
Heart of Arizona, Hold That
Co-ed.
1939 : Jesse James.
ELLIOTT, LILLIAN
1938: The Jury's Secret,
Wanted by the Police.
1939: Tough Kid, Boy's Re-
formatory, Irish Luck, Heroes
in Blue.
ELLIOTT, ROBERT
1938: Trade Winds.
1939: The Saint Strikes Back,
Mickey the Kid, The Roaring
Twenties, I Stole a Million,
Gone With the Wind.
ELLIOTT, VIC
1938
ELLIS
1938
ELLIS
1938
Quick Money.
DICK
Juvenile Court.
EDWARD
Little Miss Broadway,
A Man to Remember.
T C N T /H aV E T II N
"MUSIC IN MY
HEART"
(Columbia Pictures)
★
"TUNE UP TIME"
Columbia Broadcasting System
Coast-To-Coast ETHYL GASOLINE
Personal Management
Nat Goldstone Agency
408
1939: Man of Conquest, Ca-
reer, Three Sons, Main Street
Lawyer.
ELLIS, FRANK
1938 : Border Wolves.
1939: Ride 'Era Cowgirl, Roll
Wagons Roll.
ELLIS, JEANNE
1938: Girl of the Golden
West.
ELLIS, JOHN
1939: Beasts of Berlin.
ELLIS, PATRICIA
1938: The Gaiety Girls, Ro-
mance on the Run, Lady in
the Morgue, Blockheads.
1939 : Back Door to Heaven,
Fugitives at Large.
ELLIS, PETER
1938 : Lord Jeff.
ELLISON, JAMES
1938: Vivacious Lady, Mother
Carey's Chickens, Next Time
I Marry, It's Spring Again.
1939 : Zenobia, Sorority House,
Fifth Avenue Girl, Hotel for
Women.
ELTON, EDMUND
1939: Should a Girl Marry.
ELVIRY
1938 : Down in Arkansaw.
1939 : Jeepers Creepers.
EMANUEL, DEMITRIS
1938 : Blockade.
EMERY. GILBERT
1938: Making the Headlines,
The House of Mystery, The
Buccaneer, Lord Jeff, A Man
to Remember, Storm Over
Bengal.
1939 : The Saint Strikes Back,
Juarez, The Lady's from Ken-
tucky, Nurse Edith Cavell.
EMMETT, FERN
1938: You and Me, Overland
Stage Raiders.
1939: Made for Each Other,
Saga of Death Valley.
ENNIS, E. C.
1938: College Swing.
ERICSON, HELEN
1939: Wife, Husband and
Friend, Quick Millions, Hotel
for Women, Too Busy for
Work.
ERIKSON, LIEF
1938: Big Broadcast of 1938,
Ride a Crooked Mile.
1939: One Third of a Nation.
ERNEST, GEORGE
1938 : Love on a Budget,
Safety in Numbers, A Trip to
Paris, Down on the Farm.
1939: Down on the Farm, Boy
Friend, 20,000 Men a Year,
Quick Millions, Too Busy to
Work.
ERROL, LEON
1939 : Girl from Mexico, Danc-
ing Co-ed, Mexican Spitfire.
ERWIN. STUART
1938 : Mr. Boggs Steps Out,
Passport Husband, Three Blind
Mice.
1939 : Back Door to Heaven,
It Could Happen to You, Hol-
lywood, Cavalcade, The Honey-
moon's Over.
ESMOND, CARL
1938: The Dawn Patrol.
1939 : Thunder Afloat.
ETHIER. ALPHONZ
1938: The Baroness and the
Butler, Sunset Trail.
EVANS, BRUCE
1939: Back Door to Heaven.
EVANS, HELENA PHILIPS.
1938: My Bill, Nancy Drew —
Detective.
EVANS. HERBERT
1938: Everybody's Doing It,
Gangster's Boy, The Dawn
Patrol.
1939 : Susannah of the Moun-
ties.
EVANS. MADGE
1938: Sinners in Paradise,
Army Girl.
EVANS, MURIEL
1939: Roll Wagons Roll.
EVANS, PERRY
1939: The Great Command-
ment.
EVANS, REX
1939 : Zaza.
EVERS, ANN
1938: Frontier Town, Riders
of the Black Hills, The Mad
Miss Manton, If I Were King.
1939 : Beauty for the Asking.
EVERTON. PAUL
1938: Midnight Intruder, Mer-
rily We Live, Beloved Brat,
Gun Law, Reformatory, Little
Miss Thoroughbred, Orphans
of the Street, Outside the Law.
1939: Topper Takes a Trip.
Trapped in the Sky, Stand Up
and Fight, Whispering En-
emies, Maisie.
FABARES, NANETTE
1939: The Private Lives of
Elizabeth and Essex.
FADDON, TOM
1939 : I Stole a Million.
Destry Rides Again.
FAHY, DOUGLAS
1939: What a Life.
FAIN, MATTY
1938 : Port of Missing Girls,
Alcatraz Island, Barefoot Boy,
Wanted by the Police, Personal
Secretary.
FAIRBANKS .DOUGLAS, JR.
1938 : The Joy of Living, The
Rage of Paris, Having a Won-
derful Time, The Young in
Heart.
1939: Gunga Din, The Sun
Never Sets, Rulers of the Sea.
FAIRMAN, AUSTIN
1938: Bulldog Drummond's
Peril.
FALKENBERG, JINX
1939: Song of the Buckaroo.
FALLOWS, RUTH
1938 : Saleslady.
FARGO, PETER
1939 : The Arizona Kid.
FARLEY. DOT
1938: Stranger from Arizona.
FARLEY, JAMES
1938 : Quick Money.
FARMER, FRANCES
1938: Ride a Crooked Mile.
FARMER, OLIVER
1938: Life Goes On.
FARNUM, FRANKLIN
1938 : Prison Train.
FARNUM. WILLIAM
1938 : Santa Fe Stampede,
Shine on Harvest Moon, If I
Were King.
409
Players9 Work
1939 : Mexicali Rose, Rovin'
Tumbleweeds, Colorado Sun-
set, South of the Border.
FARR, PATRICIA
1938: All-American Sweet-
heart, Trade Winds.
FARRELL. CHARLES
1938 : Moonlight Sonata, Just
Around the Corner, Flight to
Fame.
1939: Tail Spin, Treachery on
the High Seas.
FARRELL, EVE
1938: Dynamite Delaney.
FARRELL, GLENDA
1938: Blondes at Work, Stolen
Heaven, The Road to Reno,
Prison Break, Torchy Gets
Her Man, Exposed.
1939: Torchy Blane in China-
town.
FASSETT, JULIA
1939: One Third of a Nation.
FAULKNER, RALPH
1939: The Star Maker.
FAY, DOROTHY
1938: Stranger from Arizona,
Long Shot, Law of the Texan,
Frontier Scout.
1939: Song of the Buckaroo,
Trigger Pals.
FAY. FRANK
1938: Meet the Mayor.
FAYE. ALICE
1938: In Old Chicago, Sally
Irene and Mary, Alexander's
Ragtime Band.
1939 : Tail Spin, Rose of Wash-
ington Square, Hollywood Cav-
alcade, Barricade.
FAYE, JULIA
1938: You and Me.
FAYLEN. FRANK
1938: The Invisible Menace.
1939 : Reno, Waterfront, The
Star Maker, No Place to Go,
Nick Carter — Master De-
tective.
FAZENDA. LOUISE
1938 : Swing Your Lady,
Down on the Farm.
1939: Down on the Farm,
The Old Maid.
FEALY, MAUDE
1938: The Buccaneer.
FEATHERSTONE. EDDIE
1939: Homicide Bureau.
FELD, FRITZ
1938: Romance in the Dark,
Bringing Up Baby, Go Chase
Yourself, Gold Diggers in
Paris, The Affairs of Anna-
bel, I'll Give a Million, Artists
and Model's Abroad.
1939: Idiot's Delight, When
Tomorrow Comes, Little Ac-
cident, At the Circus, Every-
thing Happens at Night.
FELLOWS, EDITH
1938: Little Miss Roughneck,
City Streets, The Little Ad-
venturess.
1939: Pride of Bluegrass,
Five Little Peppers.
FENDERSON. REGINALD
1938: Life Goes On.
1939: Reform School.
FENNELL, RUFUS
1938: Dark Sands.
Players'' Work
FENNER. WALTER
1939: Juarez, Mountain
Rhythm, A Woman is the
Tudge.
FENTON. LESLIE
1938: Boys Town.
FENWICK. JEAN
1938: If I Were King.
1939: Arrest Bulldog Drum
mond. Tell Xo Tales.
FETCHIT. STEPIN
1939: Zenobia.
FETHERSTON, EDDIE
1938: Women in Prison, Who
Killed Gail Preston? The Lone
Wolf in Paris, Squadron of
Honor.
FIDLER, JIMMY
1938: Garden of the Moon.
FIELD, BETTY
1939: What a Life, Of Mice
and Men.
FIELD, CHARLOTTE
1938: Pride of the West, Mys-
terious Rider.
FIELD, MARY
1938: White Banners, Cowboy
from Brooklyn.
1939: Dancing Co-ed. Stunt
Pilot. The Fighting Gringo.
FIELD. SHEP &
ORCHESTRA
1938: Big Broadcast of 1938.
FIELD, VIRGINIA
1939: Mr. Moto's Last Warn-
ing, Captain Fury. Bridal
Suite, The Sun Never Sets.
Eternally Yours, Mr. Moto
Takes a Vacation.
FIELDS, GRACIE
1938 : We're Going to Be Rich.
1939: Smiling Along.
FIELDS. LEW
1939: The Story of Vernon
and Irene Castle.
FIELDS. STANLEY
1938: The Adventures of Mar-
co Polo, Wide Open Faces,
Algiers, Panamint's Bad Man,
Flirting with Fate, Painted
Desert, Straight Place and
Show.
1939: The Kid from Kokomo.
Crashing Danger, Hell's
Kitchen. Fugitive at Large,
Pack Up Your Troubles.
Blackwell's Island, Exile Ex-
press.
FIELDS, W. C.
1938: Big Broadcast of 1938.
1939: You Can't Cheat an
Honest Man.
FILAURI, ANTONIO
1939: Code of the Secret Ser-
FIN. ARTHUR
1938: He Loved an Actress.
FINLAYSON. JAMES
1938: Blockheads.
1939 : Hollywood Cavalcade.
The Flying Deuces, The Great
Victor Herbert.
FISCHER, GLORIA
1938: Beloved Brat.
FISCHER. ROBERT C.
1939: Zaza.
FISHER. DIANE
1939: Swanee River.
FISHER. ELLIOT
1938 : Mr. Boggs Steps Out.
FISKE, RICHARD
1938: The Little Adventuress,
Rlondie.
1939: Homicide Bureau,
Blondie Meets the Boss, Be-
hind Prison Gates, Man from
Sundown, Parents on Trial,
The Stranger from Texas.
FISKE, ROBERT
1938: The Purple Vigilantes,
Cassidy of Bar 20, Religious
Racketeers, Numbered Wom-
an, Flight Into Nowhere,
South of Arizona, Colorado
Trail, Sunset Trail, Adventure
in Sahara, I Am a Criminal.
1939: West of Sante Fe.
Racketeers of the Range.
Mystic Circle Murder.
FITZGERALD, BARRY
1938 : Bringing Up Baby, Four
Men and a Prayer, The Dawn
Patrol.
1939 : The Saint Strikes Back,
Pacific Liner, Full Confession.
FITZGERALD, GERALDINE
1939: Wuthering Heights.
Dark Victory.
FITZGERALD. JOHNNY
1938: Riders of the Black
Hills.
1939: Boy Slaves.
FITZGERALD. NEIL
1938 : Bulldog Drummond in
Africa.
1939: Arrest Bulldog Drum
mond. Sergeant Madden, Bull
dog Drummond's Secret Po-
lice, Bulldog Drummond's
Bride, Rulers of the Sea.
FITZROY. EMILY
1938: The Frontiersman.
FIX. PAUL
1938: Penitentiary, When G-
Men Step In, The Buccaneer.
Crime Takes a Holidav, Crime
JflnlfS
ELLISOA
Management
John McCormick, Inc.
410
King, Smashing the Rackets,
-\iglu Hawk.
1939: Heritage of the Desert,
Undercover Doctor, News Is
Made at Xight, Mutiny on
the Blackhawk, Those High
Grey Walls, Behind Prison
Gates.
FLAGSTAD, KIRSTEN
1938: Big Broadcast of 193S.
FLAHERTY, PAT
1 9 3 8: Hollywood Stadium
Mystery, She Loved a Fire-
man, Telephone Operator, Al-
ways in Trouble, The Main
Event.
1939: Legion of Lost Flyers.
FLAVIN. JAMES
1938: The Buccaneer, Ride a
Crooked Mile, Lightning Car-
son Rides Again, The Duke of
West Point, Thanks for Ev-
erything.
1939: Mickey the Kid, Mr.
Wong in Chinatown.
FLEISCHMANN, HARRY
1939: Ambush.
FLETCHER, TEX
1939: Six-Gun Rhythm.
FLICK, PAT C.
1938: Little Tough Guy, The
Missing Guest.
FLINT, SAM
1938 : State Police.
FLOWERS, BESS.
1938: Women in Prison, The
Lone Wolf in Paris, The Lady
Objects.
FLYNN. ERROL
1938: The Adventures of Robin
Hood, Four's a Crowd, The
Sisters, The Dawn Patrol.
1939: Dodge City, The Pri-
vate Lives of Elizabeth and
Essex.
FLYNN, MARIA
1939: Intermezzo: A Love
Story.
FLYNN, ROY
1938: The Buccaneer.
FONDA. HENRY
1938 : Jezebel, I Met My Love
Again, Blockade, Spawn of the
North, The Mad Miss Manton.
1939: Jesse James, Let Us
Live, The Story of Alexander
Graham Bell. Young Mr. Lin-
coln. Drums Along the Mo-
hawk.
FONTAINE. JOAN
1938: Maid's Night Out, Skv
Giant, The Duke of West
Point.
1939: Gunga Din. Man of
Conquest, The Women.
FOO, LEE TUNG
1938: Mr. Wong — Detective.
1939: Mr. Wong in China
town.
FORAN, DICK
1938: Over the Wall, She
Loved a Fireman, Love Honor
and Behave, Forbidden Valley,
The Cowboy from Brooklyn,
Boy Meets Girl, Four Daugh-
ters, The Sisters, Heart of the
North, Secrets of a Nurse.
1939: Daughters Courageous,
Inside Information. 1 Stole
a Million, Hero for a Day,
Four Wives.
FORBES. MARY
1938 : Everybody Sing, Out-
side of Paradise, Always Good-
bye, You Can't Take it With
You.
1939: You Can't Cheat an
Honest Man, Fast and Loose,
Risky Business, The Sun
Never Sets, The Adventures
of Sherlock Holmes, Holly-
wood Cavalcade, Should Hus-
bands Work ?
FORBES. RALPH
1938: Women Are Like That.
Kidnapped, Woman Against
the World, Annabella Takes a
Tour, Convicts at Large, If I
Were King.
1939: The Hound of the Ba,
kervilles, The Magnificent
Fraud, The Private Lives of
Elizabeth and Essex, Tower of
London.
FORD, FRANCIS
1938 : In Old Chicago, Ken-
tucky Moonshine, The Tex-
ans.
1939: Stagecoach. Young Mr.
Lincoln, Bad Lands. Drums
Along the Mohawk.
FORD, JUDITH
1938 : Code of the Rangers.
FORD, WALLACE
1938 : He Loved an Actress,
Dark Sands.
1939 : Back Door to Heaven.
FORMAN, TOM
1938: Rawhide.
FORSTER, RUDOLF
1939 : Island of Lost Men.
FORTE, JOSEF
1938: Pals of the Saddle.
1939 : Beasts of Berlin.
FOSTER, EDDIE
1938: Held for Ransom, High-
way Patrol.
1939: Mutiny in the Big
House.
FOSTER. PRESTON
1938: Double Danger, Every-
body's Doing It, Lady in the
Morgue, Army Girl, The Last
Warning, Up the River, The
Storm, Submarine Patrol.
1939: Society Smugglers. Chas
ing Danger. News Is Made
at Night, Geronimo, .Missing
Evidence, 20.000 Men a Year.
FOSTER. SUSANNA
1939: The Great Victor Her-
bert.
FOULGER, BYRON
1938: It's All in Your Mind,
Born to be Wild, Tenth Ave-
nue Kid, Tarnished Angel, I
Am a Criminal.
1939: Exile Express. Mutiny
on the Blackhawk. The Girl
from Rio, The Man They
Could Not Hang. Television
Spy.
FOUR TONES, THE
1939: Harlem Rides the Range.
One Dark Xight.
FOWLER, BERENDO
1939: Stagecoach.
FOWLER, JEAN
1938: Under Western Stars.
FOWLEY DOUGLAS
1938: Mr. Moto's Gamble.
Walking Down Broadway,
Keep Smiling, Passport Hus-
band, Meridian 7-1212, The
Arizona Wildcat. Time Out for
Murder, Submarine Patrol, In-
side Story,
1939: Dodge City. Lucky
Xight, It Could Happen to
You. Boy Friend. Charlie
Chan at Treasure Island.
FOX, ALEX
1939: The Star Maker.
FOY, CHARLES
1938 : The Daredevil Drivers.
Penrod and His Twin Brother.
1939: Blackwell's Island, Kink'
of the Underworld, Hell's
Kitchen. Conspiracy, Sweep-
stakes Winner, Mutiny in the
Big House.
I* lu ye r s ' Wor h
FOY. EDDIE. JR
1939 : Secret Service of the
Air, Women in the Wind.
Code of the Secret Service.
Frontier Marshal, Smashing
the Money Ring, The Cow-
bov Quarterback.
FOY, MARY
1938: Blockade.
FRANCE, C. V.
1938: If I Were King.
FRANCIS, KAY
1938 : Women Are Like That,
My Bill, Comet Over Broad-
way, Secrets of an Actress.
1939: King of the Under-
world, Women in the Wind.
In Name Only.
FRANCIS, NOEL
1938: Sudden Bill Dorn.
FRANCIS, OLIN
1938: Two-Gun Justice, Over-
land Stage Raiders.
FRANCIS, WILMA
1938 : Trade Winds.
FRANEY, WILLIAM
1938 : Quick Money.
FRANK, JERRY
193S : Heroes of the Hills.
FRANKLIN, CLYDE
1938: Dvnamite Delanev.
FRANKLIN, GLORIA
1939 : Lady of the Tropics.
FRANKLIN. IRENE
1938: Flirting with Fate, Re-
bellious Daughters.
1939: Fixer Dugan.
FRAWLEY. WILLIAM
1938: Mad About Music,
Crime Takes a Holiday, Pro-
fessor Beware, Sons of the
Legion, Touchdown Army.
1939: Ambush. Huckleberry
Finn, St. Louis Blues. Per-
sons in Hiding. Rose of Wash-
ington Square, Ex - Champ.
Grand Jury Secrets, Stop
Look and Love.
FRA/K K ERT
1938: Religious Racketeers.
1939: Navy Secrets. Six-Gun
Rhythm. Juarez and Maxi-
milian. Mystic Circle Murder.
Daughter of the Tong, Crash-
ing Thru.
FRAZER, RUTH
1938: Fury Below.
FRIES. OTTO
1938: Romance in the Dark,
Alexander's Ragtime Band.
FRIGANZA, TRIXIE
1938 : Silks and Saddles
FRISCO, JOE
193S : Western Jamboree.
FROHMAN, BERT
1939: Back Door to Heaven.
FROMAN, JANE
1938: Radio City Revels.
FROME, MILTON
1939: Ride 'Em Cowbov.
FRYE. DWIGHT
1938: Invisible Enemy, Fast
Company, Adventure in Sa-
hara, Night Hawk.
FRYE, KATHERINE
1939: Mexicali Rose.
FUNG, WILLIE
1938: Border Wolves, Sinners
in Paradise, Too Hot to Han-
dle.
1939: Honolulu, Maisie. 6.000
Enemies. Hollywood Caval-
cade. Barricade.
FYFFE, WILL
1939: Rulers of the Sea.
411
Players9 Worh
GAAL, FRANCISKA
1938 : The Buccaneer.
1939: Paris Honeymoon, The
Girl Downstairs.
GABLE. CLARK
1938: Test Pilot, Too Hot to
Handle.
1939: Idiot's Delight, Gone
With the Wind.
GALE, DEIDRE
1939: The Little Princess.
GALE, JUNE
1938: Meridian 7-1212, Time
Out for Murder, Inside Story.
1939: It Could Happen to You,
The Escape, Hotel for Women,
Charlie Chan at Treasure
Island, The Honeymoon's Over.
GALLAGHER, RICHARD
(SKEETS)
1938: Danger on the Air.
1939: Idiot's Delight.
GALLAHER, DONALD
1939: Code of the Fearless,
The Magnificent Fraud.
GALLAUDET. JOHN
1938: Who Killed Gail Pres-
ton? The Devil's Party, The
Main Event, Little Miss
Roughneck, Sing You Sin-
ners.
1939: Wings of the Navy,
Twelve Crowded Hours, Fed-
eral Man-Hunt, Streets of
Missing Men, Code of the
Secret Service, One Hour to
Live, The Man Who Dared.
Manhattan Shakedown, The
Star Maker, They All Come
Out, Hero for a Day.
GALLI, ROSINA
1938: Blockade.
1939: Fisherman's Wharf, The
Housekeeper's Daughter.
GALT, GALAN
1938: Spawn of the North.
GAMORE, CHARLES
1938: Swiss Miss.
GAN, CHESTER
1938: Shadows Over Shanghai.
GARBO, GRETA
1939: Ninotchka.
GARCIA, ALAN
1938: Blockade, In Old Mex-
ico.
GARCIA, JOE
1939: Overland Mail.
GARDINER, REGINALD
1938: Everybody Sing, Marie
Antoinette, Sweethearts.
1939: The Girl Downstairs,
The Flying Deuces.
GARDNER, ARTHUR
1938: Religious Racketeers,
Heart of the North.
1939: Mystic Circle Murder,
Waterfront.
GARDNER, JACK
1938: Cocoanut Grove.
GARFIELD, JOHN
1938: Four Daughters, They
Made Me a Criminal.
1939: Blackwell's Island. They
Made Me a Criminal, Juarez,
Daughters Courageous, Dust
Be My Destiny, Four Wives.
GARGAN. EDWARD
1938: That's My Story, The
Devil's Party, The Texans,
Straight Place and Show,
Thanks for the Memory, An-
nabella Takes a Tour.
1939: Honolulu, The Saint
Strikes Back, Yes-My Darling
Daughter, Lucky Night, For
Love or Money, Fixer Dugan.
They All Come Out, Pack Up
Your Troubles, Night Work,
20,000 Men a Year.
GARGAN, WILLIAM
1938: The Crime of Dr. Hal-
let, The Devil's Party, The
Crowd Roars, Personal Secre-
tary.
1939: Broadway Serenade,
Within the Law, Women in the
Wind, The House of Fear,
Three Sons. The Housekeeper's
Daughter, Joe and Ethel Turp.
GARLAND, JUDY
1938 : Everybody Sing, Love
Finds Andy Hardy, Listen
Darling.
1939: The Wizard of Oz,
Babes in Arms.
GARLAND, RUTH
1938 : The Sisters.
GARNER, PEGGY ANN
1939: Blondie Brings Up
Baby, In Name Only.
GARR, EDDIE
1938: That's My Story.
GARRALAGA, MARTIN
1938 : Rose of the Rio Grande,
Outlaw Express, Starlight
Over Texas.
1939: Juarez, Juarez and Max-
imilian. The Fighting Gringo.
GARRICK, JOHN
1939: The Great Victor Her-
bert.
GARRISON, HAROLD
1939: Reform School.
GARRY, JO
1939 : Back Door to Heaven.
GARSON, GREER
1939 : Goodbye, Mr. Chips, Re-
member?
JOHN WAYNE
GATESON. MARJORIE
1938: The House of Mystery,
No Time to Marry, Making
the Headlines, Gateway, The
Duke of West Point, Spring
Madness, Stablemates.
1939: My Wife's Relatives,
Geronimo, Too Busy to Work.
GAY, BETSY
1939: Mystery Plane.
GAYE, GREGORY
1938: Love Honor and Be-
have, Straight Place and Show,
Thanks for Everything, Too
Hot to Handle.
1939: Paris Honeymoon, The
Three Musketeers, Ninotchka,
Hotel for Women.
GAYNOR, JANET
1938: Three Loves Has Nancy,
The Young in Heart.
GAZE, GWEN
1938: Bar 20 Justice.
GEAR, LUELLA
1938: Carefree.
GEHRIG, LOU
1938: Rawhide.
GEORGE, FLORENCE
1938: College Swing.
1939: Tell No Tales.
GEORGE, GLADYS
1938 : Love Is a Headache,
Marie Antoinette.
1939 : I'm from Missouri,
Here I Am a Stranger, The
Roaring Twenties.
GEORGE, ROBERT
1939: One Third of a Nation.
GETSCHELL, SUMNER
1938 : Campus Confessions.
1939 : These Glamour Girls.
GIBSON, WYNNE
1938: Gangs of New York,
Flirting with Fate.
GIERMAN. FREDERICK
1939: Beasts of Berlin.
GILBERT, BILLY
1938: Happy Landing, She's
Got Everything, Joy of Liv-
ing, Maid's Night Out, Army
Girl, My Lucky Star, Block-
heads, Breaking the Ice, Mr.
Doodle Kicks Off, Peck's Bad
Boy with the Circus.
1939: The Girl Downstairs,
Forged Passport, The Star
Maker, The Under-Pup, Rio,
Destry Rides Again, The Dic-
tator, Safari, His Girl Friday,
The Woman from Hell, Sandy
is a Lady, Our City, World
Cruise.
GILBERT, HELEN
1939: Andy Hardy Gets Spring
Fever, Secret of Dr. Kildare.
GILBERT, JODY
1939 : Chasing Danger, Every-
thing Happens at Night.
GILBERT, LEATRICE JOY
1938 : Of Human Hearts.
GILBERT, WALTER
1938 : Dynamite Delaney.
GILLETTE, RUTH
1938: Rebecca of Sunnybrook
Farm, In Old Chicago, Jos-
ette, The Chaser, Slander
House.
1939: Return of the Cisco Kid.
GILLILAND, HELEN
1938: The Storm.
GILLING WATER, CLAUDE
(Deceased)
1938: Little Miss Broadway,
There Goes My Heart.
1939: Cafe Society.
GILLINGWATER,
CLAUDE, JR.
1938 : Just Around the Cor-
ner.
GILLIS, ANN
1938 : The Adventures of Tom
Sawyer, Peck's Bad Boy with
the Circus, Little Orphan An-
nie.
1939: The Under-Pup, Beau
Geste.
GILMAN, LUCY
1938 : Gangster's Boy.
GILMORE, VIRGINIA
1939: Winter Carnival.
GIRARD. JOSEPH W.
1938: Unashamed, Held for
Ransom.
1939: Ride 'Em Cowgirl,
Tough Kid, Crashing Thru.
GIRARDOT, ETIENNE
(Deceased)
1938 : Professor Beware, Port
of Seven Seas, The Arizona
Wildcat, There Goes My
Heart.
1939: The Story of Vernon
and Irene Castle, Fast and
Loose, Exile Express, For
Love or Money, Little Acci-
dent, Hawaiian Nights, The
Hunchback of Notre Dame.
GIVOT. GEORGE
1939: Hollywood Cavalcade.
GLASER, VAUGHAN
1939 : Rulers of the Sea, What
a Life.
GLASSMIRE, GUS
1939 : Woman Doctor.
GLEASON. JAMES
1938: Army Girl, The Hig-
gins Family.
1939: My Wife's Relatives,
On Your Toes, Should Hus-
bands Work? The Covered
Trailer.
GLEASON, LUCILE
1938 : Nurse from Brooklyn,
Beloved Brat, The Higgins
Family.
1939: My Wife's Relatives,
Should Husbands Work?, The
Covered Wagon.
GLEASON, PAT
1938: Call the Mesquiteers,
The Marines Are Here.
GLEASON, RUSSELL
1938: Love on a Budget, Fury
Below, Safety in Numbers, A
Trip to Paris, The Higgins
Family.
1939 : My Wife's Relatives,
Down on the Farm, News Is
Made at Night, Should Hus-
bands Work? The Covered
Trailer, Here I Am a Stranger.
GLECKLER, ROBERT
(Deceased)
1938: Rascals, Gangs of New
York, Alexander's Ragtime
Band, Little Miss Broadway,
Gun Law, Orphans of the
Street.
1939 : Stand Up and Fight,
They Made Me a Criminal.
GODDARD, PAULETTE
1938 : The Young in Heart,
Dramatic School.
1939: The Women, The Cat
and the Canary.
GODFREY, PETER
1938: Blockade.
GOMBELL. MINNA
1938: Blockheads, Going
Places, The Great Waltz,
Comet Over Broadway.
1939: Stop Look and Love.
The Hunchback of Notre
Dame.
Players' Worh
GOOD RIDER, MARTIN
1939: Susannah of the Moun
ties.
GOODALL, GRACE
1938 : City Streets.
GOODWIN, HAROLD
1938: Sky Giant.
1939: Jesse James, Boy Friend,
Too Busy to Work.
GORCEY, DAVID
1938: Little Tough Guy, Prai-
rie Moon, Little Tough Guys
in Society, Juvenile Court.
1939: Sergeant Madden, News-
boys' Home, Call a Messenger.
GORCEY, LEO B.
1938 : Crime School, Angels
with Dirty Faces.
1939: They Made Me a Crim-
inal, On Dress Parade, Angels
Wash Their Faces.
GORDON, BERT
1938: Outside of Paradise.
GORDON, C. HENRY
1938 : Invisible Enemy, Tar-
zan's Revenge, The Black Doll,
Yellow Jack, Long Shot, Ad-
venture in Sahara, Sharpshoot-
ers.
1939: Trapped in the Sky,
Heritage of the Desert, Man
of Conquest, Return of the
Cisco Kid, Charlie Chan in
the City in Darkness.
GORDON, CHARLES
1939 : Double Deal.
GORDON, HUNTLEY
1938: Gangster's Boy.
1939: Mr. Wong in China-
town.
GORDON, MARY
1938: Kidnapped, City Streets.
1939: The Hound of the Bas-
kervilles, Tail Spin, Captain
Fury, She Married a Cop,
Rulers of the Sea, Parents on
Trial, The Adventures of
Sherlock Holmes.
GORDON, PHYLLIS
1939: Another Thin Man.
GORDON, ROY
1938 : Cocoanut Grove, Cam-
pus Confessions.
1939: Persons in Hiding, Boy
Slaves, The Great Man Votes,
Blondie Brings Up Baby, The
Spellbinder, The Real Glory,
Million Dollar Legs.
GOT, ROLAND L.
1938: Extortion, Night Hawk.
GOTTSCHALK. FERDINAND
1938 : Romance in the Dark,
The Adventures of Marco
Polo, Stolen Heaven, Josette.
GOUDE, JANE
1939: That's Right - You're
Wrong.
GOULD. WILLIAM
1938: Wild Horse Rodeo, The
Purple Vigilantes, Gangster's
Boy, Mr. Wong — Detective.
1939: Streets of New York.
Women in the Wind. Nancy
Drew and the Hidden Stair-
case, On Dress Parade, The
Cowboy Quarterback.
GOVER, MILDRED
1938: My Old Kentucky
Home.
GRABLE. BETTY
1938 : College Swing, Give Me
a Sailor, Campus Confessions.
1939: Man About Town, Mil-
lion Dollar Legs, The Day
the Bookies Wept.
413
Players' Work
GRAHAME. MARGOT
1938: The Buccaneer.
GRAINGER, DOROTHY
1939: Blue Montana Skies.
GRANACH, ALEXANDER
1939: Xinotchka.
GRANDSTEDT, GRETA
1938: Telephone Operator, The
Last Express.
1939: Beasts of Berlin.
GRANT. ALFRED
1939: Reform School.
GRANT, CARY
1938: Bringing Up Baby, Hol-
idav.
1939: Gunga Din, Only Angels
Have Wings, In Name Only.
His Girl Friday, My Favorite
Wife.
GRANT. LAWRENCE
1938: Bluebeard's Eighth
Wife, The Young in Heart.
1939: Wife. Husband and
Friend. Rulers of the Sea.
GRANVILLE. BONITA
1938: Merrily We Live, Be-
loved Brat, White Banners,
My Bill. Hard to Get, Nancy
Drew — Detective.
1939: Nancy Drew and the
Hidden Staircase, Nancy Drew
— Trouble Shooter. Angels
Wash Their Faces.
GRAPEWIN. CHARLES
1938: The Bad Man of Brim-
stone, Of Human Hearts, Girl
of the Golden West, Three
Comrades, Three Loves Has
Nancy, Artists and Models
Abroad, Listen Darling.
1939: Stand Up and Fight.
Burn 'Em Up O'Connor, The
Man Who Dared. Sabotage.
Hero for a Dav. The Wizard
of Oz. Dust Be My Destinv.
GRAUMAN, SID
1938: Mad About Music.
GRAVES. RALPH
1939: Streets of Missing Men.
Three Texas Steers, Eternally
Yours.
GRAVET. FERNAND
1938: Fools for Scandal, The
Great Waltz.
GRAY, JOE
1938: You and Me.
GRAY, LINDA
1938: Shadows Over Shang
liai.
GRAY.
1938:
1939 :
LORNA
Adventure in Sahara.
The Man They Could
Not Hang. The Stranger from
Texas.
GRAY. ROGER
1938: Barefoot Boy, You and
Me.
GRAY. SALLY
1939: The Saint in London.
GRAYSON, DONALD
1938: Outlaws of the Prairie,
Cattle Raiders. Call of the
Rockies.
GRECO, BETTY
1938: Road Demon.
GREEN, DENNIS
1939: The Hound of the Bas
kervilles. The Witness Van-
ishes.
GREEN. GERTRUDE
1938: Down in Arkansiw.
GREENE. HARRISON
1938 : Mr. Boggs Steps Out,
Born to be Wild.
1939: Career, New Frontier.
GREENE, JOHNNY
& ORCHESTRA
1938 : Start Cheering.
GREENE: RICHARD
1938: Four Men and a Prayer,
My Lucky Star, Kentucky.
Submarine Patrol.
1939 : The Hound of the Bas
kervilles, The Little Princess.
Stanley and Livingstone, Here
I Am a Stranger.
GREIG. ROBERT
1938: Madnight Intruder, The
Adventures of Marco Polo.
1939: Ambush. It Could Hap-
pen to You, Way Down South,
Drums Along the Mohawk.
GREY. FRANCES
1938: Unashamed.
GREY, NAN
1938: Reckless Living, The
Jury's Secret, The Black Doll.
Danger on the Air, Girl's
School, The Storm.
1939: Three Smart Girls Grow
Up, Ex-Champ, The Under
Pup. Tower of London.
GREY. VIRGINIA
1938: Test Pilot, Rich Man-
Poor Girl, Ladies in Distress.
Youth Takes a Fling, Dra-
matic School.
PATRICIA
CHAPMAN
Bull Photo
414
1939: Broadway Serenade,
The Hardys Ride High, Thun-
der Afloat, Another Thin Man,
The Women.
GRIBBON, EDDIE
1938: Maid's Night Out.
GRIFFIES, ETHEL
1939: I'm from Missouri, We
Are Not Alone, The Star
Maker.
GRIFFITH, KAY
1938: My Lucky Star.
1939: Wife, Husband and
Friend.
GROSS, SOL
1939: The Cowboy Quarter-
back.
GROSSMITH, LAWRENCE
1939: I'm from Missouri, Cap-
tain Fury.
GROVER, MILDRED
1939: Day-Time Wife.
GUARD, KIT
1938: Code of the Rangers,
You and Me, Heroes of the
Hills, Prison Train, Frontier
Scout.
1939: Six-Gun Rhythm, El
Diablo Rides.
GUHL, GEORGE
1938: Blondes at Work, Tor-
chy Blane in Panama, Gold
Mine in the Sky, Torchy Gets
Her Man.
1939: Torchy Blane in China
town, What a Life, The Star
Maker, Nancy Drew and the
Hidden Staircase.
GUILBERT, NINA
1939: Trigger Pals.
GUILFOYLE. PAUL
1938: Double Danger, Crash-
ing Hollywood, Quick Money,
Law of the Underworld, The
Saint in New York, This Mar-
riage Business, I'm From the
City, Sky Giant, Blind Alibi,
Fugitives for a Night, Tar-
nished Angel, Law West of
Tombstone, The Mad Miss
Manton.
1939: Pacific Liner, Society
Lawyer, Heritage of the Des-
ert, Unexpected Father, News
Is Made at Night, Our Leading
Citizen, Sabotage, One Hour
to Live.
GUIZAR, TITO
1938: Big Broadcast of 1938.
1939 : St. Louis Blues, The
Llano Kid.
GUNN. EARL
1939: Romance of the Red
woods, The Great Command
ment.
GUNNELS, CHESTER
1938: Shine on Harvest Moon,
Come on Rangers.
GURIE, SIGRID
1938 : The Adventures of
Marco Polo, Algiers.
1939: The Forgotten Woman.
Rio.
GWENN, EDMUND
1938: A Yank at Oxford,
South Riding.
1939: Penny Paradise, Cheer
Boys Cheer, An Englishman's
Home, Earl of Chicago, Doc-
tor Takes a Wife, Pride and
Prejudice.
GWYNNE, ANNE
1939: Unexpected Father, Lit-
tle Accident, O k la h o m a
Frontier, Charlie McCarthy De-
tective.
HAADE, WILLIAM
1938: He Couldn't Say No,
The Invisible Menace, Tele-
phone Operator, Hollywood
Stadium Mystery, Sing You
Sinners, The Texans, If I
Were King, Shadows Over
Shanghai.
1939: Down on the Farm.
Union Pacific, Unmarried,
Island of Lost Men, Night
Work, Full Confession, Reno.
Kid Nightingale.
HACKATHORNE, GEORGE
1939: Gone With the Wind.
HACKER, SLIM
1939: Six-Gun Rhythm.
HACKETT, KARL
1938 : Frontier Town, Paroled
— To Die, Rangers Round-up,
Song and Bullets, Phantom
Ranger, Down in Arkansaw,
Lightning Carson Rides Again,
Starlight Over Texas, Where
the Buffalo Roam.
HADEN, SARA
1938: You're Only Young
Once, Out West With the
Hardys.
1939: Four Girls in White,
The Hardys Ride High, Tell
No Tales, Andy Hardy Gets
Spring Fever, Judge Hardy
and Son, Secret of Dr. Kildare,
Remember?
HADLEY, REED
1938 : Female Fugitive, Holly-
wood Stadium Mystery, Or-
phans of the Street.
1939: Calling Dr. Kildare.
HAINES, DONALD
1939: Sergeant Madden.
HALE, ALAN
1938 : The Adventures of
Marco Polo, Four Men and a
Prayer, The Adventures of
Robin Hood, Valley of the
Giants, Algiers, Listen Dar-
ling, The Sisters.
1939: Pacific Liner, Dodge
City, The Man in the Iron
Mask, Dust Be My Destiny,
On Your Toes, The Private
Lives of Elizabeth and Essex.
HALE, CREIGHTON
1939 : Nancy Drew and the
Hidden Staircase, The Re-
turn of Dr. X.
HALE, JONATHAN
1938: Her Jungle Love, Judge
Hardy's Children, Arsene Lu-
pin Returns, The First Hun-
dred Years, Over the Wall,
The Saint in New York, Wives
Under Suspicion, Yellow Jack,
Gangs of New York, Break-
ing the Ice, Boys Town, Road
Demon, The Duke of West
Point, Tarnished Angel, Fugi-
tives for a Night, Blondie,
There's That Woman Again
1939: The Saint Strikes Back.
The Story of Alexander Gra-
ham Bell, Wings of the Navy.
Blondie Meets the Boss, Thun-
der Afloat, Blondie Brings Up
Baby, In Old Monterey, The
Amazing Mr. Williams, In
Name Only, Fugitive at Large,
Barricade.
HALEY, JACK
1938: Rebecca of Sunnybrook
Farm, Alexander's Ragtime
Band, Hold that Co-ed, Thanks
for Everything.
1939 : Wizard of Oz.
HALL, ARCHIE
1938: Rhythm of the Saddle,
Overland Stage Raiders.
Players9 Wo r h
HALL, BEN
1938: Riders of the Black
Hills, Algiers.
HALL, GENE
1938: 1 Met My Love Again,
Santa Fe Stampede.
HALL, HUNTZ
1938: Crime School, Little
Tough Guy, Angels with Dirty
Faces.
1939: They Made Me a Crim-
inal, On Dress Parade, Call
a Messenger, Angels Wash
Their Faces, The Return of
Dr. X.
HALL JOHNSON CHOIR
1938: My Old Kentucky
Home.
1939 : Swanee River.
HALL, MILTON
1939: Reform School.
HALL, PORTER
1938: Scandal Street, Bulldog
Drummond's Peril, Dangerous
to Know, Stolen Heaven, Pri-
son Farm, Men with Wings,
King of Alcatraz, The Arkan-
saw Traveler.
1939: Grand Jury, They Shall
Have Music, Mr. Smith Goes
to Washington.
HALL, RUTH
1938: Meet the Mayor.
HALL, STUART
1938: The Dawn Patrol.
HALL, THURSTON
1938: No Time to Marry,
Women Are Like That, There's
Always a Woman, Extortion,
Squadron of Honor, The Main
Event, Fast Company, The
Amazing Dr. Clitterhouse,
Professor Beware, Little Miss
Roughneck, The Affairs of
Annabel, Going Places, Cam-
pus Confessions, Hard to Get.
1939: You Can't Cheat an
Honest Man, Each Dawn I
Die, Million Dollar Legs, The
Day the Bookies Wept, Ha-
waiian Nights, Dancing Co-
ed, First Love, Our Neigh
bors the Carters, The Star
Maker, Mutiny on the Black-
hawk, Teepers Creepers.
HALL, WILLIAM
1938: The Spy Ring.
1939: In Old Monterey.
HALL, WINTER
1938: Four Men and a Prayer,
If I Were King.
HALLETT, GEORGE
1938: Woman Against the
World.
HALLIDAY, JOHN
1938: Arsene Lupin Returns,
Hlockade, That Certain Age.
1939: Intermezzo: A Love
Story, Hotel for Women.
HALOP, BILLY
1938: Crime School, Little
Tough Guy, Angels with Dirty
Faces.
1939: They Made Me a Crim-
inal, You Can't Get Away
With Murder, On Dress Pa-
rade, Angels Wash Their
Faces, Call a Messenger, Dust
Be My Destiny.
HALTON, CHARLES
1938 : Penitentiary, Trouble at
Midnight, Bluebeard's Eighth
Wife, The Saint in New York,
Stolen Heaven, I Am the Law,
415
Players9 Worh
Penrod's Double Trouble, I'll
Give a Million, Room Service.
1939: I'm from Missouri, Jesse
James, Federal Man • Hunt,
Dodge City, They Made Her
a Spy, Juarez, News Is Made
at Xight. Charlie Chan at
Treasure Island, Reno, Swanee
River.
HAMBLEN, STUART
1939: In Old Monterey, The
Arizona Kid.
HAMER, GERALD
1939: Bulldog Drummond's
Bride.
HAMILTON, HALE
1938: The Adventures of
Marco Polo, Meet the Mayor.
HAMILTON, JOHN
1938 : Over the Wall, Mr. Mo-
to's Gamble, Dr. Rhythm, Mr.
Wong — Detective, I Stand Ac-
cused.
1939: Spirit of Culver. Forged
Passport, Allegheny Uprising,
The Roaring Twenties, Smash-
ing the Money Ring.
HAMILTON, MARGARET
1938: The Adventures of Tom
Sawyer, A Slight Case of Mur-
der, Four's a Crowd, Mother
Carey's Chickens, Breaking the
Ice, Stablemates.
1939: Babes in Arms, Angels
Wash Their Faces, The Wiz-
ard of Oz, Main Street Law-
yer.
HAMILTON NEIL
1 9 3 8: Hollywood Stadium
Mystery, Army Girl.
1939: The Saint Strikes Back.
HAMPDEN, WALTER
1939: The Hunchback of
Xotre Dame.
HAMPTON, HOPE
1938 : The Road to Reno.
HANLON, BERT
1938: A Slight Case of Mur-
der, Boy Meets Girl, The
Amazing Dr. Clitterhouse.
1939: Sweepstakes \V inner.
HANLON, TOM
1938 : Kentucky Moonshine.
HANSEN, ELEANOR
1938: Crime of Dr. Hallet, The
Mad Miss Manton.
HANSEN, SPEED
1938 : Under the Big Top.
HARDIN, IRA
1938: Harlem on the Prairie.
HARDIN, RELLIE
1939 : The Bronze Buckaroo.
HARDWICKE, SIR CEDRIC
1939: On Borrowed Time,
Stanley and Livingstone, The
Hunchback of Xotre Dame.
HARDY, OLIVER
1938: Swiss Miss. Blockheads.
1939 : Zenobia, The Flying
Deuces.
HARE. LUMSDEN
1939: Gunga Din, Captain
Fury.
HARFORD. ALEC
1938: Heart of the North.
HARLAN. KENNETH
1938: Saleslady, Under West-
ern Stars, Blondes at Work,
Accidents Will Happen, Held
for Ransom, Pride of the West,
Sunset Trail, Law of the
Texan, The Duke of West
Point, The Headleys at Home,
The Little Adventuress.
1939: On Trial, Port of Hate,
Range War.
HARLAN. OTIS
(Deceased)
1938: Mr. Boggs Steps Out,
Outlaws of Sonora, The Tex-
ans.
HARLAN, ROSITA
1938: The Arizona Wildcat.
HARMON, JOHN
1938: Torchy Gets Her Man,
Gambling Ship.
1939: I Was a Convict, In-
side Information, Indianapolis
Speedway, Torchy Plays With
Dynamite, Charlie McCarthy
Detective.
HARRIGAN. NEDDA
1938: A Trip to Paris.
HARRIGAN. WILLIAM
1939: Back Door to Heaven.
HARRINGTON, HAMTREE
1939: Poncomania.
HARRIS, LARRY
1938: Cocoanut Grove.
HARRIS. PHIL
1939: Man About Town.
HARRIS. SYBIL
1939: Federal Man-Hunt.
HARRIS, THERESA
1938: Jezebel, The Toy Wife.
1939: Tell Xo Tales.
HARRIS. WINIFRED
1939: The Kid from Kokomo,
Kid X'ightingale.
HILLY GILBERT
"THE DICTATOR"
"SAFARI"
"HIS GIRL FRIDAY"
"THE WOMAN FROM HELL"
"SANDY IS A LADY"
"OUR CITY"
"WORLD CRUISE"
416
HARRISON, CAREY
1938 : The Buccaneer.
HARRON, JOHN
1938: A Slight Case of Mur-
der, Torchy Blane in Panama.
1939: Secret Service of the
Air, The Cowboy Quarter-
back.
HART, CHARLES
1938: Juvenile Court.
HART, EDDIE
1938: Call the Mesquiteers,
Rhythm of the Saddle.
HART, GORDON
1938: Cassidy of Bar 20,
Numbered Women, Lady in
the Morgue, Overland Stage
Raiders.
1939: Home on the Prairie,
On Trial, Women in the Wind,
Should a Girl Marry, Rovin'
Tumbleweeds.
HART, JOHN
1938: Prison Farm, Illegal
Traffic, King of Alcatraz.
1939: Disbarred, Persons in
Hiding.
HART, MABEL
1938: Over the Wall.
HART. MARY
1938: Come on Rangers, Shine
on Harvest Moon.
1939: Rough Riders' Round-
Up, The Mysterious Miss X,
My Wife's Relatives, Frontier
Pony Express, In Old Cali-
ente, Should Husbands Work?
Southward Ho, Everything's
On Ice.
HART, NEAL
1939: The Renegade Ranger.
HARTLEY, JOHN
1939 : Persons in Hiding, Un-
married, Grand Jury Secrets,
Million Dollar Legs, Night
Work, $1,000 a Touchdown.
HARVEY, CLARENCE
1939 : Zaza.
HARVEY. FORRESTER
1938 : Kidnapped, Mysterious
Mr. Moto of Devil's Island.
1939 : Bulldog Drummond's
Secret Police, The Lady's
from Kentucky, The Witness
Vanishes.
HARVEY, GEORGETTE
1939: Back Door to Heaven.
HARVEY. HARRY
1938: The Painted Trail, Ro-
mance of the Limberlost, Six
Shootin' Sheriff, Held for Ran-
som, Under the Big Top.
1939: Code of the Fearless,
In Old Montana, Daughter
of the Tong.
HARVEY, HARRY, JR.
1939: Danger Flight.
HARVEY, LEW
1939 : The Oklahoma Kid.
HARVEY, PAUL
1938: Rebecca of Sunnybrook
Farm, A Slight Case of Mur-
der, Love on a Budget, Al-
giers, I'll Give a Million, The
Higgins Family, Charlie Chan
in Honolulu, There's That
Woman Again, The Sisters, If
I Were King.
1939: Mr. Moto in Danger
Island, Never Say Die. The
Gorilla. The Forgotten Wom-
an, They Shall Have Music,
News Is Made at Night,
Stanley and Livingstone, Meet
Dr. Christian.
HATCH, IKE
1938 : Dark Sands.
HATFIELD, JACK
1938: The Headleys at Home.
HATTON. RAYMOND
1938: Roaring Timber, He
Couldn't Say No, Over the
Wall, Love Finds Andy
Hardy, The Texans, Touch-
down Army, Come on Rangers.
1939: Rough Riders' Round-
Up, I'm from Missouri, Paris
Honeymoon, Ambush, Frontier
Pony Express, Undercover
Doctor, 6,000 Enemies, Ca-
reer, Wyoming Outlaw, New
Frontier, Wall Street Cow-
boy, The Kansas Terrors,
Cowboys from Texas.
HATTON, RONDO
1938: In Old Chicago.
HAWKINS, CHARLES
1939: Double Deal.
HAWLEY, MONTE
1938: Life Goes On.
1939: Reform School, One
Dark Night, Double Deal.
HAY, HARRY
1938 : Woman Against Woman.
HAYDEN, HARRY
1938: Double Danger, Sales-
lady, Four Men and a Prayer,
I'll Give a Million, Hold That
Co-ed, Kentucky.
1939: Wife, Husband and
Friend, Society Smugglers,
Hidden Power, The Rains
Came, Flight at Midnight,
Frontier Marshall, Barricade,
Swanee River.
HAYDEN, RUSSELL
1938: Heart of Arizona, Cas-
sidy of Bar 20, Bar 20 Jus-
tice, In Old Mexico, Pride
of the West, Mysterious Rid-
ers, The Frontiersman, Sunset
Trail.
1939 : Silver on the Sage, Heri-
tage on the Desert, Renegade
Trail, Law of the Pampas,
Range War.
HAYES, BERNARDINE
1938: Prison Nurse, Trouble
at Midnight, My Old Kentucky
Home, That's My Story, You
and Me.
1939: King of Chinatown,
Lucky Night, Panama Lady,
Some Like It Hot, Heroes in
Blue, The Day the Bookies
Wept.
HAYES, GEORGE "Gabby"
1938: Heart of Arizona, Gold
Is Where You Find It, Bar
20 Justice, In Old Mexico,
Sunset Trail, The Frontiers-
man.
1939: Silver on the Sage,
Fighting Thoroughbreds, Let
Freedom Ring, Man of Con-
quest, In Old Caliente, South-
ward Ho, Saga of Death Val-
ley, In Old Monterey, Rene-
gade Trail, Wall Street Cow-
boy, The Arizona Kid, Days
of Jesse James.
HAYES, GRACE
1939: Babes in Arms.
HAYES, LINDA
1938: Outside of Paradise,
Danger on the Air.
1939: Girl from Mexico, The
Spellbinder, Conspiracy.
HAYES, PETER
1939: Million Dollar Legs,
These Glamour Girls.
HAYES, SAM
1938 : Rebecca of Sunnybrook
Farm.
1939: They Made Me a Crim-
inal, Tail Spin.
HAYLE. GRACE
1939 : The Star Maker.
417
Players9 Worh
HAYS, BARRY
1938: Heroes of the Hills.
HAYWARD, LOUIS
1938: Condemned Women,
Midnight Intruder, The Saint
in New York, The Rage of
Paris. The Duke of West
Point.
1939: The Man in the Iron
Mask.
HAYWARD, SUSAN
1938 : Girls on Probation.
1939 : Our Leading Citizen.
Beau Geste, $1,000 a Touch-
down.
HAYWORTH, RITA
1938: Who Killed Gail Pres-
ton? Convicted, Juvenile Court.
1939 : The Renegade Ranger,
Homicide Bureau, Only Angels
Have Wings, Special Inspector,
The Lone Wolf Spy Hunt.
HEALY, MARY
1939: Second Fiddle, 20,000
Men a Year, Hotel for Wom-
en.
HEALY, TED (Deceased)
1938: Love Is a Headache.
HEARN. EDWARD
1938: Trouble at Midnight.
1939: West of Sante Fe.
HEARN, LEW
1938: International Crime.
HEIFETZ, JASCHA
1939 : They Shall Have Music.
HEISTAND, JOHN
1938: Kentucky Moonshine.
HELM, FAY
1938 : I Am the Law, Racket
Busters.
1939: Dark Victory, Our
Leading Citizen, B 1 o n d i e
Brings Up Baby, The Light
That Failed.
HENDERSON. DELL
1938: Goodbye Broadway, Re-
bellious Daughters.
1939 : Frontier Marshal.
HENDRICKS. BEN. Jr.
1938 : Sergeant Murphy, Roar-
ing Timber, Born to Be Wild.
HEN IE, SONJA
1938: Happy Landing, My
Lucky Star.
1939 : Second Fiddle, Every-
thing Happens at Night.
HENNING, PAT
1938: Shine on Harvest Moon.
HENRY. LOUISE
1939: Charlie Chan in Reno.
HENRY. WILLIAM
1938: Four Men and a Prayer,
Yellow Jack, A Man to Re-
member, Campus Confessions,
The Arizona Wildcat.
1939: Ambush. I'm from Mis-
souri, Persons in Hiding, Tel-
evision Spy, Geronimo.
HEPBURN. KATHARINE
1938 : Bringing Up Baby, Hol-
iday.
HEPPELL, MICHAEL
1938: Convicted.
1939: Manhattan Shakedown
HERBERT. HOLMES
1938: The Buccaneer, The
Black Doll, Say It in French
1939: The Little Princess, The
Mystery of Mr. Wong.
Trapped in the Sky, Juarez.
Plu }/ ers' Worh
Hidden Bower. Wolf Call.
Rad Boy, We Arc Not Alone,
Stanley and Livingstone. The
Adventures of Sherlock
Holmes, Everything Happens
at Night.
HERBERT, HUGH
1938 : Gold Diggers in Paris,
Four's a Crowd, Men Are
Such Fools, The Great Waltz.
1939: The Family Next Door.
The Lady's from Kentucky.
Eternally Yours, Little Acci-
dent.
HERBERT, JOSEPH
1938: Terror of Tiny Town.
HERBERT. TOM
1938: Professor Beware.
HERBERT-BOND, JOHN
1939: Tower of London.
HERMAN, AL
1939: Swanee River.
HERNANDEZ, JOE
1938: Long Shot.
HERRING, AGGIE
1938: Island in the Sky.
HERSHOLT, JEAN
1938: Happy Landing, Alex-
ander's Ragtime Band, I'll
Give a Million, Five of a
Kind.
1939: Mr. Moto in Danger
Island, Meet Dr. Christian,
Courageous Dr. Christian.
HERVEY, IRENE
1938: Say It in French.
1939: Society Smugglers, East
Side of Heaven. The House of
Fear, Missing Evidence, Destry
Rides Again.
HEWLETT, BENTLEY
1938: Born to Be Wild, West-
ern Jamboree.
1939: A Woman is the Judge.
HEYBURN. WELDON
1938: Saleslady, Dynamite De-
laney, Crime School, Mysteri-
ous Rider.
1939: Panama Patrol, Should
a Girl Marry, Fugitive at
Large.
HEYDT, LOUIS JEAN
1938: I Am the Law, Test
Pilot.
1939: They Made Me a Crim
inal, They Made Her a Spy.
Let Freedom Ring, Each
Dawn I Die, Reno, Charlie
Chan at Treasure Island.
Gone With the Wind.
HEYWOOD, HERBERT
1938: Born to Be Wild, Block-
ade, Three Blind Mice, Swing
Sister Swing.
HICKMAN, GEORGE B.
1938: Romance in the Dark.
HICKMAN. HOWARD
1938 : Rascals, Start Cheering,
Numbered Woman, Flight Into
Nowhere, Come on Leather-
necks, luvenile Court, I Stand
Accused.
1939: Wife, Husband and
Friend, Good Girls Go to
Paris, The Kansas Terrors,
Espionage Agent, Little Ac-
cident, The Return of Dr. X.
Gone With the Wind.
HICKS, REGINALD
1938: Woman Against the
World.
HICKS, RUSSELL
1938: In Old Chicago, Big
Broadcast of 1938, Kidnapped,
Gateway, Little Miss Broad
way. Hold That Co-ed, Fugi-
tives for a Night, Kentucky.
1939: I Was a Convict, The
Three Musketeers, The Story
of Alexander Graham Bell.
Hollywood Cavalcade, The
Real Glory, Joe and Ethel
Turp, Swanee River, The
Honeymoon's Over.
HIESTAND, JOHN
1939: Second Fiddle.
HILL. AL
1938 : The Buccaneer, Lady in
the Morgue, Gambling Ship.
HILL, ALBERT, JR.
1939 : Bov's Reformatory.
HILL, HOWARD
1938 : The Adventures of Robin
Hood.
HILLER, WENDY
1938: Pygmalion.
HILLIARD, HARRIET
1938: Cocoanut Grove.
HILLIARD, RUTH
1938: All-American Sweet-
heart, Extortion.
HILLIE, VERNA
1938: Rebellious Daughters.
HILTON, CHARLES
1939: No Place to Go.
HINCKS. REGINALD
1939: Manhattan Shakedown.
HINDS. SAMUEL S.
1938: Double Danger, The
Jury's Secret, Test Pilot, For-
bidden Valley, Wives Under
Suspicion, The Devil's Party,
The Rage of Paris, The Road
to Reno, You Can't Take It
With You, Young Dr. Kil-
dare, Secrets of a Nurse, Swing
that Cheer, Personal Secretary,
The Storm.
1939: Newsboys' Home, With-
in the Law, Ex-Champ, Call-
ing Dr. Kildare, Career,
Tropic Fury, Rio, Hawaiian
Nights, First Love, One Hour
to Live, The Under-Pup, Hero
For a Day, Secret of Dr. Kil-
dare, Destry Rides Again,
Charlie McCarthy Detective.
HINES, JOHNNY
1938: Too Hot to Handle.
HOBART, ROSE
1939: Tower of London.
HOBBES. HALLIWELL
1938: Bulldog Drummond's
Peril, The Jury's Secret, Kid-
napped, You Can't Take It
With You, Storm Over Ben-
gal, Service de Luxe.
1939: Pacific Liner, The
Hardys Ride High, Tell No
Tales, Naughty But Nice,
Nurse Edith Cavell, The Light
That Failed, Remember?
HODGE. HAROLD
1938 : Sudden Bill Dorn.
HODGES, JOY
1938 : Service de Luxe, Per-
sonal Secretary.
1939: The Family Next Door.
They Asked for It. Unex-
pected Father. Little Accident.
HODGINS. EARLE
1938 : Rangers Roundup, The
Purple Vigilantes, Outlaws of
the Prairie, Call the Mesquit-
eers, The Old Barn Dance,
The Last Stand, Pride of the
West, Barefoot Boy, Long
Shot.
1939: Home on the Prairie.
Panama Ladv, Range War.
HODGSON, LEYLAND
1938 : The Buccaneer.
1939: Mr. Moto's Last Warn-
ing, Susannah of the Motili-
ties, Second Fiddle, The Wit-
ness Vanishes.
HOFFMAN, GERTRUDE W.
1938: Cassidy of Bar 20.
HOFFMAN, MAX. JR.
1938: The Daredevil Drivers,
Sergeant Murphy, Accidents
Wifl Happen, Sky Giant.
1939: Wings of the Navy,
Kid Nightingale.
HOFFMAN. OTTO
1938: Romance in the Dark,
Mr. Boggs Steps Out.
1939: Our Leading Citizen.
HOGAN. DICK
1938: Submarine Patrol.
1939: Five Came Back, Three
Sons.
HOGAN, EDDIE
1939: Invitation to Happiness.
IIOHL, ARTHUR
1938 : Penitentiary, Bad Man
of Brimstone, Kidnapped,
Crime Takes a Holiday, Sta-
blemates.
1939: Boy Slaves. You Can't
Cheat an Honest Man, Thev
Shall Have Music. Blackmail.
Fugitive at Large, The Ad-
ventures of Sherlock Holmes.
The Hunchback of Notre
Dame.
HOLCOMB, HERBERT
1938: Phantom Ranger.
HOLDEN, EDDIE
1939: Torture Ship.
HOLDEN, FAY
1938: You're Only Young
Once, Judge Hardy's Children,
Love Is a Headache, Battle
of Broadway, Hold that Kiss,
Love Finds Andy Hardy, Out
West with the Hardys, Sweet-
hearts.
1939: Sergeant Madden, The
Hardys Ride High, Andy
Hardy Gets Spring Fever.
Judge Hardy and Son.
HOLDEN, GLORIA
1938 : Hawaii Calls, Test Pilot,
Girl's School.
1939 : Dodge City, Miracles
for Sale.
HOLDEN, PETER
1939: The Great Man Votes.
HOLDEN, WILLIAM
1939: Golden Boy.
HOLLAND, CLIFFORD
1939: Reform School.
HOLLAND, EDNA
1939: Bachelor Mother, Judge-
Hardy and Son.
HOLLOWAY, CAROL
1939: The Lady's from Ken-
tucky.
HOLLOWAY. STERLING
1938: Of Human Hearts, Dr.
Rhythm, Professor Beware,
Spring Madness.
1939 : Nick Carter — Master
Detective.
HOLLYWOOD, JIMMY
1938: Squadron of Honor.
HOLM, ELEANOR
1938: Tarzan's Revenge.
HOLM, FAY
1938: Peck's Bad Boy with
the Circus, Blondie.
HOLM, JAN
1938: My Bill, Broadway
Musketeers.
HOLMAN, HARRY
1938 : Josette, I Demand Pay-
ment, Western Jamboree.
1939: I Was a Convict.
HOLMES, STUART
1939: On Trial.
HOLT, DAVID
1938: The Adventures of Tom
Sawyer.
1939: Beau Geste, Hero for
a Day.
HOLT, TACK
1938: Roaring Timber, Making
the Headlines, The House of
Mystery, Flight Into No-
where, Crime Takes a Holiday,
Reformatory, Outside the Law.
1939: Trapped in the Sky,
Whispering Enemies. Hidden
Power, Fugitive at Large.
HOLT, KEOLAHA
1939: Honolulu.
HOLT, TIM
1938 : Gold Is Where You
Find It, I Met My Love
Again, Law West of Tomb-
stone, Sons of the Legion.
1939: Spirit of Culver, The
Renegade Ranger, Stagecoach,
Fifth Avenue Girl.
HOLT, ULA
1938 : Tarzan and the Green
Goddess.
HOLTZ, TENEN
1938 : International Crime,
Cipher Bureau.
HOMANS. ROBERT
1938 : Gold Is Where You
Find It, Hollywood Stadium
Mystery, Over the Wall, The
Kid Comes Back, Gold Mine
Players' Worh
in the Sky, The Amazing Dr.
Clitterhouse, Little Miss Thor-
oughbred, Night Hawk, Heart
of the North, Crashin' Thru
Danger.
1939: Yes — My Darling
Daughter, Hell's Kitchen,
Smuggled Cargo.
HOPE, BOB
1938: Big Broadcast of 1938,
College Swing, Give Me a
Sailor, Thanks for the Mem-
ory.
1939: Never Say Die, Some
Like It Hot, The Cat and
the Canary.
HOPKINS, MIRIAM
1939: The Old Maid.
HOPPER, DE WOLF
1939: Pride of Bluegrass, The
Old Maid, Nancy Drew and
the Hidden Staircase, The
Cowboy Ouarterback.
HOPPER. HEDDA
1938: Dangerous to Know,
Tarzan's Revenge, Maid's
Night Out, Thanks for the
Memory.
1939: Midnight, The Women
What a Life, Laugh It Off.
HOPPER. WILLIAM
1938: Mystery House.
HOPTON. RUSSELL
1938: Crime Takes a Holiday.
1939: The Saint Strikes Back.
Mutiny in the Big Hous< .
Renegade Trail, Torture Ship.
HORTON, CLEM
1939: West of Sante Fe.
HORTON, EDWARD
EVERETT
1938: Bluebeard's Eighth
Wife, College Swing, Holiday,
Little Tough Guvs in Society.
The Gang's All Here.
1939: Paris Honeymoon, That'^
Right- You're Wrong.
HOUDINI, MADAME
HARRY
1938 : Religious Racketeers.
HOUSTON, GEORGE
1938 : The Great Waltz, Fron-
tier Scout.
HOVEY. ANN
1938: Flirting with Fate.
HOVICK. LOUISE
1938: Sally Irene and Mary,
Battle of Broadwav, My Lucky
Star.
HOWARD, ESTHER
1938: Scandal Street, Meet the
Mayor, Swing Sister Swing.
1939: Broadway Serenade.
HOWARD. GENE
1939: Code of the Fearless.
HOWARD, JOAN
1938: Swing Your Lady.
1939 : Woman Doctor.
HOWARD. JOHN
1938 : Penitentiary, Bulldog
Drummond's Peril, Bulldog
Drummond in Africa, Prison
Farm, Touchdown Army.
1939: Arrest Bulldog Drum
mond. Bulldog Drummond's
Secret Police. Grand Jury Se-
crets, Bulldog Drummond'^
Bride, What a Life, Disputed
Passage.
419
Players9 Worh
HOWARD, KATHLEEN
1939: Little Accident, First
Love.
HOWARD, LESLIE
1938: Pygmalion.
1939: Intermezzo: A Love
Story, Gone With the Wind.
HOWARD, LEWIS
1939: First Love.
HOWARD, MARY
1938: Love Finds Andy
Hardy, Fast Company.
1939: Four Girls in White,
Nurse Edith Cavell.
HOWARD, MEREDITH
1938: Kentucky
HOWARD, NORAH
1939 : The Saint in London.
HOWE, DOROTHY
1938 : Big Broadcast of 1938,
Her Jungle Love, Cocoanut
Grove, King of Alcatraz.
1939: Persons in Hiding, Un-
married.
HOWELL, CLIFF
1939: Tough Kid.
HOWELL, KENNETH
1938 : Love on a Budget, Safe-
ty in Numbers, A Trip to
Paris, Girl's School.
1939: Down on the Farm.
Quick Millions, Too Busy to
Work.
HOWELL, VIRGINIA
1938: Goodbye Broadway, The
Little Adventuress, Girl's
School.
HOWES. REED
1938: Flight to Fame.
1939 : Six-Gun Rhythm, Roll
Wagons Roll.
HOWLAND, OLIN
1938: Girl of the Golden West,
Swing Your Lady, The Ad-
ventures of Tom Sawyer, Ken-
tucky Moonshine, Little Tough
Guy, The Mad Miss Manton,
Sweethearts, Brother Rat.
1939: Zenobia, Made for
Each Other, One Hour to
Live. Blondie Brings Up Baby,
Days of Jesse James, The Re-
turn of Dr. X, Gone With the
Wind.
HOYT, ARTHUR
1938: Start Cheering, The
Black Doll, It's All Yours,
You and Me, The Devil's
Party, The Sisters, Girls on
Probation.
1939: Should Husbands Work?
HUBBARD, JOHN
1938: The Buccaneer, Cocoa-
nut Grove.
1939: The Housekeeper's
Daughter.
HUBER. HAROLD
1938: Mr. Moto's Gamble, A
Slight Case of Murder, The
Adventures of Marco Polo, In-
ternational Settlement, Gangs
of New York, Passport Hus-
band, A Trip to Paris, Going
Places, Little Tough Guys in
Society, Mysterious Mr. Moto
of Devil's Island.
1939: You Can't Get Away
With Murder, King of the
Turf. The Lady and the Mob,
Chasing Danger, 6,000 En-
emies, Main Street Lawyer,
Beau Geste, Charlie Chan in
the City in Darkness, Charlie
McCarthy Detective.
HUDSON. ROCHELLE
1938: Rascals, Mr. Moto
Takes a Chance, Storm Over
Bengal.
1939: Pride of the Navy, Miss-
ing Daughters, A Woman is
the Judge, Smuggled Cargo.
HUGHES. CAROL
1938: Under Western Stars,
Gold Mine in the Sky, Man
from Music Mountain.
1939: The Day the Bookies
Wept.
HUGHES. CHARLES
ANTHONY
1939: Women in the Wind.
HUGHES, J. ANTHONY
1938: In Old Chicago, Call of
the Yukon, Ladies in Dis-
tress.
1939: Tail Spin.
HUGHES, CATHERINE
1938 : Trouble at Midnight.
HUGHES, CHARLES A.
1938 : The Frontiersman.
HUGHES, HELEN
1938: Topa Topa.
HUGHES. LLOYD
1938: Clipped Wings, Num-
bered Woman, I Demand Pay-
ment.
1939 : Romance of the Red-
woods.
HUGHES. MARY BETH
1939: The Women, These
Glamour Girls, Fast and Furi-
ous, The Covered Trailer,
Dancing Co-ed.
420
HUGHES, STANLEY
1938: Freshman Year, The
Storm, Swing that Cheer, Se-
crets of a Nurse.
1939: House of Fear.
HUGHES, TONY
1938: Just Around the Corner.
HUGO, MAURICE
1938: Wanted by the Police.
HULITT, OTTO
1939: One Third of a Nation.
HULL, HENRY
1938: Paradise for Three,
Three Comrades, Yellow Jack,
Boys Town, The Great Waltz.
1939 : Spirit of Culver, Jesse
James, Return of the Cisco
Kid, Babes in Arms, Bad
Little Angel, Stanley and
Livingstone, Miracles for Sale,
Nick Carter — Master Detective,
Judge Hardy and Son.
HULL, WARREN
1938 : Hawaii Calls.
1939: Smashing the Spy Ring,
Should a Girl Marry, The
Girl from Rio. Crashing Thru.
HUMBERT, GEORGE
1938: Trouble at Midnight,
No Time to Marry, Island in
the Sky, Professor Beware,
City Streets, Flirting with
Fate.
1939 : Topper Takes a Trip,
Fisherman's Wharf, Daughters
Courageous, Full Confession.
HUME, BENITA
1938: Peck's Bad Boy with
the Circus.
HUMPHRIES, CECIL
1939: Wuthering Heights.
HUNT, MARSHA
1938 : Born to the West, Come
on Leathernecks, Long Shot.
1939: The Hardys Ride High.
Winter Carnival, These Glam-
our Girls, Joe and Ethel Turp.
HUNT, ROGER
1939: They Made Her a Spy.
HUNTER. HENRY
1938: Trouble at Midnight,
Forbidden Valley.
1939: Calling Dr. Kildare,
Good Girls Go to Paris, Thun-
der Afloat.
HUNTER. IAN
1938 : The Adventures of Rob-
in Hood, Always Goodbye,
Secrets of an Actress, Comet
Over Broadway, The Sisters.
1939: Yes — My Darling
Daughter, The Little Princess,
Broadway Serenade, Tarzan
Finds a Son, Maisie, Bad Lit-
tle Angel, Tower of London.
HUNTER, KENNETH
1938: The Adventures of Rob-
in Hood, Kidnapped.
1939: The Little Princess.
HUNTER, R.
1938 : Harlem on the Prairie.
HUNTLEY. G. P.. Jr.
1939 : I'm from Missouri,
Tower of London, Beau Geste,
Mr. Moto Takes a Vacation.
HUNTLEY, GEORGE P.
1938: Artists and Modeli
Abroad, Say It in French.
HURLIC. PHILLIP
1938: The Adventures of Tom
Sawyer, Penrod and His Twin
Brother.
1939: Zenobia.
HURST. BRANDON
1938: Four Men and a Prayer.
1939: Stanley and Livingstone.
HURST, PAUL
1938: In Old Chicago, No
Time to Marry, Rebecca of
Sunnybrook Farm, Josette, Al-
exander's Ragtime Band, Isl-
and in the Sky, Prison Break,
My Lucky Star, The Last Ex-
press, Hold that Co-ed, Thanks
for Everything, Secrets of a
Nurse.
1939: Broadway Serenade, Cafe
Society, Topper Takes a Trip,
It Could Happen to You, Each
Dawn I Die, Quick Millions,
Bad Lands, Gone With the
Wind.
HUSSEY, RUTH
1938 : Judge Hardy's Children,
Man-Proof, Hold that Kiss,
Meridian 7-1212, Rich Man-
Poor Girl, Time Out for Mur-
der, Spring Madness.
1939: Honolulu, Within the
Law, Maisie, The Women,
Another Thin Man, Blackmail,
Fast and Furious.
HUSTON. WALTER
1938: Of Human Hearts.
1939: The Light That Failed.
HUTCHINSON. JOSEPHINE
1938: The Crime of Dr. Hal-
let.
1939: Son of Frankenstein.
HUTCHINSON. MURIEL
1939: One Third of a Nation,
Another Thin Man, The Wom-
en, Joe and Ethel Turp.
H Y A MS, JOHN
1939 : The Housekeeper's
Daughter.
HYMER, WARREN
1938: Arson Gang Busters,
Joy of Living, Telephone Op-
erator, Bluebeard's Eighth
Wife, You and Me, Gateway,
Thanks for Everything, Sub-
marine Patrol.
1939 : Mr. Moto in Danger
Island, The Lady and the
Mob, Boy Friend, Calling All
Marines, Coast Guard, Destry
Rides Again, Charlie McCarthy
Detective.
HYTTEN. OLAF
1938: The Lone Wolf in
Paris, Youth Takes a Fling.
1939: Andy Hardy Gets
Spring Fever, The Great Com-
mandment, Rulers of the Sea,
Our Neighbors the Carters,
Allegheny Uprising.
IGNON, GUI
1939: Nurse Edith Cavell.
IMHOF. ROGER
1939: Nancy Drew — Trouble
Shooter, Everything Happens
at Night, Tell No Tales, Abe
Lincoln in Illinois, Huckleberry
Finn, They Shall Have Music,
Drums Along the Mohawk,
Little Old New York.
INESCOURT, FRIEDA
1939 : Woman Doctor, Beauty
for the Asking, Zero Hour,
Tarzan Finds a Son, A Wom-
an is the Judge.
INGRAHAM, JACK
1938 : Wild Horse Rodeo, Code
of the Rangers.
INGRAHAM, LLOYD
1938: Man from Music Moun-
tain, Reformatory, Painted
Desert, Gun Packer.
INGRAM, JACK
1938 : Outlaws of Sonora, Des-
ert Patrol, Riders of the Black
Hills, Frontier Scout, Phan-
tom Gold.
1939: The Night Riders, Home
on the Prairie, Blue Montana
Skies, Down the Wyoming
Trail, Wyoming Outlaw, New
Frontier, Saga of Death Val-
Players9 Worh
ley, Rovin' Tumbleweeds, Col-
orado Sunset.
INGRAM, REX
1939: Huckleberry Finn.
INOCENCIO, BENNY
1939: The Real Glory.
IRVING. BILL
1938 : Convicted.
IRVING. GEORGE
1938: Bringing Up Baby, Con-
demned Women, Crashing Hol-
lywood, She's Got Everything,
Go Chase Yourself, This Mar-
riage Business, Mother Car-
ey's Chickens, Crime Ring,
Smashing the Rackets, Blind
Alibi, Maid's Night Out, Law
West of Tombstone, Mr. Doo-
dle Kicks Off.
1939 : Wife,, Husband and
Friend, The Hardys Ride High,
Streets of New York, Dust
Be My Destiny.
IRVING, MARGARET
1938: Love Honor and Be-
have, The Baroness and the
Butler, Little Miss Rough-
neck.
1939: Mr. Moto's Last Warn-
ing.
IRVING. PAUL
1938: Battle of Broadway.
1939: Balalaika.
IRVING, WILLIAM
1939: Down on the Farm.
IRWIN, BOYD
1939: The Man in the Iron
Mask, Sky Patrol.
IRWIN, CHARLES
1938 : Kidnapped, Lord Jeff.
1939: Wolf Call, Susannah of
the Mounties, The Light That
Failed.
ISLEY, PHYLLIS
1939: New Frontier.
ITO, MICHIO
1938: Spawn of the North.
JACKSON, EUGENE
1938: The Buccaneer.
1939 : The Lady's from Ken-
tucky, Reform School.
JACKSON, FREDDIE
1939: Reform School, Double
Deal.
JACKSON. SELMER
1938 : You're Only Young
Once, Prison Nurse, Midnight
Intruder, Arson Gang Busters,
Alexander's Ragtime Band,
The Missing Guest, Gambling
Ship, Flight to Fame, Gang-
ster's Boy, Personal Secretary,
Secrets of an Actress, Down in
Arkansaw.
1939: Off the Record, Stand
Up and Fight, Inside Informa-
tion, The Star Maker, On
Dress Parade, Calling All
Marines, South of the Border.
JACKSON. THOMAS E.
1938 : Blondes at Work, Inter-
national Crime, Crime Takes
a Holiday, Lady in the
Morgue, Torchy Gets Her
Man, I Stand Accused.
1939: Mystery of the White
Room.
JACKSON, WARREN
1938: Call the Mesnuiteers.
JAFFE, SAM
1939: Gunga Din.
JAFFEE, CARL
1939 : The Saint in London.
JAMES, IDA
1939: Poncomania.
421
Play v v s 9 Worh
JAMES, ROY
1938: Overland Stage Haiders.
JANNEY, WILLIAM
1938: Clipped Wings.
JAQUET, FRANK
1938: When Were You Born?
My Lucky Star, Shine on
Harvest Moon, Hold that
Co-ed.
1939: Dust Be My Destiny.
JARRETT, ART
1939: Trigger Pals.
JASON, SYBIL
1938: Comet Over Broadway.
1939: Woman Doctor, The
Little Princess.
JAYNES, BETTY
1938: Sweethearts.
1939 : Babes in Arms.
JEAN, GLORIA
1939: The Under-Pup.
JEANS, ISABEL
1938: Fools for Scandal, Se-
crets of an Actress, Youth
Takes a Fling, Hard to Get,
Garden of the Moon.
1939: Good Girls Go to Paris.
Man About Town.
JEFFREY, HERBERT
1939 : The Bronze Buckaroo.
Harlem Rides the Range.
JEFFREY, MICHAEL
1938: Mr. Boggs Steps Out.
JEFFRIES, HERBERT
1938: Harlem on the Prairie.
JENKINS, ALLEN
1938: A Slight Case of Mur-
der, Swing Your Lady, Fools
for Scandal, Gold Diggers in
SMILEY (FROG) BURNETTE and 'BLACK-EYED NELLIE'
America's No. 1 Western Comedian
422
Paris, The Amazing Dr. Clit-
terhouse, Going Places, Hard
to Get, Racket Busters, Heart
of the North.
1939: Five Camr Back.
Naughty But Nice, Torch>
Plays With Dynamite, Sweep-
stakes Winner, Destry Ride*
Again.
JENKS, FRANK
1938: Love Is « Headache.
Reckless Living, Lady in the
Morgue, The Devil's Party,
Goodbye Broadway, Youth
Takes a Fling, The Storm,
The Last Warning.
1939: Society Smugglers. Big
Town Czar, S. O. S. Tidal
Wave, First Love.
JENKS, SI
1938: Rawhide, Kentucky
Moonshine.
1939: Drums Along the Mo-
hawk.
JENNINGS, MAXINE
1938: Mr. Wong — Detective.
JEPSON, HELEN
1938 : The Goldwyn Follies.
JEWELL, HOLLIS
1938: Romance of the Lim-
berlost.
JEWELL, ISABEL
1938: Love on Toast, The
Crowd Roars.
1939: Missing Daughters, They
Asked for It, Gone With the
Wind.
JIMINEZ, SOLEDAD
1938 : Forbidden Valley, Cali-
fornia Frontier.
1939: Return of the Cisco
Kid. The Girl from Rio.
JOBY, HANS
1939: Iteasts of Berlin, Thun-
der Afloat.
JOHNSON, CASEY
1939: Five Came Back
JOHNSON. CARMENC1TA
1938: Beloved Ural, Keep
Smiling.
JOHNSON, HALL, CHOIR
1939: St. Louis Blues, Zenobia.
Way Down South.
JOHNSON, JOHN LESTER
1938 : Tarzan's Revenge.
JOHNSON, JUNE
19.58: Double Danger.
JOHNSON, KAY
1938 : White Banners.
1939: The Real Glory.
JOHNSON, LORAINE
1938: Scandal Street. Painted
Desert.
1939: Sergeant Madden.
JOHNSON, NOBLE
1939: Frontier Pony Express,
Juarez, Tropic Fury.
JOHNSON, OSCAR
1939: Ice Follies of 1939.
JOHNSON, RITA
1938: Man Proof, Rich Man
Poor Girl, Smashing the Rack
ets. Letter of Introduction.
1939 : The Girl Downstairs.
Honolulu, Broadway Serenade,
Within the Law. 6.000 En-
emies, Stronger Than Desire.
They All Come Out, Nick
Carter — Master Detective.
JOLSON, AL
1939: Rose of Washington
Square, Hollywood Cavalcade,
Swanee River.
JONES, ALLAN
1938: Everybody Sing.
1939 : Honeymoon in Bali, The
Great Victor Herbert.
JONES, BEULAH HALL
1939: Drums Along the Mo-
hawk.
JONES, BUCK
1938: Sudden Bill Dorn, The
Overland Express, California
Frontier, Law of the Texan,
Stranger from Arizona.
1939: Unmarried.
JONES, DICKIE
1938: Border Wolves, Flying
Fists. The Kid Comes Back,
A Man to Remember, The
Frontiersman.
1939: Woman Doctor, Sergeant
Madden. Sky Patrol, The Man
Who Dared, Destry Rides
Again.
JONES, ELIZABETH
1939: Drums Along the Mo-
hawk.
JONES, GORDON
1938: Quick Money, Night
Spot, Rich Man-Poor Girl.
Out West with the Hardys.
Long Shot. I Stand Accused.
1939: Pride of the Navy, Dis-
puted Passage.
JONES, JANE
1938: Port of Missing Girls,
Alexander's Ragtime Band.
1939: East Side of Heaven.
JONES, MARCIA MAE
1938: The Adventures of Tom
Sawyer, Mad About Music.
Barefoot Boy.
1939: The Little Princess,
First Love, Meet Dr. Chris
tian.
JONES, THADDEUS
1938: The Buccaneer.
JORDAN, BOBBY
1938: A Slight Case of Mur-
der, Crime School, Reforma
tory. My Bill, Angels with
Dirty Faces.
1939: Thev Made Me a Crim
inal. Off the Record. Dust Be
My Destiny. On Dress Pa-
rade, Angels Wash Their
JORDAN. CHARLES
1938: Penrod and His Twin
Brother.
JORDAN. DORIS
1939: Sorority House.
TORY. VICTOR
1938: The Adventures of Tom
Sn wver.
1139: Blackwell's Island.
Dodge City. Wings of the
Navy. Man of Conquest. Worn
en in the Wind. Susannah of
the Mounties. Each Dawn T
Die. I Stole a Million. Call
a Messenger, Gone With tin-
Wind.
JOSLYN, ALLYN
1938: The Shining Hour,
Sweethearts.
1939: Cafe Society. Only
Angels Have Wings, Fast and
Furious.
JOY. LEATRICE
1939: First Love.
JOYCE, BRENDA
1939: Here I Am a Stranger.
The Rains Came.
JOYCE, JEAN
1938: Outlaws of Sonora. Ro-
mance on the Run.
1939: Tough Kid. Overland
Mail.
JUDELS. CHARLES
1938: Reckless Living, You're
Only Young Once, Mad About
Music, Stolen Heaven. Swis*
Miss. Flirting with Fate.
JUNG, SHIA
1939 : Port of Hate.
KAAREN, SUZANNE
1938: Blondes at Work, Phan-
tom Ranger, Trade Winds.
KABIBBLE, ISH
1939 : That's Right — You're
Wrong.
KALISH, MEL
1938: Alexander's Ragtime
Band.
KALIZ, ARMAND
1938: Josette, Gold Diggers
in Paris, A Trip to Paris, Al-
giers. Vacation from Love.
1939 : Off the Record.
KALTENBORN, H. V.
1939: Mr. Smith Goes to
Washington.
KANE, EDDIE
1938: Mr. Boggs Steps Out,
The Gladiator.
1939: Missing Daughters, Rov-
in' Tumbleweeds.
KANE. KATHERINE
1938: Love on Toast, Swing
Sister Swing.
1939: Spirit of Culver.
KANE, MARJORIE
1938: Merrily We Live.
KARINE, SANDRA
19tR: Port of Missing Girls.
1939: Mutiny on the Black-
hawk.
KARLOFF, BORIS
1938 : The Invisible Menace,
Mr. Wong — Detective.
1939: Son of Frankenstein.
The Mystery of Mr. Wong,
Mr. Wong in Chinatown. The
Man They Could Not Hang.
Tower of London.
KARNS, ROSCOE
1938: Scandal Street, Tip-Off
Girls, Dangerous to Know,
You and Me, Thanks for the
Memory.
1939: King of Chinatown.
Everything's On Ice. That's
Right — You're Wrong. Danc-
ing Co-eds.
KAUFMAN, WILLY
1939: Confessions of a Nazi
Spy. Beasts of Berlin, Nurse
Edith Cavell.
KAYE, EDWARD
1938: Wolves of the Sea.
KEANE, BOB
1938: Born to Be Wild.
KEANE, EDWARD
1938: Alcatraz Island, Shad-
ows Over Shanghai, Nancy
Drew — Detective. I Demand
Payment, Slander House,
Tnrrhy Gets Her Man.
1939: Frontier Pony Express.
Heroes in Blue, The Roaring
Twenties.
KEANE. ROBERT EMMETT
1938: Boys Town, The Chaser,
The Last Express, Billy the
Kid Returns.
1939: Cafe Society, Confes-
sions of a Nazi Spy, Pack Up
Ydur Troubles. The Spell-
binder, One Hour to Live,
Hawaiian Nights.
KEATING. FRED
1938: Dr. Rhythm, Prison
Train.
1939: Society Smugglers.
KEATON. BUSTER
1939 : Hollywood Cavalcade.
KECKLEY, JACK
1938: Six Shootin' Sheriff.
KECKLEY. JANE
1939: In Old Montana.
Players' Work
KEEFE, CORNELIUS
1938: Telephone Operator, My
Old Kentucky Home.
1939: Stagecoach.
KEEFE, JAMES
1938: Long Shot.
KEELER, RUBY
1938 : Mother Carey's Chick-
ens.
KEENE, EDWARD
1939: My Wife's Relatives.
KEENE, RICHARD
1939: She Married a Cop.
KEENE. TOM
1938: The Painted Trail.
KEITH, IAN
1938: The Buccaneer, Comet
Over Broadway.
KEITH, ROSALIND
1938: Arson Gang Busters,
Clipped Wings.
1939: Bad Boy, Manhattan
Shakedown.
KELLARD, ROBERT
1938: Walking Down Broad-
way, Battle of Broadway, Isl-
and in the Sky, Always in
Trouble, My Lucky Star, Me-
ridian 7-1212, Time Out for
Murder.
1939: Boy Friend, Stop, Look
and Love.
KELLAWAY, CECIL
1938 : Double Danger, Every-
body's Doing It, Night Spot,
This Marriage Business, Maid's
Night Out. Tarnished Angel.
1939 : Wuthering Heights, The
Sun Never Sets, We Are Not
Alone, Intermezzo : A Love
Story, Mexican Spitfire.
KELLINO, PAMELA
1939: I Met a Murderer.
KELLOGG, CECIL
1938: Rawhide.
KELLY, JAMES
1939: Code of the Fearless.
KELLY, JOHN
1938: Bringing Up Baby. Fe-
male, Fugitive Convicts at
I nrge. Exposed.
1939: Sergeant Madden. Wolf
Call, Meet Dr. Christian.
KELLY, KITTY
1939: Grand Jury Secrets.
Geronimo.
KELLY. LEW
1938: The Overland Express.
Born to Be Wild. Man from
Music Mountain. Flirting with
Fate. The Painted Desert.
1939: Tough Kid. Three Texa^
Steers. Saga of Death Valley.
KELLY, NANCY
1938: Submarine Patrol.
1939: Tail Spin, Jesse James.
Stanley and Livingstone.
Frontier Marshal.
KELLY, PATRICK
1938: The Missing Guest.
KELLY, PATSY
1938: Merrily We Live. There
Goes My Heart, The Cowboy
and the Lady.
1939: The Gorilla.
KELLY. PAUL
1938: Nurse from Brooklyn.
Torchy Blane in Panama, Isl
and in the Sky, The Devil's
Party, The Missing Guest, Ju-
venile Court, Adventure in
Sahara.
423
Players' Worh
1939: Forged Passport, The
Flying Irishman, Within the
Law, 6,000 Enemies, The
Roaring Twenties.
KELLY, TOMMY
1938: The Adventures of Tom
Sawyer, Peck's Bad Boy with
the Circus.
1939: They Shall Have Music.
KELSEY. FRED
1939: Rough Riders' Round-
Up.
KELSO, JIM
1939 : Our Leading Citizen.
KELTON. PERT
1938: Rhythm of the Saddle,
Slander House.
1939: Whispering Enemies.
KEMP, HAL & ORCHESTRA
1938: Radio City Revels.
KEMP, MATTY
1938: I Demand Payment,
Law of the Texan, Campus
Confessions.
1939: Million Dollar Legs.
KENDALL, CYRUS W.
1938: The Invisible Menace,
Little Miss Thoroughbred, Val-
ley of the Giants, Rawhide,
Crime School, Night Hawk.
1939: Pacific Liner, Stand Up
and Fight, Twelve Crowded
Hours, Calling All Marines,
Fugitive at Large, Angels
Wash Their Faces.
KENMAN, DAVID
1939: Mystic Circle Murder.
KENNEDY, EDGAR
1938: The Black Doll, Scan-
dal Street, Peck's Bad Boy
with the Circus.
1939: It's a Wonderful World.
Little Accident, Everything's
On Ice, Charlie McCarthy De-
tective, Laugh It Off.
KENNEDY, JACK
1938: Born to the West, Ro-
mance of the Limberlost, I
am a Criminal, Gangster's
Boy.
KENNEDY, PHYLLIS
1938: Joy of Living, Viva-
cious Lady, Mother Carey's
Chickens, Artists and Models
Abroad.
KENNEDY. TOM
1938: Crashing Hollywood,
He Couldn't Say Xo, Making
the Headlines, The House of
Mystery, Blondes at Work,
Go Chase Yourself, Torchy
Blane in Panama, Crime Ring,
Long Shot, Torchy Gets Her
Man.
1939 : Society Lawyer, Torchy
Blane in Chinatown, Torchv
Plays With Dynamite, The
Covered Trailer, The Day the
Bookies Wept.
KENNETH. KEITH
1939: Paris Honeymoon, The
Little Princess.
KENNEY, JACK
1939: Wyoming Outlaw.
KENNY. COLIN
1938 : The Adventures of Robin
Hood.
1939: We Are Not Alone.
KENT. CRAUFORD
1938: Love Honor and Be-
have.
1939: I Was a Convict, We
Are Not Alone.
KENT, DOROTHEA
1938 : Goodbye Broadway,
Having a Wonderful Time,
Young Fugitives, Youth Takes
a Fling, The Last Express.
1939: Risky Business, She
Married a Cop, Calling All
Marines.
KENT, LOIS
1938 : Scandal Street.
KENT, MICHAEL
1938: A Desperate Adventure.
KENT, ROBERT
1938: The Gladiator, Mr. Moto
Takes a Chance, Wanted by
the Police, Little Orphan An-
nie, Gang Bullets.
1939: East Side of Heaven, For
Love or Money, Andy Hardy
Gets Spring Fever, Caling All
Marines, Secret of Dr. Kil-
dare.
KENWORTH, KATHERINE
1939: Wyoming Outlaw.
KENYON. DORIS
1938: Girl's School.
1939: The Man in the Iron
Mask.
KENYON. GWEN
1938: Artists and Models
Abroad.
KERMAN, DAVID
1938 : Religious Racketeers.
KERR. DONALD
1938: Lady in the Morgue,
Four Daughters, Sky Giant,
Gang Bullets, Mars Attacks
the World.
1939: King of the Turf.
KERRIGAN, J. M
1938: Vacation from Love,
Little Orphan Annie.
JOHN MILJAN
"NEW MOON"
"JUAREZ"
"OKLAHAMO KID"
"IF I WERE KING"
"EMERGENCY SQUAD"
"WOMEN WITHOUT NAMES"
424
1939: The Kid from Texas,
The Flyiing Irishman, The
Great Man Votes, Union Pa-
cific, Sorority House, Zero
Hour, 6,000 Enemies, The Wit-
ness Vanishes, Two Bright
Boys, Sabotage, Gone With
the Wind.
KERWIN, DAVID
1939 : The Arizona Kid.
KEYES, EVELYN
1938: The Buccaneer, Sons of
the Legion.
1939: Union Pacific, Gone
With the Wind.
K1BBEE. GUY
1938: Of Human Hearts, Bad
Man of Brimstone, Joy of Liv-
ing, Three Comrades, Three
Loves Has Nancy, Rich Man-
Poor Girl.
1939: Let Freedom Ring, It's
a Wonderful World, Mr. Smith
Goes to Washington, Babes in
Arms, Bad Little Angel.
KIBRICK, LEONARD
1939: It's a Wonderful World.
KIDD, RAE
1938: Unashamed.
KIKUME. AL
1938 : Air Devils.
KILBURN, TERRY
1938: Lord Jeff, Sweethearts.
1939: Goodbye Mr. Chips,
Andy Hardy Gets Spring
Fever, They Shall Have Music,
The Adventures of Sherlock
Holmes.
KILIAN, VICTOR
1938: It's All Yours, The
Adventures of Tom Sawyer,
Gold Diggers in Paris, Prison
Break, Boys Town, Orphans
of the Street.
1939: Paris Honeymoon. Fight-
ing Thoroughbreds, Huckle-
berry Finn, Return of the
Cisco Kid, Only Angels Have
Wings, Dust Be My Destiny.
KING. BILLY
1938: Heart of Arizona, Pride
of the West.
KING, BRUCE
1938: Professor Beware.
KING, CAMMIE
1939: Gone With the Wind.
KING, CHARLES
1938 : Frontier Town, Thun-
der in the Desert, Song and
Bullets, Phantom Ranger,
Man's Country, Gun Packer,
Starlight Over Texas.
1939: Song of the Buckaroo.
Wild Horse Canyon, Down
the Wyoming Trail, Mutiny
in the Big House, Oklahoma
Frontier.
KING, CHARLES, JR.
1938 : Where the Buffalo
Roam.
KING. CLAUDE
1938: Four Men and a Prayer,
Booloo.
1939 : Within the Law.
KING, EMMET
1939 : The Man in the Iron
Mask.
KING. JOHN
1938: The Crime of Dr. Hal-
let, State Police, Breaking the
Ice, Sharpshooters, Charlie
Chan in Honolulu, Inside
Story.
1939: The Three Musketeers.
The Hardys Ride High, Mr.
Moto Takes a Vacation, The
Gentleman from Arizona.
KING. JOSEPH
1938: In Old Chicago, Alex-
ander's Ragtime Band, City
Streets, Heart of the North.
1939: My Son is a Criminal,
Off the Record, You Can't
Get Away With Murder, Code
of the Secret Service, Smash-
ing the Money Ring, Destry
Rides Again.
KING, LILLY
1939: King of Chinatown.
KING, WALTER WOOLF
1938: Walking Down Broad-
way, Swiss Miss.
1939: Society Smugglers, Big
Town Czar, The House of
Fear, Balalaika.
KINGSFORD. WALTER
1938 : There's Always a Wom-
an, Paradise for Three, The
Toy Wife, The Lone Wolf in
Paris, Lord Jeff, Algiers, Care-
free, The Young in Heart,
Young Dr. Kildare, If I Were
King, Say It in French.
1939: Smashing the Spy Ring.
Calling Dr. Kildare, Juarez,
The Man in the Iron Mask,
The Witness Vanishes, Danc-
ing Co-ed, Miracles for Sale,
Secret of Dr. Kildare.
KINNEY. CLYDE
1938: I'm from the City.
KINSKY. LEONID
1938: Outside of Paradise, A
Trip to Paris, Three Blind
Mice, Professor Beware, The
Great Waltz, Flirting with
Fate.
1939: Exile Express, The Story
of Vernon and Irene Castle.
Day-Time Wife, The Spell-
binder, On Your Toes, Every-
thing Happens at Night.
KIRK, JACK
1938: The Last Stand, Pals
of the Saddle.
1939: Rough Riders' Round-
Up.
KIRKE, DONALD
1938: I Demand Payment.
KNAGGS, SKELTON
1939: Torture Ship.
KNAPP, EVALYN
1938: Hawaiian Buckaroo,
Rawhide, Wanted by the Po-
lice.
KNIGHT, CHARLES
1938: Pals of the Saddle.
KNIGHT. FUZZY
1938: Silks and Saddles, Quick
Money, Flying Fists, Border
Wolves, The Last Stand,
Spawn of the North, The Cow-
boy and the Lady.
1939: Union Pacific, Desperate
Trails, Oklahoma Frontier.
KNIGHT, JUNE
1938: Vacation from Love.
KNOWLDEN. MARILYN
1938: Barefoot Boy, Marie
Antoinette, Men with Wings,
Angels with Dirty Faces, Just
Around the Corner.
1939: Hidden Power.
KNOWLES, PATRIC
1938: The Patient in Room
IS, The Adventures of Robin
Hood, Four's a Crowd, Storm
Over Bengal, The Sisters,
Heart of the North.
1939 : Torchy Blane in China-
town. Beauty for the Asking.
Five Came Back, Another
Thin Man, The Spellbinder,
Two's Company, The Honey-
moon's Over.
KOHLER, FRED, Sr.
(Deceased)
1938: The Buccaneer, Forbid-
Players9 Worh
den Valley, Blockade, Gangs
of New York, Billy the Kid
Returns, Painted Desert.
KOHLER. FRED, Jr.
1938: Prison Nurse, Roaring
Timber, Hold that Co-ed.
1939: Young Mr. Lincoln.
KOLB, CLARENCE
1938 : Gold Is Where You
Find It, Merrily We Live,
Give Me a Sailor, Carefree,
The Law West of Tombstone.
1939: Honolulu, I Was a
Convict, Society Lawyer, Good
Girls Go to Paris, It Could
Happen to You, The Amazing
Mr. Williams, Beware Spooks!,
Our Leading Citizen, Five
Little Peppers.
KOLBURN, TERRY
1938: A Christmas Carol.
KOLKER. HENRY
1938: The Invisible Menace,
The Adventures of Marco
Polo, Holiday, Safety in Num-
bers, Too Hot to Handle, The
Cowboy and the Lady.
1939: Let Us Live, Union
Pacific, Hidden Power, Here
I Am a Stranger, Parents on
Trial, The Real Glory, Should
Husbands Work?, Main Street
Lawyer.
KOMAI, TETSU
1939: The Real Glory.
KORJUS, MILIZA
1938 : The Great Waltz.
KORNMAN, MARY
1938 : Outside of Paradise, I
Am a Criminal, King of the
Newsboys.
KORTMAN, ROBERT
1938: Law of the Texan.
1939: The Renegade Ranger,
Renegade Trail, Oklahoma
Frontier.
KOSHETZ, MME. NINA
1938: Algiers.
KOSLECK, MARTIN
1939: Espionage Agent, Nurse
Edith Cavell, Nick Carter-
Master Detective.
KOUKA, PRINCESS
1938: Dark Sands.
KRAMER, WRIGHT
1938 : Professor Beware, The
Gladiator.
KREBS, NITA
1938 : Terror of Tiny Town.
KRUGER. ALMA
1938: The Toy Wife, Marie
Antoinette, Mother Carey's
Chickens, Tarnished Angel,
The Great Waltz.
1939: Made for Each Other,
Calling Dr. Kildare, Balalaika,
Secret of Dr. Kildare.
KRUGER, LORRAINE
1938: Everybody's Doing It,
I'm from the City, Exposed.
KRUGER, OTTO
1938: I Am the Law, Thanks
for the Memorv, Exposed.
1939: Disbarred, Zero Hour.
Another Thin Man, A Woman
is the Judge.
KRUPA, GENE
1936 : Some Like It Hot.
KUHN, MICKEY
1939: Juarez, S. O. S. Tidal
Wave. Gone With the Wind.
KULLMAN, CHARLES
1938 : The Goldwyn Follies.
KURNITZ, GRANVILLE
1939: Fast and Furious.
425
Pluy e r s " IV o r h
KUZNETZOFF, ADA
1938: Everybody Sing, Swiss
Miss.
1939: Pacific Liner, Bulldog
Drummond's Bride. Tropic
Fury, Torture Ship.
KYSER, KAY
1939: That's Right — You're
Wrong.
LACKTEEN. FRANK
1939: Juarez, The Kansas Ter-
rors.
LADDY, ALAN
1938: Horn to the West.
1939: Beasts of Berlin, Rulers
of the Sea.
LAHR, BERT
1938: Josette, Just Around the
Corner.
1939 : Zaza, The Wizard of
Oz.
LAIDLAW, ETHAN
1938: I'm from the City,
Rhythm of the Saddle.
1939: Home on the Prairie.
The Night Riders, Three Tex-
as Steers, Western Caravans.
Cowboys from Texas.
LAKE, ARTHUR
1938: Double Danger, Every-
body's Doing It, Blondie,
There Goes My Heart.
1939: Blondie Meets the Boss.
Blondie Takes a Vacation.
Blondie Brings Up Baby,
LAKE, FLORENCE
1938: T Met My Love Again,
Convicts at Large.
1939: Stagecoach.
LAMALLE. ISABELL
1938: Mr. Boggs Steps Out,
Gang Bullets.
LAMARR, HEDY
1938: Algiers.
1939: Lady of the Tropics
LAMB. CHARLES
1938: Inside Story.
LAMONT, SONNY
1939: The Story of Vernon
and Irene Castle.
LAMOUR, DOROTHY
1938: Big Broadcast of 1938,
Her Jungle Love, Spawn of
the North.
1939 : St. Louis Blues, Man
About Town, Disputed Pas-
sage.
LANCASTER, RICHARD
1938: Held for Ransom.
LANCHESTER. ELSA
1938: The Beachcomber.
LANDIS, CAROLE
1938: Blondes at Work, Cold
Diggers in Paris, Four's a
Crowd.
1939: Three Texas Steers,
Cowboys from Texas.
LANE, ALLAN
1938: Night Spot, This Mar-
riage Business, Having a
Wonderful Time, Crime Ring.
Maid's Night Out, Fugitives
for a Night, Law West of
Tombstone.
1939: Twelve Crowded Hours.
They Made Her a Spy, Pa-
cific Liner, Panama Lady,
The Spellbinder, Conspiracy.
LANE. CHARLES
1938: In Old Chicago, Cocoa-
nut Grove, You Can't Take It
With You, Professor Beware,
Always in Trouble, Thanks for
Everything, Kentucky.
1939: Boy Slaves, Luckv
Night, News is Made at
Night, Mr. Smith Goes to
Washington. Thev All r„m<
Out.
LANE. LENITA
1938: Girls on Probation.
LANE, LOLA
1938: Torchy Blane in Pan-
ama, When Were You Born':
Mr. Chump, Four Daughter-
1939: Daughters Courageous.
Four Wives.
LANE, NORA
1938: Cassidy of Bar 20.
1939: The Gentleman from
Arizona.
LANE. PRISCILLA
1938: Love Honor and Be-
have, Cowboy from Brooklyn.
Men Are Such Fools, Foui
Daughters, Brother Rat.
1939: Yes — My Darling
Daughter, Daughters Coma
geous. Dust Be My Destim .
The Roaring Twenties, Four
Wives.
LANE, RICHARD
1938: Radio City Revels.
Crashing Hollywood, Every-
body's Doing It, Go Chase
Yourself, This Marriage Busi-
ness, I'm from the City, Blind
Alibi, Exposed, Charlie Chan
in Honolulu, The Last Warn-
ing, Mr. Doodle Kicks Off.
1939: Mr. Moto in Danger
Island, Union Pacific, For
Love or Money, It Could Hap
pen to You, Stronger Than
Desire, Unexpected Father.
News is Made at Xight, The
HUGH
HERBERT
426
Escape, Hero for a Day, Mu-
tiny on the Blackhawk, Main
Street Lawyer, The Day the
Bookies Wept.
LANE, ROSEMARY
1938: Gold Diggers in Paris,
Four Daughters.
1939: The Oklahoma Kid,
Blackwell's Island, Daughters
Courageous, Four Wives, The
Return of Dr. X.
LANE, TRACY
1938: Sergeant Murphy.
LANG. JUNE
1938: International Settlement,
One Wild Night, Meet the
Girls.
1939: Zenohia, Forged Pass-
port, Captain Fury, For Love
or Money, Inside Information.
LANE. WILLA MAE
1939: Poncomania.
LANGDON, HARRY
1938: He Loved an Actress.
1939: Zenobia.
LANI, PUA
1938: Hawaii Calls.
LA PLANTE, LOULETTE
1938 : The Buccaneer.
LA ROCQUE, ROD
1938: International Crime.
1939: The Hunchback of Noire
Dame.
LA ROUX, CARMEL
1938: Starlight Over Texas.
LA ROY, RITA
1938: Condemned Women.
1939: Fixer Dugan.
LARRY'S KIDS
1939: The Star Maker.
LA RUE, FRANK
1938: Outlaws of Sonora, Song
and Bullets, Lightning Carson
Rides Again, Overland Stage
Raiders, Frontier Scout.
1939: Trigger Pals, Song of
the Buckaroo, In Old Mon-
tana, Down the Wyoming
Trail, Port of Hate, Roll
Wagons Roll.
LA RUE, JACK
1938 : Arson Gang Busters,
Valley of the Giants, Under
the Big Top, I Demand Pay-
ment.
1939: Big Town Czar, In
Old Caliente.
LA SAVIO, JO JO
1939 : Law of the Pampas.
LATORRE, DON
1938: Tuvenile Court.
1939: Range War.
LAUGHTON, EDDIE
1938: Convicted, Highway Pa-
trol.
1939: My Son is a Criminal,
Special Inspector.
LAUGHTON, CHARLES
1938: The Beachcomber.
1939: Jamaica Inn, The
Hunchback of Notre Dame.
LAUREL, STAN
1938: Swiss Miss, Blockheads.
1939: The Flying Deuces.
LAURENT. JACQUELINE
1938: Judge Hardy's Children.
LAURI, JOHN
1938: Dark Sands.
LAURIE. FRANK
1939: Code of the Fearless.
LA VARR, MERT
1938: The Buccaneer.
LAWFORD, PETER
1938: Lord Jeff.
LAWLOR. ANDERSON
1938: Alcatraz Island, Mys-
tery House, Accidents Will
Happen, Heart of the North.
1939: Torchy Blane in China-
town.
LAWRENCE, FRED
1938 : Penrod and His Twin
Brother.
LAWRENCE, MARC
1938: Penitentiary, Who Killed
Gail Preston? Convicted, I Am
the Law, Squadron of Honor,
Charlie Chan in Honolulu, Ad-
venture in Sahara.
1939: Sergeant Madden, Homi
cide Bureau, Romance of the
Redwoods, Ex-Champ, S. O.
S. Tidal Wave, Blind Alibi.
The Housekeeper's Daughter.
Dust Be My Destiny, Beware
Spooks !
LAWRENCE, WILLIAM
1938 : Sudden Bill Dorn.
LAWSON, BOBBY
1939: Down the Wyoming
Trail.
LAWSON, PRISCILLA
1938: Test Pilot, Girl of the
Golden West, Heroes of the
Hills.
LAWSON, WILFRID
1939: Allegheny Uprising.
LEAKE, JIMMIE
1939 : Five Little Peppers.
LEASE, REX
1938: Fury Below, Code of
the Rangers, Desert Patrol.
1939: South of the Border.
LEBEDEFF. 1 VAN
1938: Straight Place and
Show.
1939: The Mystery of Mr.
Wong, Trapped in the Sky.
Hotel for Women.
LE BERTHON, HELEN
1938: Religious Racketeers.
1939 : Mystic Circle Murder.
LECHNEK, BILLY
1938: Penrod and His Twin
Brother.
LEDERER, FRANCIS
1938: It's All Yours, The Lone
Wolf in Paris.
1939: Midnight, Confessions of
a Nazi Spy.
LEE, BESSIE
1939: Mr. Wong in China
town.
LEE, BILLY
1938: Cocoanut Grove, Sons
of the Legion, Say It in
French.
1939: Night Work, Jeepers
Creepers, In Old Monterey.
LEE, CAROLYN
1939 : Honeymoon in Bali.
LEE, DOROTHY
1939: Twelve Crowded Hours,
S. O. S. Tidal Wave.
LEE, GWENN
1938: Paroled from the Big
House.
LEE, MARY
1939 : South of the Border.
LEE, SAMUEL
1938 : The Last Express.
1939: Gracie Allen Murder
Case.
LEEDS, ANDREA
1938 : The Goldwyn Follies,
Letter of Introduction, Youth
Takes a Fling.
1939: They Shall Have Mu-
sic, The Realy Glory, Swanee
River.
LEETE, CAROLE
1938: A Man to Remember.
Players9 Work
LEFTWICH, ALEXANDER
1938: Prison Train.
1939: Zaza, Juarez.
LE GON. JENI
1938: Fools for Scandal.
1939: Double Deal.
LEIGH, VIVIEN
1939: Gone With the Wind.
LENDER, MARY LOU
1938 : Numbered Woman, Pro-
fessor Beware.
LEONARD, AUDREY
1938: Love Honor and Be-
have.
LEONARD, BARBARA
1939: Charlie Chan in the
City in Darkness.
LEONARD, SHELDON
1939: Another Thin Man.
LEOPOLD, ETHELDRA
1938: Trade Winds.
LE ROY, HAL
1938: Start Cheering.
LE ROY, KENNETH
1939: Back Door to Heaven.
LE ijAINi, EDWARD J.
1938: Outlaws of the Prairie,
College Swing, Cattle Raiders,
Squadron of Honor, My Lucky
Star, West of Cheyenne, Law
of the Plains, Colorado Trail,
Call of the Rockies.
1939: West of Sante Fe, Jesse
James, Spoilers of the Range.
LESLIE, MAXINE
1939: Overland Mail.
LESTER, BRUCE
1938: Boy Meets Girl, If I
Were King.
1939: The Witness Vanishes.
LESTER, VICKI
1938: The Patient in Room
18, This Marriage Business,
Maid's Night Out, Sky Giant,
The Mad Miss Manton.
L'ESTRANGE, JILL
1938 : Topa Topa.
LEVENE, SAM
1938: Yellow Jack, The Shop-
worn Angel, The Mad Miss
M anton.
1939: Golden Boy.
LEVETT, DOROTHY
1939: That's Right— You're
Wrong.
LEWIS, BEN
1939: House of Fear.
LEWIS, DIANA
1938: He Couldn't Say No,
Gold Diggers in Paris.
LEWIS, GEORGE
1939: Back Door to Heaven,
Beware Spooks :
LEWIS, MITCHELL
1938: Mysterious Mr. Moto
of Devil's Island.
LEWIS, VERA
1938: Four Daughters, Nancy
Drew — Detective, Comet Over
Broadway.
1939: On Trial, Women in
the Wind, Naughty But Nice,
Hell's Kitchen, Nancy Drew
and the Hidden Staircase,
Sweepstakes Winner, The
Roaring Twenties, The Re-
turn of Dr. X, Four Wives.
LIEBER, FRITZ
1938 : The Jury's Secret, Flight
Into Nowhere, Gateway.
1939: They Made Her a Spy,
Pack Up Your Troubles,
Nurse Edith Cavell, The
Hunchback of Notre Dame.
427
Ptayers' Work
LILLIE, BEATRICE
1938: Dr. Rhythm.
LINAKER, KAY
1938: The Last Warning, Per-
sonal Secretary, Trade Winds,
I Am a Criminal.
1939: Charlie Chan in Reno,
Drums Along the Mohawk,
The Girl from Rio.
LINCOLN, ELMO
1939 : Wyoming Outlaw, Colo-
rado Sunset.
LIND, DELIA
1938: Swiss Miss.
LINDEN. ERIC
1938 : Midnight Intruder, Ro-
mance of the Limberlost.
1939: Everybody's On Ice,
Gone With the Wind.
LINDSAY, LOIS
1938 : Golddiggers in Paris.
LINDSAY. MARGARET
1938: Gold Is Where You
Find It, Jezebel, When Were
You Born? There's That Wom-
an Again, Broadway Musket-
eers, Garden of the Moon.
1939: On Trial, Hell's Kitchen,
The Under-Pup, 20,000 Men
a Year.
LISA, ANNA
1939 : Beasts of Berlin.
LITE, LES & ORCHESTRA
1938: Fools for Scandal.
LITEL, JOHN
1938 : Gold Is Where You
Find It, Jezebel, A Slight Case
of Murder, Over the Wall,
Love Honor and Behave, Al-
catraz Island, The Amazing
Dr. Clitterhouse, Little Miss
Thoroughbred, Valley of the
Giants, My Bill, Broadway
Musketeers, Comet Over
Broadway, Nancy Drew — De-
tective.
1939: You Can't Get Away
With Murder, Wings of the
Navy, Dodge City, Secret Ser-
vice of the Air, On Trial,
Nancy Drew — Trouble Shoot-
er, Dust Be My Destiny, One
Hour to Live, On Dress Pa-
rade, Nancy Drew and the
Hidden Staircase, The Return
of Dr. X.
LITTLE BILLY
1938: Terror of Tiny Town.
LITTLE FIELD. LUCIEN
1938: Born to the West, Scan-
dal Street, Hollywood Stadium
Mystery, Wide Open Faces,
The Gladiator, Night Hawk.
1939: Mystery Plane, Unmar-
ried, Sabotage, Jeepers Creep-
ers, What a Life.
LIU, LOTUS
1938 : The Adventures of Mar-
co Polo, Trade Winds.
LIVINGSTON, ROBERT
1938: Arson Gang Busters,
Wild Horse Rodeo, The Pur-
ple Vigilantes, Call The Mes-
quiteers, Outlaws of Sonora,
Heroes of the Hills, Riders of
the Black Hills, Ladies in
Distress, Night Hawk, Or-
phans of the Street.
1939: Federal Man-Hunt, The
Kansas Terrors, Cowboys from
Texas.
LLOYD. ALMA
1938: If I Were King.
LLOYD, DORIS
1938: Alcatraz Island, The
Black Doll.
1939: I'm from Missouri, First
Love, Barricade.
LLOYD, GEORGE
1938 : A Slight Case of Mur-
der, Torchy Blane in Panama,
Blockade, Prison Train, Mr.
Wong — Detective.
1939: Torchy Plays with Dy-
namite, Behind Prison Gates,
Sweepstakes Winner, Water-
front.
LLOYD. HAROLD
1938 : Professor Beware.
LLOYD, ROLLO
( Deceased)
1938: Night Spot, Arsene Lu-
pin Returns, Lady in the
Morgue, Goodbye Broadway,
Spawn of the North.
LOCKHART, GENE
1938: Of Human Hearts, Sin-
ners in Paradise, Men Are
Such Fools, Algiers, Penrod's
Double Trouble, Sweethearts,
A Christmas Carol, Blondie,
Meet the Girls, Listen Darl-
ing.
1939: The Story of Alexander
Graham Bell, I'm from Mis-
souri, Hotel Imperial, Tell No
Tales, Bridal Suite, Our Lead-
ing Citizen, Blackmail, Geron-
imo.
LOCKHART, KATHLEEN
1938: Men Are Such Fools,
Penrod's Double Trouble, Blon-
die, A Christmas Carol, Sweet-
hearts.
1939: Man of Conquest, Our
Leading Citizen, What a Life.
LOCKWOOD, MARGARET
1939 : Susannah of the Moun-
ties.
LOEB, PHILIP
1938: Room Service.
LOEBELL, MARC
1939: The Great Command-
ment.
LOFT. ARTHUR
1938 : Start Cheering, No Time
to Marry, Women in Prison,
All-American Sweetheart, Raw-
hide, Extortion, Who Killed
Gail Preston? City Streets,
The Main Event, I Am the
Law, Highway Patrol, Squad-
ron of Honor, Down in Ark-
ansaw, The Lady Objects,
Gang Bullets, Rhythm of the
Saddle.
1939: Risky Business, Hell's
Kitchen, Southward Ho, A
Woman is the Judge, Pride
of Bluegrass, Smuggled Car-
go.
LOFTUS. CECILIA
1939: The Old Maid, On Dress
Parade.
LOGAN. ELLA
1938: The Goldwyn Follies.
LOGAN, JANICE
1939: Undercover Doctor,
What a Life.
LOGAN, RUBY
1939 : One Dark Night.
LOGAN, STANLEY
1939: We Are Not Alone.
LOMBARD. CAROLE
1938: Fools for Scandal.
1939: Made for Each Other,
In Name Only.
LONDON, TOM
1938: Roaring Timber, Out
laws of Sonora, Phantom Ran-
ger, Riders of the Black Hills,
Six Shootin' Sheriff, Prairie
Moon, Santa Fe Stampede,
Pioneer Trail.
1939: The Night Riders, The
Renegade Ranger, Song of the
Buckaroo, Mountain Rhythm,
Roll Wagons Roll.
LONG. LOTUS
1939: The Mystery of Mr.
Wong, Mr. Wong in China-
town.
LONG, WALTER
1938: Bar 20 Justice, The
Painted Trail, Six Shootin'
Sheriff, Man's Country.
1939: Wild Horse Canyon.
LONO, JAMES
1938: Call of the Yukon.
LOO, RICHARD
1938 : Shadows Over Shanghai.
1939: Mr. Wong in China-
town, Island of Lost Men,
Daughter of the Tong.
LORIMER, LOUISE
1938: Gangster's Boy.
LORRE. PETER
1938: Mr. Moto's Gamble, I'll
Give a Million, Mr. Moto
Takes a Chance, Mysterious
Mr. Moto of Devil's Island.
1939: Mr. Moto in Danger
Island, Mr. Moto's Last Warn-
ing, Mr. Moto Takes a Vaca-
tion.
LORY, JACQUES
1938 : Fools for Scandal.
LOUISE. ANITA
1938 : Marie Antoinette, My
Bill, Going Places, The Sis-
ters.
1939 : The Gorilla, Hero for a
Day, Reno, These Glamour
Girls, Main Street Lawyer,
The Little Princess.
LOVE, MONTAGU
1938 : The Buccaneer, The Ad-
ventures of Robin Hood, Kid-
napped, Professor Beware, If
I Were King.
1939: Gunga Din, Juarez, The
Man in the Iron Mask, We
Are Not Alone, Rulers of the
Sea.
LOVETT,, DOROTHY
1939: Meet Dr. Christian.
LOWE, EDMUND
1938 : Secrets of a Nurse.
1939: Newsboys' Home, Our
Neighbors the Carters, The
Witness Vanishes.
LOWE, ELLEN
1938: Beloved Brat.
LOWERY, ROBERT
1938: Passport Husband, Sub-
marine Patrol.
1939: Mr. Moto in Danger
Island, Young Mr. Lincoln,
Charlie Chan in Reno, Holly-
wood Cavalcade, Drums Along
the Mohawk.
LOWRY, MORTON
1938: The Dawn Patrol.
1939: The Hound of the Bas-
kervilles, Tarzan Finds a Son,
Winter Carnival.
LOY. MYRNA
1938 : Test Pilot, Man-Proof.
Too Hot to Handle.
1939: Lucky Night, The Rains
Came, Another Thin Man.
LUCAS. WILFRED
1938: The Baroness and the
Butler, Crime Afloat.
LUDEN. JACK
1938: Pioneer Trail, Phantom
Gold.
1939: Susannah of the Moun-
ties.
LUGOSI. BELA
1939 : Son of Frankenstein, The
Gorilla, Ninotchka.
428
LUISETTI, HANK
1938 : Campus Confessions.
LUKAS, PAUL
1938: Dangerous Secrets, Re-
bellious Daughters.
1939: Mutiny of the Elsinore,
Confessions of a Nazi Spy,
Captain Fury.
LUKATS, NICK
1938: Start Cheering, Born to
the West, Extortion, The Duke
of West Point.
LUKE, KEYE
1938 : Mr. Moto's Gamble, In-
ternational Settlement.
1939 : Disputed Passage, Bar-
ricade.
LUMET, BARUCH
1939: One Third of a Nation.
LUMET, SIDNEY
1939: One Third of a Nation.
LUNDIGAN, WILLIAM
1938: State Police, The Black
Doll, Reckless Living, That's
My Story, Wives Under Sus-
picion, Danger on the Air,
The Missing Guest, Freshman
Year.
1939: Three Smart Girls Grow
Up, They Asked for It, The
Old Maid, Legion of Lost
Flyers.
LUPINO. IDA
1939: The Lone Wolf Spy
Hunt, The Lady and the Mob,
The Adventures of Sherlock
Holmes, The Light That
Failed.
LYDON, JIMMY
1939: Back Door to Heaven.
LYNCH, JOE
1939: Tough Kid.
LYND, HELEN
1939: The Lone Wolf Spy
Hunt, The Kid from Texas,
Flight at Midnight.
LYND, HERTA
1938 : You and Me.
LYNN, EDDIE
1939: Reform School.
LYNN, ELEANOR
1938 : You're Only Young
Once, The Shopworn Angel,
Fugitives for a Night.
LYNN, JEFFREY
1938: When Were You Born?
Cowboy from Brooklyn, Four
Daughters.
1939: Yes— My Darling
Daughter, Daughters Courage-
ous, The Roaring Twenties,
Espionage Agent, Four Wives.
LYNN, LENI
1939: Babes in Arms.
LYNN, PETER
1938: Meridian 7-1212, Cipher
Bureau, Time Out for Mur-
der.
1939: Mystery Plane, Let Us
Live. Wolf Call, Mr. Wong
In Chinatown, Quick Millions.
LYNN, ROSS
1938: Unashamed.
LYON, BEN
1938 : He Loved an Actress.
1939 : Treachery on the High
Seas.
LYON, PRISCILLA
1938: Beloved Brat.
LYONS, COLLETTE
1938 : Woman Against the
World.
1939: Three Texas Steers.
LYS. LYA
1939 : Confessions of a Nazi
Spy, The Return of Dr. X.
MacBRIDGE, DONALD
1938: Room Service.
MacDONALD, EDMUND
1938: Prison Break.
1939: The Flying Irishman,
Twelve Crowded Hours, Girl
from Mexico, Gracie Allen
Murder Case, The Amazing
Mr. Williams, Charlie Chan
at Treasure Island, Coast
Guard.
MacDONALD, GRANT
1938: Woman Against tht
World.
MacDONALD, HUGH
1939 : Union Pacific.
MacDONALD, J. FARRELL
1938: State Police, Flying
Fists, Roaring Timber, My
Old Kentucky Home, Num-
bered Woman, White Banners,
Extortion, The Crowd Roars,
Little Orphan Annie, Subma-
rine Patrol, Gang Bullets,
Come on Rangers, There Goes
My Heart.
1939: Zenobia, Mickey the
Kid, Susannah of the Moun-
ties, Conspiracy, The Gentle-
man from Arizona.
MacDONALD. IEANETTE
1938 : Girl of the Golden West,
Sweethearts.
1939 : Broadway Serenade.
MacDONALD, KENNETH
1939: Spoilers of the Range,
Outpost of the Mounties.
MacFADDEN, HAMILTON
1938: Sharpshooters, Tarnished
Angel, Five of a Kind.
1939 : Charlie Chan in Reno,
Chicken Wagon Family.
MacFARLANE, BRUCE
1938: Come On Leathernecks,
Come On Rangers.
1939: Forged Passport.
MacGREGOR, DOREEN
1938 : Convicted.
MacKELLAR, HELEN
1938: Ltitle Tough Guy, Val-
ley of the Giants, Barefoot
Boy.
1939: Disbarred, Bad Boy.
MacKENZIE, KEITH
1938: Sons of the Legion.
MacLANE. BARTON
1938: The Kid Comes Back,
Gold Is Where You Find It,
Blondes at Work, You and
Me, Prison Break, Torchy
Gets Her Man, The Storm.
1939: Torchy Blane in China-
town, Stand Up and Fight,
I Was a Convict, Big Town
Czar, Mutiny in the Big
House.
MacLAREN. IAN
1938: Invisible Enemy, Little
Orphan Annie.
1939 : The Hound of the Bas-
kervilles.
MacLAREN, MARY
1938 : The Duke of West
Point.
MacMAHON, ALINE
1938. Back Door to Heaven.
MacMAHON, HORACE
1938 : King of the Newsboys,
When G-Men Step In, Fast
Company, Ladies in Distress,
Tenth Avenue Kid, Secrets of
a Nurse, Broadway Musket-
eers,
1939. Sergeant Madden, Pride
of the Navy, I Was a Con-
vict, Federal Man-Hunt, Big
Town Czar, Rose of Washing-
ton Square, _ For Love or
Money, Gracie Allen Murder
Case, She Married a Cop,
Quick Millions, Sabotage.
Players' Work
MacMURRAY, FRED
1938 : Cocoanut Grove, Sing
You Sinners, Men with Wings.
1939: Cafe Society, Invita-
tion to Hapiness, Honeymoon
in Bali.
MacQUARRIE, MURDOCH
1938: Blockade.
McAVOY, CHARLES
1939: King of the Turf, Rulers
of the Sea.
McARTHUR, HUGH
1939 : Panama Patrol.
McBRIDE, DONALD
1938 : Annabella Takes a Tour.
1939: The Great Man Votes,
The Story of Vernon and Irene
Castle, Blondie Takes a Va-
cation.
McCALL, VERNON
1939: Reform School, Double
Deal.
McCALLION, JAMES
1939: Boy Slaves, The Man
Who Dared, Pride of Blue-
grass.
McCALLUM, JOHN
1938: Held for Ransom.
McCARROLL, FRANK
1938 : Code of the Ranger.
McCARTY, MARY
1938 : Rebecca of Sunnybrook
Farm, Keep Smiling.
McCLAIN, WILLIAM
1939 : Gone With the Wind.
McCLUNG, BOB
1938 : Silks and Saddles.
1939 : Boy's Reformatory.
McCOLLUM, WARREN
1939: Boy's Reformatory.
McCORMICK, MERRILL
1938: Outlaws of Sonora.
1939: Ride 'Em Cowgirl. In
Old Caliente, Overland Mail,
Mutiny in the Big House.
McCORMICK, MYRON
1939: One Third of a Nation.
McCOY. TIM
1938: Code of the Rangers,
Two-Gun Justice, Phantom
Ranger, Lightning Carson
Rides Again.
McCREA, JOEL
1938 : Three Blind Mice, Youth
Takes a Fling.
1939: Union Pacific, They
Shall Have Music, Espionage
Agent.
McCULLOUGH, PHILO
1938: The Buccaneer.
McCULLUM, WARREN
1939: The Great Command-
ment.
McDANIEL. HATTIE
1938: Battle of Broadway, The
Shopworn Angel, The Shining
Hour, The Mad Miss Manton.
1939: Zenobia, Gone With the
Wind.
McDANIELS. ETTA
1938: Keep Smiling, Crime
Afloat.
1939: Sergeant Madden.
McDANIELS, SAM
1938: Sergeant Murphy, Gam-
bling Ship.
1939 : Pride of Bluegrass.
McDILL, FERN
1938 : Terror of Tiny Town.
McDONALD, FRANCIS
1938: Gun Law, If I Were
King.
1939 : Union Pacific, Range
War, Bad Lands, The Light
That Failed.
429
Players9 Work
Mcdowell, nelson
1939: Roll Wagons Roll.
McFARLANE, BRUCE
1939: Torchy Plays with Dyn
amite.
McFARLAND, GEORGE
(SPANKY)
1938 : Peck's Bad Boy with
the Circus.
McGEE, ROGER
1 939 : Stop Look and Love,
The Escape.
McGLYNN, FRANK, Sr.
1938: Sudden Bill Dorn.
1939: Juarez and Maximilian.
McGLYNN, FRANK, JR.
1938 : Kentucky Moonshine.
McGOWAN, J. P.
1938: The Buccaneer.
1939: In Old Montana, Code
ot the Fearless, Calling All
Marines, Stagecoach.
McGRAIL, WALTER
1938: Held for Ransom.
McGRATH, JAMES
1938: Woman Against the
World.
McHUGH, FRANK
1938 : Swing Your Lady, He
Couldn't Say No, Little Miss
Thoroughbred, Boy Meets
Girl, Valley of the Giants,
Four Daughters.
1939: Dodge City, Wings of
the Navy, Daughters Coura-
geous, Dust Be My Destiny,
The Roaring Twenties, On
Your Toes, Indianapolis Speed-
way. Four Wives.
McHUGH, JACK
1939: Six-Gun Rhythm, Bov's
Reformatory.
McHUGH. KITTY
1938: My Old Kentucky
Home.
1939: Broadwav Serenade.
McHUGH. MATTHEW
1938: No Time to Marry.
1939: Federal Man-Hunt, Sl,-
000 a Touchdown.
McINTYRE, CHRISTINE
1938: Rangers Roundup.
McINTYRE. LEILA
1939: The Housekeeper's
Daughter.
McKAY, DOREEN
1938 : The Higgins Family.
Pals of the Saddle.
1939 : The Night Riders.
McKAY. GEORGE
1938: It's All Yours, Con-
victed, Squadron of Honor,
Little Miss Roughneck. High-
way Patrol, The Duke of
West Point, Illegal Traffic.
1939: King of the Turf, $1,00(1
a Touchdown, Babes in Arms.
Manhattan Shakedown. Special
Investigator.
McKEE, LAFE
1938: Rawhide, I'm from the
City.
McKEE, PAT
1938: Straight Place and
Show.
McKENZIE, BOB
1939: Death of a Champion.
McKENZIE, EVA
1938: Pioneer Trail.
McKIM, SAMMY
1938: The Old Barn Dance,
Call the Mesquiteers.
1939: The Night Riders, West
em Caravans, New Frontier,
Rovin' Tumbleweeds.
McKINNEY, MIRA
1938: Young Fugitives.
McKINNEY, NINA MAE
1939: Poncomania.
McLAGLEN, CLIFFORD
1939: Prisoner of Corbal.
McLAGLEN, VICTOR
1938: Battle of Broadway, The
Devil's Party, We're Going
to be Rich.
1939: Pacific Liner, Gunga
Din, Let Freedom Ring, Cap-
tain Fury, Ex-Champ, Full
Confession, Rio.
McLaren, mary
1938 : Numbered Woman.
Mclaughlin, betty
1939: What a Lite.
McLEAY, JANET
1939: Calling All Marines.
McLEOD, GORDON
1939 : The Saint in London.
McMULLEN, DOUG
1939: Back Door to Heaven.
McMAHON, HORACE
1939 : Laugh It Off.
McMAHON, LEO
1938: Heart of Arizona.
McNAMARA, JAMES
1938: You and Me.
McNELLIS, FRANK
1938: Dynamite Delaney.
McPHAIL, DOUGLAS
1938: Sweethearts.
1939 : Babes in Arms.
McQueen, butterfly
1939: Gone With the Wind.
McTAGGART, BUD
1939: Six Gun Rhythm.
McTAGGART, MALCOLM
1939: Full Confession.
McVEY, PAUL
1938: Passport Husband,
Night Hawk, Meet the Girls.
1939: Stagecoach. Panama
Patrol, Inside Information,
Drums Along the Mohawk.
McWADE. EDWARD
1938 : The Patient in Room
18, White Banners. Garden of
the Moon, Comet Over Broad-
way.
1939: Indianapolis Speedway,
Our Neighbors the Carters.
McWADE, MARGARET
1938: Forbidden Valley.
McWADE, ROBERT
( Deceased)
1938: Gold Is Where You
Find It, Of Human Hearts.
MACK, BETTY
1938: Mr. Boggs Steps Out.
MACK, CACTUS
1939: The Fighting Gringo.
MACK, HELEN
1938 : King of the Newsboys,
Gambling Ship, I Stand Ac-
cused, Secrets of a Nurse.
1939: Mystery of the White
Room, Calling All Marines.
MACK, TOMMY
1938 : Law of the Texan.
1939: Zenobia, The Lady and
the Mob.
MACK. WILBUR
1938: Mr. Wong — Detective.
1939: Tough Kid
MACKAY, BARRY
1938: A Christmas Carol.
1939: Smuggled Cargo.
MACOLLUM. BARRY
t938: If I Were King.
1939: Beau Geste, Rulers of
the Sea.
MADISON, JULIAN
1938: Desert Patrol.
MADISON, NOEL
1939: Missing Evidence, Char-
lie Chan in the City in Dark-
ness.
MAGARA, AIKE
1938: Trade Winds
MAGEE, ANITA
1939: Back Door to Heav-n
MAGRILL, GEORGE
1938: Born to be Wild.
1939: King of Chinatown.
MAGUIRE, MARY
1938 : Sergeant Murphy, Alca-
traz Island, Mysterious Mr.
Moto of Devil's Island.
MAHAN, BILLY
1938: Love on a Budget, A
Trip to Paris, Safety in Num-
bers.
1939. Down on the Farm.
Quick Millions, Too Busv to
Work.
MAHER, WALLY
1939: The Star Maker, Nick
Carter — Master Detective.
MAIN, MARJORIE
1938 : Penitentiary, Test Pilot.
Little Tough Guy, Romance of
the Limberlost, Prison Farm.
Too Hot to Handle, Girl',
School, Under the Big Top.
1939: Lucky Night, They Shall
Have Music, Angels Wash
Their Faces. Another Thin
Man, The Women.
MALA
1938: Call of the Yukon.
MALATESTA, FRED
1938: The Black Doll.
1939: Juarez.
MALNECK, MATTY &
ORCHESTRA
1939: East Side of Heaven.
MALO, FRANK
1939 : Boy Slaves.
MALYON, EILY
1938 : Rebecca of Sunnybrook
Farm, Kidnapped, The Young
in Heart.
1939: The Hound of the Bas
kervilles. The Little Princess.
Confessions of a Nazi Spy.
On Borrowed Time, We Are
Xot Alone, Barricade.
MAN MOUNTAIN DEAN
1938: The Gladiator.
MANDER, MILES
1938: Kidnapped, The Mad
Miss Manton.
1939: The Three Musketeers.
The Little Princess, Wuther
ing Heights, The Man in the
Iron Mask, Stanley and Liv
ingstone. Tower of London.
MANN, HANK
1938: Stranger from Arizona.
1939: Hollywood Cavalcade.
MANN, MARGARET
1939: Federal Man-Hunt.
MANNING, THELMA
1938: In Old Chicago.
MANTON & MILLER
1938: Harlem on the Prairie
MAPLE CITY FOUR
1938: The Old Barn Dance.
Under Western Stars.
MARAN, FRANCESCO
1939: Mutiny on the Black
hawk.
MARCH. FREDRIC
1938: The Buccaneer, Trade
Winds, There Goes My Heart
MARCH, SALLY
1939: The Arizona Kid.
MARENGHI, JERRY
1939: At the Circus.
MARIAN, PAUL
1939: In Old Caliente.
MARICLE, LEONA
1938 : The Lone Wolf in Paris.
Comet Over Broadway, The
Mad Miss Manton.
1939: Beauty for the Asking.
Judge Hardy and Son.
430
MARIN. ALBERT
1939: Wings of the Navy.
MARION. BETH
1938: Frontier Scout. Phan
torn Gold.
MARKS, JOE
1938 : Outside of Paradise.
MARLOWE, ANTHONY
1939: The Great Command
ment.
MARLOWE, JERRY
1939: Legion of Lost Flyers,
Hero for a Day.
MARQUIS, MARGARET
1938: Cassidy of Bar 20, My
Old Kentucky Home.
MARR. EDWARD
1938: Road Demon, Spawn
of the North, The Affairs of
Annabel. Meridian 7-1212, Sky
Giant, Time Out for Murder.
1939 : Disbarred. Mr. Moto in
Danger Island, King of China-
town. Grand Jury Secrets.
Torchv Plavs With Dvnamite.
MARSH. ANTHONY
1938: Overland Stage Raid-
ers.
MARSH. JOAN
1938: The Lady Objects.
1939: Fast and Loose.
MARSH. MARIAN
1938: Prison Nurse, A Des-
perate Adventure.
1939: Missing Daughters.
MARSH. MYRA
1938: Rascals.
1939: Boy Friend, The Kan-
sas Terrors.
MARSHALL, ALAN
1938: I Met My Love Again,
Invisible Enemy, The Road to
Reno, Dramatic School.
1939: Exile Express, Four
Girls in White. The Adven-
tures of Sherlock Holmes. The
Hunchback of Notre Dame.
MARSHALL, BRENDA
1939: Espionage Agent.
MARSHALL. HERBERT
1938: Mad About Music, Al-
ways Goodbye, Woman
Against Woman.
1939: Zaza.
MARSHALL. TULLY
1938: The House of Mystery,
Mr. Boggs Steps Out, Arsene
Lupin Returns. Making the
Headlines, College Swing.
1939: The Kid from Texas.
Rlue Montana Skies.
MARTEL. ALPHONSE
1939: Topper Takes a Trip.
MARTEL. JEAN
1938: Flying Fists.
MARTEL. IUNE
1938: Wild Horse Rodeo.
Santa Fe Stampede.
MARTIN. CHRIS-PIN
1938: The Texans, Flirting
with Fate.
1939: Stagecoach, Return of
the Cisco Kid. The Llann
Kid. The Fighting Gringo.
MARTIN. MARCELLA
1939: Gone With the Wind.
MARTIN. MARION
193S: Sinners in Paradise, The
Storm, Youth Takes a Fling.
1939: Sergeant Madden, In-
vitation to Happiness, The
Man in the Iron Mask.
MARTIN. MARY
1939: The Great Victor Her
bert.
MARTIN, TONY
1938: Sally Irene and Mary.
Kentucky Moonshine, Thanks
lor Everything, Up the River.
1939: Winner Take All, Music
In My Heart.
MARTY, LITA
1938 : The Buccaneer.
MARVIN, FRANKIE
1938: Under Western Stars.
The Old Barn Dance. Gold
Mine in the Sky, Man from
Music Mountain.
1939: Mountain Rhythm. Col-
orado Sunset.
MARX BROTHERS
Chico-Groucho-Harpo
1938 : Room Service.
1939: At the Circus.
MARX. MAX
1939: Tough Kid.
MASON. JAMES
1939: The Renegade Ranger.
I Met a Murderer.
MASON. LEROY
1938: The Painted Trail, Fury
Below. Topa Topa, Heroes of
the Hills, Outlaw Express.
Gold Mine in the Sky, Santa
Fe Stampede, Rhvthm of the
Saddle.
1939: Mexicali Rose, West of
Sante Fe, Wyoming Outlaw.
Sky Patrol, New Frontier.
The Fighting Gringo.
MASON. LOUIS
1938: Trouble at Midnight.
1939: Stagecoach.
MASON, MELISSA
1938 : Radio City Revels.
MASON. ROY
1938 : The Spy Ring, Air Dev-
ils.
MASON, SULLY
1939: That's Right— You're
Wrong.
MASSEN. OSA
1939: Honevmoon in Bali.
MASSEY. ILONA
1939: Balalaika.
MASSEY, LOUISE
1938: Where the Buffalo
Roam.
MASSEY. RAYMOND
1939 : Black Limelight.
MATTHEWS, CARL
1938: Rangers Roundup, Fron
tier Scout.
1939: Six Gun Rhythm, Code
of the Fearless.
MATTHEWS, JESSIE
1938: Sailing Along.
MATTHEWS, JOYCE
1938: Artists and Models
Abroad.
1939: Night Work. Million
Dollar Legs. $1,000 a Touch
down.
MATTHEWS LESTER
1938 : There's Always a Wom-
an, The Adventures of Robin
Hood. Meridian 7-1212, Three
Loves Has Nancy, Mysterious
Mr. Moto of Devil's Island.
I Am a Criminal, If I Were
King, Time Out for Murder.
1939: The Three Musketeers.
Susannah of the Mounties.
Should a Girl Marry, Con-
spiracy. Rulers of the Sea.
Everything Happens at Night.
MATTRAW, SCOTT
1938: In Old Chicago.
MATURE, VICTOR
1939: The Housekeeper's
Daughter.
MAUCH. BILLY
1938: Penrod and His Twin
Brother, Penrod's Double
Trouble.
P f ci y v rs' W or k
MAUCH. BOBBY
1938: Penrod and His Twin
Brother, Penrod's Double
Trouble.
MAXWELL. EDWIN
1938 : Romance on the Run.
1939 : Drums Along the Mo-
hawk. Ninotchka, Way Down
South.
MAXWELL, ELSA
1939: Hotel for Women.
MAYBERRY. LYNN
1939: Ride 'Em Cowgirl.
MAYER, RAY
1938: Prison Nurse, Comet
Over Broadway, Garden of the
Moon.
1939: King of Chinatown.
MAYNARD, KEN
1938 : Six Shootin' Trouble.
MAYNARD. KERMIT
1938: Western Jamboree.
1939: The Night Riders, Col
orado Sunset.
MAYO. FRANK
1939: Confessions of a Nazi
Spy. Nancy Drew and the
Hidden Staircase.
MEARS. MARTHA
1939: Our Neighbors the Car-
ters.
MEEHAN. LOU
1938: Thunder in the Desert.
MEEK. DONALD
1938: The Adventures of Tom
Sawyer, Double Danger, Good-
bye Broadway, Little Miss
Broadway, Having a Wonder-
ful Time, You Can't Take It
With You, Hold that Co-ed.
1939: Jesse James, Stagecoach.
Young Mr. Lincoln. The
Housekeeper's Daughter,
Blondie Takes a Vacation.
Hollywood Cavalcade, Nick-
Carter — Master Detective.
MEEKER. GEORGE
1938 : Tarzan's Revenge. Dan-
ger on the Air, Marie Antoin-
ette, Slander House, Meet the
Mayor, Long Shot.
1939: Rough Riders' Round
Up. The Lady and the Mob.
Undercover Doctor. Stunt Pi-
lot, The Roaring Twenties.
Everything's On Ice. tione
With the Wind, Swanee River.
MEHAFFEY, BLANCHE
1938: Held for Ransom.
MEINS. DOUGLAS
1939: On Dress Parade.
MELESH, ALEX
1938: Artists and Models
Abroad.
1939: Paris Honevmoon.
MELFORD. GEORGE
1939 : Rulers of the Sea.
MELLINGER. FRED
1939: Beasts of Berlin.
MELTON. FRANK
1938: Trouble at Midnight,
Silks and Saddles, Freshmm
Year, Riders of the Black
Hills.
MENJOU, ADOLPHE
1938: The Goldwyn Follies.
Letter of Introduction, Thanks
tor Everything.
1939 : King of the Turf. That's
Right — You're Wrong. Gold
en Boy, The Housekeeper's
Daughter.
431
Players9 Worh
MERANDE, DORO
1939: The Star Maker.
MERCER, BERYL
(Deceased)
1939 : The Hound of the Bas-
kervilles, The Little Princess,
A Woman is the Judge.
MERCER, FRANCES
1938 : Vivacious Lady, Smash-
ing the Rackets, Crime Ring,
Blind Alibi, Annabella Takes
a Tour, The Mad Miss Man-
ton.
1939 : The Story of Vernon
and Irene Castle, Beauty for
the Asking, Society Lawyer.
MERCIER, LOUIS
1939: Bulldog Drummond's
Bride, Charlie Chan in the
City in Darkness.
MEREDITH, BURGESS
1938: Spring Madness.
1939: Idiot' Delight, Of Mice
and Men.
MEREDITH, IRIS
1938: Outlaws of the Prairie,
Cattle Raiders, West of Chey-
enne, Law of the Plains, South
of Arizona, Call of the Rock-
ies, Colorado Trail.
1939: West of Sante Fe, Spoil-
ers of the Range, Western
Caravans, Riders of Black
River, Man from Sundown,
Those High Grey Walls, Tam-
ing of the West, Outpost of
the Mounties.
MERKEL, UNA
1939: Four Girls in White,
Some Like It Hot, On Bor-
rowed Time, Destry Rides
Again.
MERMAN. ETHEL
1938 : Happy Landing, Alex-
ander's Ragtime Band, Straight
Place and Show.
MERRILL, LOU
1939: Tropic Fury.
MERRILL, WALTER
1938: Wanted by the Police.
MERTON, JOHN
1938: Female Fugitive,
Wolves of the Sea, Fury Be-
low, Phantom Ranger, Gang
Bullets, Where the Buffalo
Roam.
1939: Code of the Fearless,
In Old Montana, Renegade
Trail, The Great Command-
ment.
METCALF, BRADLEY
1938 : Barefoot Boy, Gangster's
Boy.
METHOT. MAYO
1938 : Women in Prison, Num-
bered Woman, The Sisters.
1939: Should a Girl Marry,
Unexpected Father, A Woman
is the Judge.
MEYER. GRETA
1938: The Great Waltz, Torchy
Gets Her Man.
1939: No Place to Go.
MEYER. TORBEN
1938: Romance in the Dark,
The First Hundred Years.
1939: Topper Takes a Trip.
MICHAEL, GERTRUDE
1939: Hidden Power.
MIDDLEMASS, ROBERT
1938 : Blondes at Work, High-
way Patrol, Spawn of the
North, I Am the Law, Ken-
tucky, I Stand Accused.
1939: Stand Up and Fight,
The Magnificent Fraud, Coast
Guard, Blondie Brings Up
Baby.
MIDDLETON, CHARLES B.
1938 : Outside the Law, Mars
Attacks the World, Kentucky.
1939: The Oklahoma Kid,
Jesse James, Captain Fury,
Wyoming Outlaw, The Fly-
ing Deuces, Blackmail, Way
Down South, Cowboys from
Texas.
MILAN, FRANK
1938: Joy of Living, Danger
on the Air, Pals of the Saddle.
MILASCH, ROBERT
1939: The Man in the Iron
Mask.
MILES, ART
1939: The Gorilla.
MILJAN, JOHN
1938: Man-Proof, If I Wert
King, Ride a Crooked Mile,
Pardon Our Nerve, Torchy
Runs for Mayor.
1939: The Oklahoma Kid,
Juarez, Fast and Furious,
Emergency Squad, Women
Without Names, New Moon.
MILLAND, RAY
1938: Her Jungle Love, Men
with Wings, Say It in French.
1939: Hotel Imperial, Beau
Geste, Everything Happens at
Night.
MILLER, ANN
1938: Radio City Revels, You
Can't Take It with You, Tar-
nished Angel, Room Service.
MILLER, F. E.
1939: The Bronze Buckaroo,
Harlem Rides the Range,
Double Deal.
MILLER. IVAN
1938: Call of the Yukon, The
Old Barn Dance, The Buc-
caneer, Squadron of Honor,
Man from Music Mountain, I
Am the Law, Little Miss
Roughneck, Down in Arkan-
saw.
1939: Forged Passport, Wall
Street Cowboy, Cowboys from
MILLER, JOHN "SKINS"
1938: Blockade .
1939 : Heritage of the Desert.
MILLER, LOUISE
1938: Hunted Men.
MILLER, SIDNEY
1938: Boys Town, Cipher Bu-
reau.
1939 : Panama Patrol, Streets
of New York, Andy Harv
Gets Spring Fever, 20,000 Men
a Year, What a Life.
MILLER. WALTER
1938 : Wild Horse Rodeo,
Blind Alibi, Crime Ring, Come
on Leathernecks, Down in Ar-
kansaw.
1939: Home on the Prairie.
MILLICAN, JAMES
1938: Who Killed Gail Pres-
ton?
MILLS, EDITH
1939: Legion of Lost Flyers.
MILLS, SHIRLEY
1939: The Under-Pup.
MINISTERI, GEORGE
1938 : Terror of Tiny Town.
MINJIR, HAROLD
1938: Dr. Rhythm.
1939: The Great Command-
ment.
MINNEVITCH, BORRAH
1938: Rascals.
MIRANDA, ISA
1939: Hotel Imperial.
MITCHELL, BELLE
1938: Blockade.
MITCHELL, BRUCE
1939: Silver on the Sage.
MITCHELL, FRANK
1939: Tropic Fury.
MITCHELL, GRANT
1938: Women Are Like That,
Reformatory, That Certain Age,
Youth Takes a Fling, Peck's
Bad Boy with the Circus, The
Headleys at Home.
1939: Juarez, 6,000 Enemies,
On Borrowed Time, Hell's
Kitchen, Mr. Smith Goes to
Washington, The Secret of
Dr. Kildare.
MITCHELL, H. BRUCE
1938: Bar 20 Justice.
MITCHELL, HOWARD
1939 : Irish Luck.
MITCHELL, MILLARD
1938: Dynamite Delaney.
MITCHELL, PATSY
1938: Beloved Brat.
MITCHELL, ROBERT B.
1938 : Carefree, The Frontiers-
man.
MITCHELL, THOMAS
1938 : Love Honor and Be-
have, Trade Winds.
1939: Stagecoach, Only Angels
Have Wings, Mr. Smith Goes
to Washington, The Hunch-
back of Notre Dame, Gone
With the Wind.
MIX, ART
1938 : Outlaws of the Prairie,
Law of the Plains, West of
Cheyenne, Call of the Rockies.
South of Arizona.
1939: Spoilers of the Range.
Maisie.
MOLLISON, HENRY
1938: Youth Takes a Fling.
MONG, WILLIAM V.
1938: Painted Desert.
MONTAGUE, MONTE
1938: Riders of the Black
Hills.
1939: The Renegade Ranger,
Racketeers of the Range, Al-
legheny Uprising.
MONTANA, PATSY
1939: Colorado Sunset.
MONTGOMERY. DOUGLASS
1939: The Cat and the Ca-
nary.
MONTGOMERY, JACK
1938: Border Wolves.
MONTGOMERY. ROBERT
1938: The First Hundred
Years, Yellow Jack, Three
Loves Has Nancy.
1939 : Fast and Loose.
MOORE, ALICE
1938: Woman Against the
World.
MOORE, BILL
1939: Mutiny on the Black-
hawk.
MOORE. CARLYLE. Jr.
1938: The Overland Express,
Outlaw Express.
MOORE, CHARLES
1938: Dr. Rhythm, Adventure
in Sahara.
MOORE, CONSTANCE
1938: State Police, The Crime
of Dr. Hallet, Border Wolves,
Wives Under Suspicion, The
Last Stand, Prison Break, The
Missing Guest, Freshman Year,
Swing that Cheer.
432
1939: You Can't Cheat an
Honest Man, Ex-Champ, Mu-
tiny on the Blackhawk, Ha-
waiian Nights, Laugh It Off,
Charlie McCarthy Detective.
MOORE, DENNIE
1938 : Cowboy from Brooklyn,
Mystery House, Boy Meets
Girl, Four's a Crowd, Secrets
of an Actress, Rebellious
Daughters.
1939 : Wild Horse Canyon,
I'm from Missouri, Bachelor
Mother, Mutiny in the Big
House, The Women, Over-
land Mail, Danger Flight, The
Girl from Rio, Eternally
Yours, Irish Luck, No Place
to Go.
MOORE, DICKIE
1938: Love Honor and Be-
have, The Gladiator, My Bill,
The Arkansas Traveler.
1939: Hidden Power.
MOORE, DOROTHY
1938: Quick Money, Girl's
School, Blondie.
1939: Blondie Meets the Boss.
MOORE, GEORGE
1938 : Held for Ransom.
MOORE, JACK
1938: When Were You Born?
The Texans.
MOORE, LEE M.
1939: King of the Turf.
MOORE, MATT
1939: Bad Boy, Range War.
MOORE, PAULINE
1938 : Passport Husband, Three
Blind Mice, Five of a Kind,
The Arizona Wildcat.
1939: The Three Musketeers,
Young Mr. Lincoln, Charlie
Chan in Reno, Charlie Chan
at Treasure Island, Days of
Jesse James.
MOORE, SUE
1938: Swing Your Lady.
MOORE, VICTOR
1938: She's Got Everything,
Radio City Revels, This Mar-
riage Business.
MOORE, WILLIAM
1938: Mr. Boggs Steps Out,
International Crime.
MOORHEAD, NATALIE
1938: Heart of Arizona, Be-
loved Brat.
1939: Lady of the Tropics.
MORAINE, LYLE
1938: Port of Missing Girls.
MORAN, FRANCISCO
1939: Beasts of Berlin.
MORAN. BETTY
1939: Range War.
MORAN. FRANK
1938: Battle of Broadway.
MORAN, JACKIE
1938: Mad About Music, Ar-
son Gang Busters, The Ad-
ventures of Tom Sawyer, Bare-
foot Boy, Mother Carey's
Chickens.
1939 : Spirit of Culver, Every-
body's Hobby, Meet Dr.
Christian, Gone With the
Wind.
MORAN, PEGGY
1938: Gold Diggers in Paris,
Girl's School, Rhythm of the
Saddle.
1939: Little Accident.
MORAN, POLLY
1938: Ladies in Distress.
1939: Ambush.
MORANTI. MILBURN
1938: Gold Mine in the Sky.
MORAY, YVONNE
1938 : Terror of Tiny Town.
MORDANT, EDWIN
1938: Outlaws of Sonora,
Shadows Over Shanghai.
MORELAND, MANTON
1938: Next Time I Marry,
Frontier Scout.
1939: Irish Luck, One Dark
Night.
MORENO, ANTONIO
1938 : Rose of the Rio Grande.
1939: Ambush.
MORGAN, CLAUDIA
1938: That's My Story.
1939: Stand Up and Fight.
MORGAN, DENNIS
1939: Waterfront, Return of
Dr. X, No Place to Go, Tear
Gas Squad, Ride Cowboy Ride,
The Fighting 69th, Three
Cheers for the Irish, Singing
Dude.
MORGAN. FRANK
1938: Paradise for Three, The
Crowd Roars, Port of Seven
Seas, Sweethearts.
1939 : Broadway Serenade, The
Wizard of Oz, Balalaika.
MORGAN. GENE
1938: All-American Sweet-
heart, Start Cheering, When
G-Men Step In, Who Killed
Gail Preston? Extortion, The
Main Event.
1939: Homicide Bureau, Fed-
eral Man-Hunt.
MORGAN, RALPH
1938 : Love Is a Headache,
That's My Story, Wives Un-
der Suspicion, Army Girl, Mo-
ther Carey's Chickens, Bare-
foot Boy, Shadows Over
Shanghai, Orphans of the
Street, Out West with the
Hardys.
1939: Trapped in the Sky,
Fast and Loose, The Lone
Wolf Spy Hunt, Man of Con-
quest, Smuggled Cargo, Way
Down South, Geronimo.
MORIARTY, PAT
1939: Mutiny in the Big
House.
MORIN, ALBERT
1939: Everybody's Hobby,
Outposts of the Mounties,
Gone With the Wind.
MORISON, PATRICIA
1939: I'm from Missouri, The
Magnificent Fraud, Persons in
Hiding.
MORLEY. KAREN
1938: Kentucky.
MORLEY, ROBERT
1938 : Marie Antoinette.
MORRIS. ADRIAN
1938 : You and Me, If I Were
King, Angels with Dirty
Faces.
1939: Return of the Cisco
Kid, 6,000 Enemies, Wall
Street Cowboy, Gone With the
Wind.
MORRIS, CHESTER
1938 : Law of the Underworld,
Sky Giant, Smashing the Rack-
ets.
1939 : Pacific Liner, Blind
Alibi, Five Came Back, Thun-
der Afloat.
MORRIS, CORBETT
1938 : Tarzan's Revenge, The
House of Mystery, Making
the Headlines.
MORRIS, FRANCES
1938 : Cocoanut Grove.
Players9 Worh
MORRIS, GLENN
1938 : Tarzan's Revenge, Hold
that Co-ed.
MORRIS, JOHNNIE
1938: Barefoot Boy.
1939: The Star Maker, The
Gentleman from Arizona.
MORRIS, WAYNE
1938 : Love Honor and Be-
have, The Kid Comes Back,
Men Are Such Fools, Valley
of the Giants, Brother Rat.
1939: The Kid from Kokomo,
The Return of Dr. X.
MORRISS. ANN
1938: The Chaser, Spring
Madness.
1939: The Women, Society
Lawyer, Within the Law.
MORROW, JACKIE
1938: Penrod and His Twin
Brother, Penrod's Double
Trouble.
1939 : Everybody's Hobby.
MORTON, CHARLES
1939: Stunt Pilot.
MORTON. JAMES C.
1939: Topper Takes a Trip.
MORTON, JOHN
1938: Two-Gun Justice.
MOSCOVITCH, MAURICE
1938 : Gateway, Suez.
1939: Love Affair, Susannah
of the Mounties, In Name
Only, Rio, The Great Com-
mandment, Everything Hap-
pens at Night.
MOVITA
1938 : Rose of the Rio Grande.
1939: Wolf Call, The Girl
from Rio.
MOWBRAY. ALAN
1938 : Merrily We Live, There
Goes My Heart.
1939: Topper Takes a Trip,
Never Say Die, The Llano
Kid, Way Down South.
MOWER. JACK
1938: Tarzan and the Green
Goddess, Comet Over Broad-
way, Hard to Get.
1939: Confessions of a Nazi
Spy, Code of the Secret Ser-
vice, Everybody's Hobby,
Smashing the Money Ring,
The Return of Dr. X.
MOYA, ROBERT
1938: Law West of Tomb-
stone.
MUDIE. LEONARD
1938 : The Jury's Secret, When
Were You Born? Kidnapped.
1939: Dark Victory, Arrest
Bulldog Drummond, Tropic
Fury.
MUI, LILLIE
1938: Too Hot to Handle.
MUIR. ESTHER
1938: Romance in the Dark,
Battle of Broadway, The Law
West of Tombstone, Western
Jamboree, A Day at the
Races.
MULHALL, JACK
1938 : The Spy Ring, Outlaws
of Sonora, You and Me, Held
for Ransom, Crime Ring, The
Chaser, The Storm.
1939: Home on the Prairie.
First Love.
MULLINER, ARTHUR
1939: The Sun Never Sets.
MUMMERT, DANNY
1938: Blondie.
433
I* I a 11 v r 8 " H o r /»•
19.59: Blondie Metis the Boss.
Blondie Brings Up Baby,
Blondie Takes a Vacation
MUNDIN, HERBERT
< Deceased)
1938: Invisible Enemy, The
Adventures of Robin Hood,
Lord Jeff, Exposed.
1939: Society Lawyer.
MUNI, PAUL
1939: Juarez, We Arc Not
Alone.
MUNIER. FERDINAND
1939: Arrest Bulldog Drum
mond, Everything Happens at
Night.
MUNSON. ONA
1939: Legion of Losl Flyers,
(lone With the Wind.
MURPHY. GEORGE
1938: Little Miss Broadway.
Letter of Introduction, Hold
that Co-ed.
1939: Riskv Business.
MURPHY, HORACE
1938: Paroled— To Die. Wide
Open Faces, Stolen Heaven,
Thunder in the Desert, Star-
light Over Texas. Billy the
Kid Returns. Stranger from
Arizona, Where the Buffalo
Roam.
1939: Song of the Buckaroo,
Down the Wyoming Trail
MURPHY. MAURICE
1938: Nurse from Brooklyn,
My Bill.
1939 : Forged Passport, ( areer,
The Covered Trailer.
MURPHY, ROBERT
1938: Girl of the Golden West,
In Old Chicago.
MURRAY. CHARLIE
1938: The Road to Reno.
Breaking the Ice.
MURRAY, FORBES
1938: Hold that Coed. Air
Devils, Say It in French.
1939: Smashing the Spy King.
The Lady and the Mob, Spoil
ers of the Range.
MURRAY JOHN T
1938: Gang ISullets, Down on
the Farm.
1939: Down on the Farm. The
llardys Ride High. Andy
Hardy Gets Spring Fever.
Quick Millions
MURRAY. KEN
1938: Swing Sister Swing.
MURREL. FRANKLIN
1939: Juarez and Maximilian
MURTAGH SISTERS
1938: Freshman Year.
MUSE. CLARENCE
1938: The Toy Wife, Prison
Train, Secrets of a Nurse.
1939 : Way Down South.
MUSIC MAIDS. THE
1939: East Side of Heaven.
MYRON, A. S.
1939: Second Fiddle.
NACE, ANTHONY
1938: The Duke of West
Point, Sunset Trail
NADELL, BERNARD
1938: Exposed.
NAGEL, ANNE
1938 : Saleslady, Myster y
House. Under the Big Top,
Gang Bullets.
1939: Should a Girl Marry.
Unexpected Father, Call a
Messenger. Legion of Lost
Klyers.
NAGEL. CONRAD
1939: Juarez and Maximilian.
NAISH, J. CARROLL
1938: Her Jungle Love, Tip-
Off Girls, Hunted Men, Pri-
son Farm, Hiilldog Drummond
in Africa. Illegal Traffic. King
of Alcatraz.
1939: King of Chinatown, Per-
sons in Hilling. Hotel Im-
perial, Undercover Doctor.
Beau Geste, Island of Lost
Men.
NAPIER. JEAN
1939: We Are Not Alone.
NASH. FLORENCE
1939: The Women.
NASH. JACQUELINE
1939: They Shall Have Mu
sic.
NASH. BOB
1938: Mr. Doodle Kicks Off.
NASH. MARY
1939: The Little Princess. The
Rains Came.
NAZARRO. CLIFF
1938: Outside of Paradise, A
Desperate Adventure.
1939: St. Louis Blues. Forged
Passport, King of the Turf.
NEAGLE, ANNA
1938: Girl in the Streets,
Sixty Glorious Years.
1939: Nurse Edith Cavell.
NEAL, TOM
1938: Out West with the Har-
dys.
1939: Burn 'Em Up O'Con-
nor, F ur Girls in \\ hit; \\ ith-
in the Law. 6.000 Enemies.
Another Thin Man. They All
Come Out, Joe and Ethel
Turp.
NEDELL. BERNARD
1938: Mr. Moto's Gamble.
1939: Secret Service of the
Air, Lucky Night. Some Like
It Hot. They All Come Out.
I'ast and Furious, Those High
Grey Walls. Angels Wash
Their Faces.
NESMITH, OTTOLA
1938: Fools for Scandal.
1939: The Star Maker.
NESTELL. WILLIAM
1939: The Night Riders.
NEWELL. DAVID
1938: Sergeant Murphy.
NEWELL. WILLIAM
1938: Ride a Crooked Mile.
Slander House.
NEWILL, JAMES
1939: Crashing Thru.
NEWLAN, PAUL
1938: Cocoanut Grove, You
and Me.
NEWMAN. ALFRED
1939: They Shall Have Mu-
sic.
NICHOLSON. LILLIAN
1939: Tuarez.
NIESEN. GERTRUDE
1938: Start Cheering.
NILES, KEN
1938: The Kid Comes Back.
NILSSON, ANNA Q.
1938: Prison Farm
NIVEN, DAVID
1938: Bluebeard's Eighth
Wife, Four Men and a Prayer.
Three Blind Mice, The Dawn
Patrol.
1939 : Wuthering Heights.
Bachelor Mother, The Real
Glory, Eternally Yours.
NOBLE. ROBERT
1938: The Adventures of Robin
Hood.
NOEL. HATTIE
1939: Our Leading Citizen.
NOLAN. BOB
1938: The Law of the Plains.
West of Cheyenne, Colorado
Trail, South of Arizona.
1939: West of Same Fe.
Spoilers of the Range, West
ern Caravans, Riders of Black
River. Man from Sundown.
Outpost of the Mounties,
Stranger from Texas.
NOLAN. DORIS
1938: Holiday.
1939: One Hour to Live.
NOLAN, JAMES
1938: Torchy Blane in Pan
ama, Little Miss Thorough
bred, Girls on Probation.
NOLAN, LLOYD
1938 : Dangerous to Know,
Tip-Off Girls, Hunted Men.
Prison Farm, King of Alca-
traz.
1939: St. Louis Blues. Am
bush. Undercover Doctor, The
Magnificent Fraud.
NOLLEY, EDMONIA
1939: One Third of a Nation
NORRIS. EDWARD
1938 : Boys Town.
1939: Newsboys' Home. Tail
Spin. On Trial. The Gorilla.
Frontier Marshal. Here I Am
a Stranger. The Escape.
NORTON BARRY
1938: The Buccaneer.
1939: Should Husbands Work -
NORTON. EDGAR
1939: Son of Frankenstein.
Juarez and Maximilian. Cap
tain Fury.
NORTON. JACK
1938: Meet the Girls. Thanks
for the Memory.
1939: Grand Jury Secrets.
Toe and Ethel Turp.
NOVA, FORTUNIO BONA
1938: Romance in the Dark.
NOVAK, PEGGY
193S: He Loved an Actress.
NOVARRO RAMON
1938: A Desperate Adventure.
NOVELLO. JAY
1938: Tenth Avenue Kid.
Pliriing with Fate.
1939: Calling All Marines.
NOVERA. MEDEA
1939: Juarez and Maximilian
NUGENT. EDWARD
1938: Meet the Mayor.
NUGENT J. C
1938: It's All Yours. Mid
night Intruder, Give Me a
Sailor.
NUNN, WAYNE
1939: One Third of a Nation.
NYE, CARROLL
1938: Rebecca of Sunnybrook
Farm, Kentuckv Moonshine.
1939: Gone With the Wind.
NYI, Z. T.
1939: Disputed Passage.
OAKIE. JACK
1938: Radio City Revels, The
Affairs of Annabel. Annabella
Takes a Tour, Thanks for Ev-
erything.
OAKLAND. VIVIAN
1938: Double Danger, Crime
Afloat, Slander House, Rebel-
lious Daughters.
434
OAKMAN, WHEELER
1938 : Code of the Rangers,
Mars Attacks the World.
1939: In Old Montana, Mu
tiny in the Big House. Torture
Ship.
OBEKON. MERLE
1938 : The Divorce of Lady
X, The Cowboy and the Lady.
1939: Wuthering Heights.
O'BRIEN. DAVID
1938: Man's Country, Fron-
tier Scout, Where the Buffalo
Roam.
1939: Song of the Buckaroo,
Mutiny in the Big House.
Daughter of the Tong. New
Frontier. Crashing Thru.
O'BRIEN. EDMOND
1939: The Hunchback of
Notre Dame.
O'BRIEN. FLORENCE
1939: Double Deal.
O'BRIEN. GEORGE
1938: Gun Law, The Painted
Desert.
1939: The Renegade Ranger.
Racketeers of the Range, The
Fighting Gringo.
O'BKIEN PAT
1938: Women Are Like That.
Cowboy from Brooklyn, Boy
Meets Girl, Garden of the
Moon, Angels with Dirty
Faces.
1939: Off the Record, The
Kid from Kokomo. Indian
apolis Speedwav.
O'BRIEN, PATRICK
1938: Bar 20 Justice, Hawaii-
an Buckaroo, Panamint's Bad
Man.
OCOCHARTY, W. H.
1938: Terror of Tiny Town.
OCONNELL. HUGH
1938: Swing Your Lady,
Women Are Like That, Ac-
cidents Will Happen, Torchy
lllane in Panama, Mystery
1 louse, P e n r o d ' s Double
Trouble.
O CONNELL, MARGARET
1938: Crashin' Through Dan-
ger.
O'CONNOR. DONALD
1938: Sing You Sinners, Sons
of the Legion, Men with
Wings.
1939: Unmarried, Heath of a
Champion. Million Dollar Legs.
Night Work. On Your Toes.
Beau Geste.
O'CONNOR. FRANK
1938: The Purple Vigilantes,
Riders of the Black Hills.
O'CONNOR. PATSY
1938: Too Hot to Handle.
O'CONNOR. ROBERT E.
1939: Streets of New York.
Joe and Ethel Turp.
O'CONNOR. UNA
1938: The Adventures of Robin
Hood.
1939: We Are Not Alone.
O'liSVRRN. VESEY
1938: The Lady Objects.
ODELL, KENT
1939: Stagecoach.
O' DON N ELL. SPEC
1938: Accidents Will Happen
O DRISCOLL, MARTHA
1938: Girl's School.
1939: Secret of Dr. Kildare
Judge Hardy and Son.
OEHMEN, RITA
1938 : Gun Law.
OFFERM AN. GEORGE, ]r.
1938: Scandal Street, Extor-
tion, Crime School.
1939: Calling Dr. Kildare.
Boy's Reformatory, (.'all a
Messenger.
O'HARA, MAUREEN
1939: The Hunchback of Notiy
Dame.
O'HARA. PAT
1939: Outpost of the Moun
ties.
O'KEEFE, DENNIS
1938: Bad Man of Brimstone,
Hold that Kiss, The Chaser,
Vacation from Love.
1939: Burn 'Em Up O'Con-
nor, The Kid from Texas, LTn-
expected Father, That's Right
— You're Wrong.
OLESON, OLE
1938: Paroled from the Big
House.
OLIVER. DAVID
1938: Nurse from Brooklyn,
State Police, The Devil's
Party, The Road to Reno,
Swing that Cheer, Secrets of
a Nurse, Little Tough Guys
in Society, Exposed.
OLIVER. EDNA MAY
1938: Paradise for Three, Lit-
tle Miss Broadway.
1939 : The Story of Vernon
and Irene Castle. Second Fid-
dle, Nurse Edith Cavell, Drum*
Along the Mohawk.
OLIVER. GORDON
1938: Women Are Like That,
Alcatraz Island, Jezebel, The
Daredevil Drivers, The Ma-
rines Are Here, There's That
Woman Again, Blondie, Bro-
ther Rat.
1939: Pride of the Navy. M>
Son is a Criminal, Romano
of the Redwoods, A Woman
is the Judge, Sabotage.
OLIVER. TED
1938: She Loved a Fireman.
OLIVER-SMITH, GERALD
1939: Bachelor Mother.
OLIVIER, LAURENCE
1939: Wuthering Heights.
OLSEN, MORONI
1938: Gold Is Where You
Find It, Kidnapped, Subma-
rine Patrol, Kentucky.
1939: Homicide Bnureau, The
Three Musketeers. Rose of
Washington Square. Code of
t he Secret Service, Susannah
of the Mounties, Allegheny
Uprising, Dust Be My Des
tiny, That's Right You're
Wrong, Barricade.
O'MALLEY. PAT
1939: Romance of the Red
woods. Stunt Pilot.
O'MALLEY, REX
1939: Zaza.
O'NEIL, BARBARA
1938: Love Honor and Be
have. The Boy Wife, I Am
the Law
1939: The Sun Never SeU.
W h e n Tomorrow Comes.
Tower of London. Gone With
the Wind.
O N KILL. HENRY
1938: Jezebel, Gold Is Where
You Find It, Yellow Jack,
White Banners, The Chaser,
The Amazing Dr. Clitterhouse,
Girls on Probation, Brother
Hat, Racket Busters.
1939: Torchy Blane in China
town, Wings of the Navy.
Confessions of a Nazi Spy,
Juarez. Lucky Night, The
Man Who Dared, Angels Wash
Their Faces. Everybody's Hob-
by, Four Wives.
I* f a i/ v r s ' W o i • /»•
OQU1NN. CATHERINE
1938: The Mad Miss Manton.
ORR, WILLIAM
1939: The Hardys Ride High
ORSELL, RENEE
1939: Made for Each Other.
ORTH, FRANK
1938: The Patient in Room
18, Mr. Chump, Nancy Drew
— Detective.
1939 : Burn 'Em Up O'Con-
nor, Broadway Serenade, Fast
and Furious, Nancy Drew and
the Hidden Staircase, Secret
of Dr. Kildare.
OSBORN, TED
1938: State Police, The Road
to Reno.
OSBORNE. BUD
1938: The Overland Express,
The Painted Trail, The Mexi-
cali Kid, Man's Country, Prai-
rie Moon.
1939: Racketeers of the Range,
New Frontier.
OSCAR, HENRY
1939: The Saint in New York.
O'SHEA, OSCAR
1938: King of the Newsboys,
Border Wolves, Man-Proof,
International Crime, Num-
bered Woman, The Main
Event, Stablemates, Rebellious
Daughters, Racket Busters,
The Shining Hour, Youth
Takes a Fling.
1939: King of the Turf, Lucky
Night, Big Town Czar. In-
vitation to Happiness. Tell No
Tales, S. O. S. Tidal Wave.
She Married a Cop. The Star
Maker, Those High Grey
Walls, Missing Evidence, Of
Mice and Men.
O SULL1VAN. MAUREEN
1938: A Yank at Oxford, Hold
That Kiss, The Crowd Roars,
Port of Seven Seas, Spring
Madness.
1939: Let Us Live, Tarzan
Finds a Son.
OTHO, HENRY
1938: Clipped Wings, Over-
land Stage Raiders.
1939: Mexicali Rose.
OTT1ANO. RAFAELA
193S: I'll Give a Million,
Suez.
1939: Paris Honevmoon.
OTTO. FRANK
1938: The Kid Comes Back,
Dynamite Delaney.
OUSPENSKAYA. MARIA
1939: Love Affair, The Rains
Came, Tudge Hardv and Son.
OVERMAN, LYNN
1938: Her Jungle Love, Big
Broadcast of 19o8, Hunted
Men, Spawn of the North,
Sons of the Legion, Men with
Wings, Ride a Crooked Mile.
1939: Persons in Hiding. Union
Pacific, Death of a Champion.
OVERTON, SHERRIE
1938: Girl's School.
OWEN, GARY
1938: Call of the Yukon,
Heart of the North.
OWEN, REGINALD
1938: Paradise for Three, Ev-
erybody Sing, Kidnapped,
Three Loves Has Nancy, Va-
435
Pluyers9 Work
cation from Love, A Christ-
mas Carol, Sweethearts.
1939: Fast and Loose, The
Girl Downstairs, Hotel Im-
perial, Bridal Suite, The Real
Glory, Bad Little Angel, Re-
member?, Balalaika, Earl of
Chicago, Florian.
OWENS, HARRY
1938 : Cocoanut Grove.
PADDEN, SARAH
1938: Women in Prison, Rich
Man-Poor Girl, Romance of
the Limberlost, Woman
Against Woman, Little Orphan
Annie.
1939: Angels Wash Their
Faces, Let Freedom Ring, Zero
Hour, Should a Girl Marry.
PADEREWSKI, JAN
1938: Moonlight Sonata.
PADULA, MARGARET
1939: Lady of the Tropics.
PAGE. BRADLEY
1938: Crashing Hollywood,
Night Spot, Go Chase Your-
self, The Affairs of Annabel,
Crime Ring, Annabella Takes
a Tour, Fugitives for a Night,
Law West of Tombstone.
1939: Twelve Crowded Hours,
Fixer Dugan.
PAGE, DOROTHY
1939: Ride 'Em Cowgirl.
PAGE, GAIL
1938: Crime School, The
Amazing Dr. Clitterhouse,
Four Daughters.
1939: Indianapolis Speedway,
Four Wives, You Can't Get
Away With Murder, Daugh-
ters Courageous, Naughty But
Nice.
PAIGE, CAROL
1938 : You and Me.
PAIGE, RAYMOND
1938: Hawaii Calls.
PAIGE, ROBERT
1938 : There's Always a Wom-
an, When G-Men Step In,
Who Killed Gail Preston? The
Main Event, Highway Patrol,
The Last Warning, The Lady
Objects, I Stand Accused.
1939: Homicide Bureau, Death
of a Champion.
PAINE, HARRY
1938 : Trade Winds.
PAIVA, NESTOR
1938: Prison Train.
PALANGE, INEZ
1938: The Black Doll, Speed
to Burn, Little Miss Rough-
neck, Road Demon, Flirting
with Fate.
1939: Winner Take All,
Chicken Wagon Family.
PALATHY, A.
1939: Beasts of Berlin.
PALEY, SUSAN
1939 : Death of a Champion.
PALLETTE, EUGENE
1938: The Adventures of Rob-
in Hood, There Goes My
Heart.
1939: Wife, Husband and
Friend, First Love, Mr. Smith
Goes to Washington.
PANGBORN. FRANKLIN
1 938 : Bluebeard's Eighth
Wife, Love on Toast, Mad
About Music, Joy of Living,
Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm,
She Married an Artist, Viva-
cious Lady, Dr. Rhythm,
Four's a Crowd, Three Blind
Mice, Carefree, Always Good-
bye, Just Around the Corner,
Meet the Mayor.
1939: Topper Takes a Trip,
The Girl Downstairs, Broad-
way Serenade, Fifth Avenue
Girl.
PANZER, PAUL
1939: Beasts of Berlin.
?APE, LIONEL
1938: Big Broadcast of 1938,
Bluebeard's Eighth Wife, Out-
side of Paradise, Four Men
and a Prayer.
1939: Drums Along the Mo-
hawk, Rulers of the Sea,
Eternally Yours.
PARDEE, DOC
1939 : The Gentleman from
Arizona.
PARKER. BARNETT
1938 : Love Is a Headache,
Sally Irene and Mary, Hold
that Kiss, Marie Antoinette,
Listen Darling.
1939: The Girl Downstairs,
She Married a Cop, At the
Circus, Hotel for Women,
Babes in Arms.
PARKER, CECILIA
1938: Judge Hardy's Children,
You're Only Young Once,
Love Finds Andy Hardy, Out
West with the Hardys.
1939 : Burn 'Em Up O'Con-
nor, The Hardys Ride High,
Andy Hardy Gets Spring
Fever, Judge Hardy and Son.
PARKER, EDWIN
1939: Danger Flight.
PARKER. FRANKLIN
1938: The Higgins Family,
Trade Winds.
PARKER. JEAN
1938: Penitentiary, Romance
of the Limberlost, The Arkan-
sas Traveler.
1939: Zenobia, Romance of
the Redwoods, She Married a
Cop, Flight at Midnight,
Parents on Trial, The Fly-
ing Deuces.
PARKER, MARY
1938: Artists and Models
Abroad.
1939: St. Louis Blues. Cafe
Society.
PARKER, RAYMOND
1938: Swing that Cheer, The
Last Warning.
1939: Society Smugglers, The
House of Fear.
PARKER. WILLARD
1938: A Slight Case of Mur-
der.
1939 : Zero Hour.
PARKINSON, CLIFF
1938: Rawhide.
PARNELL, EFFIE
1939 : That's Right — You're
Wrong.
PARKYAKARKUS
1938 : She's Got Everything.
PARNELL, EMORY
1938: Arson Gang Busters,
Call of the Yukon, King of
Alcatraz.
1939: Pacific Liner, The Star
Maker, One Hour to Live.
PARRISH, BOB
1938: Mr. Doodle Kicks Off.
PARRISH, ENID
1938: Two-Gun Justice.
PARRISH. HELEN
1938: Mad About Music, Lit-
tle Tough Guy, Little Tou*h
Guys in Society.
1939: Three Smart Girls
Grow Up, Winter Carnival,
First Love.
PARRY, JEAN
1939: The Three Musketeers.
PARSONS, MILTON
1939 : When Tomorrow Comes.
PARSONS, PATSY LEE
1939: Meet Dr. Christian.
PATRICK, EDWARD
1939: Reform School.
PATRICK. GAIL
1938: Mad About Music, Dan-
gerous to Know, Wives Under
Suspicion, King of Alcatraz.
1939: Disbarred, Man of Con-
quest, Grand Jury Secrets,
Reno.
PATRICK. LEE
1938: Crashing Hollywood,
Night Spot, Condemned Wom-
en, Law of the Underworld,
The Sisters.
1939: Fisherman's Wharf.
PATTERSON. ELIZABETH
1938: Scandal Street, Blue-
beard's Eighth Wife, Bull-
dog Drummond's Peril, Sing
You Sinners, Sons of the Le-
gion.
1939: The Story of Alexander
Graham Bell, Bulldog Drum-
mond's Secret Police, Bulldog
Drummond's Bride, The Cat
and the Canary, Bad Little
Angel, Our Leading Citizen.
PATTERSON, JOHN
1938: Born to the West, The
Buccaneer.
PATTERSON, PAT
1939: Idiot's Delight.
PATTON, TONY
1938: Two-Gun Justice.
PAWLEY. EDWARD
1938: Dangerous to Know,
White Banners, Smashing the
Rackets, Gun Law, Prison
Break, Little Tough Guy, Ro-
mance of the Limberlost, Sons
of the Legion, Angels with
Dirty Faces.
1939 : The Oklahoma Kid, The
Lady's from Kentucky, Un-
married, Each Dawn I Die.
PAWLEY. WILLIAM
1938 : International Crime,
White Banners, Prairie Moon.
1939: Rough Riders' Round-
Up, Panama Lady, Disputed
Passage.
PAYNE. JOHN
1938: Love on Toast, College
Swing, Garden of the Moon.
1939: Wings of the Navy.
Indianapolis Speedway, Bad
Lands, Kid Nightingale.
PAYNE, SALLY
1938: The Higgins Family,
Man from Music Mountain.
1939: My Wife's Relative*.
PAYTON, LEW
1938: Jezebel.
1939: The Lady's from Ken-
tucky.
PEARCE, ADELE
1939: Sorority House, Wy-
oming Outlaw, Three Sons.
Full Confession, The Girl from
Rio.
PEARCE. GEORGE
1939: The Star Maker.
PEARSON. JOHN
1938: Prison Train.
PEARSON, JOSEPHINE
1939 : One Dark Night.
PEARSON, TED
1938: Test Pilot, You're Only
Young Once.
1939: Boy Friend.
436
PECK. CHARLES
1938: Mad About Music, Of
Human Hearts.
1939: Andy Hardy Gets Spring
Fever, Five Little Peppers.
PEGG, VESTER
1938: Born to the West.
PEIL, EDWARD
1938: Colorado Trail.
1939 : The Night Riders, Spoil-
ers of the Range.
PELLETIER, WILFRED
1938: Big Broadcast of 1938.
PELUFFO, STELITA
1938 : Outlaws of Sonora.
PENDLETON. GAYLORD
1938: Sky Giant, The Duke
of West Point.
1939: Disputed Passage.
PENDLETON, NAT
1938 : Swing Your Lady, Ar-
sene Lupin Returns, The
Chaser, The Crowd Roars, The
Shopworn Angel, Fast Com-
pany, Meet the Mayor, Young
Dr. Kildare.
1939: Burn 'Em Up O'Con-
nor, Calling Dr. Kildare, It's
a Wonderful World, 6,000 En-
emies, On Borrowed Time,
Another Thin Man, At the
Circus, Secret of Dr. Kildare.
PENN, LEONARD
1938 : Judge Hardy's Children,
Man-Proof, Girl of the Golden
West, The Toy Wife, Ladies
in Distress, Marie Antoinette.
1939: Bachelor Mother.
PENNER, JOE
1938: Go Chase Yourself, I'm
from the City, Mr. Doodle
Kicks Off.
1939 : The Day the Bookies
Wept.
PENNER, WALTER
1939: The Covered Trailer.
PENNICK, J. RONALD
1939 : Drums Along the Mo-
hawk.
PENNICK, JACK
1938: King of the Newsboys,
Cocoanut Grove, You and Me,
Submarine Patrol.
1939: Stagecoach, Mountain
Rhythm, The Star Maker.
PEPITO
1938 : Army Girl, Annabella
Takes a Tour.
PEPPER, BARBARA
1938 : Hollywood Stadium
Mystery, Wide Open Faces,
Lady in the Morgue, Army
Girl, Outside the Law.
1939: They Made Me a Crim-
inal, The Magnificent Fraud,
Colorado Sunset, Flight at
Midnight, Three Sons.
PEPPER, BUDDY
1939: Streets of New York.
PERETTI, PEO
1938: The Lone Wolf in
Paris.
PEREZ, JOSE
1938: California Frontier.
PERL, ALAN
1938: The Toy Wife.
PERRIN. JACK
1938: The Purple Vigilantes.
PERRY, JOAN
1938: Start Cheering.
1939: Blind Alibi, Good Girls
Go to Paris.
PETERS. JOHN
1939 : Mystery Plane, Beasts
of Berlin, Sky Patrol.
PETERS, RALPH
1938: Outlaws of Sonora,
Man's Country, Wanted by
the Police.
1939: Tough Kid, Six-Gun
Rhythm, Rovin' Tumbleweeds.
PETERSON, DOROTHY
1938: Hunted Men, Breaking
the Ice, Girls on Probation.
1939: Dark Victory, The Fly-
ing Irishman, Two Bright
Boys, Sabotage, Five Little
Peppers.
PETRUZZI, JULIAN
1938: Tenth Avenue Kid.
PHELPS. LEE
1938: Female Fugitive, Sud-
den Bill Dorn, The Gladiator,
Long Shot, Trade Winds.
1939: Kid Nightingale, Gone
With the Wind.
PHILLIPS, HOWARD
1938: Gangs of New York.
PHILLIPS, NORMAN
1939: Our Neighbors the Car-
ters.
PICHEL, IRVING
1938: Jezebel, There Goes My
Heart, Gambling Ship.
1939 : Newsboys' Home, Exile
Express, Topper Takes a Trip,
Juarez, Torture Ship, Reno.
PIDGEON, WALTER
1938: Man-Proof, Girl of the
Golden West, The Shopworn
Angel, Listen Darling, Too
Hot to Handle.
1939: Society Lawyer, 6,000
Enemies, Stronger Than De-
sire, Nick Carter — Master De-
tective.
PIER. EDWARD. SR.
1938 : Code of the Rangers.
PIGOTT. TEMPE
1938: Fools for Scandal.
1939: Boy's Reformatory.
PILOT, BERNICE
1938: Penrod and His Twin
Brother, Beloved Brat, My
Bill, Sky Giant, Penrod's
Double Trouble.
1939: No Place to Go.
PIRRONE, JOHNNY
1938: Penrod and His Twin
Brother, Speed to Burn, Road
Demon.
PIRRONE, JOHNNIE, JR.
1939: Winner Takes All.
PITTS, ZASU
1939: The Lady's from Ken-
tucky, Mickey the Kid. Naugh-
ty But Nice. Nurse Edith
Cavell, Eternally Yours.
PLATT, BILLY
1938: Terror of Tiny Town.
PLATT, LOUISE
1938 : I Met My Love Again,
Spawn of the North.
1939: Stagecoach, Tell No
Tales.
PLOWRIGHT. HILDA
1939 : Cafe Society.
POLK, OSCAR
1939: Gone With the Wind.
POLLARD. SNUB
1938: Frontier Town, Where
the Buffalo Roam, Starlight
Over Texas.
1939 : Song of the Buckaroo.
PORCASI, PAUL
1938 : Vacation from Love.
1939: Lady of the Tropics.
PORTER. LEW
1938 : Rangers Roundup.
PORTER, LILLIAN
1938 : Josette.
1939 : Stop Look and Love.
POST, GUY BATES
1939: Juarez and Maximilian.
POTEL, VICTOR
1938: Outside the Law.
1939: Rovin' Tumbleweeds.
Players' Worh
POTTER, PETER
1938: Prison Train, Prairie
Moon.
POULSEN, WILLIAM A.
1939: Another Thin Man.
POVAH, PHYLLIS
1939: The Women.
POWELL. DICK
1938: Cowboy from Brooklyn,
Hard to Get, Going Places.
1939: Naughty But Nice.
POWELL, ELEANOR
1938: Rosalie.
1939 : Honolulu.
POWELL, JACK
1939: East Side of Heaven.
POWELL, LEE
1938 : Come on Rangers.
1939: Trigger Pals.
POWELL, WILLIAM
1938 : The Baroness and the
Butler.
1939: Another Thin Man.
POWER, JOHN
1939: Zaza, We Are Not
Alone, Rulers of the Sea.
POWER, TYRONE
1938: In Old Chicago, Alex-
ander's Ragtime Band, Marie
Antoinette, Suez.
1939: Jesse James, Rose of
Washington Square, Second
Fiddle, The Rains Came, Day-
Time Wife, Johnny Apollo.
POWERS, CHARLES
1939: Boy Slaves.
PRATHER, LEE
1938 : Women in Prison, Born
to the West, The Buccaneer.
1939: Homicide Bureau.
PRATT, PURNELL
1938: Come on Rangers.
1939: My Wife's Relatives,
Colorado Sunset.
PREISSER, JUNE
1939: Babes in Arms, Danc-
ing Co-ed, Judge Hardy and
Son.
PRESTON, ROBERT
1938: King of Alcatraz, Ille-
gal Traffic.
1939: Disbarred, Union Pa-
cific, Beau Geste.
PRICE, ALONZO
1938 : Forbidden Valley.
PRICE, HAL
1938: Code of the Rangers,
Call the Mesquiteers, Pioneer
Trail.
1939: Home on the Prairie,
Overland Mail, New Frontier.
PRICE, STANLEY
1939: Undercover Doctor, The
Star Maker, Range War, The
Great Commandment.
PRICE, VINCENT
1938: Service de Luxe.
1939: The Private Lives of
Elizabeth and Essex, Tower
of London.
PRIMA, LOUIS
1938: Start Cheering.
1939: Rose of Washington
Square.
PRINCESS LUANA
1938 : Trade Winds.
1939: Hawaiian Nights.
PRINGLE, AILEEN
1939: The Hardys Ride High,
Should a Girl Marry.
437
I* I « 1/ 1» r s ' tt or h
PRIVAL. LUCIEN
1938 : Mr. Wong — Detective.
1939: Confessions of a Nazi
Spy, Beasts of Berlin, Nurse
Edith Cavell, Espionage Agent.
1'KOSSER, HUGH
1938: Blockade.
PROUTY, JED
1938: Walking Down Broad-
way, Love on a Budget, Keep
Smiling, Goodbye Broadway,
Safety in Numbers, A Trip
to Paris, Danger on the Air,
Down on the Farm, The Duke
of West Point.
1939 : Down on the Farm.
Exile Express. Gracie Allen
Murder Case. Hollywood Cav-
alcade. Quick Millions, Too
Busv to Work.
PRYOR. ROGER
1939: The Man They Could
Not Hang.
PUGLIA. FRANK
1938: Rascals, Barefoot Boy,
Dramatic School, Sharpshoot-
ers.
1939: Forged Passport, Maisic.
Code of the Secret Service.
In Old Caliente.
PULLEN, FRED
1938: Booloo.
PUNSLY, BERNARD
1938: Crime School. Little
Tough Guy, Angels with Dirty
Faces.
1939: Angels Wash Their
Faces. On Dress Parade.
PURCELL. DICK
1938: Alcatraz Island, The
Daredevil Drivers, Over the
Wall, Accidents Will Hap-
pen, Flight Into Nowhere.
Mystery House. Valley of the
Giants, P e n r o d ' s Double
Trouble, Garden of the Moon,
Air Devils, Broadway Musket-
eers, Nancy Drew — Detective.
1939: Blackwell's Island.
Tough Kid. Streets of New-
York. Heroes in Blue. Irish
Luck.
PUTNAM, STEVE
1938: Mr. Dodle Kicoks Off.
QUALEN. JOHN
1938: The Bad Man of Brim
stone, Joy of Living, The
Chaser. The Mad Miss Man-
ton, Outside the Law, Five
of a Kind.
1939: Stand Up and Fight.
Mickey the Kid, Honeymoon
in Bali, Thunder Afloat. Four
Wives.
QUIGLEY. CHARLES
1938: Convicted.
1939: Heroes in Blue. Special
Inspector.
QUIGLEY. JUANITA
1938: Having a Wonderful
Time. Woman Against Wom-
an, That Certain Age. The
Mad Miss Manton.
1939: The Familv Next Door.
QUILLAN. EDDIE
1938 : Swing Sister Swing.
1939: The Flving Irishman.
Made for Each Other. The
Family Next Door. Young
Mr. Lincoln. Hawaiian Night-.
Alleghenv Uprising.
QUINN. ANTHONY
1938 : The Buccaneer, Danger-
ous to Know, Tip-Off Girls,
Hunted Men, Bulldog Drum-
mond in Africa, King of Alca-
traz.
1939: King of Chinatown,
I nion Pacific, Island of Lost
Men, Television Spy.
QUINN, TOMMY
1939: King of the Turf.
RAFT, GEORGE
1938: You and Me, Spawn of
the North.
1939: The Lady's from Ken
tucky, Each Dawn I Die, I
Stole a Million.
RAINER. LUISE
1938: The Toy Wife. The
Great Waltz, Dramatic School.
RAINS. CLAUDE
1938: Gold Is Where You
Find It, The Adventures of
Robin Hood, White Banners,
Four Daughters.
1939: They Made Me a Crim-
inal, Juarez, Daughters Coura-
geous. Mr. Smith Goes to
Washington, Four Wives.
RAKES. NAPIER
1939: Rulers of the Sea.
RALPH, JESSIE
1938: Love Is a Headache.
Hold that Kiss, Port of Seven
Seas.
1939: St. Louis Blues. Cafe
Society, Four Girls in White.
The Kid from Texas. Mickey
the Kid, Drums Along the
Mohawk.
RALSTON, ESTHER
1938: Slander House.
RALSTON. MARCIA
1938: Gold Is Where You
Find It, Fools for Scandal,
Crime Takes a Holiday, Men
Are Such Fools.
RAMBEAU. MARJORIE
1938: Merrily We Live, Worn
an Against Woman.
1939: The Rains Came. Laugh
It Off.
RAMSEY, ALLAN
1938: Tuvenile Court.
RANDALL. JACK
1938: Man's Country. The
Mexicali Kid. Gun Packer.
1939: Wild Horse Canyon.
Overland Mail.
RANDALL, MARGARET
1938: Romance in the Dark,
You and Me.
RANDOL, GEORGE
1938: Harlem on the Prairie
RANDOLPH, LILLIAN
1938: Life Goes On.
RANKIN, DORIS
1938: Saleslady.
1939: Societv Smugglers.
RAQUELLO, EDWARD
1938: The Patient in Room
18, Western Tamboree, Torchy
Gets Her Aran, The Last Ex-
press.
1939: Girls from Mexico, Miss
ing Daughters.
RASCH. WILSON D.
1939: Down the Wyoming
Trail.
RATHBONE. BASIL
1938: The Adventures of
Marco Polo, The Adventures
of Robin Hood, If I Were
King. The Dawn Patrol.
1939: The Hound of the Bas
kervilles. Son of Frankenstein.
The Sun Never Sets, Rio.
Tower of London. The Ad-
ventures of Sherlock Holmes.
RATOFF. GREGORY
1938: Sally Irene and Mary,
Gateway, Forbidden Territory.
RAUCOURT, JULES
1938: Artists and Model*
Abroad.
RAWITZER, ELOISE
1938: Danger on the Air.
RAWLINSON. HERBERT
1938: Women Are Like That.
The Kid Comes Back, Hawaii
Calls, Torchy Gets Her Man,
Orphans of the Street, Secrets
of an Actress, Under the Big
Top.
1939: You Cant' Get Awav
With Murder, Dark Victory.
RAY, ARTHUR
1939: Double Deal.
RAY. LEAH
1938: Happy Landing, Walk
ing Down Broadway.
RAY. TERRY
1938: Cocoanut Grove.
RAYE, MARTHA
1938: Big Broadcast of 1938,
College Swing, Give Me a
Sailor.
1939: Never Say Die, $1,000
a Touchdown.
RAYE, TERRY
1938: You and Me.
RAYMOND, ART
1938: The Duke of Witt
Point.
RAYMOND, CYRIL
1938: He Loved an Actress.
RAYMOND. FRANCES
1939: The Star Maker.
RAYMOND. GENE
1938 : She's Got Everything.
Stolen Heaven.
READ, BARBARA
1938: The Crime of Dr. Hal-
let, Midnight Intruder.
1939: The Spellbinder, Sorority
House.
REAGAN. PHIL
1938: Outside of Paradise.
1939: She Married a Cop.
Flight at Midnight.
REAGAN, RONALD
1938: Sergeant Murphy, Swing
Your Lady, Accidents Will
Happen. Cowboy from Brook-
lyn, Boy Meets Girl, Brother
Rat, Going Places, Girls on
Probation.
1939: Dark Victory. Secret
Service of the Air. Code of the
Secret Service. Naughty But
Nice, Hell's Kitchen. Angels
Wash Their Faces, Smashing
the Monev Ring.
REBURN. STEWART
1939: Second Fiddle.
REDFIELD, BILLY
1939: Back Door to Heaven.
REEBE. LOREN
1938: Code of the Rangers.
REECE. RUTHIE
1939: The Gentleman from
Arizona.
REED. GEORGE
1938 : The Buccaneer, Ken
tuckv, Going Places.
1939 : Secret of Dr. Kildare.
Swanee River.
REED. PHILLIP
1938: Merrily We Live.
REESE-BURNS. ETHEL
1938: Woman Against the
World.
REEVES. GEORGE
1939: Gone With the Wind.
REGAN. TAYNE
1938: Mr. Moto's Gamble.
Walking Down Broadway.
Josette, Booloo.
438
K EGAS, GEORGE
1938: Hawaiian Buckaroo,
Torchy Blane in Panama,
Clipped Wings, Mr. Moto
Takes a Chance.
1939: Arrest BuWdog Drum
mond, Juarez and Maximilian,
Codr of the Secret Service.
The Cat and the Canary. The
Adventures of Sherlock Holmes,
The Light That Failed.
REICHEK. FRANK
1938: Rascals. Prison Nurse,
City Streets, I'll Give a Mil-
lion. Torchy Gets Her Man.
1939: Mystery of the White
Room. Woman Doctor, Juarez.
Tlie Magnificent Fraud, Our
Neighbors the Carters, The
Escape, South of the Border.
Everything Happens at Night.
REMLEY, RALPH
1938: Outside of Paradise.
1939: The Story of Alexander
Graham Bell, King of the Un-
derworld.
RENALDO. DUNCAN
1938: Rose of the Rio Grande.
Spawn of the North, Crime
Afloat.
1939: Rough Riders Round
L'p, Juarez and Maximilian.
The Kansas Terrors, Cow-
boys from Texas, South of
the Border.
RENAVENT, GEORGES
1938 : Jezebel, Gold Diggers in
Paris, I'll Give a Million.
Artists and Models Abroad.
1939: Topper Takes a Trip.
The Three Musketeers. Pack
Up Your Troubles.
RENEE & STELLA
1939: Another Thin Man.
RENTCHLER. MICKEY
1938: The Adventures of Tom
Sawyer, Boys Town, Peck's
Bad Boy at the Circus.
1939: Made for Each Other.
REYNOLDS. CRAIG
1938: Female Fugitives, Mak-
ing the Headlines, The House
of Mystery, Romance on the
Run, Gold Mine in the Sky,
I Am a Criminal, Slander
House.
1939: The Mystery of Mr.
Wong, Navy Secrets, Wall
Street Cowboy, Bad Little
Angel, The Gentleman from
Arizona.
REYNOLDS, GENE
1938: Of Human Hearts, In
Old Chicago, The Crowd
Roars, Boys Town, Love Finds
Andy Hardy.
1939: The Flying Irishman.
The Spirit of Culver, They
Shall Have Music.
REYNOLDS, HARRINGTON
1939: Ride 'Em Cowgirl.
REYNOLDS. MARJORIE
1938: The Overland Express.
Six Shootin' Sheriff, Man's
Country, Black Bandit, Rebel-
lious Daughters.
1939: Mystery Plane. Streets
of New York. Racketeers of
the Range, Stunt Pilot, Mr.
Wong in Chinatown, Danger
Flight, Sky Patrol.
RHETT, ALICIA
1939: Gone With the Wind.
RHODES. ERIK
1938: Dramatic School, Say It
in French, Meet the Girls.
Mysterious Mr. Moto of
Devil's Island.
1939: On Your Toes.
RHODES. ILA
1939: Secret Service of the
Air, Women in the Wind.
RIANO, REINE
1938: Outside of Parade-
Four's a Crowd, Men Are Such
Fools, Spring Madness, Thanks
for Everything, Nancy Drew —
Detective.
1939: Wife, Husband and
Friend. Nancy Drew and the
Hidden Staircase. Day - Time
Wife, Disputed Passage. Nan
cy Drew — Trouble Shooter, The
Honeymoon's Over.
RICE. FLORENCE
1938: Paradise for Three, Fast
Company. Vacation from Love,
Sweethearts.
1939: Four Girls in Whin.
Stand Up and Fight, The Kid
from Texas. Little Accident,
Miracles for Sale, At the Cir-
cus.
RICE. JACK
1938: Arson Gang Busters.
RICH. DICK
1939 : Let Freedom Ring.
Angels Wash Their Faces.
RICH, GLORIA
1938: King of the Newsboys,
The Old Barn Dance, Oullaws
of Sonora, A Desperate Adven-
ture.
RICH, IRENE
1938: That Certain Age.
1939: Everybody's Hobby.
RICHARDS, ADDISON
1938: Prison Nurse, The Black
Doll, Alcalraz Island, Acci-
dents Will Happen, Valley of
the Giants, Boys Town, The
Last Express, Flight to Fame.
1939: They Made Her a Spy,
Twelve Crowded Hours. Whis-
pering Enemies. Off the Rec-
ord. Burn 'Em Up O'Connor.
Exile Express, Mystery of the
White Room. Inside Informa-
tion, Andy Hardy (lets Spring
Fever. They All Come Out.
Thunder Afloat. Espionage
Agent, Geronimo. Bad Lands.
Nick Carter — Master De-
tective.
RICHARDS, GRANT
1938: My Old Kentucky
Home. Love on Toast, Under
the Big Top.
1939: Risky Business. Inside
Information.
RICHMAN. CHARLES
1938: The Adventures of Tom
Sawyer, Blondes at Work, The
Cowbov and the Lady.
1939: Dark Victory, Exile Ex
press.
RICHMOND. KANE
1938: Mars Attacks the World.
1939: Tail Spin. Winner Take
All. Return of the Cisco Kid.
Charlie Chan in Reno, Chicken
Wagon Family, 20.000 Men a
Year. The Escape.
RICHMOND, WARNER
1938: Wolves of the Sea, Six
Shootin' Sheriff, Prairie Moon.
1939: Wild Horse Canyon.
RICKETTS. THOMAS
(Deceased)
1938: Bluebeard's Eighth
Wife, Young Fugitives, The
Young in Heart.
RIDEOUT. ROBERT
1938: Convicted.
1939: Manhattan Shakedown.
RIDGELEY, JOHN
1938: The Patient in Room 18.
Blondes at Work, Forbidden
439
I* I a y e r s ' W o r k
Valley, rorcliy Blane in Pan
.on. i. White Manners, Cowboy
from Brooklyn, My Bill, Little
Miss Thoroughbred, Hard to
Get, Going Places, Torchy Gets
Her Alan.
1939: You Can't Get Away
With Murder, Secret Service
of the Air, Wings of the Navy.
They Made Me a Criminal,
Nancy Drew and the Hid-
den Staircase, Everybody's
Hobby, Indianapolis Speedway,
Torchy Plays with Dynamite.
The Cowboy Quarterback, Kiel
Nightingale.
RIDGES. STANLEY
1938: Yellow Jack, The Mad
Miss Manton, If I Were King,
There's That Woman Again.
1939: Let Us Live, Silver on
the Sage, Union Pacific, Each
Dawn I Die, Espionage Agent.
Dust Be My Destiny, Nick
Carter — Master Detective.
RIGGI, FRANK
1939: They Made Me a Crim
inal.
RIGGS, TOMMY
1938: Goodbye Broadway.
RIOS, ELVIRA
1939: Stagecoach.
RISDON, ELIZABETH
1938: Mad About Music, Cow-
boy from Brooklyn, The Affairs
of Annabel, My Bill, Girls on
Probation.
1939: The Great Man Votes.
Huckleberry Finn, Sorority
House, Girl from -Mexico, Five
Came Back, The Forgotten
W Oman, The Roaring Twen-
ties, Disputed Passage, Full
Confession, The Man Who
Dared, Mexican Spitfire.
RITTER, TEX
1938: Frontier Town, Where
the Buffalo Roam, Starlight
Over Texas, Rolling Plains.
Utah Trail.
1939: Song of the Buckaroo.
Down the Wyoming Trail, Roll
Wagons Roll. Sundown on the
Prairie, Rolling Westward, The
Man from Texas. Riders of the
Frontier, Westward Stage.
RITZ BROTHERS
1938: The Goldwyn Follies,
Kentucky Moonshine, Straight
Place and Show.
1939: The Three Musketeers,
The Gorilla, Pack Up Your
Troubles.
RIVERO, JULIAN
1939: luarez and Maximilian.
x'OACH. BERT
1938: Mad About Music,
Stolen Heaven, Romance on
the Run, Algiers, Inside Story,
The Great Waltz.
1939: Rose of Washington
Square, The Alan in the Iron
Mask, Nurse Edith Cavell.
ROACH, MARGARET
1939: Captain Fury, Fast and
Furious.
ROADMAN, BETTY
1938: It's All Yours, The
I Ieadleys at Home.
Players' Worh
ROBARDS. JASON
1938: Clipped Wings, Cipher
Bureau, Flight to Fame.
1939 : Mystery Plane, Juarez
and Maximilian, Stunt Pilot,
Range War, Sky Patrol, Dan-
ger Flight.
ROBBINS, JAMES
1938: The Kid Comes Back,
Lady in the Morgue.
1939: Bad Boy.
ROBERT1, LYDA
( Deceased)
1938: Wide Open Faces.
ROBERTS, BEATRICE
1938: The Devil's Party, Mars
Attacks the World.
ROBERTS, BEVERLY
1938: The House of Mystery,
Call of the Yukon, The Dare-
devil, Making the Headlines,
Tenth Avenue Kid, Flirting
with Fate, Outside the Law.
1939: I Was a Convict, Tropic
Fury.
ROBERTS, BILL
1938: The Texans.
ROBERTS, FLORENCE
1938 : Love on a Budget, A
Trip to Paris, Safety in Num-
bers, Down on the Farm, The
Storm, Personal Secretary.
1939: Down on the Farm,
Ouick Millions, Too Busy to
Work.
ROBERTS, LEONA
1938: Of Human Hearts,
Bringing Up Baby, Condemned
Women, This Marriage Busi-
ness, Crime Ring, Having
Wonderful Time, The Affairs
of Annabel, I Stand Accused,
Kentucky.
1939: Persons in Hiding,
Bachelor Mother, The Escape,
Gone With the Wind, Swanee
River.
ROBERTS, LYNN
1938: Call the Mesquiteers,
Hollywood Stadium Mystery,
The Higgins Family, Billy the
Kid Returns.
1939 : Everything's On Ice.
ROBERTS, WILFRED
1939: The Light That Failed.
ROBERTSON, EDWARD
1938 : Life Goes On.
ROBERTSON, WILLARD
1938 : Roaring Timber, Gangs
of New York, Island in the
Sky, You and Me. Men With
Wings, Kentucky, Torchy Gets
Her Man.
1939: Jesse James, Heritage
of the Desert, My Son is a
Criminal, Each Dawn I Die,
Range War, Two Bright Boys.
ROBESON, PAUL
1938: Dark Sands.
ROBINS, EDWARD H.
193S: Love on Toast.
ROBINSON. BILL
1938 : Rebecca of Sunnybrook
Farm, Road Demon, Up the
River, Just Around the Corner.
ROBINSON. DEWEY
1938: Army Girl, Broadway
Musketeers, Ride a Crooked
Mile.
1939: Navy Secrets, Forged
Passport.
ROBINSON, EDWARD G.
1938: A Slight Case of Mur-
der, The Amazing Dr. Clitter-
house, I Am the Law.
1939: Confessions of a Nazi
Spy, Blackmail, Dr. Ehrlich's
Magic Bullet.
ROBINSON, FRANCES
1938: Forbidden Valley, The
Last Warning, Secrets of a
Nurse.
1939: Society Smugglers, Risky
Business, The Family Next
Door, Desperate Trails, Hero
for a Day, Tower of Lon-
don.
ROBINSON, JAMES
1938: Long Shot, Phantom
Gold.
ROBINSON, RUTH
1938: The Lone Wolf in Paris.
ROBLES, RUDY
1939: The Real Glory.
ROBSON, FLORA
1939: Wuthering Heights, We
Are Not Alone.
ROBSON. MAY
1938: Bringing Up Baby, The
Adventures of Tom Sawyer,
The Texans, Four Daughters.
1939: Yes — My Darling
Daughter, They Made Me a
Criminal, The Kid from Ko-
komo, Daughters Courageous,
That's Right — You're Wrong,
Nurse Edith Cavell, Four
Wives.
ROCHELLE, CLAIRE
1939: Code of the Fearless,
Missing Daughters, El Di-
ablo Rides.
ROCKWELL, JACK
1938: Under Western Stars,
West of Cheyenne, Law of the
Plains, Prairie Moon, Shine
on Harvest Moon, Black Ban-
dit.
1939: Rough Riders' Round-
Up, Silver on the Sage, Man
from Sundown, Renegade Trail,
Days of Jesse James.
RODIAN. JOHN
1939: Tower of London.
RODIN-RYAN, MAUREEN
1938: Little Miss Thorough-
bred.
ROE. RAYMOND
1939: Back Door to Heaven.
ROEBUCK, TINY
1938 : Straight Place and
Show.
ROGERS, CHARLES (Buddy)
1938: Let's Make a Night of
It.
ROGERS, GERALD
1939: Bulldog Drummond's
Secret Police.
ROGERS, GINGER
1938: Vivacious Lady, Having
Wonderful Time, Carefree.
1939 : The Story of Vernon
and Irene Castle, Bachelor
Mother, Fifth Avenue Girl,
Primrose Path.
ROGERS. JEAN
1938 : Meridian 7-1212, Always
in Trouble, Mysterious Mr.
Moto of Devil's Island, Mars
Attacks the World, Time Out
for Murder, Inside Story.
1939: Hotel for Women, Stop
Look and Love.
ROGERS, JOHN
1938 : The Buccaneer.
1939: Arrest Bulldog Drum-
mond.
ROGERS, KENT
1939: Streets of New York.
ROGERS, ROY
1938: Under Western Stars,
Shine on Harvest Moon, Come
on Rangers, Billy the Kid Re-
turns.
1939: Rough Riders' Round-
Up, Frontier Pony, Express,
In Old Caliente, Wall Street
Cowboy, Southward Ho, The
Arizona Kid, Saga of Death
Valley, Jeepers Creepers, Days
of Jesse James, Dark Com-
mand.
ROGERS, RUTH
1938: You and Me.
1939: Silver on the Sage,
The Night Riders.
ROLAND, GILBERT
1938: Gateway.
1939: Juarez.
ROMANOFF, CONSTANTINE
1938 : Meet the Girls.
ROMANTINI, JOE
1938: Cipher Bureau.
ROMERO, CESAR
1938: Happy Landing, Always
Goodbye, My Lucky Star, Five
of a Kind.
1939: Wife Husband and
Friend, The Little Princess,
Return of the Cisco Kid,
Charlie Chan at Treasure
Island, Frontier Marshall.
ROMERO, GRACILLA
1939: Juarez and Maximilian.
RONDELL, RONNIE
1938: Cocoanut Grove.
1939: Beau Geste.
ROONEY, MICKEY
1938: Love is a Headache,
Judge Hardy's Children,
You're Only Young Once,
Hold That Kiss, Lord Jeff,
Love Finds Andy Hardy, Boys
Town, Out West With the
Hardys, Stablemates.
1939: Huckleberry Finn, The
Hardys Ride High, Andy
Hardy Gets Spring Fever,
Babes in Arms, Judge Hardy
and Son.
ROOSEVELT, BUDDY
1938: The Buccaneer.
ROQUEMORE. HENRY
1938: Goodbye Broadway,
Youg Fugitives, Barefoot
Boy.
1939: Exile Express, Babes in
Arms.
ROS, RAMON
1938 : Blockade.
ROSAMOND. CLINTON
1938 : The Toy Wife.
1939: Stand Up and Fight.
Calling Dr. Kildare.
ROSENBLOOM, MAXIE
1938 : Mr. Moto's Gamble, The
Kid Comes Back, Gangs of
Xew York, The Amazing Dr.
Clitterhouse, Submarine Patrol.
1939 : Women in the Wind,
The Kid from Kokomo.
Naughty But Nice, Each Dawn
I Die, 20,000 Men a Year.
ROSENER, GEORGE
1939: Confessions of a Nazi
Spy, Beasts of Berlin, The
Great Commandment.
440
ROSENTHAL, HARRY
1939: Tail Spin, Wife Hus-
band and Friend.
ROSING, BODIL
1938 : The First Hundred
Years You Can't Take It With
You.
1939: Confessions of a Nazi
Spy, Beasts of Berlin, The
Star Maker.
ROSS, LANNY
1938: The Lady Objects.
ROSS, SHIRLEY
1938: Big Broadcast of 1938,
Prison Farm, Thanks for the
Memory.
1939: Paris Honeymoon, Cafe
Society, Some Like It Hot,
Unexpected Father.
ROSS, THOMAS W.
1939 : Blondie Takes a Vaca-
tion.
ROUBERT, MATTY
1938: Shine on Harvest Moon.
ROUVEROL. JEAN
1938 : Annabella Takes a Tour,
Western Jamboree, The Law
West of Tombstone.
ROUX, TONY
1938: In Old Mexico.
1939: The Llano Kid.
ROWAN. DON
1938: Wanted by the Police,
Racket Busters.
1939: Tough Kid, Nancy
Drew and the Hidden Stair-
case, Everybody's Hobby.
ROWLES, DOUGLAS
1938 : Alexander's Ragtime
Band.
ROYCE, LIONEL
1939: Confessions of a Nazi
Spy, 6,000 Enemies, Con-
spiracy, Pack Up Your
Troubles, Nurse Edith Ca-
vell.
ROYLE, WILLIAM
1938: Convicts at Large.
1939: The Renegade Ranger,
Mexicali Rose, Frontier Pony
Express, The Man in the Iron
Mask, Mr. Wong in China-
town, Mutiny in the Big
House, The Rains Came, The
Fighting Gringo.
RUB. CHRISTIAN
1938: Mad About Music, I'll
Give a Million, Professor Be-
ware, You Can't Take It With
You, The Great Waltz.
1939: Forged Passport, Never
Say Die, Hidden Power, No
Place to Go, Everything Hap-
pens at Night.
RUBIN, BENNY
1938: The Headleys at Home.
RUGGLES, CHARLIE
1938: Bringing Up Baby,
Breaking the Ice, Service de
Luxe.
1939: Invitation to Happiness,
Night Work, Balalaika, The
Farmer's Daughter.
RUHL, WILLIAM
1939: Tough Kid.
RUICK, MEL
1938: The Buccaneer.
RUMANN, SIG
1938: Paradise for Three, The
Saint in New York, I'll Give
a Million, Suez, Girls on Pro-
bation, The Great Waltz.
1939: Honolulu, Never Say
Die, Confessions of a Nazi
Spy, Only Angels Have Wings,
Ninotchka, Remember?
RUSH, DICK
1938: Trade Winds, Sante Fe
Stampede.
RUSKIN, SHIMEN
1938: Having Wonderful
Time.
RUSSELL, BYRON
1939: One Third of a Nation.
RUSSELL, JOHN
1938 : Always Goodbye, Five
of a Kind.
1939: Jesse James, Mr. Smith
Goes to Washington, Sabo-
tage, The Man Who Dared.
RUSSELL. MARY
1938 : Extortion, Squadron of
Honor.
RUSSELL. ROSALIND
1938 : Man-Proof, Four's a
Crowd, The Citadel.
1939: Fast and Loose, The
Women.
RUTH, MARY
1939: Song of the Buckaroo,
They Shall Have Music.
RUTHERFORD, ANN
1938: Of Human Hearts,
Judge Hardy's Children,
You're Only Young Once,
Love Finds Andy Hardy, A
Christmas Carol, Dramatic
School, Out West With the
Hardys.
1939: Four Girls in White,
The Hardys Ride High, Andy
Hardy Gets Spring Fever,
These Glamour Girls, Dancing
Co-ed, Judge Hardy and Son,
Gone With the Wind.
RUTHERFORD, JOHN
1938: The Buccaneer.
RUTHERFORD, TOM
1938 : A Desperate Adventure,
Vacation from Love.
RYAN, PEGGY
1939: The Flying Irishman,
She Married a Cop.
RYAN, STEVE
1938: Rangers Roundup.
RYAN, TOMMY
1938: Tenth Avenue Kid, Or-
phans of the Street, Prairie
Moon.
1939: My Wife's Relatives,
Streets of Missing Men,
Mickey the Kid, Should Hus-
bands Work?, The Covered
Trailer.
SAID, HASSON
1939 : Stanley and Livingstone.
ST. JOHN, AL
1938: Rangers Roundup, Call
of the Yukon, Song and Bul-
lets, Frontier Scout.
1939: Trigger Pals.
ST. POLIS, IOHN
1938: Saleslady, International
Crime, Phantom Ranger, Mr.
Wong — Detective.
1939 : Boy's Reformatory,
They Shall Have Music.
SAIS, MARIN
1938: Pioneer Trail, Phantom
Gold.
1939: Juarez and Maximilian.
SALES. VIRGINIA
1938 : The Jury's Secret.
SANDE, WALTER
1938: Arson Gang Busters,
Ladies in Distress, Tenth Ave-
nue Kid.
SANDERS, GEORGE
1938: International Settlement,
Four Men and a Prayer.
1939 : Mr. Moto's Last Warn-
ing, The Saint Strikes Back,
Confessions of a Nazi Spy,
The Saint in London, Al-
legheny Uprising, Nurse Edith
Cavell.
SANFORD, RALPH
1938: The Patient in Room 18.
1939: The Star Maker.
Players9 Worh
SANTLEY, FRANK
1938: She's Got Everything.
SARGENT, CHARLES
1939: Down the Wyoming
Trail.
SARNO, HECTOR
1938: Flight Into Nowhere.
SAUM, CLIFF
1938: Torchy Gets Her Man.
1939: On Trial.
SAVAGE, DANIEL BOONE
1938: Swing Your Lady.
SAVO, JIMMIE
1938 : Reckless Living.
SAWYER, JOSEPH
1938: Tarzan's Revenge, Stolen
Heaven, Always in Trouble,
Passport Husband, Heart of
the North, The Storm, Cam-
bling Ship.
1939 : You Can't Get Away
With Murder, The Lady and
the Mob, Confessions of a
Nazi Spy, Inside Information,
Sabotage, Frontier Marshall,
I Stole a Million, The Roar-
ing Twenties
SAWYERS, JO ANN
1938: Young Dr. Kildare.
1939: Huckleberry Finn, Fast
and Loose, Honolulu, Within
the Law.
SAYLES. FRANCIS
1938 : The Purple Vigilantes,
1939: Riders of Black River.
SAYLOR, SYD
1938 : The Black Doll, Born to
the West, Little Miss Broad-
way, There Goes My Heart,
Crashin' Thru Danger.
1939: Union Pacific, $1,000
a Touchdown.
SAYRE, JEFFREY
1939: Mutiny in the Big
House.
SCHARFF, LESTER
1939: The Great Command-
ment.
SCHILD KRAUT, JOSEPH
1938: The Baroness and the
Butler, Marie Antoinette, Suez.
1939: Idiot's Delight, The
Three Musketeers, The Man
in the Iron Mask, Pack Up
Your Troubles, Lady of the
Tropics, Mr. Moto Takes a
Vacation, The Rains Came.
SCHNICKELFRITZ BAND
1938: Gold Diggers in Paris.
SCHOENBERG,
ALEXANDER
1938: Crashin' Thru Danger.
1939: They Shall Have Mu-
sic.
SCOBEE, MERLE
1939: Down the Wyoming
Trail.
SCOBEE, RAY
1939 : Down the Wyoming
Trail.
SCOTT, DOUGLAS
1939: Wuthering Heights, We
Are Not Alone, Intermezzo :
A Love Story.
SCOTT, FRED
1938: Rangers Roundup, Song
and Bullets.
1939: In Old Montana, Code
of the Fearless.
SCOTT, RANDOLPH
1938: Rebecca of Sunnybrook
Farm, The Road to Reno, The
Texans.
441
Players9 Work
1939: Jesse James, Susannah
of the Mounties. Coast Guard.
Frontier Marshal, 20,000 Men
a Year.
SCOTT, RAYMOND,
QUINTET
1938: Rebecca of Sunnybroow
Farm.
SEABROOK, GAY
1938: The Higgins Family,
Long Shot.
1939: Racketeers of the
Range.
SEABURY, INEZ
1938: Girl of the Golden West.
SEARL, JACKIE
1938 : Little Tough Guy, Little
Tough Guys in Society, That
Certain Age.
1939: Angels Wash Their
Faces.
SEBASTIAN, DOROTHY
1939: Rough Riders' Round
Up, The Arizona Kid.
SEDAN. ROLFE
1938: Bluebeard's Eighth
Wife, Stolen Heaven, I'll Give
a Million, A Desperate Adven-
ture, Under the Big Top.
1939 : The Story of Vernon
and Irene Castle. Juarez and
Maximilian, Ninotchka. Every-
thing Happens at Night.
SEDGWICK, EDNA
1938: Swing Sister Swing.
SEESE, DOROTHY
^1939: Five Little Peppers.
SEIDEL. TOM
1939: 20.000 Men a Year.
SELBIE, EVELYN
1938: Blockade.
SEMELS. HARRY
1938: Blockade.
1939: King of the Turf, Over-
land Mail.
SENNETT, MACK
1939: Hollywood Cavalcade.
SERGEANT, LEW
1938 : Tarzan and the Green
Goddess.
SEVERN, RAYMOND
1939: We Are Not Alone.
SEYMOUR, HARRY
1938: A Slight Case of Mur-
der, Boy Meets Girl.
SEYMOUR, JANE
1939: Back Door to Heaven.
SHANNON, FRANK
1938: Blondes at Work, Torchy
Blane in Panama, Torchy Gets
Her Man, Mars Attacks the
World.
1939: Torchy Blane in China-
town, Torchy Plays With
Dynamite.
SHANNON. PEGGY
1938 : Girls on Probation.
1939: Blackwell's Island, Fix-
er Dugan.
SHARON, JANE
1939: Everybody's Hobby.
SHARPE, DAVID
1939: Three Texas Steers.
Wyoming Outlaw.
SHAW, ALBERT
1938: The Last Express.
1939: Gracie Allen Murder
Case.
SHAW, ARTIE
1939: Dancing Co-ed.
SHAW, C. MONTAGUE
1938: Four Men and a Prayer.
Little Miss Broadway, Mars
Attacks the World.
SHAW, JANET
1938: Jezebel, Accidents Will
Happen, Gold Diggers in Paris.
Girls on Probation, The Sis-
ters.
1939: Torchy Blane in China-
town. The Old Maid.
SHAW, MONTAGUE
1939: The Three Musketeers.
The Rains Came, Stanley and
Livingstone.
SHAW, ROBERT
1939: Boy Friend, Quick Mil-
lions, 20,000 Men a Year.
SHAY, MILDRED
1939: Balalaika.
SHAYNE. KONSTANTIN
1939: Paris Honeymoon.
SHEAN. AL
1938: Too Hot to Handle, The
Great Waltz.
1939: Broadway Serenade.
Joe and Ethel Turp.
SHEARER, LUCILLE
1938: Unashamed.
SHEARER, NORMA
1938 : Marie Antoinette.
1939: Idiot's Delight, The
Women.
SHEEHAN, JOHN
1938: Dynamite Delaney.
1939: Wolf Call.
SHEFFIELD, JOHN
1939: Tarzan Finds a Son,
Babes in Arms.
SHEFFIELD, MACEO
1938: Harlem on the Prairie.
1939: Reform School, Double
Deal.
SHEFFIELD, REGINALD
1938: Female Fugitive, The
Buccaneer.
SHELDON, KATHERINE
1938: Quick Money, Num-
bered Woman, I'm from the
City. Sunset Trail.
1939: Our Leading Citizen.
SHELLEY. GEORGE
1938: Law of the Underworld.
SHERIDAN, ANN
1938 : Alcatraz Island, The Pa-
tient in Room 18, She Loved
a Fireman, Cowboy from
Brooklyn, Mystery House,
Little Miss Thoroughbred, Let-
ter of Introduction, Angels
With Dirty Faces, Broadway
Musketeers.
1939: Dodge City, They Made
Me a Criminal, Naughty But
Nice, Winter Carnival. In
dianapolis Speedway, Angels
Wash Their Faces.
SHERIDAN. FRANK
1938: City Streets.
1939: Heroes in Blue.
SHERIDAN, JAMES
1939: Overland Mail.
SHERLOCK. CHARLES
1939 : Confessions of a Nazi
Spy, King of the Turf.
SHERMAN, HIRAM
1939: One Third of a Natiun.
SHERO, TERRY
1939: Gone With the Wind.
SHERVENS BROTHERS
1939: Home on the Prairie.
SHERWOOD, GEORGE
1938: Overland Stage Raiders.
1939: Code of the Fearless.
SHIELDS, ARTHUR
1939: Drums Along the Mo
hawk.
SHIELDS, FRANK
1938: The Goldwyn Follies.
SHIPSTAD, EDDIE
1939: Ice Follies of 1939.
SHIPSTAD, ROY
1939: Ice Follies of 1939.
SHIRLEY, ANNE
1938: Condemned Women, Law
of the Underworld, Mother
Carey's Chickens, A Man to
Remember, Girl's School.
1939: Boy Slaves, Sorority
House, Career.
SHOEMAKER, ANNE
1939: Romance of the Red-
woods, They All Come Out,
Babes in Arms.
SHORT, DOROTHY
1938: Heart of Arizona, Where
the Buffalo Roam.
1939: Wild Horse Canyon,
Daughter of the Tong.
SHORT, GERTRUDE
1938: Tip-Off Girls.
SHRUM, WALTER
1938: The Old Barn Dance.
SHUMM. HANS
1939: Beasts of Berlin.
SHUMWAY. LEE
1938: Outlaws of the Prairie,
Rawhide, Spawn of the North,
Painted Desert.
SHUMWAY. WALTER
1939: Six-Gun Rhythm.
SIBELIUS, CELIA
1939 : Confessions of a Nazi
Spy.
SIDNEY. SYLVIA
1938: You and Me.
1939: One Third of a Nation.
SIERRA, MELISSA
1938 : Law of the Texan.
1939: Only Angels Have
Wings.
SIMMONS. BOB
1939: Reform School, One
Dark Night.
SIMMONS, GEORGIA
1938: Romance on the Run.
SIMMS. GINNY
1939: That's Right — You're
Wrong.
SIMMS, LARRY
1938: Blondie.
1939: Blondie Meets the Boss.
Blondie Brings Up Baby.
Blondie Takes a Vacation.
SIMON, SIMONE
1938: Josette.
SIMPSON, IVAN
1938: Invisible Enemy, The
Baroness and the Butler, The
Adventures of Robin Hood.
1939: The Hounds of the Bas-
kervilles. Made for Each
Other, Never Say Die, Rulers
of the Sea.
SIMPSON, REGINALD
1938: Gold is Where You Find
It.
SIMPSON, RUSSELL
1938: Valley of the Giants,
Heart of the North.
1939: Dodge City, Western
Caravans, Desperate Trails.
Drums Along the Mohawk.
442
SINCLAIR, HORACE
19^9 : One Third of a Nation.
SINCLAIR, HUGH
1939: Prisoner of Corba!
SINCLAIR, RONALD
1938 : A Christmas Carol.
1939' Tower of London, Five
Little Peppers, The Light Thai
Failed.
SINGER MIDGETS, THE
1939: The Wizard of Oz.
SINGLETON, PENNY
1938: Outside of Paradise,
Swing Your Lady, Men Are
Such Fools, Boy Meets Girl,
Mr. Chump, The Mad Miss
Manton, Garden of the Moon,
Secrets of an Actress, Hard to
Get, Blondie, Racket Busters.
1939: Blondie Meets the Boss.
Blondie Takes a Vacation.
Blondie Brings Up Baby.
SKELTON, RICHARD
1938 : Having Wonderful Time.
SKIPWORTH. ALISON
1938: King of the Newsboys,
Wide Open Faces, Ladies in
Distress.
SLATE BROS.
1938: College Swing.
SLOANE, OLIVE
1938: He Loved an Actress.
SMART, JOHN
1938: Cipher Bureau.
1939: Panama Patrol, Some
Like It Hot.
SMITH. C. AUBREY
1938 : Four Men and a Prayer,
Kidnapped, Sixty Glorious
Years.
1939: East Side of Heaven.
Five Came Back, The Sun
Never Sets, Eternally Yours.
Another Thin Man, The Un-
der-Pup, Balalaika.
SMITH, CLAUDE
1938: Sunset Trail.
SMITH. GERALD OLIVER
1938: Invisible Enemy, Gate-
way.
SMITH, JACK C.
1938: Paroled— To Die, Front-
ier Scout.
SMITH, KENT
1939: Back Door to Heaven.
SMITH. QUEENIE
1939: On Your Toes.
SMITH, ROBERTA
1938: Down on the Farm.
1939: Down on the Farm.
Hoy's Reformatory, What a
Life.
SNEGOFF, LEONID
1939: Barricade.
SNOWFLAKE
1938: Wild Horse Rodeo, Ha-
waiian Buckaroo, Under the
Big Top.
SODERLING. WALTER
1939: Death of a Champion.
SOJIN, MRS.
1938: Trade Winds.
SOKOLOFF, VLADIMIR
1938 : Arsene Lupin Returns,
Alcatraz Island, Blockade, The
Amazing Dr. Clitterhouse,
Spawn of the North, Ride a
Crooked Mile.
1939 : Juarez, The Real Glory.
SONDERGAARD. GALE
1938: Lord Jeff, Dramatic
School .
1939: Never Say Die, Juarez,
The Cat and the Canary, The
Llano Kid.
SONS OF THE PIONEERS
1939: Western Caravans, Rid
ers of the Black River, Out-
posts of the Motilities, Stranger
from Texas.
SOREL, GEORGE
1938: Swiss Miss.
1939 : Navy Secrets.
SORRELL, KAREN
1938: Flight Into Nowhere,
Mysterious Mr. Moto of
Devil's Island.
SOTHERN, ANN
1938: She's Got Everything,
Trade Winds.
1939: Maisie, Fast and Furi-
ous, Hotel for Women, Joe
and Ethel Turp.
SOTHERN, HUGH
1938 : The Buccaneer, Danger-
ous to Know, Flight to Fame.
1939: The Oklahoma Kid,
Juarez.
SOTHERN, JEAN
1939 : Down the Wyoming
Trail.
SOUBIER, CLIFFORD
1938 : Penrod and His Twin
Brother.
SOUTHERN, TOM
1939: Harlem Rides the Range,
Double Deal.
SOUSSANIN, NICHOLAS
1939: Those High Grey Walls.
SPACEY, JOHN G.
1938: Four Men and a Prayer,
Who Killed Gail Preston?
1939 : Special Inspector.
SPARKS. NED
1938: Hawaii Calls.
1939 : The Star Maker, Two's
Company.
SPEHR, ALBERT
1939: The Great Command
ment.
SPELLMAN, MARTIN
1938 : Boys Town, I Am a
Criminal, Santa Fe Stampede.
1939 : Let Us Live, Streets
of New York, Beau Geste.
SPELLMAN, MARTIN J., Jr.
1938: Sharpshooters.
SPOTTSWOOD, JAMES
1938: Hollywood Stadium
Mystery.
SQUIRES, JACK
1938: Dynamite Delaney.
STACK, ROBERT
1939: F'irst Love.
STACK, WILLIAM
1938: Man-Proof, Four Men
and a Prayer, Booloo.
STAFFORD, GRACE
1939: Confessions of a Nazi
Spy, The Man Who Dared,
Blondie Brings Up Baby.
STAFFORD SISTERS
1938 : The Old Barn Dance,
Gold Mine in the Sky.
STAHL, WALTER
1938: Little Miss Roughneck.
1939: Juarez, Beasts of Ber-
lin.
5TANDER, LIONEL
1938 : No Time to Marry, The
Crowd Roars, Professor Be-
ware.
1939: Ice Follies of 1939,
What a Life.
443
!• f « y ers' Wo r h
STANDING. WYNDHAM
1939: Bulldog Drummond's
Secret Police, The Man in
the Iron Mask.
STANLEY, EDWARD
1938: Born to be Wild, Alca-
traz Island, The Missing
Guest, Billy the Kid Returns.
1939: I Was a Convict, Es-
pionage Agent, The Star Mak-
er.
STANLEY, ERIC
1938: A Slight Case of Mur-
der, The Buccaneer, The Dare-
devil Drivers, The Patient in
Room 18, When Were You
Born?, Little Miss Thorough-
bred.
STANLEY, LOUISE
1938: Start Cheering, Thunder
in the Desert, Danger on the
Air, Gun Packer, Personal
Secretary.
STANLEY, RED
1938 Cocoanut Grove.
STANLEY, RICHARD
1938: Illegal Traffic, King of
Alcatraz.
1939: Persons in Hiding.
STANLEY, ROBERT
1938: Unashamed.
STANTON. PAUL
1938: Rascals, Law of the
Underworld, Kentucky Moon-
shine, My Lucky Star, Army
Girl.
1939 : The Story of Alexander
Graham Bell, Rose of Wash-
ington Square, Bachelor
Mother, Stronger Than De-
sire, 20,000 Men a Year, The
Star Maker, Hollywood Cav-
alcade, Stanley and Living-
stone.
STANTON, ROBERT
1939 : Three Sons.
STANTON, VAL
1938 : Prison Train.
STANTON, WILL
1938: Four Men and a Prayer,
Straight Place and Show.
1939: Tlie Little Princess,
Captain Fury.
STANWYCK, BARBARA
1938: Always Goodbye, The
Mad Miss Manton.
1939: Union Pacific, Golden
Boy, Remember the Night.
STARRETT. CHARLES
1938: Outlaws of the Prairie,
Start Cheering, Cattle Raiders,
Law of the Plains, West of
Cheyenne, Colorado Trail, Call
of the Rockies, South of Ariz-
ona.
1939 : West of Santa Fe,
Spoilers of the Range, West-
ern Caravans, Man from Sun-
down, Riders of Black River.
Outpost of the Mounties,
Stranger from Texas.
STEELE, BOB
1938 : Paroled— To Die, Desert
Patrol, Thunder in the Desert.
1939: Smoky Trail, El Diablo
Rides, Of Mice and Men.
Players' Worh
STEELE, JANE
1938: Dynamite Delaney.
STEELE. VERNON
1939: The Witness Vanishes
STEINER, DOROTHY
1938: Joy of Living.
STEINER, ESTELLE
1938: Joy of Living.
STEINKE, HANS
1938: The Buccaneer.
STELITA
1938: Born to the West.
STELLING. WILLIAM
1939 : Gone With the Wind.
STEN. ANNA
1939 : Exile Express.
STEPHENS. HARVEY
1938: Tip-Off Girls, Dangerous
to Know, The Texans.
1939: The Oklahoma Kid, You
Can't Get Away With Mur-
der, The House of Fear,
Grand Jury Secrets, Beau
Geste.
STEPHENS, MARVIN
1938 : Love on a Budget, Speed
to Burn, Safety in Numbers,
A Trip to Paris.
1939: Fighting Thoroughbreds.
Down on the Farm, Quick
Millions, Too Busy to Work.
STEPHENSON. HENRY
1938: The B aroness and the
Butler, Marie Antoinette, Suez,
Dramatic School, The Young
in Heart.
1939: Tarzan Finds a Son,
The Adventures of Sherlock
Holmes, The Private Lives of
Elizabeth and Essex.
STEPHENSON, JAMES
1938 : When Were You Born?,
White Banners, Cowboy from
Brooklyn, Boy Meets Girl,
Heart of the North, Nancy
Drew — Detective.
1939: King of the Underworld,
Secret Service of the Air,
Torchy Blane in Chinatown,
On Trial, Confessions of a
Nazi Spy, The Private Lives
of Elizabeth and Essex, The
Old Maid, We Are Not Alone,
Beau Geste, Espionage Agent.
STEVENS, CHARLES
1938: The Crime of Dr. Hallet,
Forbidden Valley.
1939: The Renegade Ranger.
Desperate Trails.
STEVENS, IRA
1939: The Little Princess.
STEVENS, KENNETH
1939: Broadway Serenade,
Winter Carnival.
STEVENS, LANDERS
1939: Zero Hour.
STEVENS, ONSLOW
1939: When Tomorrow Comes,
Those High Grey Walls.
STEVENSON, BOB
1939: Beasts of Berlin.
STEVENSON, MARGOT
1939: Smashing the Money
Ring.
STEWART, ELEANOR
1938 : The Painted Trail, The
Mexicali Kid.
STEWART, IVA
1938: Safety in Numbers.
1939 : Mr. Moto Takes a
Vacation.
STEWART, JAMES
1938: Of Human Hearts, Vi-
vacious Lady, The Shopworn
Angel, You Can't Take It
With You.
1939: Ice Follies of 1939,
Made for Each Other, It's
a Wonderful World, Mr.
Smith Goes to Washington,
Destry Rides Again.
STEWART, KAY
1939: What a Life.
STEWART. MAXINE
1939: Everything's On Ice.
STEWART, PEGGY
1938: Little Tough Guy, That
Certain Age.
1939: Everybody's Hobby.
STEWART, SOPHIE
1939: Nurse Edith Cavell.
STICKNEY. DOROTHY
1938: I Met My Love Again.
1939: What a Life.
STOCKDALE. CARL
1938: Hawaiian Buckaroo,
Rawhide, Blockade.
STONE. ARTHUR
1938: Go Chase Yourself.
STONE, BOBBY
1938: Gangster's Boy.
1939: Streets of New York.
STONE, FRED
1938 : Quick Money.
1939: No Place to Go.
STONE. GEORGE E.
1938: Mr. Moto's Gamble, A
Slight Case of Murder, Over
the Wall, Alcatraz Island, You
and Me, Long Shot, Subma-
rine Patrol.
1939: You Can't Get Away
With Murder, The House-
keeper's Daughter.
STONE, LEWIS
1938: The Bad Man of Brim-
stone, You're Only Young
Once, Judge Hardy's Children,
Stolen Heaven, Yellow Jack.
The Chaser, Love Finds Andy
Hardy, Out West With the
Hardys.
1939: Ice Follies of 1939,
The Hardys Ride High, Andy
Hardy Gets Spring Fever,
Judge Hardy and Son, Joe
and Ethel Turp.
STONE, MILBURN
1938: Port of Missing Girls,
Mr. Boggs Steps Out, Wives
Under Suspicion, Sinners in
Paradise, Crime School, Pa-
roled from the Big House,
California Frontier.
1939: Mystery Plane, King of
the Turf, Society Smugglers,
Blind Alibi, Young Mr. Lin-
coln, Stunt Pilot, Tropic
Fury, Sky Patrol, Danger
Flight, Nick Carter — Master
Detective, Charlie McCarthy
Detective, Crashing Thru.
STONE, PAULA
1938: In Old Chicago, Island
in the Sky, Down in Arkansaw,
Orphans of the Street, Con-
victs at Large.
1939: Laugh It Off.
STOREY. JUNE
1939: Home on the Prairie,
Sorority House, Blue Mon-
tana Skies, Mickey the Kid,
Mountain Rhythm, Colorado
Sunset, In Old Monterey, First
Love, South of the Border.
STORM, RAFAEL
1938: Straight Place an*
Show.
STRADNER, ROSE
1939: Blind Alibi.
STRANG, HARRY
1938: The Purple Vigilantes,
Come on Leathernecks, Squad-
ron of Honor, Phantom Rang-
er, Submarine Patrol.
1939: Return of the Cisco
Kid, Mr. Moto Takes a Va-
cation.
STRANGE, GLENN
1938: The Painted Trail, Bor-
der Wolves, The Last Stand,
In Old Mexico, Sunset Trail,
Mysterious Rider, Gun Packer,
Black Bandit, Call of the
Rockies.
1939: Rough Riders' Round-
Up, Blue Montana Skies, Law
of the Pampas, Range War,
Overland Mail, The Llano
Kid, The Fighting Gringo,
Days of Jesse James.
STRANGE, HENRY
1938: Two-Gun Justice.
STRANGE, ROBERT
1938: Sky Giant, I Stand Ac-
cused.
1939 : The Story of Vernon and
Irene Castle, They Made Me
a Criminal, The Saint Strikes
Back, Hell's Kitchen, Angels
Wash Their Faces, The Spell-
binder.
STRAUSS, WILLIAM H.
1939: Golden Boy.
STRELICH, STEVE
1938: Goodbye Broadway.
STUART. GLORIA
1938: Rebecca of Sunnybrook
Farm, Change of Heart, Island
in the Sky, Keep Smiling,
Meridian 7-1212, Time Out for
Murder, The Lady Objects.
1939: The Three Musketeers.
Winner Take All, It Could
Happen to You.
STUBBS. CHUCK
1939: They Shall Have Mu-
sic.
STUBBS. HARRY
1938: In Old Chicago, Dr.
Rhythm, Peck's Bad Boy with
the Circus, I Stand Accused.
STUDWICK, SHEPPERD
1938: Fast Company.
SUES, LEONARD
1939: What a Life.
SULLAVAN. MARGARET
1938: Three Comrades, The
Shopworn Angel, The Shining
Hour.
SULLIVAN. CHARLES
1938: Goodbye Broadway.
SULLIVAN, ED
1939: Big Town Czar.
SULLIVAN, ELLIOTT
1938: Fury Below, Accidents
Will Happen, Gangs of New
York, Next Time I Marry,
Racket Busters.
1939: King of the Underworld,
Smashing the Money Ring,
The Spellbinder.
SULLIVAN, J. MAURICE
1938: The Buccaneer.
SULLIVAN, MAXINE
1938: Going Places.
1939: St. Louis Blues.
444
SULLY, FRANK
1938: Hold That Co-ed,
Thanks for Everything.
1939: Some Like It Hot.
SUL-TE-WAN, MADAME
1938: In Old Chicago, Ken-
tucky.
SUMMERVILLE, GEORGE
"SLIM"
1938: Rebecca of Sunnybrook
Farm, Kentucky Moonshine,
Five of a Kind, Up the River,
Submarine Patrol.
1939: Jesse James, Winner
Take All, Charlie Chan in
Reno.
SUSS, BERNARD
1939: Mountain Rhythm.
SUTTON, GERTRUDE
1938: Say It in French.
SUTTON, GRADY
1938 : Vivacious Lady, Alex-
ander's Ragtime Band, Three
Loves Has Nancy, Having
Wonderful Time, The Mad
Miss Manton, Hard to Get.
1939 : It's a Wonderful World,
Angels Wash Their Faces,
Three Sons.
SUTTON, JOHN
1938: Four Men and a Prayer.
1939: Zaza, Arrest Bulldog
Drummond, Susannah of the
Mounties, Bulldog Drum-
mond's Bride, Tower of Lon-
don, Charlie McCarthy De-
tective.
SUTTON, KAY
1938 : The Saint in New York,
This Marriage Business, Care-
free, Smashing the Rackets,
I'm from the City, The Mad
Miss Manton.
1939: S. O. S. Tidal Wave.
SUTTON, PAUL
1938: Bar 20 Justice, The Spy
Ring, In Old Mexico, Shadows
Over Shanghai, Air Devils.
1939: Balalaika.
SWARTHOUT, GLADYS
1938 : Romance in the Dark.
1939 : Ambush.
SWICKARD, JOSEF
1938 : You Can't Take It With
You.
SWIRE, EARL
1939: On Trial.
SWITZER, CARL
(Alfalfa)
1938 : Scandal Street.
TAGGART, BEN
1938 : The Overland Express.
TALBOT, LYLE
1938: Call of the Yukon,
Change of Heart, One Wild
Night, Gateway, I Stand Ac-
cused, The Arkansas Traveler.
1939: Forged Passport, Second
Fiddle, They Asked for It,
Torture Ship.
TALIAFERRO, HAL
1938: Phantom Gold, Pioneer
Trail, Black Bandit.
1939 : Western Caravans,
Daughter of the Tong, Saga
of Death Valley, Outpost of
the Mounties.
TALLICHET, MARGARET
1938 : A Desperate Adventure,
Girl's School.
TAMIROFF, AKIM
1938: The Buccaneer, Danger-
ous to Know, Spawn of the
North, Ride a Crooked Mile.
1939: King of Chinatown,
Paris Honeymoon, Union Pa-
cific, The Magnificent Fraud,
Disputed Passage, Honeymoon
in Bali.
TANKARD, DENIS
1939: That's Right — You're
Wrong.
TANNEN, CHARLES
1938: My Lucky Star, Subma-
rine Patrol.
1939: Jesse James, Young Mr.
Lincoln. Drums Along the
Mohawk, Swanee River.
TANNEN, JULIUS
1938 : Love is a Headache.
1939: Danger Flight.
TANSEY, SHERRY
1938 : Paroled— To Die.
1939 : Silver on the Sage, Six-
Gun Rhythm.
TAPLEY. COLIN
1938 : Booloo, Storm Over
Bengal, If I Were King.
1939: The Light That Failed.
TAYLOR, AL
1938 : Man from Music Moun-
tain.
TAYLOR, DUB
1938: You Can't Take It With
You.
1939: Taming of the West.
TAYLOR, FERRIS
1938: He Couldn't Say No,
The Daredevil Drivers, Santa
Fe Stampede.
1939: Man of Conquest, Zero
Hour, S. O. S. Tidal Wave,
Mountain Rhythm, Main
Street Lawyer.
TAYLOR. FORREST
1938: The Painted Trail, The
Last Stand, Desert Patrol,
Outlaw Express, Heroes of
the Hills, Gun Packer, Black
Bandit, Law of the Texan,
Lightning Carson Rides Again.
1939: Riders of Black River.
TAYLOR, JACKIE
1939: Made for Each Other.
TAYLOR. KENT
1938 : The Jury's Secret, The
Last Express.
1939: Four Girls in White,
Gracie Allen Murder Case,
Five Came Back, Three Sons.
TAYLOR. LIBBY
1938 : The Toy Wife.
TAYLOR, MARY
1939 : Lady of the Tropics.
TAYLOR, NORMA
1938: I Demand Payment.
TAYLOR, ROBERT
1938: A Yank at Oxford,
Three Comrades, The Crowd
Roars.
1939: Stand Up and Fight,
Lucky Night, Lady of the
Tropics, Remember?
TEAL, RAY
1938: Western Jamboree.
TEASDALE, VERREE
1939 : Topper Takes a Trip,
Fifth Avenue Girl.
TEMPLE, SHIRLEY
1938: Rebecca of Sunnybrook
Farm, Little Miss Broadway,
Just Around the Corner.
1939: The Little Princess,
Susannah of the Mounties, The
Blue Bird.
TENBROOK, HARRY
1938: A Slight Case of Mur-
der, Rawhide.
Players' Worh
1939 : Stagecoach, Oklahoma
Frontier.
TENNANT, DOROTHY
1938: Men with Wings.
TERHUNE, MAX
1938: Wild Horse Rodeo, Call
the Mesquiteers, The Purple
Vigilantes, Outlaws of Sonora,
Riders of the Black Hills, La-
dies in Distress, Heroes of the
Hills, Santa Fe Stampede,
Pals of the Saddle, Overland
Stage Raiders.
1939 : The Night Riders, Man
of Conquest, Three Texas
Steers.
TERRY, ALBERT
1938: Man from Music Moun-
tain.
TERRY, BOB
1938: Six Shootin' Sheriff,
Lightning Carson Rides Again,
Stranger from Arizona, Star-
light Over Texas, Where the
Buffalo Roam.
1939: Song of the Buckaroo,
Down the Wyoming Trail.
TERRY, DON
1938: When G-Men Step In,
Who Killed Gail Preston?
Squadron of Honor.
TERRY, HAZEL
1939: Prisoner of Corbal.
TERRY, LINDA
1939 : Parents on Trial.
TERRY, PHILIP
1938: Yellow Jack, Hold That
Kiss.
1939: Four Girls in White,
Calling Dr. Kildare, On Bor-
rowed Time, Balalaika.
TERRY, LINDA
1938: The Mad Miss Manton.
TERRY, ROBERT
1938 : The Buccaneer.
TERRY, RUTH
1938 : International Settlement,
Alexander's Ragtime Band,
Hold That Co-ed.
1939: Wife Husband and
Friend.
TERRY, SHEILA
1938: Fury Below, I Demand
Payment.
TETLEY, WALTER
1938 : Lord Jeff, Prairie Moon.
1939 : Spirit of Culver, Boy
Slaves, They Shall Have Mu-
sic, Tower of London.
THANE, DIRK
1938: Wolves of the Sea.
1939: Daughter of the Tong.
THATCHER, HEATHER
1938 : Fools for Scandal, Girl's
School, If I Were King.
1939 : Beau Geste
THIELE, WALTER
1939 : Beasts or Berlin.
THOMAS, EVAN
1938 : The Buccaneer.
1939: Arrest Bulldog Drum-
mond, The Little Princess, The
Hound of the Ba.'kervilles.
THOMAS, FRANK M.
1938: Night Spot, Crashing
Hollywood, Quick Money, Ev-
erybody's Doing It, Go Chase
Yourself, This Marriage Busi-
ness, Crime Ring, Blind Alibi,
Maid's Night Out, Boys Town,
445
Players9 Work
Mr. Doodle Kicks Off, A Man
to Remember, Little Tough
Guys in Society, Nancy Drew
— Detective.
1939: Society Lawyer, The
Mysterious Miss X, Disbarred.
They Made Her a Spy, Grand
Jury Secrets, Bachelor Mother.
They All Come Out, Saga of
Death Valley, Death of a
Champion, Nancy Drew and
the Hidden Staircase, On
Dress Parade, Angels Wash
Their Faces, Nancy Drew —
Trouble Shooter.
THOMAS, JOHN
1939: Harlem Rides the Range.
THOMAS, MARY
1939: Our Neighbors the Car-
ters.
THOMPSON, EDWARD
1938: Life Goes On.
1939: Reform School, Double
Deal.
THOMPSON, NICK
1938: Blockade.
THREE NELSONS, THE
1938: Keep Smiling.
THREE STOOGES, THE
1938 : Start Cheering.
THURSBY, DAVE
1939: Rulers of the Sea.
TIBBETTS, MARTHA
1938 : Female Fugitive.
TILBURY. ZEFFIE
1938: Bulldog Drummond's
Peril, Josette, Woman Against
Woman.
1939: The Story of Alexander
Graham Bell, Arrest Bulldog
Drummond, Tell No Tales,
Balalaika.
TOBIAS, GEORGE
1939: Maisie, They All Come
Out, The Hunchback of Xotre
Dame, Balalaika.
TOBIN, GENEVIEVE
1938: Dramatic School.
1939: Zaza, Yes— My Darling
Daughter, Our Neighbors the
Carters.
TOBY, DAN
1938: Man-Proof, Hollywood
Stadium Mystery.
TODD, ANN
1939: Zero Hour, Stronger
Than Desire, Intermezzo: A
Love Story, Destry Rides
Again.
TODD, EMILY
1938: Unashamed.
TODD, MABEL
1938: Gold Diggers in Paris,
Garden of the Moon, The Cow-
boy and the Lady.
1939: The Mysterious Miss X.
Mystery of the White Room,
Streets of Missing Men.
TOLER, SIDNEY
1938: Gold Is Where You
Find It, Wide Open Faces,
One Wild Night, Charlie Chan
in Honolulu, Up the River,
Mysterious Rider, If I Were
King, Broadway Cavalier.
1939: Heritage of the Desert,
Disbarred, King of Chinatown.
The Kid from Kokomo, Charlie
Chan in Reno, Charlie Chan
at Treasure Island, Law of
the Pampas, Charlie Chan in
the City in Darkness.
TOM, LAYNE, JR.
1938: Charlie Chan in Hono-
lulu.
TOMARCHIO, LUDOVICO
1938: Swiss Miss.
TOMBES. ANDREW
1938: Sally Irene and Mary,
Battle of Broadway, Romance
on the Run, One Wild Night,
A Desperate Adventure, Al-
ways in Trouble, Thanks for
Everything, Five of a Kind,
Vacation from Love.
1939: What a Life, Too Busy
to Work.
TOMLIN, PINKY
1938: Down in Arkansaw.
TONE, FRANCHOT
1938: Man-Proof, Love Is a
Headache, Three Comrades,
Three Loves Has Nancy.
1939: The Girl Downstairs,
Fast and Furious.
TONES, FOUR
1939: The Bronze Buckaroo.
TONEY, JIM
1939: The Lady and the Mob.
TONY, EDWARD
1939: Reform School.
TOOMEY. REGIS
1938 : The Invisible Menace,
Hunted Men, Illegal Traffic.
1939: Trapped in the Sky,
Smashing the Spy Ring, The
Mysterious Miss X, Society
Smugglers, Wings of the
Xavy, Streets of Missing Men,
Union Pacific. Hidden Power,
Thunder Afloat, Indianapolis
Speedway.
TORRENCE, DAVID
1938: Five of a Kind.
1939: Rulers of the Sea, Stan-
ley and Livingstone.
TORTOSA, JOSE LUIS
1938: Law of the Texan.
TOVAR, LUPITA
1938: Blockade.
1939: Tropic Fury, South of
the Border, The Fighting
Gringo.
TOWNE, ROSELLA
1938: Sergeant Murphy, The
Patient in Room 18, Blondes
at Work, Gold Diggers in
Paris, Cowboy from Brook-
lyn.
1939: Secret Service of the
Air, Women in the Wind,
Code of the Secret Service.
TOZERE, FREDRIC
1939: Confessions of a Nazi
Spy, Hell's Kitchen, The Man
Who Dared, Nancy Drew and
the Hidden Staircase, Every-
body's Hobby, The Cowboy
Quarterback.
TRACEY, WILLIAM
1938 : Angels with Dirty Faces,
Brother Rat.
TRACY, LEE
1938: Crashing Hollywood.
1939 : Fixer Dugan, The Spell-
binder.
TRACY, SPENCER
1938: Test Pilot, Boys Town.
1939: Stanley and Livingstone.
TRACY, WILLIAM
1939: Million Dollar Legs.
TRAVELL, GEORGE
1938 : Convicts at Large.
TRA VERS. HENRY
1938 : The Sisters.
1939: Dodge City, You Can't
Get Away with Murder, Dark
Victory, On Borrowed Time.
Stanley and Livingstone, The
Rains Came, Remember?
TRAVIS, JUNE
1938: Over the Wall, Go
Chase Yourself, The Marines
Are Here, The Gladiator, Lit-
tle Orphan Annie, Night
Hawk, Mr. Doodle Kicks OfT.
1939: Federal Man-Hunt.
TREACHER, ARTHUR
1938: Mad About Music, Al-
ways in Trouble, My Lucky
Star, Up the River.
1939: The Little Princess,
Bridal Suite, Barricade.
TREACY, EMERSON
1938: Long Shot.
TREADVILLE, BETTY
1939: One Dark Night.
TREADWAY. CHARLOTTE
1938: Female Fugitive.
TREADWELL. LAURA
1938: Hawaiian Buckaroo.
TREE. DOROTHY
1938: Having Wonderful
Time, Trade Winds.
1939: The Mysterious Miss X,
The Mystery of Mr. Wong,
Confessions of a Xazi Spy,
Television Spy, Charlie Chan
in the City in Darkness.
TREE, JOANNE
1938: Mad About Music, Girl's
School.
TREEN, MARY
1938: Sally Irene and Mary,
Kentucky Moonshine, Young
Fugitives.
1939: First Love.
TRENT, JOHN
1939: Mystery Plane, Stunt
Pilot, Sky Patrol, Danger
Flight.
TRENT, PHILIP
1938: The Spy Ring, Flirting
with Fate.
1939: Let Us Live.
TREVOR. CLAIRE
1938: Walking Down Broad-
way, Valley of the Giants, The
Amazing Dr. Clitterhouse, Five
of a Kind.
1939: Stagecoach, Allegheny
Uprising, I Stole a Million.
TROWBRIDGE. CHARLES
1938: The Invisible Menace,
The Patient in Room 18, The
Buccaneer, Alcatraz Island,
College Swing, Gangs of New
York, Crime School, Crime
Ring, The Last Express, Ken-
tucky, Gang Bullets, Thanks
for Everything, Nancy Drew
— Detective, Submarine Pa-
trol.
1939: Risky Business, Pride
of the Xavy. King of the Un-
derwold. The Story of Alex-
ander Graham Bell. King of
Chinatown. On Trial. Mutiny
on the Blackhawk. Lady of
the Tropics. The Man They
Could Xot Hang. Tropic Fury,
Swanee River.
TROY, HELEN
1938: Everybody Sing.
1939: Kid Nightingale.
TRU EX. ERNEST
1938: The Adventures of Mar
co Polo, Start Cheering, Fresh
man Year, Swing that Cheer.
Swing Sister Swing.
446
1939: Ambusli, It's a Wonder-
ful World, Bachelor Mother.
These Glamour Girls, Little
Accident, Island of Lost Men.
TRUMAN, RALPH
1939: The Saint in London.
TUCKER, HARLAND
1938: The Invisible Menace,
The Patient in Room 18.
1939: King of the Underwold
TUCKER, JERRY
1939: Federal Man-Hunt.
TUCKER, FORREST
1939: The Westerner.
TUCKER, RICHARD
1938: She's Got Everything.
The Higgins Family, The Tex-
ans, Sons of the Legion.
1939: Risky Business, The
Girl from Rio, The Covered
Trailer, The Great Victor Her-
bert.
TUCKER, ROBERT
1939: Streets of New York.
TUFTS, HARTLEY
1939 : Ambush.
TURICH, ROSE
1938 : Rose of the Rio Grande,
Starlight Over Texas.
TURNER, DON
1939: Smashing the Money
Ring, The Cowbov Quarter-
back.
TURNER, LANA
1938: The Adventures of Mar-
co Polo, Love Finds Andy
Hardy, Rich Man-Poor Girl,
Dramatic School.
1939 : Calling Dr. Kildare.
These Glamour Girls, Dancing
Co-ed.
TURNER, MAE
1938: Life Goes On.
TURNER. MARTIN
1939 : Winter Carnival.
TURNER, RAYMOND
1938: losette, Gun Packer.
1939: Charlie McCarthy De-
tective.
TURNER. ROSCOE
1939: Flight at Midnight.
TURPIN, BEN
1939: Hollywood Cavalcade.
TWELVETREES, HELEN
1939: Persons in Hiding, Un-
married.
TWERP, JOE
1938: In Old Chicago, Ail-
American Sweetheart, Ken-
tucky Moonshine.
TWITCHELL, ARCHIE
1938: Her Jungle Love, Tip-
Off Girls, Cocoanut Grove,
Spawn of the North, The Tex-
ans, Illegal Traffic.
1939: King of Chinatown,
Mickey the Kid.
TYLER. HARRY
1938: Mr. Boggs Steps Out.
1939: The Story of Alexander
Graham Bell, Tesse James, The
Lady's from Kentucky, 20, Out)
Men a Year.
TYLER, LELAH
1939: Babes in Arms.
TYLER, TOM
1939: The Night Riders. Fron-
tier Marshal. Gone with the
Wind.
TYNAN, BRANDON
1938 : Girl of the Golden
West, Youth Takes a Fling,
Nancy Drew — Detective.
1939: The Great Man Votes.
The Lone Wolf Spy Hunt,
The Lady and the Mob.
TYRELL, JOHN
1938: Women in Prison, The
Main Event, West of Chey-
enne, Call of the Rockies.
1939: The Man They Could
Not Hang.
UNG, RICHARD
1938: Spawn of the North.
URCHELL, TONY
1938 : Her Jungle Love.
URECAL, MINERVA
1938: Prison Nurse, Start
Cheering, Frontier Scout, Air
Devils.
USHER, GUY
1938: State Police, Under
Western Stars, Romance of the
Limberlost, Spawn of the
North, Little Miss Roughneck,
Crashin' Through Danger.
1939 : Rough Riders' Round
Up, King of Chinatown, The
Renegade Ranger, Wolf Call,
Mr. Wong in Chinatown,
Rovin' Tumbleweeds.
VALE, VIRGINIA
1939: Three Sons.
VALERIE, JOAN
1938: Road Demon, A Trip to
Paris, Submarine Patrol.
1939: Tail Spin, Day-Time
Wife.
VALKIS, HELEN
1938: The Old Barn Dance,
Sergeant Murphy.
VALLEE, RUDY
1938: Gold Diggers in Paris.
1939 : Second Fiddle.
VALYDA, ROSE
1939: East Side of Heaven.
VAN. FRANKIE
19^9 : Kid Nightingale.
VAN ATTA, LEE
1938: The Affairs of Annabel.
VAN DOLSEN, FAY
1939 : Never Say Die.
VAN SLYKE, ARTHUR
1938: Outlaw Express.
VAN SLOAN, EDWARD
1938: Penitentiary, Danger on
the Air, Storm Over Bengal
VAN SULKE, ARTHUR
1938: Border Wolves.
VARCONI, VICTOR
1938: King of the Newsboys,
Submarine Patrol, Suez.
1939: The Story of Vernon
and Irene Castle, Disputed
Passage, Mr. Moto Takes a
Vacation, Everything Happens
at Night.
VARNO, ROLAND
1939: Balalaika.
VAUGHN, DOROTHY
1938: Quick Money, Tele-
phone Operator, Little Miss
Thoroughbred, Gambling Ship.
Little Orphan Annie, Slandei
House.
1939: The Man in the Iron
Mask, The Star Maker. First
Love.
VAUGHN, HILDA
1938: Maid's Night Out.
VAUGHN, WILLIAM
1939: Confessions of a Nazi
Spy.
Players9 Worh
VELEZ. LUPE
1938: He Loved an Actress.
1939: Girl from Mexico, Mexi-
can Spitfire.
VENABLE, EVELYN
1938: Female Fugitive, Hol-
lywood Stadium Mystery, My
Old Kentucky Home, The
Frontiersman, The Ileadleys at
Home.
1939: Heritage of the Desert.
VENUTI. JOE
1938: Garden of the Moon.
VERDERA, CLARE
1938: Annahella Takes a Tour.
1939: Rulers of the Sea.
VEREBES, ERNO
1938: A Desperate Adventure.
1939: The Magnificent Fraud.
VERNER, LOIS
1938: Romance in the Dark.
VERNON, MARILYN
1938: Radio City Revels.
VERNON, WALLY
1938: Happy Landing, Ken
tucky Moonshine, Alexander's
Ragtime Band, Sharpshooters.
Meet the Girls.
1939: Tail Spin, Broadway
Serenade, The Gorilla, Chas-
ing Danger, Charlie Chan at
Treasure Island.
VICTOR, HENRY
1939: Confessions of a Nazi
Spy, Hotel Imperial, Thunder
Afloat, Pack Up Your
Troubles, Nick Carter — Master
Detective.
VILLANOS, CARLOS
1938: California Frontier.
VILLEGAS, LUCIO
1939: The Renegade Ranger.
Only Angels Have Wings.
The Fighting Gringo.
VINCENT, ALLEN
1938: Army Girl, Ladies in
Distress.
VINCENT, ROMO
1938 : Start Cheering.
VINSON. HELEN
1939: In Name Only.
VIRZIE, ELEANOR
1938: Road Demon.
1939: Winner Take All.
VISAROFF, MICHAEL
1938: Air Devils.
1939 : Paris Honeymoon,
Juarez and Maximilian.
VISCHER, BLANCA
1938: You and Me.
VIVIAN. ROBERT
1939 : Back Door to Heaven
VOGAN. EMMETT
1938: Sergeant Murphy, Fe-
male Fugitive, Beloved Brat.
Secrets of an Actress, Meet
the Girls.
1939: The Man Who Dared.
The Great Victor Herbert.
VOGEDING, FREDRIK
1938: Mr. Moto Takes a
Chance, The Cowboy and the
Lady, Mysterious Mr. Moto
of Devil's Island.
1939 : The Three Musketeers,
Confessions of a Nazi Sp\.
Beasts of Berlin. Charlie Chan
in the City in Darkness.
447
Players9 Worh
VOIGT, JOHN
1939: Confessions of a Nazi
Spy, Beasts of Berlin.
VON BRINCKEN, WILLIAM
1938 : International Crime, The
Mexicali Kid.
1939: Navy Secrets, Panama
Patrol, Conspiracy.
VON AYNDA, HENRY
1939 : Beasts of Berlin.
VON ELTZ, THEODORE
1938: Blondes at Work, In-
side Story.
1939: They Made Her a Spy,
The Sun Never Sets, Fifth
Avenue Girl, Legion of Lost
Flyers.
VON FUBERG, KORT
1939: Juarez and Maximilian
VON MORHART, HANS
1939 : Beasts of Berlin.
VON SEYFFERTITZ,
GUSTAV
1938: In Old Chicago, Cipher
Bureau.
139: Juarez and Maximilian,
Xurse Edith Cavell.
VON TWARDOWSKI, HANS
1939: Confessions of a Nazi
Spy, Beasts of Berlin, Es-
pionage Agent.
WADE, JOHN
1938: Heroes of the Hills.
WADSWORTH, HENRY
1938: Dr. Rhythm.
WAGNER, MAX
1938: Pernod and His Twin
Brother, Cocoanut Grove,
Painted Desert.
1939: The Roaring Twenties,
The Star Maker.
WAGNER, WILLIAM
1938: Rebecca of Sunnybrook
Farm.
WALBROOK, ANTON
1938 : The Rat, Sixty Glorious
Years.
WALBURN. RAYMOND
1938: Start Cheering, Battle of
Broadway, Gateway, Professor
Beware, Sweethearts.
1939: Let Freedom Ring. It
Could Happen to You,
Eternally Yours, The Under-
Pup.
WALCOTT, GEORGE
1938: Cocoanut Grove, West-
ern Jamboree.
1939: The Forgotten Woman.
WALDO, JANET
1939: Persons in Hiding, The
Star Maker, What a Life.
WALDON, JANET
1939 : Zaza.
WALDRON, CHARLES, SR.
1938: It's All Yours, The Lit-
tle Adventuress, Kentucky.
1939: On Borrowed Time, The
Real Glory.
WALES. ETHEL
1938: The Gladiator.
1939: In Old Caliente, Days
of Jesse James.
WALKER. BOB
1939 : El Diablo Rides.
WALKER, NELLA
1938: The Crime of Dr. Hal-
let, The Rage of Paris, Young
Dr. Kildare.
1939: Three Smart Girls Grow
Up, When Tomorrow Comes,
In Name Only, Swanee River.
WALKER, RAY
1938: The Marines Are Here,
Crashin' Thru Danger.
1939 : The Forgotten Woman,
Missing Evidence.
WALKER, VIRGINIA
1938: Bringing Up Baby.
WALKER. WALTER
1938: The Cowboy and the
Lady.
WALLACE, BERYL
1938: Trade Winds, Air Dev-
ils.
WALLACE, EMMETT
1939 : Poncomania.
WALLACE, MAY
1939: Smashing the Spy Ring.
WALLACE. MORGAN
1938: Lady in the Morgue,
Numbered Woman, Woman
Against Woman, Billy the Kid
Returns, Gang Bullets.
1939: The Mystery of Mr.
Wong, The Star Maker.
WALLER, EDWARD
1938: State Police, Call the
Mesquiteers.
1939: I'm from Missouri,
Jesse James, Return of the
Cisco Kid, Legion of Lost
Flyers, Allegheny Uprising,
New Frontier, Two Bright
Boys, Mutiny on the Black-
hawk.
WALLINGTON, JIMMY
1938: Hollywood Stadium
Mystery, Start Cheering.
WALSH, JANE
1937: The Man Who Found
Himself.
WALSH, JOHNNY
1939: Calling Dr. Kildare.
WALSHE, PAT
1939: The Wizard of Oz.
WALTERS. DICKIE
1938: The Buccaneers, Algiers.
WALTERS, LUANA
1939: Mexicali Rose.
WALTON, DOUGLAS
1938: Storm Over Bengal.
1939: The Story of Vernon
and Irene Castle, The Sun
Never Sets.
WALTON, FRED
1939 : Torture Ship.
WARAM, PERCY
1939: One Third of a Nation.
WARBURTON, JOHN
1938 : The Sisters.
1939: Captain Fury.
WARD, ANTHONY
1938 : Law of the Underworld.
WARD, JAY
1939 : Stop Look and Love.
WARD, LUCILLE
1938: Mother Carey's Chick-
ens.
1939: First Love.
WARD, SOLLY
1938: She's Got Everything.
Evervbodv's Doing It, Maid's
Night Out. Blind Alibi.
WARD, WALTER
1939: Boy Slaves.
WARDE, ANTHONY
1938: Come on Leathernecks.
1939: Mr. Moto Takes a Va-
cation.
The Affairs of Annabel.
WARE, LINDA
1939: The Star Maker.
WARE, RENALD
1938: He Loved an Actress.
WARNER, H. B.
1938 : The Adventures of Mar-
co Polo, Girl of the Golden
West, The Toy Wife, Kid-
napped, Bulldog Drummond in
Africa, You Can't Take It
With You, Army Girl.
1939: Arrest Bulldog Drum-
mond, Let Freedom Ring,
Bulldog Drummond's Secret
Police, Gracie Allen Murder
Case, Bulldog Drummond's
Bride, Mr. Smith Goes to
Washington, Nurse Edith
Cavell, The Rains Came, Tor-
pedoed.
WARNER, HELEN
1939: East Side of Heaven.
WARREN, BRUCE
1938: Held for Ransom.
WARREN. E. ALYN
(Deceased)
1938: Port of Seven Seas.
1939: Broadway Serenade.
WARREN, JULIE
1939: Heroes in Blue.
WARREN, PHILIP
1938 : Cocoanut Grove, King
of Alcatraz, Illegal Traffic.
1939: Zaza, Persons in Hid-
ing, Unmarried, Undercover
Doctor, Million Dollar Legs.
WARREN, RUTH
1938: Hold that Co-ed.
WARWICK, ROBERT
1938: The Spy Ring, The Ad-
ventures of Robin Hood, Block-
ade, Army Girl, Law of the
Plains, Squadron of Honor,
Come on Leathernecks, Gang-
ster's Boy, Going Places.
1939: Juarez, The Magnificent
Fraud, The Private Lives of
Elizabeth and Essex, In Old
Monterey.
WASHBURN, BRYANT
1938: I Demand Payment.
1939: Sky Patrol.
WASHINGTON, BLUE
1939: Gone with the Wind.
WATKIN, PIERRE
1938: There's Always a Wom-
an, Mr. Moto's Gamble, Mid-
night Intruder, Tip-Off Girls,
State Police, The Chaser,
Girl's School, Mr. Doodle
Kicks Off, Illegal Traffic,
Young Dr. Kildare, There's
That Woman Again, The Lady
Objects.
1939: They Made Her a Spy,
Society Lawyer, Wings of the
Navy, Off the Record, The
Mysterious Miss X, Risky
Business. Spirit of Culver, Mr.
Smith Goes to Washington,
Geronimo, The Covered Trail-
er, Death of a Champion.
Wall Street Cowboy, The
Great Victor Herbert.
WATSON, BILLY
1938: In Old Chicago, Kid-
napped.
1939: Mr. Smith Goes to
Washington.
WATSON. BOBBY
1938 : In Old Chicago, Boys
Town. Kentucky.
WATSON, BOBS
1939: Dodge City, The Story
of Alexander Graham Bell,
448
Calling Dr. Kildare, On Bor-
rowed Time, Blackmail, Every-
thing's on Ice.
WATSON, DELMAR
1938: Change of Heart, Hunt-
ed Men, Kentucky.
1939: Mr. Smith Goes to
Washington.
WATSON, GARY
1939: Mr. Smith Goes to
Washington.
WATSON, HARRY
1939 :_ Mr. Smith Goes to
Washington.
WATSON. LUCILLE
1938: The Young in Heart,
Sweethearts.
1939: Made for Each Other,
The Women.
WATSON, MINOR
1938: Love Honor and Be-
have, Of Human Hearts, Boys
Town, Fast Company, Stable-
mates, Touchdown Army.
1939 : The Flying Irishman,
Huckleberry Finn, The Hardys
Ride High, M a i s i e , Boy
Friend, News Is Made at
Night, The Llano Kid, Angels
Wash Their Faces, Television
Spy.
WAYNE. BILLY
1938: Tenth Avenue Kid, La-
dies in Distress, The Amazing
Dr. Clitterhouse, The Missing
Guest, Air Devils.
WAYNE. FRANK
1938: Lightning Carson Rides
Again.
WAYNE, JOHN
1938: Born to the West, Over-
land Stage Raiders, Pals of
the Saddle. Santa Fe Stam-
pede, Red River Range.
1939: The Night Riders, Stage-
coach, Three Texas Steers,
Wyoming Outlaw, New Fron-
tier, Allegheny Uprising.
WEAVER BROS.
1938 : Swing Your Lady.
WEAVER, CRAWFORD
1938: Night Spot.
WEAVER, FRANK
1938: Down in Arkansaw.
1939 : Jeepers Creepers.
WEAVER, LEON
1938: Romance on the Run.
Down in Arkansaw.
1939 : Jeepers Creepers.
WEAVER, LORETTA
1939 : Jeepers Creepers.
WEAVER, MARJORIE
1938 : Sally Irene and Mary,
Kentucky Moonshine, I'll Give
a Million, Three Blind Mice,
Hold that Co-ed.
1939: Young Mr. Lincoln,
Chicken Wagon Family, The
Honeymoon's Over.
WEBER, DAVE
1938 : Pals of the Saddle.
WEBSTER, AL
1939 : Back Door to Heaven.
WEEMS, TED
1938: Swing Sister Swing.
WEIDLER, VIRGINIA
1938: Scandal Street, Love Is
a Headache, Mother Carey's
Chickens, Men with Wings,
Too Hot to Handle, Out West
with the Hardys.
1939 : The Great Man Votes,
The Lone Wolf Spy Hunt,
Fixer Dugan, The Under-Pup,
Bad Little Angel, The Women.
WEISS, ETHEL
1939 : Frontier Pony Express.
WEISSMULLER. JOHNNY
1939 : Tarzan Finds a Son.
WELCH, PHYLLIS
1938 : Professor Beware.
WELDEN, BEN
1938: Alcatraz Island, Happy
Landing, Prison Nurse, The
Saint in New York, Mystery
House, Crime Ring, Little
Miss Broadway, Tenth Ave-
nue Kid, Smashing the Rack-
ets, Straight Place and Show,
Little Orphan Annie, Night
Hawk.
1939: Federal Man-Hunt, I
Was a Convict, The Lone
Wolf Spy Hunt, Sergeant
Madden, Rose of Washington
Square, Boys' Reformatory,
Hollywood Cavalcade, The
Star Maker, Fugitive at
Large.
WELDEN, MARION
1938: Desert Patrol.
WELLS, JACQUELINE
1938 : She Married an Artist,
When G-Men Step In, Flight
Into Nowhere, Little Miss
Roughneck, The Main Event,
Highway Patrol, Spring Mad-
ness, Flight to Fame, The
Little Adventuress.
1939: My Son Is a Criminal,
The Kansas Terrors, Behind
Prison Gates, Torture Ship.
WELSH, SYLVIA
1938 : Woman Against the
World.
WESSEL, RICHARD
1938: Arson Gang Busters.
1939: They Made Me a Crim-
inal, Missing Daughters,
Beasts of Berlin.
WESSELHOEFT, ELEANOR
1938: The Baroness and the
Butler.
1939 : Intermezzo : A Love
Story, Everything Happens at
Night.
WEST, BUSTER
1938 : Radio City Revels.
WEST, LILLIAN
1939 : That's Right — You're
Wrong.
WEST, PAT
1938: Wolves of the Sea.
1939: King of Chinatown.
WESTLEY, HELEN
1938: The Baroness and the
Butler, She Married an Artist,
Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm,
Alexander's Ragtime Band,
Keep Smiling.
1939: Zaza, Wife Husband
and Friend.
WESTMAN, NYDIA
1938 : The Goldwyn Follies,
The First Hundred Years,
Bulldog Drummond's Peril.
1939 : When Tomorrow Comes,
The Cat and the Canary.
WESTON, CECIL
1938 : Blockade.
WESTON, DICK
1938: The Old Barn Dance.
WESTON, DORIS
1938: Born to be Wild.
Players' Worfc
WESTON, RUTH
1939: Made for Each Other.
WHALEN, MICHAEL
1938 : Change of Heart, Walk-
ing Down Broadway, Speed to
Burn, Island in the Sky, Me-
ridian 7-1212, Time Out for
Murder, Inside Story.
1939: The Mysterious Miss X,
They Asked for It.
WHEELER, BERT
1939 : The Cowboy Quarter-
back.
WHELAN, ARLEEN
1938: Kidnapped, Gateway,
Thanks for Everything.
1939: Young Mr. Lincoln, Boy
Friend, Sabotage.
WHIPPER, LEIGH
1939: Of Mice and Men.
WHITAKER, CHARLES
1939: New Frontier.
WHITE, ALICE
1938: Telephone Operator,
King of the Newsboys, Anna-
bella Takes a Tour.
WHITE, HUGH
(Deceased)
1938: When G-Men Step In.
WHITE, LEE
1939: Rovin' Tumbleweeds.
WHITE, MEREDITH
1938: Beloved Brat.
WHITE, PAUL
1938: My Old Kentucky
Home, Sing You Sinners.
1939: Boy Slaves.
WHITE, SAMMY
1938: Swing Your Lady.
WHITE, THELMA
1938: Wanted by the Police.
WHITEHEAD, JOE
1938: Law of the Texan, Shine
on Harvest Moon.
WHITING, JACK
1938: Give Me a Sailor.
WHITLEY, RAY
1938: Gun Law, Painted Des-
ert.
1939: The Renegade Ranger,
Racketeers of the Range.
WHITLOCK, LLOYD
1938: Arson Gang Busters, In-
ternational Crime.
WHITMAN, ERNEST
1939 : Jesse James, Gone with
the Wind.
WHITNEY, ELEANORE
1938: Campus Confessions.
WHITNEY, HELENE
1939: The Hunchback of
Notre Dame.
WHITNEY, PAUL
1939: Smashing the Spy Ring.
WHITNEY, ROBERT
1938: Judge Hardy's Children,
The Headleys at Home.
WHITT, WAYNE (Tiny)
1939: Some Like It Hot.
WHITTAKER, CHARLES
1938: Phantom Gold, Under
Western Stars.
WHITTAKER, SLIM
1938 : _ Pioneer Trail, Rawhide,
Frontier Scout.
1939: The Fighting Gringo.
449
Players* Worh
WHITTELL, JOSEPHINE
1938: Women Are Like That.
WHITTEN, MARGUERITE
1939: Way Down South.
WHITTY, DAME MAY
1938: I Met My Love Again.
WILCOX, ROBERT
1938: Rascals, Reckless Liv-
ing, Little Tough Guy, Young
Fugitives, Swing that Cheer,
Gambling Ship.
1939: The Kid from Texas,
Undercover Doctor, Blondie
Takes a Vacation, The Man
They Could Not Hang.
WILCOXON, HENRY
1938: Prison Nurse, Keep
Smiling, Dark Sands, Mys-
terious Mr. Moto of Devil's
Island, Five of a Kind, The
Arizona Wildcat, If I Were
King.
1939 : Woman Doctor, Chasing
Danger, Tarzan Finds a Son.
WILDE, POPPY
1938: Gold Diggers in Paris.
WILDER, PATRICIA
1938: Big Broadcast of 1938,
My Lucky Star, Little Miss
Broadway, Thanks for the
Memory.
WILDHACK. ROBERT
1939: Back Door to Heaven.
WILENCHECK, CLEM
1938 : The Last Warning.
1939: Bad Boy, The Flying
Deuces, Charlie McCarthy De-
tective.
WILES, PETER
1939: The Adventures of
Sherlock Holmes.
WILKERSON, BILL
1939 : Juarez.
WILKINS, JUNE
1939: Bachelor Mother.
WILLES, PETER
1938: The Dawn Patrol.
1939: Hound of the Basker-
villes, Idiot's Delight.
WILLEY, LEONARD
1938 : Invisible Enemy, The
Adventures of Robin Hood.
WILLIAM, WARREN
1938: Arsene Lupin Returns,
The First Hundred Years,
Wives Under Suspicion.
1939: The Lone Wolf Spy
Hunt, Gracie Allen Murder
Case, The Man in the Iron
Mask, Day-Time Wife.
WILLIAMS, CHARLES
1938: Born to be Wild, Hol-
lywood Stadium Mystery, Mr.
Moto's Gamble, Alexander's
Ragtime Band, Little Miss
Broadway, Just Around the
Corner, Men with Wings.
1939 : Wife Husband and
Friend, Charlie McCarthy De-
tective.
WILLIAMS, FRANK
1938 : Double Danger.
WILLIAMS, GLORIA
1938 : The Buccaneer, Cocoa-
nut Grove.
WILLIAMS. GUINN
(Big Boy)
1938: Everybody'* Doing It,
The Bad Man of Brimstone,
Flying Fists, You and Me,
Army Girl, The Marines Are
Here, Professor Beware,
Crashin' Thru Danger, I De-
mand Payment, Down in Ar-
kansaw, Hold that Co-ed.
1939: Dodge City, Streets of
Missing Men, 6,000 Enemies,
Legion of Lost Flyers, Mutiny
on the Blackhawk, Blackmail,
Fugitive at Large, Bad Lands.
WILLIAMS, HUGH
1939: Wuthering Heights.
WILLIAMS, LARRY
1938: Torchy Blane in Pan-
ama, Brother Rat, Going
Places, Girls on Probation,
Garden of the Moon.
1939 : Secret Service of the
Air, Wings of the Navy, On
Trial, Torchy Plays with Dyn-
amite, Waterfront.
WILLIAMS. LOTTIE
1938: Little Miss Thorough-
bred, Nancy Drew — Detective.
1939: Yes — My Darling
Daughter, Dark Victory.
WILLIAMS, MASTON
1938: The Overland Express,
Call the Mesquiteers, Heroes
of the Hills.
WILLIAMS. ROGER
1938 : Code of the Rangers,
Call the Mesquiteers, Heroes
of the Hills.
1939: Mountain Rhythm.
WILLIAMS, SPENCER
1938: Harlem on the Prairie.
1939: The Bronze Buckaroo.
Harlem Rides the Range.
WILLIAMS, SPENCER. Jr.
1939: Bad Boy.
WILLIAMS, TUDOR
1938: Cipher Bureau.
WILLIAMS, ZACH
1939: Gone with the Wind.
WILLIS, NOLAN
1939: Roll Wagons Roll.
WILLIS. NORMAN
1938: Outlaws of the Prairie,
Prison Nurse, Racket Bust-
ers.
1939: Blackwell's Island, Boy
Slaves. Homicide Bureau, The
Forgotten Woman.
WILLIS, SI
1938: Cipher Bureau.
WILLIS, WALTER
1938: Santa Fe Stampede.
WILLOCK, DAVID
1939: Legion of Lost Flyers.
WILLS, CHILL
1939: Racketeers of the Range,
Allegheny Uprising.
WILLS, WALTER
1939: The Night Riders, Dan-
ger Flight, Cowboys from
Texas.
WILSON. CHARLES C.
1938: State Police, Roaring
Timber, Sally Irene and Mary,
When Were You Born? Tenth
Avenue Kid, Little Miss Thor-
oughbred, Night Hawk, Hold
that Co-ed.
1939: Fighting Thoroughbreds,
Rose of Washington Square,
Desperate Trails, Hotel for
Women, Smashing the Money
Ring, The Return of Dr. X,
The Cowboy Quarterback.
WILSON. CLARENCE
1938: Rebecca of Sunnybrook
Farm, In Old Chicago, Ken-
tucky Moonshine, Little Miss
Broadway, Having Wonderful
Time, The Texans, You Can't
Take It With You.
1939: Some Like It Hot,
Drums Along the Mohawk.
WILSON, FRANK
1938: All-American Sweet-
heart, Extortion, Little Miss
Roughneck.
WILSON. LOIS
1939 : Bad Little Angel.
WILSON, MARIE
1938 : Fools for Scandal, The
Invisible Menace, Boy Meets
Girl, Broadway Musketeers.
1939 : Sweepstakes Winner,
Should Husbands Work ? ,
Waterfront, The Cowboy
Quarterback.
WINDHEIM, MAREK
1938 : She Married an Artist.
WINDSOR, CLAIRE
1938: Barefoot Boy.
WING, TOBY
1938: Silks and Saddles, Mr.
Boggs Steps Out.
WINKLER, ROBERT
1939: Blue Montana Skies.
WINNINGER. CHARLES
1 9 3 8: Goodbye Broadway,
Hard to Get.
1939 : Three Smart Girls Grow
Up, Babes in Arms, Destry
Rides Again, Barricade.
WINTERS, LINDA
1938: Trade Winds, Prison
Train, Comet Over Broadway.
1939: Blondie Meets the Boss.
WISE, JACK
1938 : Comet Over Broadway.
1939 : Smashing the Money
Ring.
WITHERS. GRANT
1938 : Telephone Operator,
Held for Ransom, Mr. Wong
— Detective.
1939: The Mystery of Mr.
Wong, Navy Secrets, Boys'
Reformatory, Mr. Wong in
Chinatown, Daughter of the
Tong.
WITHERS, ISABEL
1938: Brother Rat.
WITHERS, JANE
1938: Rascals, Keep Smiling.
Always in Trouble, The Ari-
zona Wildcat.
1939: Boy Friend, Pack up
your Troubles, Chicken Wagon
Family.
WITHERSPOON. CORA
1938: He Couldn't Say No.
Three Loves Has Nancy, Port
of Seven Seas, Professor Be-
ware, Marie Antoinette, Just
Around the Corner.
1939: Woman Doctor, Dark
Victory, Dodge City, For Love
or Money, The Women.
WITHERSPOON, ELOISE
1938: Life Goes On.
WIX, FLORENCE
1938: The Missing Guest.
WOLFE, IAN
1938: Orphans of the Street.
1939 : Fast and Loose, Society
Lawyer, On Borrowed Time,
The Great Commandment, Al-
legheny Uprising.
450
WOLOSHIN, ALEX
1938: Spawn of the North,
Ride a Crooked Mile.
WONDER, TOMMY
1938: Freshman Year, Gang-
ster's Boy.
WONG, ANNA MAY
1938: Dangerous to Know,
When Were You Born?
1939: King of Chinatown,
Island of Lost Men.
WONG, IRIS
1939: Charlie Chan in Reno.
WONG. VICTOR
1938: Shadows Over Shang-
hai.
1939: Taming of the West.
WOOD. BRITT
1939: Range War.
WOOD, CHARLES B.
1939 : King of Chinatown.
WOOD, DOUGLAS
1939: Off the Record, Juarez,
20,000 Men a Year.
WOOD, ERNEST
1938: Roaring Timber.
WOOD, GRACE
1938: Mr. Wong — Detective.
WOOD, HARRY
1938: Crime Takes a Holiday.
WOOD HELEN
1939: Sorority House.
WOOD, PEGGY
1939: The Housekeeper's
Daughter.
WOOD, PHILIP
1938 : Room Service.
WOODBURY, JOAN
1938 : Crashing Hollywood,
Night Spot, Always in
Trouble, Passport Husband,
Algiers, Cipher Bureau.
1939: Mystery of the White
Room, Chasing Danger.
WOODS, BUCK
1939: Double Deal.
WOODS. DONALD
1938: The Black Doll, Danger
on the Air, Romance on the
Run, I Am the Law.
1939: Beauty for the Asking,
Heritage of the Desert, Girl
from Mexico, Mexican Spit-
fire.
WOODS, EDWARD
1938 : Shadows Over Shang-
hai.
WOODS. HARRY
1938: The Buccaneer, Hawaii-
an Buckaroo, The Arizona
Wildcat, Come on Rangers,
Panamint's Bad Man.
1939: Mr. Moto in Danger
Island, Union Pacific, Blue
Montana Skies, The Man in
the Iron Mask, In Old Cali-
ente. Beau Geste, Days of
Jesse James.
WOODS, WILLIAM
1939: Code of the Fearless.
WOODWARD, BOB
1938: Frontier Scout.
1939: Home on the Prairie.
WOOLLEY, MONTY
1938: Arsene Lupin Returns,
Girl of the Golden West, Ev-
erybody Sing, Three Com-
rades, Lord Jeff, Artists and
Models Abroad, Young Dr.
Kildare.
1939: Never Say Die, Man
About Town, Dancing Co-ed.
WOOTEN, SARITA
1939: Wuthering Heights, On
Your Toes, The Light That
Failed.
WORDEN, HANK
1938 : Stranger from Arizona.
WORLOCK, FREDERICK
1939 : Miracles for Sale, Lady
of the Tropics, Balalaika.
WORTH. CONSTANCE
1939: Mystery of the White
Room.
WORTH, MICHAEL
1939: Days of Jesse James.
WORTHY, HARRY
1939: Disbarred.
WRAY, FAY
1938: The Jury's Secret.
1939: Navy Secrets, Smashing
the Spy Ring.
WRAY, JOHN
1938 : The House of Mystery,
Making the Headlines, The
Black Doll, Gangs of New
York, Crime Takes a Holiday,
Tenth Avenue Kid, Spawn of
the North, A Man to Remem-
ber.
1939: Risky Business, Pacific
Liner, Each Dawn I Die, The
Amazing Mr. Williams, The
Cat and the Canary, Smuggled
Cargo, Blackmail.
WRIGHT, ARMAND
1938 : Panamint's Bad Man.
WRIGHT. BEN
1939 : Silver on the Sage.
WRIGHT, PAULA RAE
1938: Keep Smiling.
WRIXON, MARIS
1939 : Jeepers Creepers.
WULF, IEN
1938 : Arsene Lupin Returns.
WYATT, CHARLENE
1938 : Under the Big Top.
WYMAN, JANE
1938: The Spy Ring, He
Couldn't Say No, Wide Open
Faces, The Crowd Roars,
Brother Rat.
1939: Tail Spin, The Kid
from Kokomo, Torchy Plays
with Dynamite, Kid Nightin-
gale.
WYNTERS, CHARLOTTE
1938 : Sinners in Paradise, Pro-
fessor Beware, Reformatory,
Cipher Bureau, Sunset Trail.
1939 : Pride of the Navy, Pan-
ama Patrol, Nancy Drew —
Trouble Shooter, Renegade
Trail.
YA-CHING, LEE
1939 : Disputed Passage.
YACHT CLUB BOYS
1938: Cocoanut Grove, Arti, s
and Models Abroad.
YACONELLI, FRANK
1939 : Wild Horse Canyon.
YARBO, LILLIAN
1938 : Wives under Suspicion,
You Can't Take It With You.
1939 : Persons in Hiding, Way
Down South, Destry Rides
Again.
YGOR AND TANYA
1939: Unexpected Father.
YORK, DUKE
1938 : A Slight Case of Mur-
der
1939: Navy Secrets, Topper
Takes a Trip.
Players9 Work
YOSHKIN, NICCOLAI
1939 : Confessions of a Nazi
Spy.
YOUNG, ARTIE
1939: The Bronze Buckaroo,
Harlem Rides the Range.
YOUNG, BILLY
1938: Outside of Paradise.
YOUNG, CARLETON
1938 : Cassidy of Bar 20, The
Old Barn Dance, Heroes of
the Hills, Outlaw Express,
Gang Bullets.
1939: Smoky Trail, Port of
Hate, El Diablo Rides.
YOUNG. CLARA KIMBALL
1938 : The Frontiersman.
YOUNG, GEORGIANA
1939: The Story of Alexander
Graham Bell.
YOUNG, LORETTA
1938: Four Men and a Prayer,
Three Blind Mice, Kentucky,
Suez.
1939: Wife Husband and
Friend, The Story of Alex-
ander Graham Bell, Eternally
Yours.
YOUNG, POLLY ANN
1939: Mystery Plane, The
Story of Alexander Graham
Bell, Wolf Call, Port of Hate.
YOUNG. ROBERT
1938: Paradise for Three, Jo-
sette, The Toy Wife, Three
Comrades, Rich Man-Poor
Girl, The Shining Hour.
1939: Honolulu, Bridal Suite,
Maisie, Miracles for Sale.
YOUNG, ROLAND
1938: Sailing Along, The
Young in Heart.
1939: Topper Takes a Trip,
Yes — My Darling Daughter,
Here I Am a Stranger.
YOUNG, VICTOR
1938: Shadows Over Shang-
hai.
YOUNG, WALTER
1938 : Alcatraz Island.
YOUNGBLOOD, GLORIA
1938: Trade Winds.
YRIGOYEN, JOSE
1938 : Man from Music Moun-
tain.
YUNG, SEN
1938: Charlie Chan in Hono-
lulu.
1939: Charlie Chan in Reno,
Charlie Chan at Treasure
Island, 20,000 Men a Year.
ZORINA, VERA
1938: The Goldwyn Follies.
1939: On Your Toes.
ZUCCO, GEORGE
1938: Arsene Lupin Returns,
Lord Jeff, Fast Company, Va-
cation from Love, Charlie
Chan in Honolulu, Suez.
1939: Arrest Bulldog Drum-
mond, Captain Fury, The Mag
nificent Fraud, Here I Am a
Stranger, The Cat and the
Canary, The Adventures of
Sherlock Holmes, The Hunch-
back of Notre Dame.
451
LOS AHGELES, CALIF.
Anderson, Roland Paramount
Astholz, Fred Columbia
Bachclin. Franz Paramount
Banks, Lionel (Head) Columbia
Brown, Malcolm M-G-M
Campbell. Howard M-G-M
Cathcart, Daniel B M-G-M
Clark. Carroll RKO Radio
Clarke, Charles Universal
Corre, Ben Principal
Coyle, John T Republic
Crcber. Lewis 20th Century-Fox
Croxton, Louis RKO Radio
D'Agostino. Albert S RKO Radio
DarliiiK, William 20th Century-Fox
Day, Richard 20th Century-Fox
De Lacy. Ralph Universal
Dexter, Frank Darmour
Douglas, Haldane 20th Century-Fox
Dreier, Hans (Head) Paramount
Duell, Randall M-G-M
Dudley, George 20th Century-Fox
Duplie, John Stewart M-G-M
Durlauf. F. E Hal Roach
Duse, Richard M-G-M
Fegte, Ernest Paramount
Fergruson, Perry RKO Radio
Flannery, William Paramount
Fleischer. Stanley Warners
Gibbons. Cedric (Head) M-G-M
Gillespie. Buddy M-G-M
Golizin, Alexander United Artists
Goodman, John Paramount
Gore. Chester 20th Century-Fox
Groesse. Paul M-G-M
Grot, Anton Warner Bros
Haas, Robert Warner Bros
Hall, Charles D Chaplin
Fall, David 20th Century-Fox
Hartley, Esdras Warner Bros
Havens, James 20th Century-Fox
Hedrick, Earl Paramount
Herman, Al RKO Radio
Herzbrun, Bernard 20th Century-Fox
Hickson, Ernest R Monogram
Hog-sett, Albert 20th Century-Fox
Horning-, William A M-G-M
Hughes, John Warner Bros
Imazu. Eddie M-G-M
Kaye, A. E Grand National
Kirk, Mark-Lee RKO Radio
Leven. Boris 20th Century-Fox
MacArthur, Harold Universal
McAfee. Harry M-G-M
McCleary, Urie M-G-M
Mackay, John Victor Republir
Menzies. William Cameron .. Selznick International
Novi, Charles M Warners
Oberg. Ralph Republu
Obzina. Martin Universal
Odell. Robert Paramount
OTTERSON, JACK (SUPERVISING) UNIVERSAL
I'almentola, Paul Grand National
Parker, Max Warner Bros
Peters, Hans 20th Century-Fox
Polglase. Van Nest (Head) RKO Radio
Pycha. Jerome. Jr Columbia
Pye, Merrill M-G-M
Rachmil, Lewis. . Principal & Sherman-Paramoum
Reticker, Hugh Warner Bros.
Riebel, Richard Universal
Rogers, Stan M-G-M
Royce, A. I Hal Roacn
Rubattom. Wade M-G-M
Scagmanilli, Gabriel M-G-M
Sheeley. Elmer M-G-M
Smith, Ted J Warner Bros.
Smith, Perry Columbia
Slernad. Rudolph 20th Century-Fox
Sylos, Paul F Fine Arts
Taitelbaum, Bertram (Head) Warner Bros.
Tolubofi, Alexander Walter Wanger
Usher, Robert Paramount
Weyl, Carl Warner Bros
Wheeler, Lyle Selznick International
Williams, Laurence P RKO Radio
Wright. Joseph 20th Century-Fox
casting miti«:croics
LOS ANGELES, CALIF.
Ballerino. Mel (assistant) Paramount
Bigelow, Charles J Monogram
Datig, Fred M-G-M
Dodds, Harold Republic
Duffy, J. A Darmour
Egli. Joe Paramount
Elrod. Chloe (assistant) Universal
Kelley, Dan Universal
Kumin, Irving (assistant) Warner Bros.
Mclntyre, Robert Samuel Goldwyn
Mayberry, William H. (assistant) .20th Century-Fox
Mayo, Robert Paramount
Palmer. Bob RKO Radio
Richards. Charles Selznick International
Rittig, Earl Hal Roach
Ryan, James 20th Century -Fox
Schreiber, Lew 20th Century -Fox
Schuessler, Fred Howard Hughes
Sparks, Paul (assistant) Columbia
Trilling. Steve Warner Bros.
Trost. Russell (assistant) Warner Bros.
Uhr. Ira Columbia
Webb, Bobby Wanger
Zinn, John Paramount
452
FEATURES
RELEASED
SINCE 1915
Titles of Feature Motion Pictures Released in This
Country Since 1915, Including American
and Foreign-Made Films
A LIST of features, released since 1915. Pictures, distributors and Film Daily review dates axe
indicated. Distributors are noted with code letters, the key to these codes starting on this
page. The actual list of titles is begun on page 458.
Pictures released since the coming oi sound are indicated as follows: AT — all-talking; PT — part-
talking; S-SE — synchronized sound effects.
Another title reference list is ORIGINAL TITLES of books and plays made into motion pic-
tures under titles other than the original.
Credits on 1939 releases may be found on page 139.
CODE TO DISTRIBUTORS
A
ABA — A. B. A. Films.
ABR — Abrams.
ACA — American Committee for
Belief of Armenia.
ACD — Academy Pictures.
ACE — Ace Pictures.
ACI — American Cinema.
ACT — Action Pictures.
ADP — Adolph Pollak.
ADV — Advanced.
AE — Associated Exhibitors.
AEO — Aeolian Pictures.
AEP — Affiliated European Pro-
ducers.
AFE — A. F. E. Corp.
AFF — Affiliated.
AOF — American General Films.
AHB — Asher.
AI — Associated Independent
Productions.
AID — Alda Films.
AJ — Ajax.
ALA — Atlantic.
ALD — Alder.
ALE — Alexander.
ALI — Allied Pictures.
ALL — Alliance.
ALP — All Art Pictures.
ALW — William Alexander.
AM — Amklno.
AM A — Amer Anglo.
AMB — Ambassador.
AME — American.
AMO — Amalgamated.
AMB — American • Roumanian
Film Co.
AMT — American-Tobis
AMU — American Mutual.
AN — Anchor.
ANT — Anti-Vice Motion Pic-
tures.
AP — Allied Pictures.
APA— A-l Producers and Dis-
tributors.
APD — Allied Producers and Dis-
tributors.
APF — Oscar Apfel.
APH — Associated Photoplays.
APO — Apollo.
APP — A. P. Plays.
APQ — Approved.
APR — Associated Producers.
APX — Apex
AR — American Releasing Co.
ARA — Arfa Films.
ARB — Are Films.
ARC — Art class Pictures (Weiss
Bros.) .
ARF — Ar-FUms.
ARI — Arista.
ARK — Arkay Film Exchange.
ARN — Arnaud.
ARO — Aristocrat.
ARP — Artistic Pictures.
453
ART — «\rtcraft Pictures.
ARU — Arcturus Pictures.
ARW — Arrow.
ASA — Asta.
ASF — Associated Features.
ASS — Associated Cinemas.
AST — Astor.
ATA — American Trading Assn.
ATN — Atlantic.
ATI. — Atlas.
AUC — Audio Cinema.
AUD — Audible Pictures.
ATJH — Harold Austin.
AUR — Aurora Film Corp.
ATJS — Australian Films.
AUT — Capt. Harold Auten
AV — Avramenko.
AY — Aywon.
AYC — A.vcie.
B
BAC — Backer-Hoffman.
BAE — Banner.
BAK — Baker-Hoffman.
BAN — Bancroft.
BAR — Barsky.
BAT — Bartlett.
BAU — Bavaria Film A-G.
BAY — Bacon-Ay won.
BB — B. B. Features.
BBF — Bacon-Backer Four-
square.
BD — British & Dominions.
BE — Beacon.
BEB — George Beban.
BEH — Behrman Productions.
BEK — Beekman Film Co.
BEL — Berlin Films.
BEN — Chester Bennett.
BER — Bertad.
BES — Best Film Co.
BET — Bernstein.
BEC — Beaumont.
BEW — Walldcmar D. Bell.
BFP — Bryan Foy.
BHA — Bert Hall.
BI — British International.
BIF — Big Four.
BIG — Big Three.
BIL — Biltmore Productions.
BIS — Bischoff.
BL — Bluebird.
BLA — Blair-Coan.
BLC — Blackton.
BLO — Richard Block.
BLR — Blue Ribbon.
BLU — Blumenthal.
BLZ — Samuel Blitz.
BM — Balboa-Mutual.
BNE — British New Era.
BOL — II . Bollman.
BON — H. O. Bondy.
BOT — Bottonelli.
BOW — Bowes Productions.
BOX — Box Oflice Attractions.
BOY — John W. Boyle.
BPI — Bureau of Public Infor-
mation.
BR — C. C. Burr.
BRA — Brady-World.
BRB — Brenda Pictures.
BRC — Brewster.
BR!) — Bradley.
BRE — Brentwood-Mutual.
BRF — Broadcast Films.
BRH — Broadway - Hollywood
Productions.
BRI — Briskin.
BRL — Brill.
BRO — Lee Brody Co.
BRU — Brunton-Paradise.
BRX — Leo Brecher.
BTZ — Burroughs-Tarzan.
BU — Butterfly.
BUF — Buffalo Motion Picture
Co.
BUL — Butler Productions.
BUN — Bnrnslde.
BUR — H. B. Burroughs.
BUT — Butterfly.
c
CAF — Capital Foreign Attrac-
tion.
CAL — California Motion Pic-
ture Co.
CAM — Cameo.
CAN — Canyon.
CAO Casino.
CAP — Capitol Film Exchange.
CAS — Castleton-Shipman.
CAT — Capitol Productions.
CBC — Cohen-Brandt-Cohen (Co-
lumbia) .
CBP — C. B. Price.
CC — Clark-Cornelius.
CEL — Celebrity Pictures.
CEN — Century Pictures.
CF — Cinema Francais.
CFP — Collective Film Producers
CHA — Chadwick Pictures.
CHE — Chesterfield: Chesterfield-
Invincible.
CHR — Charter.
CIE — Cines.
CIG — Cine Grand Films.
CIL — Cine-Lux. Inc.
CIN — Cinema Attractions.
CIR — Circle Film Attractions.
CIX — Cinexport.
CLA — Claridge.
CLP — Classplay.
CLR — Russell Clark.
CLU — W. H. Clune.
CM — Columbia-Metro.
CMA — C. & M. Pictures.
CNN — Conn Pictures.
CO A — E. R. Coane.
COB — Contemporary Amuse-
ments, Inc.
COC — Concord Films.
COD — C. 0. D. Blanchfleld.
COE — Commodore.
COG — Congo Pictures.
COH — Max Cohen.
COL — Columbia.
COM — Commonwealth.
CON — Consolidated-Met.
COO — Colony.
COP — Congo Pictures.
COQ — Conquest.
COR — Corona.
COS — Cosmos.
COT — Continental Pictures.
COU — Cosmarr,
COV — Cort.
CP — Collywn Pictures.
CRA — Crea.
CRB — Crest.
CRD — Certified.
CRE — i. V. Cremonim.
CRE — Crescent Pictures.
CRI — Criterion Films.
CRO — Credo Pictures
CRT — Creative.
CUC — Coinpagnie Univcrselle.
CUE — Enrico Cutali.
CUM — Cummings.
CUO — Samuel Cummins.
CUR — Richard Currier Produc-
tions.
CUT — Curtiss.
CWO — Comstock-World.
454
D
DAB — Dansk-Biograf.
DAI — Daily Productions.
DAN — Danubla.
DAV — Davis Distributing Co.
DAW — Norman Dawn Produc-
tions.
DEM — Democracy Photoplays.
DEN — Denver-Dixon.
DIE — Dietrich-Kenyon.
DIL — DiLorenzo.
1)1 V — Diversion.
DOO — Doo-Lee.
DRK — Drkik-Martel.
DVB — Dublin Film Co.
DUD — Dudley-Unity.
DUW — Du World.
E
EAG — Eagle Productions.
EAS — Eastern Films.
EC — East Coast.
EDG — Edgar.
EDK — Edison-Kleine.
EDP — Edison Perfection.
EDU — Educational.
EKE — Edison-K. E. 8. E.
EKO — E. K. O. Film Co.
ELB — Ellbee Pictures.
ELD — El Dorado Productions.
ELF — C. S. Elfelt.
ELK — Edward L. Klein.
ELI, — William Elliott Produc-
tions.
EMP — Empire.
EMU — Empire Mutual.
ENC — European News Co.
ENR — Enterprise.
EST — Entente.
EP — Epco.
EPA — EMPA Films.
EPI — Export and Import.
EPP — Dr. I. i. Eppel.
EQ — Equitable.
EQA — Equality.
EQU — Equity.
EQW — Equitable-World.
ERA — New Era.
ERB — Erbograph Art.
ERM — Ermine.
ERO — Eron Pictures. Inc.
ES — Essanay.
ESP — Esperia.
ETR — Eastern Triangle.
ELK — Eureka Prods.
ELP — Europa.
EUR — European Productions.
EUS — Captain H. Eustace.
EXA — Excelsior.
EXC — Exceptional.
EXD — Exclusive.
EXE — Exhibitors Film Ex-
change.
EXH — Exhibitors' Film Corp.
EXL — Exhibitors Mutual.
EXO — Explorers Film Co.
EXP — Excellent Pictures.
EXQ — Exploitation Pictures.
EXK — Express.
F
F — Fox Film Corp.; 20th Cen-
tury-Fox.
FA — Fine Arts.
FAB — Jacob Fabian.
FAF — Foreign American Films.
FAH — Faith Pictures.
FAI — Fairmont.
FAM — Foreign-American Films.
FAT — Fine Arts-Triangle.
FBO — Film Booking Offices.
FBW — F. B. Warren.
FCA — Foreign Cinema Arts.
FCC — French Cinema Center.
FCH — Film Clearing House.
FD — First Division.
FDC — Film Distributing Co.
FED — Federated.
FEL — Fclson-Europa Produc-
tions.
FEB — Fery Film (Germany).
FF — Franco Films (France).
FFF — Foreign Feature Films.
FFS — Fifty-fifth St. Playhouse
Group.
FGC — Film Guild Cinema.
FGU — Film Arts Guild.
FHG — Foreign-Hanover-
General.
FIA — Film Alliance of the
United States.
FID — Fidelity.
FIL — Film Market.
FIM — Film Exchange.
FIP — Filippine Films.
FIT — James A. FitzPatrick.
FLE — J. J. Fleming.
FLI — Joseph Fliesler.
FMA — Famous Attractions.
FN — First National.
FOF — Foreign Films.
FOP — Fort Pitt.
FOB — Forward.
FOY — Foy Productions, Ltd.
FBA — Franco American Export
& Import Co.
FBE — Freuler Film Associates.
FBM — French Motion Picture
Co.
FBN — France Films.
FBO — Frohman.
FTA — First Anglo.
FTP — Foreign Talking Pictures.
FUT — Walter Futter (Wafllms).
FW — F. & W. Films.
FWA — Franklyn Warner.
FWO — Frohinan-World.
G
G — Samuel Goldwyn.
GAF — Garfield.
GAG — Leon Garganoff.
GAL — Gallic Films.
GAB — Garson.
GAS — Garrison Films.
GAT — Gateway Productions.
GAU — Gaumont.
GB — (Amnion I - British.
GBG — Henry Ginsburg.
GEF — General Films.
G EG — Germania.
GEI — Irving Geist.
GEN — Geneva.
GEO — Genius.
GEP — General Pictures.
GEB — Gerson.
GFF — General Foreign Sales.
GGR — Al Griffith-Grey.
GUA — G. Hamilton.
GLA — Gladiator Films.
GLB — Gladstone.
GLD — Symon Gould.
GLE — Goldie Films.
GLO — Amer-Anglo Corp.
GN — Grand National.
GOB — Globe.
GOG — Golgothia Corp.
GOL — Goldstone.
GON — Goodman.
GOO — Goodwill.
GOB — Gordon Film Co.
GOS — Goldsmith Prods.
GOT — Gotham Productions.
GOU — M. J. Gourland.
GBA — Graphic Film Corp.
GBB — Great Wall Film Co.
GBC — Arthur Greenblatt.
GBE — Greater.
GBI — D. W. Griffith Produc-
tions.
GBN — Great Northern.
GSF — Golden Stars Films.
Gil A — Guaranteed Pictures.
H
HAD — Horsley-Art Dramas.
HAL — Hallmark.
HAM — Arthur Hammcrstein
Enterprises.
HAN — Hensen-Marine.
HAP — High Art Pictures.
HAB — Harma.
HAS — Harris-Hanover.
HAT — Hatch.
HAW — Hall-Abrahams-Wcrner.
HEA — Headline Pictures.
HEL — Helber Pictures.
HEM — Herman.
HEN — Henley-Seng.
HEP — Hepworth.
HEB — Hercules Productions.
HES — Hesperia.
HEW — Herman Wohl.
HH — Hampton-Hodkinson.
HHA — H. & H.
HIM — Himalaya Films.
HIS — Historic Films.
455
HM — Hi-Mark.
HMU — Horsley-Mutual.
HNE — Bobert J. Horner.
HOB — J. H. Hoffberg.
HOC — Hooper-Connell.
HOD — W. W. Hodkinson Co.
HOF — M. H. Hoffman.
HOL — Hollywood.
HOP — Hopp Hadley.
HOB — Horkheimer.
HOU — Houdini.
HOW — Howell.
HPI — Hollywood Pictures.
HUM — Hampton-Mutual.
HUM — Hutton-Mutual.
HUN — Hungaria Pictures.
HUB — Hugo Beisenfeld.
HWA — Haworth.
HWF — Hiller & Wilk.
HYP — Hyperion.
I
ICE — International Cinema Ex-
change.
IDE — Ideal Pictures.
IFC — Independent Film Clear-
ing House.
IML — Imperial Dist.
IMM — Indo-American.
IMP — Imported Pictures.
INC — Ince-Triangle.
IND — Independent.
INE — Inter-Continental.
INF — Inter-Continent.
INL — Industrial Films.
INS — International Stageplay
Pictures.
INR — International Roadshows.
INT — International.
INV — Invincible.
INW — Interworld.
IRO — Iroquis.
IRV — Irving Exchange.
ITA — Itala Films.
IV — Ivan.
I
JA — Jans.
JAC — Jacobs-Hall.
JAF — Jaffe Art Films.
JAW — Jawitz.
JDK — Jay Dee Kay Productions.
JEF — Jewish Film Productions.
JEN — Jennings-Shipman.
JEW — Jewell.
JFA — Jafa.
JO — Joan.
JOE — Buck Jones Productions.
JOH — Ray Johnston.
JUD — Judea Films.
JW — J. W. Films.
K
KAC — Krimsky-Cochran.
KAJ — M. J. Kandell.
KAL — Kalem.
KAN — Kane.
KA8 — Frank Kassler.
KAU — Henry Kaufman.
KEA — James Keane.
KEL — Kelly.
KKM — John M. Kelley.
KEX — Willis Ketn.
KEK — Herman.
KES — K. E. S. E.
KEN — Willis Kent.
KIN — Burton King.
KIO — Kinotrade.
KIP — Kinopol.
KIT — Kinematrade.
KLA — Captain F. Kleinschmidt.
KLE — George Kleine Service.
KLU — R. H. Klumb.
KR — R. & R. Film Co.
KRA — Kremer.
KRB — Sherman S. Krellberg.
KRE — Krelbar.
KUR — F. W. Kurtz.
L
LAB — Labor Film Service.
I.AF — Latin Films.
LAT — Latin-Artists Pictures.
LBR — Lee-Bradford Co. (Art-
lee).
LED — Lederer.
LEE — Artlee Pictures.
LEM — Levey.
LEN — Lenauer-International.
LEO — Leo Films.
LES — Sol Lesser.
LEV — Levinson.
LEW — Lenwal Productions.
LIB — Liberty Productions.
LIC — Lichtman.
LIr3 — Liebfreed & Miller.
LIN — Lincoln Prods.
LON — London Film-Cosmofoto
film.
LOU — Louben Films.
LOW — Lowell.
LST — Jack Lustberg.
LUB — Bert Lubin.
LUM— Lumas (Gotham).
LYC — Lyceum.
LYN — Lynn Productions.
LYR — Lyric Films.
M
M — Metro.
MA — Modern Arts.
MAB — Arthur Mayer and Joseph
Burstyn.
MAC — Marcy Exchange.
MAD — Madison Pictures.
MAF — Mayfair.
MAJ — Majestic Pictures.
MAK — Marketed.
MAL — Ernst Mattsson.
MAM — Mammoth.
MAN — Manson.
MAO — Mascot Pictures.
MAP — Mascot.
MAQ — Mabel Attractions.
MAR — H. B. Marlnelli.
MAS — Mastodon.
MAT — Frank Mattlson.
MAD — Master.
MAY — Masterpieoe.
MAW — Malvina.
MAX — Max Graf.
MAY — Mayfair-Shallenberger Si
Priest.
MAZ — Malmar.
MBR — Malcolm-Browne.
MCA — M (Arthur.
MCF — Bernarr McFadden.
MCL Douglas Mac I. can.
MCM — McManus.
ME — Merit.
MEL — Melody Pictures.
MEN — Mena.
MEO — Metropolis.
MEP — Metropolitan.
MER — Mercury Pictures.
MES — Metropolis Pictures.
MET — Mentone.
MG — Metro-Gold wyn.
MGM — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.
MGR — M-G-R Productions.
MHM — Maxim Prod.
MIC — Mickey.
MIL — Million Dollar
Productions.
MOD — Modern Film Corp.
MOE — Moeler.
MON — Monopol.
MOP — Monogram.
MOS — B. S. Moss.
MOV — Moviegraphs, Inc.
MPG — Motion Picture Guild.
MPS — Metropolis.
MT — Mutual.
MTJN — Mundus.
MUR — Murray Productions.
N
NAM — N. A. M. P. I.
NAN — National Pictures.
NAP — Napoli Films.
NAT — National Players, Ltd.
NBR — New Brunswick.
NER — New Era.
NES — New Star Films.
NEW — New Cal.
NF — National Films.
NOB — Noble-Duplex.
NOC — Harold Noee.
NOF — Northern Films.
NOL — Nola.
NOR — Norwegian American
Line.
NPI — National Pioneer.
NTJO — Nuoro Mondo.
456
O
OCE — Ocean-Raver.
OCP — Oclott Players.
OD — Od-FUms.
OG — Ogden.
OLM — Olympic Pictures.
OLY — Olympia Macri Excelsior
ORE — Ore-Bernstein.
OSO — Osso Productions.
P
PA A — Palestine-American .
PAC — Play Cholee.
PAF — Pacific.
PAI — Patriot.
PAL — Paralta.
PAM — Paragon.
PAN — Panellinias Film Co.
PAP — Parthenon Pictures (Os
car Price) .
PAR — Paramount (Famous-
Lasky, etc.)
PAS — Passion Play Committee.
PAT — Pathe Si RKO Pathe.
PAX — Pax Films, Inc.
PBA — Paragon-Brady-World.
PBW — Peerless-Brady-World.
PDC — Producers Distributing
Corp.
PEA — Peacock.
PEE — Peerless.
PEN — Pennant.
PER — Perfect.
PES — Harry C. Pearson.
PET — Petrova.
PFT — Perfection.
PFC — Polish Film Corp.
PGO— Play Co.
PHD — Photo-Dramas.
PHE — Phoenix.
PHF — Publio Health Films.
PHL — Photoplay Library.
PHO — Phoebus Films.
PHY — Chris. Phyllis Prod.
PI — Pioneer.
PIC — Picture Classics.
PIE — Piedmont.
PIN — Pinnacle.
PIT — Pittaluga.
PIZ — Pizor.
PLA — Plaza Pictures.
PLC — Plunkett St Carroll.
PLC — Plurograph Unity.
PLY — Plymouth.
PMU — Powell-Mutual.
POA — Polish American Film
Co.
POB — Bud Pollard Prods.
POL — Pole Pictures.
POL — Polish Government Films.
PON — Pollner Distributing Co.
POW — Peerless-Power.
POM — Pollard-Mutual.
POP — Powers Pictures.
POR — Portale Pictures.
PPR — Photo-Frodncers.
PRE — Preferred.
PRG — Progressive Pictures.
PRI — Principal.
PRM — Prime.
PRO — Pro Patria Films.
PRP — Producers Pictures Corp.
PRR — Prizma.
PRS — Presidio Pictures.
PRW — Premo-World.
PRX — Protex Trading Corp.
PS — Producers Security.
PSR — Pacific
PCB — Public Rights.
PUR — Puritan.
PWO — Pearless-World.
PWP — Public Welfare Pictures.
PYM — Pyramid.
PYR — Pyramid-World.
Q
QDE — Quigley-Davenport-Ex-
pedition.
qu — Quality Distributors.
R
R — Rex Film Co.
RA — Rayart Pictures.
RAD — Radin.
RAE — Raleigh Pictures.
RAF — Radiosol.
RAI — Rainbow.
RAL — General.
RAO — Roma.
RAS — Raspin Productions.
EAV — Raver.
RAY — B. B. Ray.
RB — Rex Beach Productions.
RBG — Rex Beach-Goldwyn.
RC — R. C.
REA — Realart.
REB — Reliable.
REC — Ritchey Export Corp.
RED — Red Films.
REE — J. P. Reed.
REF — Reformation Films.
REG — Regal.
REH — Record Pictures.
REI — Reliance.
REK — Edwin S. Relkin.
REL — Realistic.
REM — Remington Pictures.
REN — Regent Pictures.
REP — Republic.
RES — Resolute.
RG R — Russel-Griever.
RHF — Rapf -Hoffman-Four-
square.
RIA — Rialto.
RIE — Jack Rieger.
RIM — Rimax Productions.
RKO — RKO Radio.
ROA — Roadshow Pictures.
ROB — Roberts & Cole.
ROC — Roma Film Co.
ROG — F. B. Rogers.
ROL — Rolfe.
ROM — Romayne.
ROM — Cines-Rome.
ROP — H. H. Rosenfleld.
ROS — Rosemary Films.
ROU — Roubert.
ROW — Rowland-Wagner.
ROY — Fanchon Royer.
RSR — Rapf.
RUL — RusseU.
RUS — Russian Student Club of
America.
s
SA — Sherrill-Art.
SAB — Sable.
SAC — Sack Amusement Co.
SAG — S. & G. Films.
SAL — Edward Salisbury.
SAM — Sarawick.
SAN — Sanford.
SAS — Sascha Films.
SAZ — Walter S. Sazela.
SCA — Scandinavian Pictures.
SCE — Schenck-Select.
SCH — B. P. Schulberg.
SCI — Schomer.
SOL — Schlesinger.
SCN — George Schneider.
SCO — Lester F. Scott.
SCR — Screencraft.
SCW — Schwab.
SDC — Stanley Dist. Corp.
SE — Select.
SEA — Red Seal.
SEC — Second National.
SEE — S. & E.
SEI — Joseph Seiden.
SEL — Selig-V. L. S. E.
SET — Marie Seton.
SEV — Seventh Avenue Film Co.
SEX — Selexart.
SEZ — Selznick.
SFI — Sfinks Films.
SGE — Super Golden Eagle.
SHE — Sherry.
SHI — Shipman.
SHO — Shockuchi (Japan) .
SHP — Showmen's Pictures.
SHU — Sherman-United.
SIE — Sierra Films.
SIG — Signet.
SIN — Dr. Alexander Singelow.
SKT — Sennett-Keystone-
Triangle.
SL — S-L Films.
SM — S. & L. Film Co.
SMI — William H. Smith.
SNO — Sidney A. Snow.
SOA — Sofar Films.
SOF — So. Feature Films.
SOL — Solitary Sin Corp.
SON — Sonora.
SOU — Southland Pictures.
SPE — Spectrum.
SPI — Sphinx Films.
457
SR — State Rights.
SS — Stage & Screen.
ST — Steiner.
STA — Star Film Co.
STB — States Cinema Corp.
STC — A. G. Stern.
STD — Stein.
STE — Sterling.
STF — M. F. Stearns.
STG — Steger.
STH — Standard.
SIT — William Steiner.
STJ — Standard Pictures.
STL — StoU.
STN — Z. Stanczweski.
STO — Goldstone.
STP — Scandinavian Talking
Pictures.
SU — Sunset.
SUB — Sunbeam.
SUM — Supreme.
SUN — Sun.
SUO — Superior.
SUP — Superlative.
SUR — Superb Pictures.
SUS — Sunshine Films.
SUT — Sunray Films.
SWE — Swedish Biograph.
SWT — Bruno Zwicker.
SWO — Shubert-World.
SWP — Swedish Talking Pictures.
SYA — Synchro Art.
SYN — Syndicate.
SYR — Syracuse.
T
TAP — John S. Tapernoux; Ta-
pernoux-Melropolis.
TAR — Tarzan.
TCS — Tucker-Cosmofotofilm-
Sherman.
TE — Triumph-Equitable.
TEL — Telepictures.
TEM — Temple.
TER — Tom Terriss.
THC — Theater Classics.
THH — T. Hayes Hunter.
THL — Thalia.
Till' — Thornby Productions.
TIF — Tiffany Productions.
TIM — Times Pictures.
TOB — Tobis Forenfilms.
TOD — Today Film Corp.
TOF — Tomfilms, Inc.
TOM — Tom Arnold.
TOP — Topical.
TOW — Tower.
TPC — Trinity Pictures.
TPE — Talking Picture Epics.
TRA — Transatlantic.
TRB — Tribune-United.
TRC — Treo Productions.
TRE — Trans-Oceanic.
TRF — Trans-America Films.
TRG — True Life Photoplays.
TRI — Triangle.
TRK — Trekolog Films.
TKL — Transcontinental Pic-
tures.
TRN — Tri-National.
TKO — J. D. Trop.
TRP — Otto Trippel.
TKS — Treasure Pictures.
TKL' — Truart.
TY — Tyrad.
u
U — Universal.
UA — United Artists.
UED — Ufa Eastern Division.
UCO — Unique-Fotofilnis.
UFA — Ufa Films.
UG — Eugenic.
UKR — Ukrafilm Productions.
ULT — Ultra Films.
UNA — Unity.
UNG — Charles Unger.
UNI — United Picture Theaters.
UNP — Unusual Photoplays.
UPC — United Pictures Co.
URF — Universal Red Films.
USA — U. S. Amusement Arl
Dramas.
USF — Usa Film Distributors.
USL — Usla.
USP — U. S. Public Service.
V
VAL — Bruno Valletti.
VAN — Van Dyke-Art.
VED — Vedis Films.
VIC — Victory.
VIE; — Viennese Film Co.
VIK — Viking Productions.
MO — Victory.
VIT — Vitagraph.
VIU — Vitullo Films.
VLS — V. I . S. E.
VTL — Vital.
w
\VA — Warner Bros.
WAD — Worldart.
WAF — Worldart Film Corp.
WAL — Waldorf.
WAN — Aloha Wanderwell.
WAR — Wharton-Sherriott.
WAS — Walch Film Corp.
WAW — Warwick Pictures.
WEB — Weber-North .
WEB — Webster.
WEI — Jesse Weil Productions.
WEL — Carveth Wells.
WES — Westart.
WET — West.
WH — W. H.
WHI — .J. R. Whitney.
WIB — William Berke.
WIL) — Frank R. Wilson.
WIE — G. H. Wiley.
WIK — Jacob Wilk.
WIL — Wilke-Independent.
WIM — Williamson-Submarine.
WIN — Hans Winter.
WIO — J. D. Williams.
WIP — Windsor Pictures.
WIS — Wistara.
WK — Willis Kent.
WO — World.
WOD — World's Trade Ex-
change.
WOK — Worldkino.
WOO — A. H. Woods.
WOW — World Wide.
WPX — W. P. Exchange.
WKI — Wright.
WSR — Western.
WTI. Wharton- International.
WW — Sono Art-World Wide.
X
XX — Distributor unknown.
XYD — A. J. Xydias
Y
VAX — Yankee.
YID — Yiddish Talking Pictures.
YOR — York Pictures.
YOl" — Roberston-Young.
z
ZAK — Zakoro.
ZBY — Zbyszko Polish-American
Film Corp.
ZER — Zcrner.
ZIO — Zion.
17,238 TITLES
RELEASED SINCE 1915
Code to Distributors Starts on Page 453
A
A. B. C. of Love — PAT
12-14-19
A Brivele der Mamen (AT-
Yiddish) — SPI. .9-21-39
A Csunya Lany (AT-Hun-
garian) — DAN ....10-21-35
A Donto Pillanat (AT-Hun-
grarian) — HUN. .10-12-38
A Falu Fossza (AT-Hun-
garian) — HUN. .4-20-38
A Fifi Mind Orult (AT-
Hungarian) — HUN. .12-16-37
A m-es (AT- Hungarian) —
DAN. .4-18-38
A Kek Balvany (AT) — XX
4-19-33
A Kiralyne Huszarja (AT-
Hungarian) — XX. .1-18-36
A Nous La Liberte (AT-
French) — AUT. .5-22-32
Abduction (AT-German) —
CAO . . 1938
Abdul the Damned (AT) —
ALL. .6-1-35
Abie's Irish Rose (S-SE) —
PAR. .4-22-28
Able Minded Lady — PSR.1922
Above All, the Truth (AT-
German ) — XX . . 1939
Abel Mit Der Mundharmonika
(AT) — UFA. .9-5-34
Above All Law — PAR (re-
viewed as Mysteries of
India) 7-30-22
Above the Clouds (AT) —
COL. .12-19-33
458
Abraham Lincoln — (AT)-UA
8-31-30
Abraham Lincoln — FN
1-27-24
Absolute Quiet (AT) — M-G-M
4-6-36
Abus de Confiance (AT-
French) — COL. .12-7-38
Abysmal Brute — U ...4-15-23
Abyssinia — AM 12-10-36
Accent on Youth (AT) —
PAR. .8-10-35
Accidental Honeymoon —
RSR. .5-19-18
Accidents Will Happen (AT)
— WA. .4-27-38
Accomplice — SA 2-22-17
Accusing Post (AT-Spanish) —
COL. .1938
According- to Hoyle — WSR 1922
According- to Law — MT. 3-9-16
According to the Code —
ES. .7-20-16
Accused — Ind 1926
Accused (AT) — UA ..12-17-36
Accusing Finger, The (AT) —
PAR. .11-17-36
Ace High — F 6-30-18
Ace of Aces (AT) — RKO
11-11-33
Act of Action — AE .... 1926
Ace of Cactus — SR 1924
Ace of Cads — PAR ... 10-24-26
Ace of Clubs — RA 1926
Ace of Hearts — G. ... 10-30-21
Ace of the Saddle — D. 7-13-19
Aces and Eights (AT) — PUR
8-8-36
Aces Wild (AT) — COE. .1-20-37
Acht Tage Glueck (AT) -Ger-
man)— FLI. . 8-2-31
Acquittal, The — U ...10-21-23
Acquitted — FAT 4-27-16
Acquitted (AT) — COL 12-22-29
Across the Atlantic (S-SE)
— WA. .5-13-28
Across the Border — AT 1-29-22
Across the Continent —
PAR. .4-30-22
Across the Dead Line — U
1-8-22
Across the Deadline — ST
4-26-25
Across the Divide — AE...1922
Across the Pacific — WA
10-17-26
Across the Plains — AI..1928
Across the Plains (AT) —
MOP. . 1939
Across the World With Mr. &
Mrs. Martin Johnson — TPE
1-26-30
Across to Singapore —
M-G-M. .6-6-28
Action — U 9-4-21
Action Craver — RA 1927
Action for Slander (AT) —
UA . . 1-24-88
Action Galore — ARC .... 1926
Action of Souls — FN. . .6-1-19
Actress, The — M-G-M. .7-15-28
Ada, To Nie Wypadal (AT-
Polish) — XX. .5-7-37
Adam and Eva — PAR 2-18-23
Adam and Evil — M-G-M
8-14-27
Adam's Rib — PAR .... 3-4-23
Adele — U 1-19-19
Adieu Les Beaux Jours (AT)
— Unknown — 4-24-34
Adlos Nicanor (AT-Spanish) —
XX. .3-17-38
Adolf Armstarke (AT-Swedish)
— SCA. .10-8-37
Adopted Son — M 11-8-17
Adorable (AT) — F ...5-19-33
Adorable Cheat — CHE 4-15-28
Adorable Deceiver — FBO .1926
Adorable Savage — U . . . 8-8-20
Adoration (S-SE) — FN
12-16-28
Adventure — PAR 4-26-25
Adventure Girl (AT) — RKO
8-3-34
Adventure in Hearts — PAR
1919
Adventure in Manhattan (AT)
COL. .10 23-36
Adventure Mad — Par . .5-13-28
Adventure in Sahara (AT) —
COL. .12-23-38
Adventure Shop — VIT ..1-5-19
Adventurer, The — M-G-M
9-23-28
Adventurer, The — USA —
2-22-17
Adventurer, The — F ...3-7-20
Adventure's End (AT) —
U. .11-11-37
Adventures in Pygmy Land
HOD. .3-11-2H
Adventures of Carol — WO ''927
Adventures of Chico (AT) —
MOP. .3-3-38
Adventures of Huckleberry
Finn, the (AT) — MGM.2-17-39
(Reviewed as "Huckleberry
Finn")
Adventures of Jane Arden
(AT) — WA. .1939
Adventures of Maya — ELK
4-28-2!''
Adventures of Marco Polo (AT)
— UA. .2 15-38
Adventures of Robin Hood (AT)
— WA. .4-29-38
Adventures of Sherlock Holmes,
(AT)— F. .8-28-39
Adventures of Tom Sawyer
(AT) — UA. .2-15-38
Adventuress — SEZ 1920
Adventurous Blonde. The (AT)
— WA. .11-30-37
Adventurous Knights (AT) —
AJ. .6-7-35
Adventurous Sex — AE .6-21-25
Adventurous Soul — HM ..1928
Advice to the Lovelorn
(AT) — UA. .12-14-33
Aelita — AM 1929
Affair Lafont, The (AT-
French) — TRA. . 10-24-39
Affair of Cappy Ricks, The
(AT) — REP. .5-29-37
Affair of Susan (AT) — U
9-17-35
Affair of the Follies, An —
— FN. .3-13-27
Affair of Three Nations, An
— PAT. .11-4-15
Affairs of Anatol — PAR
9-18-21
Affairs of Annabel (AT) —
RKO. .7-13-38
459
17,238 TITLES
Affairs of a Gentleman (AT)
— U. .6-23-34
Affairs of Cellini (AT) —
UA . . 5-5-34
Affairs of Lady Hamilton —
HOD. .4-29-23
Affairs of Maupassant (AT-
German) — GAL. .2-17-38
Affinities — HOD 1922
Afghanistan — AM ....10-6-29
Aflame in the Sky — FBO 1927
Afraid to Fight— U . . . 7-23-22
Afraid to Love — PAR .4-17-27
Afraid to Talk (AT) — U.1932
Africa Speaks — COL ..9-21-30
African Holiday — PES . . . 6-7-37
After a Million — SU . . 6-18-24
After Business Hours — PDC
6-28-25
After His Own Heart — M 1919
After Marriage — SU ..11-8-25
After Midnight — SEZ . . 9-25-21
After Office Hours (AT) —
MGM. .2-16-35
After Six Days — ARC .... 1922
After the Ball — FBO 1924
After the Ball (AT) — F
3-18-33
After the Dance (AT) —
COL. .8-14-35
After the Fog (AT&S) —
BE. .1-19-30
After the Show — PAR. 10-9-21
After the Storm — COL 5-27-28
After the Thin Man (AT) —
M-G-M. .12-7-36
After the Verdict — BNE
1-26-30
After the War — U 12-1-18
After Tomorrow (AT) — F
3-6-32
After Tonight (AT)— RKO
10- 26-33
After Your Own Heart — F
8-7-21
Aftermath — CP 12-17-27
Aftermath — PAR 1914
Against All Odds— F ..7-27-24
Against the Law — EP....1922
Against the Law (AT) — COL
11- 21-34
Age for Love (AT) —
UA. .11-15-31
Age of Consent (AT) —
RKO.. 8-25-32
Age of Desire, The — FN
1-20-24
Age of Indiscretion (AT) —
MGM. .6-18-35
Age of Innocence, The —
WA. .1924
Age of Innocence (AT) —
RKO. .8-31-34
17,238 TITLES
Aggie Appleby, Maker of
Men (AT) — RKO. . 10-19-33
Agulis Frente Al Sol (AT-
Spanish) — LST. .1032
Ah. Wilderness (AT) —
MGM. .11-15-36
Ain't Love Funny — FBO 1920
Air Circus (PT&S) — F .9-9-28
Air Devils (AT) — U 9-16-38
Air Eagles (AT) — COT
12-27-31
Air Hawk — FBO 1925
Air Hawks (AT) — COL 6-1-35
Air Hostess (AT) — COL
1-21-33
Air Legrion — RKO ...11-25-28
Air Mail (AT) — U 1932
Air Mail— PAR 3-29-25
Air Mail Pilot — HM... 5-13-28
Air Patrol — U 1928
Air Police (AT) — WW
3-22-31
Al Buio Insieme (AT-
Italian) — CIL. .8-19-3?
Al Teman — AM 1-11-31
Alabaster Box— VIT ....1917
Aladdin and the Wonderful
Lamp — F. .10-11-17
Aladdin from Broadway —
VIT. .3-15-17
Aladdin's Other Lamp — M
7-5-17
Alarma (AT-Spanish) —
XX. .1939
Alarm Clock Andy — PAR
3-21-20
Alaskan — PAR 9-21-24
Alaskan Adventures — PAT
1916
Albany Night Boat — TIF
9-23-28
Alcatraz Island (AT) —
FN. .1937
Alcatraz Island (AT) —
WA. .1-21-38
Alchet (AT-Polish) —
JEF. .9-17-37
Aldebaran (AT-Italian) —
XX. .1938
Alex the Great — FBO 3-18-28
Alexander Hamilton (AT) —
WA. .9-20-31
Alexander Nevsky (AT-
Russian) — AM ..3-29-39
Alexander's Ragtime Band
(AT) — F. .5-28-38
Alf's Button — FN ....3-19-22
Algiers (AT) — UA 6-28-38
All Baba and the Forty
Thieves! — F. .12-1-18
Ali Baba Goes to Town (AT) —
F. .10-21-37
Alias Bulldog Drummond (AT)
— GB. .9-10-35
Alias French Gertie — (AT) —
RKO. .4-13-30
Alias Jimmy Valentine — M
4- 11-20
Alias Jimmy Valentine (PT
& S) — M-G-M. .11-18-28
Alias Julius Caesar — FN .1922
Alias Mary Brown — TRI 8-4-18
Alias Mary Dow (AT) —
U. .6-29-35
Alias Mary Flynn — FBO
5- 17-25
Alias Mary Smith (AT) —
MAP. .8-24-32
Alias Mike Moran — PAR
3-23-19
Alias Miss Dodd—U. . .6-13-20
Alias Mrs. Jessup — M....1917
Alias Phil Kennedy — FBO 1922
Alias the Bad Man (AT) — TIF
6- 28-31
Alias the Deacon — U. . 6-26-27
Alias the Doctor (AT) —
FN. .3-6-32
Alias the Lone Wolf — COL
10-2-27
Alias the Night Wind — F
8-19-23
Alibi (AT)— U 4-14-29
Alibi. The — VIT 8-10-16
Alibi for Murder (AT) — COL
10-2-36
Alibi Ike (AT) — WA.. 7-17-35
Alice Adams— AE .... 6-24-23
Alice Adams — (AT) —
„ RKO.. 8-14-35
Alice in Wonderland — PAT
1927
Alice in Wonderland (AT) —
UCO. .9-20-31
Alice in Wonderland (AT) —
PAR. .12-11-33
Alice Through a Looking
Glass — PAT. .1928
Alien. An — R 1915
Alien Enemy. An — HOD
4-25-18
Alien Souls — PAR ....5-11-16
Alimony — FBO 1-20-24
Alimony Madness (AT) —
MAF. .5-5-33
All Aboard — FN 4-10-27
All American. The (AT) —
D. .1932
All American Chump (AT) —
M-G-M . . 8-29-36
All-American Sweetheart (AT)
— COL. .2-24-38
All Around Frying Pan —
FBO. .11-15-25
All At Sea — M-G-M 6-6-29
All Dolled Up — U 3-6-21
All For a Husband — F...1917
All For a Woman — FN
12-11-21
All Man — PBW 11-30-16
All Man — VIT 8-4-18
460
All Men Are Enemies (AT) —
F. .4-26-34
All Night — U 12-1-18
All of a Sudden Norma — BB
1-5-19
All of a Sudden Peggy —
PAR. .1920
All of Me (AT) — PAR. .2-3-34
All Over Town (AT) —
REP. .8-26-37
All Quiet on the Western Front
— (AT) — U. .4-27-30
All Souls Eve — REA. . .2-20-21
All the Brothers Were Valiant
— M. .1-21-23
All the King's Horses (AT) —
PAR. .2-13-35
All the World To Nothing —
PAT. .1918
All the World's a Stage —
PRI. .1922
All Woman — G 5-26-18
All Women Have Secrets
(AT) — PAR. .1939
All Wrong — PAT 5-18-19
Alia En El Rancho Grande
(AT-Spanish) — XX. .11-24-36
Allegheny Uprising (AT)
— RKO . . 10-24-39
Alle Tage 1st Kein Sonntag
(AT-German) — XX. .7-16-36
All's Fair in Love — G. 10-30-21
Allergi Masnadieri (AT-
Italian) — XX. .10-20-39
Alles um eine Frau (AT-
German — XX. .12-24-35
Alles Weg'n Dem Hund (AT-
German) — XX. .4-1-36
Alma Jarocha (AT-Spanish) —
XX. .1938
Almas Encontradas (AT) —
XX. .7-7-33
Almighty Dollar — PBA 8-31-16
Almost a Gentleman (AT)
— RKO. .1939
Almost a Honeymoon (AT) —
BI. .1-11-31
Almost a Husband — G 10-19-19
Almost a Lady — PDC. . 9-19-26
Almost Human — PAT 1927
Almost Married (AT) — P
7-29-32
Almost Married— M ....6-8-19
Aloha — TIF 1930
Aloha (AT) — TIF 2-1-31
Aloha-ee — TRI 11-8-15
Aloma of the South Seas —
PAR. .5-23-26
Alone (S-SE) — AM 6-5-32
Along Came Love (AT) — PAR
10-6-36
Along Came Ruth — M6 7-20-24
Along Came Sally (AT)-GB
6-16-34
Along Came Touth (AT) —
PAR. .1-11-31
Alpine Love (AT-Italian) —
NUO. .6-9-36
Alpine Passion (AT-German)
— XX. .1939
Alraune (AT) — UFA. . .6-7-34
Alster Case — ES 12-16-15
Altar Stairs. The — U. . 12-3-22
Altars of Desire — M-G-M
6-1-27
Alte Kameraden (AT-German)
— XX. .4-29-36
Always Audacious — PAR
11-14-20
Always Goodbye (AT) — F
5- 24-31
Always Goodbye (AT) —
F. .6-27-38
Always in Trouble (AT) —
F. .8-19-38
Always in the Way — M..1915
Always the Woman — G 7-16-22
Am Seidenen Faden (AT-
German — UFA. .1939
Amangeldy (AT-Russian) —
AM. .1939
Amarilly of Clothesline Alley —
ART. .3-21-18
Amateur Adventuress — M 1919
Amateur. An — WO ...6-18-19
Amateur Daddy (AT) — F
4-24-32
Amateur Devil, An — PAR 1920
Amateur Gentleman — FN
9- 12-26
Amateur Gentleman, The (AT)
— DA. .4-27-36
Amateur Orphan — PAT 5-24-17
Amateur Widow — WO . . 1919
Amateur Wife — PAR . .5-2-20
Amazing- Dr. Clitterhouse (AT)
WA. .6-21-38
Amazing- Imposter — PAT
1- 26-19
Amazing Lovers — JA . . . 1922
Amazing Mr. Williams. The
(AT) — COL. .11-22-39
Amazing Quest — HEP . . 1924
Amazing Vagabond — RKO
4-28-29
Amazing Wife — D 3-9-19
Amazing Woman — SEZ
2- 29-20
Amazon Head Hunters, The
(AT) — PRI. .11-17-32
Amazons — PAR 8-30-17
Ambassador Bill (AT) — F
11-15 31
Ambition — F 7-6-16
Ambush (AT) — PAR ..1-18-39
Ambush Valley (AT) — REB
10-26-36
America — UA 3-2-24
America's Answer — BPI 8-4-18
American Aristocracy — FAT
11-9-16
American Beauty. An — FN
10- 2-27
American Beauty — PAR
6- 29-16
American Buds — F ...4-18-18
American Consul — PAR
2-22-17
American Live Wire — VIT
4-11-18
American Madness (AT) —
COL. .7-1-32
American Maid— MT ..12-6-17
American Manners — FBO
8-31-24
American Methods — F 6-24-17
American Pluck — CHA
10- 18-25
American— That's All — FAT
6-7-17
American Toreador — AN 1922
American Venus — PAR 1-31-26
American Way — WO ...7-R-19
American Widow — M 12-20-17
Americano — FAT 1-4-17
Amo Te Sola (AT-Italian) —
NDO. .7-22-36
Among Cannibals of S. Pacific
IND. .7-28-18
Among the Missing (AT) —
COL. .9-25-34
Among Those Present — PAT
1921
Amor que Vuelve (AT-
Spanish) — KIT. .1935
Amore E Dolore (AT-
Italian) — XX. .5-18-37
Amore E. Morte (AT-
Italian) — ADR. .10-6-32
Amore Sulle Alpi (AT-
Italian) — ESP. .1939
Amphitryon (AT-French) —
GOB. .3-30-37
An American Tragedy (AT)
PAR. .8-9-31
An Leva De Gamla Sudar (AT-
Swedish) — EUP. .11-16-37
An Old Spanish Custom (AT)
— HOF. .1-17-36
An Old Sweetheart of Mine —
M. .4-29-23
An Orphan Boy of Vienna (AT-
German) — GFF. .9-17-37
Anabel Lee — JO 1921
Ancestor, The (AT-Italian) —
XX. .1938
Ancient Highway — PAR
11- 22-25
Ancient Law — MA .... 12-7-24
Ancient Mariner — F ..1-10-26
And a Still Small Voice —
NF. .12-15-18
And So They Were Married
(AT) — COL. .5-14-36
And Sudden Death (AT) — PAR
6-6-36
And the Children Pay — TT
1919
Andalusian Nights (AT-
German) — UFA. .1938
Andy Hardy Gets Spring
Fever (AT) — MGM.. 7-12-39
Angel (AT) — PAR 9-17-37
Angel Child — HOD ...9-16-18
461
17,238 TITLES
Angel Citizen — ME ...7-30-22
Angel of Broadway — PAT
10- 30-27
Angel of Crooked Street — VIT
5-28-22
Angel Factory — PAT ..9-13-17
Angelita (AT-Spanish) — -
F. .9-13-35
Angel's Holiday (AT) —
F. .4-27-37
Angels Wash Their Faces
(AT) — WA. .9-8-39
Angels with Dirty Faces (AT)
— WA. .10-24-38
Animal Crackers (AT) — PAR
8-3-30
Animal Kingdom. The (AT)
— RKO — -12-23-32
Ankles Preferred — F ..3-13-27
Ann Carver's Profession
(AT) — COL. .6-9-33
Ann Vickers (AT) — RKO
9-29-33
Ann's Finish — AMD ...4-4-18
Anna (AT-Russian) — AM
7-18-36
Anna Ascends — PAR .11-19-22
Anna Christie (AT) — MGM
2-9-30
Anna Christie — FN ..11-25-23
Anna Karenina — F 1915
Anna Karenina (AT) —
MGM. .8-31-35
Annabel Takes a Tour (AT) —
RKO. .12-28-38
Annabelle's Affairs (AT) —
F. .6 28-31
Annapolis (S-SE) — PAT .1928
Annapolis Farewell (AT) —
PAR. .8-23-35
Annapolis Salute (AT)- —
RKO. .8-17-37
Anne Against the World — RA
7-7-29
Anne for Spite— AMD 5-24-17
Anne of Green Gables (AT) —
RKO. .11-16-34
Anne of Green Gables — REA
11- 23-19
Anne of Littly Smoky — AE
1-15-22
Annemarie. Die Braut der
Companie (AT) — XX.. 1934
Annette in Paradise (AT-
German) — XX. .3-10-36
Annexing Bill — PAT . . 6-30-18
Annie Laurie — M-G-M . 6-5-27
Annie Oakley (AT) —
RKO. .10-29-35
Another Dawn (AT) —
WA. .6-18-37
Another Face (AT) —
RKO. .11-18-35
Another Language (AT)
MGM. .8-6-33
17.238 TITLES
Another Man's Boots — AY
10-29-22
Another Man's Shoes — U
11-5-22
Another Man's Wife — PDC
1924
Another Scandal — PDC 9-21-24
Another Thin Man (AT) —
MGM. .11-14-39
Answer — TRI 4-18-18
Anthony Adverse (AT) — WA
Anticipated Day (AT-Polish)
— XX. .1939
Antics (AT-German) —
XX. .1938
6-12-36
Antics of Ann — PAR 12-13-1?
Anton the Terrible — PAR
10-5-16
Anush (S) — AM ....11-11-32
Any Night — AMG 1922
Any Wife — F 1922
Any Woman — PAR ...5-31-25
Anybody Here Seen Kelly? — IT
10-21-28
Anybody's Blonde (AT) —
ACT. .11-1-31
Anybody's War (AT) — PAR
7- 13-30
Anybody's Woman (AT) — PAR
8- 17-30
Anything- for a Thrill (AT) —
CNN. .6-22-37
Anything Once — CLP ..6-21-25
Anything Once — BL ..10-18-17
Apache — COL 2-3-29
Apache Raider — PAT .2-12-28
Apaches of Paris — WW... 1929
Apaches of Paris — Ufa 9-9-2S
Apartment 29 — VIT ..4-19-17
Apartment Above (AT-Poli6h)
— XX. .1938
Apassionata — FF 4-4-29
Apostle of Vengeance — INC
6-15-16
Appearance of Evil — WO
10-13-18
Appearances — PAR ....7-3-21
Applause (AT) — PAR
10-13-29
Apple-Tree Girl — EDP 10-11-17
April Blossoms (AT) —
MGM. .1935
April Folly — PAR 2-29-20
April Fool — CHA 11-7-26
April Romance (AT) — M-G-M
1936
April Romance (AT) —
MGM. .2-2-37
April Showers — PRE .11-11-23
Arab. The — MG 7-6-24
Arabia — F
Arabian Knight — R.C. .8-15-20
Arabian Knightmare — PS 1922
Arabian Love — F 4-2-22
Aranyember ( AT-Hungarian) —
DAN. .5-11-37
Are All Men Alike — M
10-31-20
Are Children to Blame? —
CRD. .1922
Are Parents People — PAR
7-14-25
Are These Our Children (AT)
— RKO. .11-15-31
Are You a Failure — PRE
3-18-23
Are You a Mason? — PAR 1915
Are You Legally Married —
THP. .4-6-19
Are You Listening (AT) —
MGM. .4-24-32
Are You There? (AT) — F 1930
Are You There (AT) —
F. .1931
Are We Civilized? (AT) —
RAS. .6-14-34
Are Women to Blame? — FD
1928
Are You a Mason? (AT) —
KAJ. .10-30-34
Aren't We All (AT) —
PAR. .7-1-32
Argentine Love — PAR 12-28-24
Argyle Case (AT & S) — WA
9-1-29
Argyle Case — RSR 2-8-17
Aria del Continente (AT-
Italian) — ESP. .1939
Ariane (AT) — BLR ....3-8-34
Aristocracy — PAR 1914
Arizona (AT) — COL 1931
Arizona — ART 12-15-18
Arizona Bound — PAR ..5-1-27
Arizona Cyclone — U 1928
Arizona Cyclone (AT) —
FD. .1935
Arizona Days — SYW ..4-28-29
Arizona Days (AT) —
GN. .2-2-37
Arizona Express — F . . 3-23-24
Arizona Gunfighter (AT) —
REP. .9 24-37
Arizona Kid (AT) — F 5-18-30
Arizona Kid, The (AT) —
REP. .10-3-39
Arizona Legion (AT) —
RKO. .1939
Arizona Mahoney (AT) —
PAR. .5-4-37
Arizona Outlaw — WO . . . 1920
Arizona Raiders. The (AT) —
PAR . . 6-30-36
Arizona Romeo — -F ...1-18-25
Arizona Speed — AI 1928
Arizona Streak — FBO . . . 1926
Arizona Sweepstake — D
11-15-25
Arizona Terror (AT) —
TIF. .9-27-31
Arizona to Broadway (AT)
F — 7-22-33
462
Arizona Whirlwind — PAT
3- 20-27
Arizona Wildcat — F ...1-29-28
Arizona Wildcat (AT) —
F. .11-8-38
Arizonian. The (AT) —
RKO. .7 27-35
Arkansas Traveler (AT) —
PAR. .10-4-38
Arm of the Law (AT) —
MOP. .7-1-32
Armored Car (AT) —
U. .6 22-37
Armored Vault — Ufa . . . 1928
Arms and the Girl— PAR
10- 25-17
Arms and the Woman — PAR
11- 16-16
Armstrong's Wife — PAR
11-25-15
Army Girl (AT) —
REP. .7-19-38
Around the Corner (AT) —
COL. .5-4-30
Around the World in 80 Min-
utes with Douglas Fair-
banks (AT) — UA.. 11-22 31
Around the World Via Graf
Zeppelin (S-SE) — TPE
11- 10-2!»
Arrest Bulldog Drummond
(AT) — PAR. . 1938
Arrest Bulldog Drummond
(AT) — PAR. .1-17-39
Arrowsmith (AT) — UA
12- 13-31
Arsenal — AM 11-17-29
Arsene Lupin (AT) — MGM
2- 28-32
Arsene Lupin — -GRE ..2-22-17
Arsene Lupin Returns (AT) —
MGM. .1-25-38
Arshim Mai Alan (AT-
Armenian) — XX. .3-15-37
Arson Gang Busters (AT) —
REP. .4-4-38
Artie, the Millionaire Kid —
vrr. .1910
Artists and Models (AT) —
PAR. .8-5-37
Artists and Models Abroad
(AT) — PAR. .11-2-38
Aryan, The — TRI 3-30-16
As a Man Desires — FN 2-22-2?
As a Man Lives — SEZ
12-17-22
As a Man Thinks; — HOD
4- 20-19
As Dream and Shadow (AT-
Finnish) — XX. .1938
As Good As Married (AT) —
U. .4-22-37
As Husbands Go (AT) — F
1-27-34
As in a Looking Glass — WO
3-9-16
As Man Made Her — PBW
3- 15-17
As Men Love — PAR ..6-24-17
As No Man Has Loved — F
2-15-25
(Reviewed as "The Man
Without a Country")
As the Devil Commands
(AT) — COL. .9-1-33
As the Earth Turns (AT) —
WA — 2-15-34
As the Sun Went Down — M
1919
As You Desire Me (AT) —
MGM . . 6-5-32
As You Like It (AT) — F
11-6-36
Aschermittwoch (AT-
German — XX. .3-12-35
Asegure a Su Mujer (AT-
Spanish) — F. .3-13-35
Ashamed of Parents — WA
12-18-21
Ashes — EC 1922
Ashes of Embers — -PAR
10- 12-10
Ashes of Hope — TRI. .. 10-4-17
Ashes of Love— GRA .10-6-18
Ashes of Vengeance — FN
8-19-23
Asi Es La Mujer (AT-Spanish)
— XX. .10-22-36
Asphalt — AP 5-11-30
At Bay — PAT 1922
At Devil's Gorge — ARW..1923
At First Sight — PAR.. 6-28-17
At Piney Ridge — SEL .4-27-16
At the Circus (AT) — MGM
11- 17-39
At the Crossroads— AR. . .1922
At the Edge of the World —
Ufa. .6 23-29
At the End of the World —
PAR. .8-21-21
At the Mercy of Men — SEZ
4- 25-18
At the Sign of the Jack
O'Lantern — HOD. .1-22-22
At the South Pole — POL
3-3-29
At the Stage Door— FBO
12- 18-21
Atlantic (AT) — BI ...10-5-30
Atlantic Adventure (AT) —
COL. .9-10-35
Atlantic Flight (AT) —
MOP. .9-20-37
Atom — TRI 9-15-18
Atonement — PI 1920
Atta Boy — PAT 10-3-26
Atta Boy's Last Race — FAT
10-19-16
Attorney for the Defense
(AT) — COL. .5-8-32
Auction Block- — M-G-M
2-28-26
Auction Block — RBG —
12-20-17
Auction of Virtue — USA
5- 17-17
Auctioneer — F 1-23-27
Audrey — PAR 3-30-16
Aufforderung Zulu Tanz (AT-
German) — GFS. .11-26-35
Aufruhr In Damaskus (AT-
German) — UFA. .1939
August Week-End (AT) —
CHE. .7-18-36
Aunt of the Girls (AT-
Spanish) — XX. .1939
Aus Liebe Zum Vaterland
(AT-German) — AMT. .12-2-37
Autumn — URE 3-9-16
Autumn Crocus (AT) — AUT
10-25-34
Autumn Love — AEP. . 11-18-28
Autumn Maneuvers (AT-
German) — CAO. .1939
Avec L'Assurance (AT-French)
— -PAR . .5-9-35
Avenger. The (AT) — COL
4-19-31
Avenger, The (AT) — MOP
10-4-33
Avalanche — ART 7-6-19
Avalanche (AT) — FD. .3-27-32
Avalanche — PAR 12-9-28
Ave Maria (AT-Italian) —
KIT. .1935
Ave Maria (AT German) —
UFA. .10 8-37
Avec Le Sourire (AT-French)
MAZ. .2-9-39
Avenging Fangs — -PAT
5-29-27
Avenging Rider — FBO
11-11-28
Avenging Shadow — PAT
4-1-28
Avenging Trail — M ...1-10-18
Avenging Waters (AT) — COL
7- 8-36
Average Woman — BR... 2-3-24
Aviator (AT & S) — WA 1929
Avocate D'Amour (AT-French)
— REG. .9-14-38
Awakening (S-SE) — UA
11-18-28
Awakening — PWO 12-6-17
Awakening of Helen Ritchie
— M. .1-18-17
Awakening of Jim Burke
(AT) — COL. .5-18-35
Awakening of Ruth — EDP
9-27-17
Away Goes Prudence — -PAR
7-11-20
Awful Truth (AT) — PAT
8- 4-29
Awful Truth — PDC 7-5-25
Awful Truth, The (AT) —
COL. .10-11-37
Aycie J. Pilsukskiego (AT-
Polish) — MPS. .3-13-35
Az Ember Neha Teved (AT-
Hungarian) — HU. .4-9-38
Az Okos Mama (AT-
Hungarian) — XX. .4-15-36
463
17,238 TITLES
Az uj Rokon (AT-
Hungarian) — XX. .3-13-35
Az Uj Foldesur (AT-
Hungarian) — DAN. .10-2-36
B
Babbitt (AT) — FN ..12-15-34
Babbitt — WA 7-20-24
Babbling Tongues — IV 8-23-17
Babe Comes Home — FN
6-5-27
Babes in Arms (AT) — MGM
9-19-39
Babes in the Woods — F..1917
Babes in Toyland (AT) — MGM
11- 12-34
Babette— VIT 3-22-17
Baboona (AT) — F .... 1-22-35
Bab, the Fixer — BM... 8-30-17
Bab's Burglar — PAR. .11-15-17
Bab's Candidate — VIT . .7-4-20
Bab's Diary — PAR ...10-18-17
Bab's Matinee Idol — PAR 1917
Baby Cyclone (S-SE) —
MGM. .10-7-28
Baby Doll Bandit, A — U
Baby Face (AT) — WB 6-24-33
Baby Face Harrington (AT) —
MGM. .6-19-35
Baby Marie's Roundup — PAT
1919
Baby Mine — MGM ....1-15-28
Baby Mine — G 10-4-17
Baby, Take a Bow (AT) — F
6 30-34
Baby's Diplomacy — PAT
Bachelor Apartment (AT) —
RKO. .3-8-31
Bachelor Apartments — ARW
1921
Bachelor Bait (AT) — RKO
7-20-34
Bachelor Brides — PDC 5-16-26
Bachelor Daddy — PAR.. 5-7-22
Bachelor Father (AT) —
MGM. .2-1-31
Bachelor Girl (PT & S) —
COL. .7-21-29
Bachelor Mother (AT) —
HOL. .12-14-32
Bachelor Mother (AT) —
RKO. .7-3-39
Bachelor of Arts (AT) — F
12- 29 34
Bachelor's Affairs (AT) — F
6-25-32
Bachelor's Baby — COL . 6-12-27
Bachelor's Children — VIT
4-25-18
Bachelor's Club (S-SE) —
PAP. .192!)
Bachelor's Folly (AT) WW
6-24-32
17,238 TITLES
Bachelor's Paradise — TIP
7-15-28
Bachelor's Wife. A — PAT
5-18-19
Back Door to Heaven (AT)
PAR. .4-12-39
Back from Shanghai . . PAP
1929
Back From Shanghai — RAL
3-23-30
Back Home and Broke — PAR
12-31-22
Back in Circulation (AT) —
WA. .7-30-37
Back of the Man — INC 3-1-17
Back Page (AT) — GEP
6-13-34
Back Pay (AT) — FN... 6-1-30
Back Pay — PAR 2-19-22
Back Stage— TIF 6-26-27
Back Stage (AT) —
GB. .8-12-37
Back Street (AT) — U....1932
Back to God's Country — FN
11-9-19
Back to God's Country — U
7- 17-27
Back to Liberty — EXP 1-29-28
Back to Life — AE 1925
Back to Nature (AT) — F
8- 14-36
Back to the Woods — G 7-28-18
Back to Yellow Jacket — ARW
1922
Back Trail — U 6-15-24
Backbone — G 5-6-23
Bad Boy — FAT 2-15-17
Bad Boy (AT) — GAT.. 7-10-39
Bad Lands (AT) — RKO. 8-28-39
Bad Boy (AT) — F .... 1 0-29-35
Bad Company — AE ...3-29-25
Bad Company (AT) —
PAT. .11-8-31
Bad Girl (AT) — F 8-9-31
Bad Guy (AT) —
MGM. .8-26-37
Bad Lands — PDC 10 4-25
Bad Little Angel (AT) —
MGM. .11-14-39
Bad Man, The (AT) — FN
9-28-30
Bad Man — FN 10-7-23
Bad Man of Brimstone (AT) —
MGM. .1937
Bad Man of Brimstone (AT) —
M-G-M. .1-18-38
Bad Man's Bluff — PAT 1-30-27
Bad Men's Money — SYN..1929
Bad One, The (AT) — UA
3-18-30
Bad Sister (AT) — U.... 4-5-31
Badge of Courage — VIT
Badge of Honor (AT) — MAF
6-19-34
Baffled — IND 1924
Bag and Baggage — SEZ..1923
Bait — PAR 1-9-21
Baited Trap — RA 1926
Balalaika (AT) — MGM. 12-15 39
Baldevins Brollop (AT-
Swedish) — SCA. .1-23-39
Balinese Love — TPE .12-13-31
Ball in Metropol (AT-German)
— XX. .1938
Ballad of Cossack Golta (AT-
Russian) — AM. .3-2-38
Ball of Glass (AT-German)
— XX. .1939
Ballerina (AT-French) —
MAB. .11-9-38
Ballet Girl — BRA 2-3-10
Ballyhoo Buster — PAT
12-25-27
Baltic Deputy (AT-
Russian) — AM. .9-16-37
Band Plays On (AT) — MGM
12-22-34
Bandbox — HOD 11-30-19
Bandit Buster — PAT ...1927
Bandit's Baby — FBO . . . 6-7-25
Bandit's Son — FBO 1927
Bandolero. The — MG ..9-28-24
Banjo On My Knee (AT) — F
12-1-36
Bank Alarm (AT) —
GN. .6-4-37
Bantam Cowboy — FBO 8-19-28
Bar-C Mystery — PAT . .3-21-26
Bar-L Ranch (AT)-BIF
8-4-30
Bar Mitzvah (AT-Yiddish) —
SM. .3-20-35
Bar Nothin' — F 10-16-21
Bar Sinister — HAW . . .4-26-17
Bar 20 Rides Again (AT) —
PAR. .11-30-35
Bar 20 Justice (AT) —
PAR. .4-14-38
Bar Z Bad Men (AT) —
REP. .4 22-37
Baratsagos Arcot Kerek (AT-
Hungarian) — XX. .10-8-36
Barb- Wire — ARW 1922
Barbary Coast (AT) —
UA. .9-24-35
Barbed Wire — PAR ...8-14-27
Barbara Frietchie — PDC
10-5-24
Barbara Fritchie — M ..12-2-15
Barbarian — PI 1921
Barbarian, The (AT) —
MGM. .5-13-33
Barbary Sheep — ART .9-20-17
Barbarina Die Taenzerin Von
Sanssouci (AT German) —
CAP. .10-26-32
Barcarole (AT-German) — UFA
10-22-36
Bardelys, The Magnificent —
MGM. .10-17-26
Bare-flsted Gallagher — HRM
6-29-19
464
Bare Fists — U 4-20-19
Bare Knees — GOT .... 1-29-28
Bare Knuckles — F 3-6-21
Baree. Son of Kazan — VIT
5-21-18
Baree. Son of Karzan — VIT
5-24-25
Barefoot Boy (AT) —
MOP. .9-1-38
Barefoot Boy, The — CBC
11-18-23
Bargain (AT) — FN (Reviewed
as "You and I").. 9-6-31
Bargain. The — PAR ....1914
Bargains — BR 1923
Barker — SEL 8-23-17
Barker. The (PT & S) — FN
12-9-28
Barnstormer — FN 1922
Barnum Was Right (AT) —
U. . 10-27-29
Baroness and the Butler (AT)
F. .2-15-38
Barricade — FBO 10-9-21
Barricade — M 3-8-17
Barricade (AT) — F... 12-14-39
Barrier — MGM 4-4-26
Barrier — RB 2-15-17
Barrier. The (AT) —
PAR. .11-6-37
Barriers Aflame — FN .10-25-25
Barriers Burned Away — AE
12-21-24
Barriers of Folly — RUL..1922
Barriers of Society — TJ
Barriers of the Law — IND
11-16-24
Barretts of Wimpole St. (AT)
— MGM . .9-8-34
Bars of Hate (AT)— VIC 1935
Bars of Iron — STL 3-6-21
Bashful Buccaneer — RA
11-1-25
Bat. The — UA 3-21-26
Bat Whispers (AT) — UA
1-18-31
Batalion (AT-Czeehoslovakian)
— XX. .1939
Battle. The (AT) — GAG
11-21-34
Battle Cry of Peace — VIT
9-16-15
Battle of Broadway (AT) —
F. .4-27-38
Battle of Coronel and Falk-
land Islands — LEE .2-19-28
Battle of Galopoli (AT) —
CAP. .12-6-31
Battle of Greed (AT) —
CRE. .1-4-37
Battle of Hearts — F ..5-25-16
Battle of Life — F 12-14-16
Battle of Mons — ERA
3-31-29
Battle of Paris (AT & S) —
PAR. .1929
Battle of the Sexes — (S-SE) — ■
UA. .10-14-28
Battle With the Drag-on (AT-
German) — XX. .1939
Battler — WO 8-31-19
Battlin' Kid — PS 1926
Battling Buddy. . ARC .9-14-24
Battling Bunyan — AE 12-14-24
Battling Butler — MGM 8-29-26
Battling Fool — GOL .... 1924
Battling Jane — PAR ..10-6-18
Battling Orioles — PAT 10-26-24
Battling Thru — PIZ 1928
Bava — U 4-16-23
Bawbs of Blue Ridge — INC
11- 16-16
Be a Little Sport — P... 7-6-19
Be Mine Tonight (AT) —
U. .3-16-33
Be My Wife — G 6-12-21
Be Yourself (AT) — UA
3-9-30
Beach of Dreams — RC 6-26-21
Beachcomber — PAR 1916
Beachcomber. The (AT) —
PAR. .12-1-38
Beans — U 9-15-18
Bear Cat — U 4-2-22
Beast — P 7-27-16
Beast of Borneo (AT) — DUW
12- 28-34
Beast of the City, The (AT) —
MGM. .3-13-32
Beasts of Berlin, See: Goose
Step
Beating the Game — G. 9-11-21
Beating the Odds — VIT
5-4-19
Beatrice Fairfax — WTL
8-17-16
Beau Bandit (AT) — RKO
6- 15 30
Beau Broadway — M-G-M
8-15-28
Beau Brummel — WA... 4-13-24
Beau Geste — PAR .... 8-15-26
Beau Geste (AT) — PAR
7- 24-39
Beau Ideal (AT) — RKO
1-11-31
Beau Revel — PAR ....3-20-21
Beau Sabreur — PAR . . 1-29-28
Beautiful Adventure — EMU
10-25-17
Beautiful and Damned — WA
12-17-23
Beautiful Blue Danube — AY
1929
Beautiful But Dumb — TIF
9-9-28
Beautiful Cheat — U ....2-7-26
Beautiful City — FN ...11-1-25
Beautiful Gambler — U .6-26-21
Beautiful Liar — FN 1921
Beautiful Lie — M .... 5-31-17
Beautiful Sinner — PFT
6-24-25
Beautifully Trimmed — U
12-12-20
Beauty and Bullets — U 1-20-29
Beauty and the Bad Man —
PDC. .1925
Beauty and the Barge — PAR. .
Beauty and the Boss (AT) —
WA. .4-3-32
Beauty and the Rogue — AMU
2-21-18
Beauty for the Asking (AT)
— RKO.. 2-16-39
Beauty for Sale (AT) —
MGM. .9-13-33
Beauty in Chains — BL 4-11-18
Beauty Market — FN ....1919
Beauty Parlor (AT) — CHE
10- 4-32
Beauty Prize — MG ....10-5-24
Beauty of the Pustra (AT-
Hungarian) — XX. .1938
Beauty-Proof — VIT ....6-8-19
Beauty Shop — PAR ...5-14-22
Beauty Shoppers — TIF . . 7-3-27
Beauty's Daughter (AT) —
F. .9-17-35
Beauty's Worth — PAR .4-9-22
Because I Loved You (AT-
German) — AGF. .2-2-30
Because of a Woman — TRI
12-13-17
Beckoning Flame — TRI
12-23-15
Beckoning Roads — RC 12-28-19
Beckoning Trail — RED .8-3 16
Becky — MGM 10-16-27
Becky Sharp (AT) —
RKO. .6-14-35
Bed of Roses (AT) —
RKO. .7-1-33
Bedside (AT) — FN 3-6-34
Bedroom Window — PAR
6-16-24
Bedtime Story, A (AT) —
PAR. .4-22-33
Bedzie Lepiel (AT-Pollsh)
KIP. .4-9-37
Beethoven Concerto (AT-
Russian) — AM. .3-3-37
Beethoven's Great Love (AT-
French) — FRM . .1-29-37
Befehl 1st Befehl (AT-German)
— XX. .11-30-36
Before Dawn (AT) —
RKO. .10-17-33
Before Midnight (AT) — COL
1-9-34
Before Midnight — GBG .7-5-25
Before Midnight (AT) —
COL. .1933
Before Morning
GRC. .10-19-33
Before the White Man Came —
ARW. .1920
Beg, Borrow or Steal (AT) —
MGM. .12-2-27
Beggar in Purple — PAT
11- 7-20
Beggar of Cawnpore — INC
4-27-16
465
17,238 TITLES
Beggar on Horseback — PAR
7- 14-25
Beggar Prince — RC .... 2-1-20
Beggar Student — AGF.... 1929
Beggar Woman — PAT .3-14-18
Beggar's Holiday (AT) — TOW
8- 17-34
Beggars in Ermine (AT) —
MOP. .2-14-34
Beggars of Life (PT & S) —
PAR. .9-30-28
Behind Closed Doors — COL
8-4-29
Behind Closed Doors — TE
1- 27-16
Behind Jury Doors (AT) —
MAF. .3-15-33
Behind Masks — PAR ..7-10-21
Behind Office Doors (AT) —
RKO. .3-22-31
Behind Prison Bars (AT) —
MOP. .11-22-37
Behind Prison Gates (AT) —
COL. .9-8-39
Behind Stone Walls (AT) —
MAF. .3-13-32
Behind that Curtain (AT &
S) — F. .1929
Behind the Altar — AEP 2-3-29
Behind the Curtain — U 6-29-24
Behind the Curtain (AT-
Egyptian) — XX. .1939
Behind the Door — PAR 1-4-20
Behind the Evidence (AT) —
COL. .1-8-35
Behind the Front — PAR
2- 14-2(5
Behind the German Lines —
PAR. .12-9-28
Behind the Green Lights
(AT) — MAO. .3-12-35
Behind the Headlines (AT) —
RKO. .6-3-37
Behind the Lines — BL.. 9-7-16
Behind the Lines in Italy —
ROM. .9-22-18
Behind the Makeup (AT) —
PAR. .1-19-30
Behind the Mask (AT) —
COL. .6-1-32
Behind the Mask — NF 11-1-17
Behind the Mike (AT) —
U. .11-2-37
Behind the Scenes — PAR 1924
Behold My Wife — PAR
10-17-20
Behold My Wife (AT) —
PAR. .2-16-35
Behold This Woman — VIT
7- 27-24
Bei Der Blonden Kathrein (AT)
— BAU. .12-5-34
Being Respectable — WA
8- 10-24
17,238 TITLES
Belgian. The — OCP. ... 11-1-17
Believe Me. Xantippe — PAR
6-19-18
Bell Boy 13 — FN 2-11-23
Bella Donna — PAR ....2-9-18
Bella Donna — PAR . . .4-22-23
Bella Donna (AT) —
OLM. .2-26-35
Bellamy Trial (PT & S) —
MGM. .1-27-29
Belle of Alaska — AR. . 2-26-22
Belle of Broadway — COL. 1926
Belle of New York — SEZ.1919
Belle of the Nineties (AT) —
PAR. .9-6-34
Belle of the Season — M 8-3-19
Bells — PAT 9-22-18
Bells — CHA 10-31-26
Bells of San Juan — F 10-15-22
Beloved (AT) — U ....1-27-34
Beloved Adventuress — PWO
7-19-17
Beloved Bachelor (AT) —
PAR. .10-18-31
Beloved Blackmailer — WO
8- 18-18
Beloved Brat (AT) —
WA. .5-5-38
Beloved Brute — VIT .11-16-24
Beloved Cheater — RC 11-16-19
Beloved Enemy (AT) — UA
12-12-36
Beloved Imposter — VIT
11-15-18
Beloved Jim — BL .... 12-20-17
Beloved Rorue — UA .12-15-18
Beloved Traitor — G ....3-7-18
Beloved Vagabond — PAT
12-9-15
Beloved Vagabond — FBO
4-13-24
Beloved Vagabond, The (AT) —
COL. .2-9-37
Below the Deadline — AHR 1921
Below the Deadline — CHE
6-23-29
Below the Deadline (AT) —
CHE. .6-6-36
Below the Line — WA .9-27-25
Below the Sea (AT) —
COL . . 6-3-33
Below the Surface — PAR
6-13-20
Ben Blair — PAR 3-9-16
Ben-Hur MGM 1-24-26
Ben Hur — MGM 12-6-31
Bengal Tiger (AT) — WA
7-7-36
Benson Murder Case (AT) —
PAR. .4-13-30
Bergslagsfolk (AT-Spanish) —
SCA. .3-15-38
Berkeley Square (AT) — F
9- 15-33
Berlin After Dark — WW
6-2-29
Berlin Alexanderplatz (AT) —
XX. .5-13-33
Berlin, the Symphony of a
Big City — F. .1928
Bertha the Sewing Machine
Girl — F. .1-16-27
Best Bad Man — F 12-6-25
Best Man — RAL 1917
Best Man — HH 4-27-19
Best Man Wins (AT) —
COL. .1-2-35
Best of Enemies — SKT
11-11-15
Best of Enemies (AT) — F
7-17-33
Best of Luck — M 7-11-20
Best People — PAR 11-1-25
Besuch Am Abend (AT-
German) — XX. .7-8-37
Betrayal — GLO 5-5-29
Betrayal (AT-French) —
WO. .9-21-39
Betrayal, The (S-SE) — PAR
5-12-29
Betrayed — F 9-27-17
Betsy Ross — PWO ..10-18-17
Betsy's Burglar — FAT. . .3-1-17
Better Days — TPC 1928
Better Half — SE 9-15-18
Better Man — AY 11-13-21
Better Man — FBO ....8-15-26
Better Man Wins — SAN
10-22-22
Better 'Ole — WA 10-17-26
Better 'Ole — WO 3-9-19
Better Times — BRE ..6-15-19
Better Way — COL 1926
Better Wire — SE 7-13-19
Better Woman — TE ..11-11-15
Bettina Loved a Soldier —
BL. .8-3-16
Betty And The Buccaneers —
MT. .1917
Betty Takes a Hand — TRI
1-3-18
Betty to the Rescue — PAR
1-18-17
Between Dangers — PAT
1-30-27
Between Fighting Men (AT) —
WW. .1932
Between Fighting Men (AT) —
WOW. .10-16-33
Between Friends — VIT
4-20-24
Between Men — TRI . . . 12-9-15
Between Men (AT) —
SUM. .10-29-35
Between Parents (AT-German)
— UFA. .1938
Between Two Women (AT) —
MGM . . 6-29-37
Between Two Worlds — ARC
7-15-23
Beverly of Graustark — MGM
5-2-26
Beware of Bachelors (PT & S)
— WA. .1-20-29
Beware of Blondes — COL
8-26-28
Beware of Ladies (AT) —
REP. .1-12-37
Beware of Married Men
(S-SE) — WA. .1-29-28
Beware of Strangers — FIL
1918
Beware of the Bride — -E
10-24 ?0
Beware of the Law — JAW
4-8-23
Beware of Widows — U 4-17-27
Beware, Spooks! (AT) —
COL. .11-9-39
Beyond — PAR 9-11-21
Beyond All Odds — CHE . . 1926
Beyond Bengal (AT) — SHP
4-25-34
Beyond London's Lights —
FBO. .2-19-28
Beyond Price — F 5-8-21
Beyond the Bend — SEZ...1922
Beyond the Border — PDC 1928
Beyond the Crossroads — PI
1922
Beyond the Law (AT) — SYN
11- 2-30
Beyond the Law — SOF
12- 8-18
Beyond the Law (AT) — COL
7-31-34
Beyond the Rainbow — BEN
2-26-22
Beyond the Rio Grande (AT)
BIF. .5-4-30
Beyond the Rockies (FBO)
1926
Beyond the Rockies (AT) —
RKO. .9-16-32
Beyond the Rocks — PAR
6- 14-22
Beyond the Shadows— TRI
7- 28-17
Beyond the Sierras — MGM
12-16-28
Beyond the Trail — CHE.. 1926
Beyond the Wall — PHO
4-29-28
Beyond Victory (AT) — PAT
4-12-31
Biff Bank Buddy — ARC
10-5-24
Big Adventure — U 4-17-21
Big Bluff. The (AT) — TOW
10-11-33
Big Boy (AT) — WA... 9-14-30
Big Boy Rides Again (AT) —
FD. .1935
Big Brain. The (AT) — RKO
8-5-33
Big Broadcast. The (AT) —
PAR. .10-15-32
Big Broadcast of 1936 (AT) —
PAR. .9-14-35
466
Big Broadcast of 1937 (AT)
— PAR. .10-6-30
Big Broadcast of 1938 (AT) —
PAR. .2-11-38
Big: Brother — PAR ..12-30-23
Big- Brown Eyes (AT) — PAR
5-2-36
Big- Business (AT) — P .4-13-37
Big Business Girl (AT) —
FN. .6-14-31
Big Cage. The (AT) — U
5- 10-33
Big Calibre (AT) — COE..1935
Big Chance, The (AT) —
6RC. .8-30-33
Big City — MGM 4-1-28
Big City. The (AT) —
MGM. .8-30-37
Big City Blues (AT) — WA
9-10-32
Big Dan — F 10-28-23
Big Diamond Robbery — RKO
4-21-20
Big Drive. The (S-SE) —
FD . . 1-20-33
Big Executive (AT) — PAR
10-19-33
Big Fight (AT) — WW 5-11-30
Big Gamble (AT) — PAT
9-27-31
Big Game — M 8-21-21
Big Game, The (AT) — RKO
9-29-36
Big Guy, The (AT) — U..1939
Big Happiness — RC ....9-5-20
Big Hearted Herbert (AT) —
WA. .11-13-34
Big Hop — JOE 10-7-28
Big House (AT) — MGM
6- 29-30
Big Jim Garrity — PAT 4-27-16
Big Killing — PAR 7-8-28
Big Little Person — U ....1919
Big Money (AT) — PAT
11-2-30
Big News (AT & S) — PAT
7-28-29
Big Noise — FN 5-13-28
Big Noise, The (AT) — WA
4-20-36
Big Pal — ROY 1926
Big Parade — MGM ..11-22-25
Big Party (AT) — F ..4-20-30
Big Pond. The (AT) — PAR
4-13-30
Big Punch — F 2-13-21
Big Race (AT) — SHP. 2-14-34
Big Shakedown (AT) — FN
2-9-34
Big Shot, The (AT) — RKO
1-10-32
Big Shot. The (AT) —
RKO. .7-20-37
Big Show — AE 7-25-26
Big Show, The (AT) —
REP. .6-24-37
Big Sister — PAR 9-7-16
Big Stakes — EC 1922
Big Stampede, The (AT) —
WA. .11-11-32
Big Timber — PAR . . . 6-28-17
Big Timber — U 8-3-24
Big Time (AT) — F 9-15-29
Big Timber (AT) — COL
7-11-32
Big Time or Bust (AT) —
TOW. .1-10-34
Big Town (AT) — INV
12-22-32
Big Town Czar (AT) —
U. .5-11-39
Big Town Girl (AT) —
F. .11-13-36
Big Town Ideas — F. .. .5-15-21
Big Town Round-Up — F
7-10-21
Big Trail (AT)— F ... 10-12-30
Big Tremaine — M .... 12-7-16
Bigamist — FBO 4-2-22
Bigger Man — M 9-23-15
Bigger Than Barnum's — FBO
7-4-26
Biggest Show on Earth, The —
PAR. .5-2-18
Bill Apperson's Boy — FN
7-20-19
Bill Cracks Down (AT) —
REP. .3-22-37
Bill Henry — PAR 9-7-19
Bill of Divorcement — AE
10-15-22
Bill of Divorcement (AT) —
RKO. .9-17-32
Billion Dollar Scandal (AT)
PAR. .1-7-33
Billions — M 12-5-20
Billy Jim — FBO 2-12-22
Billy the Kid (AT) — MGM
10-19-30
Billy the Kid Returns (AT) —
REP. .9-16-38
Biography of a Bachelor Girl
(AT) — MGM . .1-9-35
Bird of Paradise (AT) —
RKO. .8-12-32
Bird of Prey — F 8-11-18
Birds of Prey — COL. .. 5-22-27
Birobidjan (AT-Russian) — AM
10-8-36
Birth — UG 4-19-17
Birth of a Man — MOS
5-18-16
Birth of a Nation — UA..1915
Birth of a Nation — GGR
12-21-30
Birth of a Soul — VIT... 2-1-20
Birth of Democracy — FRA
1-17-18
Birth of Patriotism — RED
4-26-17
Bishop Misbehaves, The (AT)
— MGM . .9-28-35
Bishop Murder Case (AT) —
MGM. .2-2-30
Bishop of the Ozarks — FBO
1923
467
17,238 TITLES
Bishop's Carriage — PAR . 1922
Bishop's Emeralds — PAT
6-1-19
Bit of Heaven — EXP.. 8-19-28
Bit of Jade — AMU. .. .4-18-18
Bit of Kindling — BM . . . 6-28-17
Bits of Africa — MGM .... 1928
Bits of Life — FN 9-4-21
Bitter Apples — WA ....6-5-27
Bitter Fruit — ARW 1921
Bitter Sweet (AT) — UA
8-25-33
Bitter Sweets — PEE. . .9-23-28
Bitter Tea of General Yen
(AT) — COL. .1-12-33
Bitter Truth — F 1-18-17
Bizarre Bizzarre (AT-
Freneh) — LEN. .4-14-39
Black Ace — PAT 9-2-28
Black Aces (AT) — U ..8-25-37
Black Bag — U 6-4-22
Black Bandit (AT) —
U. .11-21-38
Black Beauty — VIT 1-9-21
Black Beauty (AT) — MOP
8-23-33
Black Bird — MGM 2-7-26
Black Butterflies — QU 10-14-28
Black Butterfly — M ..12-21-16
Black Camel (AT) — F .7-5-31
Black Cargoes of The South
Seas — BIG . . 7-23-29
Black Cat (AT) — U. . .5-19-34
Black Circle — WO . . . 10-19-19
Black Crook — KAL 1-13-16
Black Cruise (PT) — BER 1929
Black Cyclone — PAT . . . 5-24-25
Black Diamond Express — WA
7-3-27
Black Doll (AT) — U... 1-25-38
Black Eyes — TRI 1919
Black Fear — M 1-13-16
Black Feather — DAI 1928
Black Friday — RED . . 8-31-16
Black Fury (AT) — FN 3-28-35
Black Gate — VIT 1920
Black Gold — ST 1924
Black Hills — BIG 6-30-29
Black Jacket (AT-Chinese)
— XX. .1939
Black is White— PAR . . 3-14-20
Black King. The (AT) —
SOU. .7-15-32
Black Legion (AT) — WA
12-30-36
Black Lightning — GOT
11-16-24
Black Limelight (AT) —
ALL. .7-6-39
Black List — PAR 3-2-16
Black Magic (S-SE) — F
9-1-29
Black Moon (AT) — COL
6-28-34
17,238 TITLES
Black Orchids — -U 1917
Black Oxen — FN 1-13-24
Black Panther's Cub — EQU
2-20-21
Black Paradise — F ....6-13-26
Black Pearl — RA 3-10-29
Black Pirate — UA 3-21-26
Black Room (AT) — COL
8-13-35
Black Roses — RC ....4-17-21
Black Shadows — PAT. .6-13-23
Black Sheep (AT) — F. 6-28-35
Black Sheep of the Family —
V
Black Shirts (AT) ... .4-12-34
Black Spider — PS
Black Stork — WAR .... 4-5-17
Black Tears — HPI 7-3-27
Black Tulip — PS
Black Watch (AT) — F 5-26-29
Black Waters (AT) — WW
4-7-29
Black Wolf — PAR 2-15-17
Blackbirds — REA ....12-12-20
Blackbirds — PAR ....10-21-15
Blackguard — LBR 1926
Blackie's Redemption — M 1919
Blackjack — F 11-6-27
Blackmail — M 10-3-20
Blackmail (AT) — WW 10-6-29
Blackmail (AT) — MOM
9-15-39
Blackmailer (AT) — COL
7- 23-36
Blackwell's Island (AT) —
WA . . 3-2-39
Blame the Woman (AT) —
PRI. .10-22-32
Blanchette — PPR 11-6-21
Blarney — MGM 10-10-26
Blarney Kiss (AT) — PRI
8- 19-33
Blaze Away — PIL ....4-16-22
Blaze O' Glory (AT) — WW
1-5-30
Blazing Arrows — APO . . . 1922
Blazing Barriers (AT) —
MOP. .11-16-37
Blazing Days — U 1927
Blazing Justice (AT) — SPE
1-29-36
Blazing Love — F 5-4-16
Blazing Sixes (AT) — WA .1937
Blazing Trail — U 1921
Blessed Event (AT) — WA
8-23-32
Blind Adventure — -VIT 1-10-18
Blind Adventure (AT) —
RKO. .10-31-33
Blind Alibi (AT) —
RKO. .6-24-38
Blind Alibi (AT) — COL
5-29-39
Blind Alleys — P 3-20-27
Blind Bargain — Q ...12-10-22
Blind Circumstances — CC 1922
Blind Date (AT) — COL
8- 31-34
Blind Goddess — PAR. . .4-18-26
Blind Hearts — FN . . . 10-16-21
Blind Husbands — U ..10-10-19
Blind Justice — DAB. .. .9-28-16
Blind Love — BAY .... 1-18-20
Blind Man's Eyes — M....1919
Blind Man's Luck — PAT
5-31-17
Blind Wives — F 1-9-21
Blind Youth — NF 6-20-20
Blinde Passagriere (AT-
German) — XX. .3-12-37
Blinded Trail — D 4-20-19
Blindfold (S-SE) — F .12-30-28
Blindfolded — HOD 5-2-18
Blindfolder Eyes (AT-
Spanish) — XX. .1939
Blinding Trail — U 1919
Blindness of Devotion — F
11- 18-15
Blindness of Divorce — F 5-2-18
Blindness of Love — ROL
3-16-16
Blinky — U 8-26-23
Blizzard — F 2-24-24
Block Signal— LUM .10-10 26
Blockade (PT & S) — RKO
12-9-28
Blockade (AT) — UA 6-9-38
Block-Heads (AT) —
M-G-M . .8-19 38
Blond Cheat (AT) — RKO.. 1938
Blonde Captive (AT) — IML
12- 13-31
Blonde Carmen, The (AT-
German) — XX. .1939
Blonde Crazy (AT) — WA
12-6-31
Blonde for a Night — PAT
9- 23-28
Blonde or Brunette — PAR
1-16-27
Blonde Saint — FN ...11-18-26
Blonde Trouble (AT) —
PAR. .8-11-37
Blonde Vampire — FB0...1922
Blonde Venus (AT) — PAR
9-24-32
Blondes by Choice — LUM 1927
Blondes at Work (AT) —
WA. .3-10-38
Blondie (AT) — COL ...11-7-38
Blondie Brings Up Baby
(AT) — COL. .11-8-39
Blondie Johnson (AT) — FN
3-1-33
Blondie Meets the Boss (AT)
— COL. .5-1-39
Blondie of the Follies (AT) —
MGM. .9-2-32
Blondie Takes a Vacation
(AT) — COL. .9-14-39
Blood and Sand — PAR 8-13-22
Blood and Steel — IND. .3-1-25
468
Blood Barrier — PAT . . .4-3-20
Blood Marriage (AT-Spanish)
— XX. .1939
Blood Money (AT) — UA
11-11-33
Blood of His Fathers — HAD
11-29-17
Blood Ship — COL ....7-31-27
Blood Will Tell — F 1-15-28
Blood Will Tell — INC.. 3-29-17
Bloodhound — FBO 1925
Blooming Angel — G ...2-15-20
Blossom Time (AT) — BI
7-26-34
Blossoms on Broadway (AT) —
PAR. .11-17-37
Blot. The — FBW 8-21-21
Blow Your Own Horn —
FBO. .11-4-23
Bludgeon — EQW 10-28-13
Blue Angel (AT) — PAR
11-18-30
Blue Bandanna — RC ....1919
Blue Bird — ART 4-4-18
Blue Blazes — RGR ....2-21-18
Blue Blazes — U 1-10-26
Blue Blood — CHA 1926
Blue Blood — G 5-2-18
Blue Blood and Red — F 4-6-16
Blue Bonnet — HOD . . . 8-31-19
Blue Danube (AT) — MUN
11-7-34
Blue Danube — PAT 1928
Blue Eagle — F 9-19-26
Blue Envelope Mystery —
VIT. .10-19-16
Blue Eyed Mary — F 5-26-18
Blue Grass — EQW . . . 10-21-15
Blue Jeans — M 3-28-18
Blue Light (AT) — DUW
5-8-34
Blue Montana Skies (AT)
— REP. .5-4-39
Blue Moon — PAT 1921
Blue Mountain Mystery —
FBO. .1922
Blue Pearl — SEZ 3-7-20
Blue Skies (S-SE) — F. .7-7-29
Blue Squadron (AT-Span-
ish)— XX 1938
Blue Steel (AT) — MOP 5-5-34
Blue Streak — FBO 3-7-26
Blue Streak. The — F. . .4-12-17
Blue Streak McCoy — U 8-1-20
Blue Sunday — U 1921
Blue Waters — NBR 1924
Bluebeard, Jr. — ARL .... 1922
Bluebeard's Seven Wives —
FN. .1-3-26
Bluebeard's Eighth Wife —
PAR. .8-12-23
Bluebeard's Eighth Wile
(AT) — PAR 3-18-38
Bluff — AMU 10-19-16
Bluff — PAR 6-4-24
Bluffer — WO 1-26-19
Blushing Bride — F 3-6-21
Boarding House Filoda (AT-
German) — XX. .1939
Boaster. The — GER ....2-6-27
Boat from Shanghai, The
(AT) — FTA. .1932
Bob Hampton of Placer —
FN. .5-8-21
Bobbed Hair — PAR ...3-26-22
Bobbed Hair — WA 11-8-25
Bobbie of the Ballet — BL
6-1-16
Bobby Burnit — PAR .... 1914
Bockbierfest (AT-German) —
BLO — 4-5-31
Body and Soul (AT) — P
3-15-31
Body and Soul — PWO 12-2-15
Body and Soul — M ... 10-17-20
Body and Soul — MGM
11-13-27
Body Punch — U 1 0-28-28
Bolero (AT) — PAR 2-17-34
Bohemian Dancer — SYN
5-19-29
Bohemian Girl — SEZ ..2-11-23
Bohemian Girl, The (AT) —
M-G-M. .2-6-36
Bohemian Life (AT-Cpanish)
— XX. .1939
Bohemios (AT-Spanish) —
CIX. .8-7-35
Boiling Point, The (AT) —
AP. .11-3-32
Bold Caballero, The (AT) —
REP. .12-3-36
Bolibar — BI 1928
Boliche (AT-Spanish) —
XX. .5-31-35
Bolshevism on Trail — SE
5-11-19
Bolted Door — U 2-25-23
Bombay Mail (AT) — U 1-6-34
Bomben Auf Monte Carlo
(AT) — XX. .9-28-33
Bombs Over London (AT)
— FIA. .9-18-39
Bombshell (AT) — MGM
10-11-33
Bonanza Buckaroo — AE . 1926
Bond Between — PAR ...4-5-17
Bond Boy — FN 10-15-22
Bond of Fear — TRI. .. .9-20-17
Bondage — BL 1917
Bondage — UFA 12-16-28
Bondage (AT) — F 4-22-33
Bondage of Barbara — G..1919
Bondage of Fear — PBW
1-18-17
Bonded Woman — PAR 8-13-22
Bondman, The — F 3-23-16
Bondman — WW 1929
Bonds of Honor — HWA
1-26-19
Bonds of Love — G 11-8-19
Bondwomen — KLE ..12-23-15
Bonnie Annie Laurie — F
10-6-18
Bonnie, Bonnie Lassie — U 1919
Bonnie Briar Bush, The —
PAR. .12-4-21
Bonnie May — FED 1921
Bonnie Scotland (AT) —
MGM . . 8-24-35
Boob — MGM 6-6-26
Book Agent — F 6-7-17
Boomerang — NPI 5-4-19
Bommerang — SCH ....3-15-25
Booloo (AT) — PAR 8-1-38
Boomerang Bill — PAR 2-12-22
Boothill Brigade (AT) —
REP. .8-11-37
Bootleggers — FBO 4-12-22
Bootlegger's Daughter — AE
1922
Boots — PAR 3-2-19
Boots and Saddles — BM
11-2-16
Boots and Saddles (AT) —
REP. .10-26-37
Boots of Destiny (AT) —
GN. .1937
Bor Borson, Jr. (AT-
Norwegian — MAL. .11-10-39
Border Blackbirds — PAT
8- 28-27
Border Brigands (AT) —
U. .6-4-35
Border Caballero (AT) — PUR
5- 26-36
Border Cafe (AT) —
RKO. .6-9-37
Border Cavalier — U ...9-25-27
Border Devils (AT) — ARC
3-20-32
Border Flight (AT) — PAR
6- 23-36
Border G-Man (AT) —
RKO. .1938
Border Intrigue — IND 5-17-25
Border Justice — IND ....1924
Border Law (AT) — COL
9- 13-31
Border Legion (AT) — PAR
6-29-30
Border Legion — PAR . 11-9-24
Border Legion — THH . . 8-4-18
Border Patrol — PAT . . 12-9-28
Border Patrolman, The (AT) —
F. .6-20-36
Border Phantom (AT) —
REP. .6-7-37
Border Raiders— PAT .9-22-18
Border Rider — SIE 1926
Border Romance (AT) — TIF
5-25-30
Border Scouts — BHA 1922
Border Sheriff — U 3-14-26
Border Vengeance — AY 8-2-25
Border Whirlwind — FBO 1926
Border Wildcat — U ...4-21-29
Border Wireless — ART 10-6-18
Border Wolves — U 1917
Border Wolves (AT) — U 2-24-38
Border Women — GOL 10-12-24
Borderland — PAR 7-30-22
Borderland (AT) —
PAR. .2-15-37
Bordertown (AT) — WA 1-24-35
469
17,238 TITLES
Born Anew (AT) — AM
7- 25-33
Born for Glory (AT) —
GB. .10 21-35
Born Reckless (AT) — F
5-25-30
Born Reckless (AT) —
F. .6-22-37
Born Rich — NF 1924
Born to Battle — PAT. .9-4-27
Born to Battle (AT) —
COE. .1935
Born to Be Bad (AT) — UA
6- 1-34
Born to Be Wild (AT) —
REP. .2-18-38
Born to Dance (AT) — M-G-M
11-17-36
Born to Fight (AT) — CNN
4-27-36
Born to Gamble (AT) —
REP. .10-4-35
Born to Love (AT) — PAT
4- 26-31
Born to the Saddle — U . . 4-7-29
Born to the West — PAR
8- 15-26
Born to the West (AT) —
PAR. .4-8-38
Borneo — F 9-10-37
Borosa Amerikaban (AT-
Hungarian) — HUN. .3-6-39
Borrowed Castle (AT-
Hungarian) — XX 1938
Borrowed Clothes — U ...1918
Borrowed Finery — TIF . . 1925
Borrowed Husbands — VIT
5- 18-24
Borrowed Plumage — TRI
7- 5-17
Borrowed Wives (AT) — TIF
10-12-30
Borrowing Trouble (AT) —
F. .10-26-37
Boss of Camp 4 — F... 11-9-22
Boss of Lonely Valley (AT) —
U. .12-22-37
Boss of Rustler's Roost —
PAT. .1-15-28
Boss of the Lazy "Y" —
TRI. .1917
Boss Rider of Gun Greek (AT)
— U. .12-16-36
Boston Blackie — F 5-20-23
Boston Blackie's Little Pal —
M. .9-8-18
Bottle Imp — PAR ....3-29-17
Bottom of the Well — VIT
10-25-17
Bottom of the World— RC
4-3-20
Bottom of the World, The —
TPE. .8-10-30
Bottoms Up (AT) — F. 3-23-34
1 7,238 TITLE
Boudoir Diplomat (AT) — U
12-7-30
Bought (AT) — WA ..8-16-31
Bought — WO 12-30-15
Bought and Paid For — BRA
11-2-16
Bought and Paid For — PAR
3-19 22
Boulder Dam (AT) — WA
2-25-36
Bound in Morocco — ART
8-4-18
Bouquets from Nicholag (AT-
French) — WAS. .3-6-39
Bowery. The (AT) — UA
10-7-33
Bowery Bishop— SEZ .9-28-24
Bowery Cinderella — EXP
11-20-27
Boy Crazy — FBO 3-5-22
Boy Friend — MGM ....9-5-26
Boy Friend (AT) — F . . 6-27-39
Boy of Flanders — MG. .3-30-24
Boy Meets Girl (AT) —
WA. .7-22-38
Boy of Mints — FN . . . 12-30-23
Boy of the Streets — RA
10-2-27
Boy of the Streets (AT) —
MOP. . 12-2-37
Boy Rider — FBO ....11-27-27
Boy Slaves (AT) — RKO. 1-18-39
Boy-Girl — BL 3-8-17
Boys Town (AT) — MGM 9-6-38
Boy Trouble (AT) — PAR. 1939
Boy's Reformatory (AT) —
MOP. .5-17-39
Boy's School (AT-French)
— COL. .6-29-39
Boys Will Be Boys — G 5-22-21
Brace Up — BL 3-21-18
Bramble Bush — VTT ..9-28-19
Brand — G 2-23-19
Brand in Der Oper (AT-
German) — CAP. .7-14-32
Brand of Cowardice — M 11-2-16
Brand of Cowardice — TRD
7-5-25
Brand of Hate (AT) — STI
11-7-34
Brand of Lopez — RC. . .4-3-20
Brand of Satan — PWO 7-12-17
Branded — LBR 1922
Branded (AT) — COL ..11-1-31
Branded Man — RA 1928
Branded Men (AT) — TIF
12-13-31
Branded Sombrero — F . . 1-8-28
Branded Soul — F 1917
Branded Soul — STO . . . 2-13-21
Branded Woman — FN. . 9-12-20
Branding Broadway — ART
12-22-18
Branding Iron — G . . . 11-14-20
Brand's Daughter — -RAL..1917
Brass — WA 3-18-23
Brass Bottle — FN 7-29-23
Brass Bowl — F 11-16-24
Brass Buttons — PAT. . .4-13-19
Brass Check — M 3-28-18
Brass Commandments — F.1923
Brass Knuckles — WA 12-25-27
Brat (AT) — F 8-2-31
Brat, The — M 9-14-19
Brave and Bold — F.... 5-19-18
Braveheart — PDC 1-17-26
Bravest Way — PAR ....6-9-18
Brawn of the North — FN
11-19-22
Brazen Beauty — U ....9-15-18
Breach of Promise (AT) —
WW. .11-23-32
Bread — MG 7-20-24
Bread — U 8-4-18
Bread Carrier — GLA 1928
Break of Hearts (AT) —
RKO. .5-16 35
Break the News to Mother —
SE. .5-25-19
Breaker. The — ES 12-7-16
Breakers Ahead — M . . .4-11-18
Breakfast at Sunrise — FN
10- 16-27
Breakfast for Two (AT) —
RKO. .10-7-37
Breaking Home Ties — AE
11- 26-22
Breaking Into Society — FBO
1923
Breaking the Ice (AT) —
RKO. .9-1-38
Breaking Point — PAR .4-13-24
Breaking Point — HOD ..2-6-21
Breath of Scandal — SCH
8-24-24
Breath of the Gods— U . . 8-1-20
Breathless Moment — U. . 2-3-24
Bred in Old Kentucky — FBO
1926
Bred in the Bone — MD
12- 30-15
Breed of Courage — FBO 1927
Breed of Men — ART. ... 2-9-19
Breed of the Border — FBO 1925
Breed of the Border (AT) —
MOP. .5-10-33
Breed of the Border (AT) —
BEU. .1935
Breed of the Sea — FBO. . 1926
Breed of the Sunsets — FBO
1928
Breed of the West (AT) — BIF
1930
Breezing Home (AT) —
U. .2-2-37
Breezy BUI — SYN 9-14-30
Breezy Jim — TRI 1919
Brewster's Millions — PAR
2-6-21
Brewster's Millions (AT) —
UA. .4-5-35
Bride Comes Home, The (AT)
PAR. .12-27-35
470
Bride for Henry, A (AT) —
MOP. .9 27-37
Bride of Fear. The — F 4-25-18
Bride of Frankenstein (AT) —
U. .4-11-35
Bride of Hate — INC. .. 1-25-17
Bride of the Desert (AT) —
RA. .11-24-29
Bride of the Lake (AT) — AM A
9-11-34
Bride of the Regiment (AT) —
FN. .5-25-30
Bride of the Storm — WA
4-11-26
Bride of Torockoi (AT-
Hungarian ) — XX 1938
Bride 68 (PT-German — TOB
4- 20-30
Bride Walks Out. The (AT) —
RKO. .7-1-36
Bride Wore Red, The (AT) —
MGM — 10-12-37
Bridegroom for Two (AT) —
POP. .1-31-32
Brides Are Like That (AT) —
FN. .3-24-36
Bridal Suite (AT) — MGM
5- 29-39
Bride's Awakening — U 5-12-18
Bride's Confession — GRA 1922
Bride's Play — PAR . . . 1-15-22
Bride's Silence — MU .... 1917
Bridge, The — M 1915
Bridge of San Luis Rey (PT
& S) — M-G-M. .4-28-29
Bridge of Sighs; — WA . . . 4-5-25
Bridge of Sighs (AT) — INV
5-1-36
Bridges Burned — M ....2-8-17
Brief Moment (AT) — COL
8- 31-33
Brigadier Gerard — U . .3-23-16
Bright Eyes — BI 7-6-30
Bright Eyes (AT) — F 12-11-34
Bright Lights (AT) — FN
2- 15-31
Bright Lights — MG. . .11-22-25
Bright Lights (AT) —
FN. .7-27-35
Bright Lights of Broadway —
PRI. .9-30-23
Bright Shawl — FN 4-22-23
Bright Skies — RC 1920
Brilliant Marriage (AT) — INV
9- 19-36
Bring 'Em Back Alive (AT)
RKO . . 6-5-32
Bring Him In — VIT. . 10-23-22
Bringing Home Father — BL
5-31-17
Bringing Up Baby (AT) —
RKO. .2-11-38
Bringing Up Belty — WO
7-27-19
Bringing Up Father — M-G-M
3- 25-28
British Agent (AT) — FN
8-2-34
Britton of the Seventh — VIT
5-11-16
Broad Daylight — U ..10-29-22
Broad-Minded (AT) — FN
7-6-31
Broadway (AT & S) — U
6-2-29
Broadway After Dark — WA
5- 25-24
Broadway After Midnigiit —
KRE. .11-13-27
Broadway and Home — SEZ
12-26-20
Broadway Arizona — TRI
10- 4-17
Broadway Babies (PT & S) —
FN. .6-30-29
Broadway Bad (AT) — F
3-7-33
Broadway Bill — M ...2-21-18
Broadway Bill (AT) — COL
11- 9-34
Broadway Billy — RA .... 1926
Broadway Boob — AE . .3-21-26
Broadway Broke — SEZ
12-30-23
Broadway Bubble — VIT
11-21-20
Broadway Butterfly — WA
3-29-25
Broadway Cowboy — PAT
7-4-20
Broadway Daddies — COL
9- 16-28
Broadway Drifter — EXP
5-29-27
Broadway Fever — TIF . . . 1-6-29
Broadway Gallant — FBO
6- 6-26
Broadway Gold — TRU. .7-22-23
Broadway Gondolier (AT) —
WA. .7-11-36
Broadway Hoofer (AT) — COL
3-30-30
Broadway Hostess (AT) —
FN. .12-16-35
Broadway Jones — ART 3-29-17
Broadway Lady — FBO
12-13-25
Broadway Love — BL ..1-17-18
Broadway Madness — EXP
10- 9-27
Broadway Madonna — FBO
11-29-22
Broadway Melody (AT & S) —
M-G-M. .2-17-29
Broadway Melody of 1936
(AT) — MGM. .8-29-35
Broadway Melody of 1938
(AT) — MGM. .8-17-37
Broadway Musketeers (AT)
— WA. .10-20-38
Broadway Nights— FN 5-15-27
Broadway or Bust — U... 6-8-24
Broadway Peacock — F .2-12-22
Broadway Rose — M . . . 9-24-22
Broadway Saint — WO . . 7-20-19
Broadway Scandal — BL . 6-2-18
Broadway Scandals (AT) —
COL. .11-3-29
Broadway Serenade (AT) —
MGM. .4-4-39
Broadway Sport — F ...6-14-17
Broadway Thru a Keyhole
(AT) — DA. .11-2-33
Broadway to Hollywood
(AT) — MGM. .9-2-33
Broken Barriers — EXP . 2-3-29
Broken Barriers — MG. . 8-10-24
Broken Barriers — (Khavah) —
ZIO. .1919
Broken Blossoms — GRI 5-18-19
Broken Blossoms (AT) —
IML. .1-15-37
Broken Butterfly — RC 10-26-19
Broken Chains — G . . . 12-17-23
Broken Chains — PBW. . 12-7-16
Broken Commandments — F
9-14-19
Broken Dishes (AT) — FN 1930
Broken Doll — APR ...6-19-21
Broken Dreams (AT) —
MOP. . 11-8-33
Broken Fetters — BL ...6-22-16
Broken Gate — HOD . . 12-26-20
Broken Gates — TIF ...4-17-27
Broken Hearted (PT & S) —
TPC. .1929
Broken Hearts — JAF 3-7-26
Broken Hearts of Broadway —
COM. .7-29 23
Broken Hearts of Hollywood —
WA. .10-10-26
Broken Homes — TRS 1926
Broken Law — F 12-16-15
Broken Laws — FBO. ... 12-7-24
Broken Lullaby (AT) —
PAR. .1-24-32
Broken Mask — AN 4-8-28
Broken Melody — SEZ 12-28-19
Broken Melody (AT) — OLM
10-31-34
Broken Shadows — SEC... 1922
Broken Shoes (AT) — AM
3-31-34
Broken Silence — ARW .7-30-22
Broken Spur — ARW
Broken Ties — PWD. ... 2-28-18
Broken Violin — ARW. . .4-8-23
Broken Vow, The (AT-
Polish) — CAP. .1932
Broken Wing: (AT) — PAR
3-27-32
Broken Wing- — PRE .... 8-26-23
Brokiga Blad (AT-Swedish)
— STP. .11-29-31
Bromley Case — ARW 1920
Bronc Stumper — PAT. . .3-4-28
Broncho Buster — U ....5-8-27
Broncho Twister — F . .3-20-27
Bronze Bell — PAR ....7-10-21
Bronze Bride — RED .... 3-29-17
Bronze Buckaroo, The (AT)
— SAC. .1-23-39
Brooding- Eyes — STE . .4-11-26
471
17,238 TITLES
Brother Rat (AT) —
WA. .10-17-38
Brother and Sister (AT-
Italiau) — KIT. .1935
Brotherly Love — M-G-M
12-23-28
Brothers (AT-COL. ... 10-19-30
Brothers — RA 4-14-19
Brothers Divided — PAT.. 1-4-20
Brothers Under the Skin — G
11- 19-22
Brown Derby — FN ....6-20-26
Brown of Harvard — ES
12- 27-17
Brown of Harvard — M-G-M
5-9-26
Brute — PAR 1925
Brute — WA 4-24-27
Brute Breaker — PAT .11-23-19
Brute Master — HOD. . 11-28-20
Bubbles — PI 1920
Buccaneer, The (AT) —
PAR. .2-4-38
Buchanan's Wife — F .... 1918
Buck Privates — U 2-5-28
Buckaroo Kid — U .... 11-14-26
Bucking- Broadway — BUT
12-13-17
Bucking- the Barrier — F
4-15-23
Bucking- the Line — F. . 11-6-21
Bucking- the Tig-er — SEZ
5-1-21
Bucking- the Truth — U .8-8-26
Buffalo Bill on the U. P. Trail
SU. .1926
Bug-le Call — INC 5-4-16
Bug-le Call — M-G-M-. ... 9-25-27
Bug-ler of Algiers — BL
11-30-16
Builders of Castles — EDP
5-3-17
Builders of Socialism — AM
1-28-36
Bulldog- Drummond — HOD
11-26-22
Bulldog" Drummond (AT & S)
HA . .5-5-2!!
Bulldog- Drummond in Af-
rica (AT) — PAR 8-1-38
Bulldog- Drummond at Bay
(AT) — REP. .7-23-37
Bulldog- Drummond's Bride
(AT) — PAR. .7-6-39
Bulldog Drummond Comes
Back (AT) — PAR 9-7-37
Bulldog Drummond Escapes
(AT) — PAR. .4-6-37
Bulldog Drummond's Revenge
(AT) — PAR. .12-22-37
Bulldog Drummond's Peril
(AT) — PAR 3-15-38
Bulldog Drummond's Secret
Police (AT) — PAR. .4-12-39
17,238 TITLES
Bulldog' Drummond Strikes
Back — (AT) — UA. .5-4-34
Bulldog: Edition (AT) — REP
9-18-36
Bulldog- Pluck — FBO 1927
Bullet Mark — PAT . .4-1-28
Bullet Proof — U 4-5-20
Bullets and Brown Eyes —
TRI. .3-2-16
Bullets or Ballots (AT) — FN
5-18-36
Bunch of Keys — ES... 9-30-15
Bunker Bean (AT) — RKO
5-25-36
(Reviewed as "His Majesty
Bunker Bean")
Bunty Pulls the Strings — G
1-9-21
Bureau of Missing- Persons
(AT) — FN. .9-2-33
Burden of Proof — SE... 9-8-18
Burglar — PWO 11-8-17
Burglar and the Lady — SUN
12-30-15
Burglar for a Nigrht — HOD
8-11-18
Burglar Proof — PAR 1921
Burglary by Proxy — FN
8-31-19
Buried Gold — RA 1926
Buried Treasure — PAR 2-20-21
Burn 'Em Up Barnes — -BR
8-21-21
Burn 'Em Up Barnes (AT) —
MAO. .3-30-35
Burn "Em Up O'Connor (AT)
— MGM. .1-12-39
Burning Bridges — PAT 9-23-28
Burning Daylight — PAR.. 1914
Burning Daylight — FN 4-29-28
Burning Daylight — M ..5-16-20
Burning Gold — ELB . . . 2-27-27
Burning Gold (AT) — REP 1935
Burning Gold (AT) — REP
6-22-36
Burning Heart, The — BI
5-18-30
Burning Sands— PAR .. 9-10-22
Burning the Candle — ES
3-15-17
Burning the Wind — U 10-28-29
Burning Trail — U 4-5-25
Burning Up (AT) — PAR
2-9-30
Burning Up Broadway — PAT
2-19-28
Burning Words — U ...5-27-23
Burnt Fingers — PAT. .. .4-3-27
Burnt Wings — U 2-22-20
Bush Leaguer — WA 9-4-27
Busher — PAR 6-1-19
Bushranger — M-G-M ..1-20-29
Business and Pleasure (AT) —
F. .2-14-32
Business Is Business — U
9-16-15
Business of Life — VIT 4-25-18
Business of Love — AST... 1926
Buster — F 1923
Bustin' Through — U . . 10-4-25
Busuljon a Lo (AT-
Hungarian) — DAN ...11-9-38
Busy Inn — PAT 4-25-18
But the Flesh is Weak (AT) —
MGM. .4-17-32
Butter and Egg Man — FN
9-2-28
Butterflies in the Rain — U
12-26-26
Butterfly — U 8-24-24
Butterfly Girl — AE ....5-29-21
Butterfly Man — R.C.. . .5-30-20
Butterfly on the Wheel — WO
11-18-15
Butterfly Range — ST ....1922
Buttons — M-G-M 1927
Buzavirag ( AT-Hungarian) —
DAN. .1-16-35
By Appointment Only (AT) —
INV. .7-12-33
By Candlelight (AT) — U
1- 6-34
By Divine Right — FBO... 1924
By Hook or Crook — WO
9-22-18
By My Pistols (AT-Spanish)
— XX. .1939
By Proxy — TRI 7-14-18
By Right of Possession — VIT
8-2-17
By Right of Purchase — SEZ
3- 28-18
By Rocket to the Moon — UFA
2- 8-31
By Royal Decree (AT-
German) — UFA 1938
By the World Forgot — VIT
9-15-18
By Whose Hand (AT) —
COL. .8-3-32
By Whose Hand? — COL
11- 27-27
By Whose Hand? — EQW
12- 11-34
By Your Leave (AT) — RKO
4- 20-16
Bye, Bye Buddy (PT & S) —
TPC . . 1929
c
Cabaret — PAR 5-8-27
Cabaret, The — WO ....6-16-18
Cabaret Girl — U 12-29-18
Cabaret Kid — LEE 1927
Cabin in the Cabin (AT) —
FN. .10-1-32
Cabinet of Dr. Caligari — G
4-10-21
Cabiria — FN
Cactus Crandall — TRI.. 8-11-18
Cactus Trails — FBO. ... 1-23-27
472
Cada Loco Con Su Temal
(AT-Spanish) — XX. .1839
Cadets of San Martin (AT-
Spanish) — XX. .1938
Cafe Hostess (AT) — COL. 1939
Cafe in Cairo. A — PDC 3 22-25
Cafe Metropole (AT) —
F. .4-29-37
Cage of Death — AGF 1920
Cafe Society (AT) — PAR
2-8-39
Caillaux Case — F ....10-13-18
Cain (AT) — PRI 1-17-32
Cain and Artern — AM.. 6-8-30
Cain and Mabel (AT) — WA
10- 19-36
Caleb Piper's Girl — PAT. 1919
Calendar Girl — AMU. . .10-25-17
Calgary Stampede — U. 10-11-26
Calibre .38 — FCH 1019
Calibre .45 — IND 1924
California — ARW 4-17-27
California Frontier (AT) —
COL. .12-13-38
California — M-G-M ....7-10-27
California Mail — ..FN.. 5-5-29
California or Bust — FBO. 1927
California Romance — F
12-10 23
California Straight Ahead — U
9-6-25
California Straight Ahead
(AT) — U. .4-16-37
California Trail (AT) — COL
7- 22-33
Californian, The (AT) —
F. .7-7-37
Call a Messenger (AT) — U
11- 16-39
Call Her Savage (AT) — F
11- 20-32
Call It a Day (AT) —
WA. .3-6-37
Call It Luck (AT) — F 7-10-34
Call Me Co-Ed (AT) — FD 1935
Call of Courage — U 9-6-25
Call of East — PAR. .. 11-29-17
Call of Her People — M . . 6-7-17
Call of Home — FBO. . .1-22-22
Call, The (AT) — BES. .3-29-38
Call of the Canyon — PAR
12- 23-26
Call of the Circus (AT)
HPI. .1-19-30
Call of the Cumberlands —
PAR. .2-3-16
Call of the Desert — SYN
6-18-30
Call of the Flesh (AT) —
MGM. .9-14-30
Call of the Heart — U 1928
Call of the Hills — LBR..1923
Call of the Klondike— RA
8- 15-26
Call of the Mate — GOL 8-3-24
Call the Mesquiteers (AT)
— REP. .2-25-38
Call of the North — PAR
12-4-21
Call of the Prairie (AT) — PAR
1-24-36
Call of the Rockies — SFN
7-12-31
Call of the Rockies (AT) —
COL. .9-21-38
Call of the Soul — F.... 1-2-19
Call of the West (AT) —
COL. .6-1-30
Call of the Wild — PAT 9-30-23
Call of the Wild (AT) —
UA. .4-30-35
Call of the Wilderness— AE
1-30-2?
Call of Youth — PAR 1921
Call of the Yukon (AT) —
REP. .4-16-38
Call to Arms (AT-Russian) —
AM . . 5-7-37
Callahans and the Murphys —
M-G-M. .7-24-27
Calling: All Cars (AT) —
EMP. . 1-9-35
Calling All Marines (AT) —
REP. .9-22-39
Calling- Dr. Kildare (AT) —
MGM. .4-25-39
Calling- of Dan Matthews (AT)
— COL. .1935
Calling of Dan Matthews, The
(AT) — COL. .1-26-36
Calm Yourself (AT) —
MGM. .7-30-35
Calvary of a Wife (AT-
Spanish) — XX 1938
Calvert's Valley — P 10-8-22
Cambric Mask — VIT ..3-30-19
Cameo Kirby (AT) — F 2-9-30
Cameo Kirby — F 10-21-23
Cameraman — M-G-M ..9-23-28
Cameron of the Royal Mounted
HOD. .1-15-22
Camille — FN 5-1-27
Camille — FHG 10-18-17
Camille — F 1917
Camille — M 9-11-21
Camille — WO 12-30-15
Camille (AT) — M-G-M
12-15-36
Camille of the Barbary Coast —
AE. .8-2-25
Camille of the Yukon — F.1920
Camouflage Kiss — F ...4-25-18
Campbells Are Coming — U
10- 21-15
Campo De Maggio (AT-Italian)
— NUO. .9-15-36
Campus Confessions (AT) —
PAR. .9-19-38
Campus Flirt — PAR. . .9-26-26
Campus Knights — CHE 9-29-29
Can a Woman Love Twice —
FBO. .3-4-23
Can This Be Dixie? (AT) — F
11- 12-36
Canadian — PAR 12-5-26
Canary Murder Case (AT & S)
PAR. .3-17-29
Cancelled Debts — STE . 10-23-27
Candy Girl — PAT 5-10-17
Candy Kid— DAI 1928
Cannonball Express (AT) —
WW. .2-28-32
Cantor's Son, The (AT-
Yiddish)— ERO. .12-29-37
Canyon Hawks (AT) — BIF
10-12-30
Canyon of Adventure — FN
4- 8-28
Canyon of Light — F.. 12-19-26
Canyon of Missing Men — SYN
3- 23-30
Canyon of the Foods — FBO
1-28-23
Capital Punishment — SCH
1- 18-25
Capitol, The — PAT ..12-21-19
Cap'n Dan — UA
Cappello A Tre Punte
(At-Italian) — NUO. .1936
Cappy Ricks — PAR .... 8-28-21
Cappy Ricks Returns (AT) —
REP. .9-10-35
Caprice — PAR 1913
Caprice of the Mountains — F
7-13-16
Captain Alverez — VIT .... 1917
Captain Applejack (AT) —
WA. .4-19-31
Captain Blood — VIT. . . 9-14-24
Captain Blood (AT) —
FN. .12-19-35
Captain Calamity (AT) — REG
4- 17-36
(Reviewed as "Captain
Hurricane" )
Captain Careless — FBO
10-21-28
Captain Courtesy — PAR.. 1915
Captain Cowboy — SYN.. 8-4-29
Captain Fly-By-Night — FBO
12-24-22
Captain Fury (AT)— UA
5- 8-39
Captain Grant's Children (AT-
Russian) — AM. .1-23-39
Captain Hates the Sea (AT) —
COL. .11-30-34
Captain Hurricane (AT) —
RKO. .4-25-35
Captain January — PRI . 7-13-24
Captain January (AT) — F
3-17-36
Captain Jinks of the Horse
Marines. .ES
Captain Kidd. Jr. — ART. 4-6-19
Captain Kiddo — (PAT . . 7-26-17
Captain Lash (S-SE) — F
2- 10-29
Captain of His Soul — TRI
2-14-18
Captain of the Grey Horse
Troop — VIT. .5-24-17
Captain of the Guard (AT) —
U. .3-30-30
473
17,238 TITLES
Captain Salvation — M-G-M
7-3-27
Captain Swagger (S-SE) — PAT
8- 26-28
Captain Swift — VIT. . .4-25-20
Captain Thunder (AT) —
WA. .5-10-31
Captain's Captain — VIT. 1-5-19
Captains Courageous (AT) —
MGM. .3-29-37
Captain's Kid. The (AT) — FN
1936
Captain's Kid, The (AT) —
WA. .1-23-37
Captivating Mary Carstairs —
— NF. .12-16-15
Captivation (AT) — CAP
9- 27-31
Captive God — TRI 7-13-16
Captured (AT) — WA... 8-19-33
Captured in Chinatown (AT) —
SUO. .7-30-35
Car No. 99 (AT) — PAR
2-23 35
Caravan (AT) — F 9-28-34
Cardboard Lover — M-G-M
9-9-28
Cardigan — AR 2-26-22
Cardinal Richelieu (AT) —
UA . . 3-26-35
Career (AT) — RKO 7-12-39
Career of Catherine Bush —
PAR. .8-17-19
Career Woman (AT) — F
11-24-36
Careers (PT & S) — FN
5-26-29
Carefree (AT) — RKO ..8-30-38
Careless Age (AT & S) — FN
10-13-29
Capeless Lady (AT) — F 4-17 32
Carmen ( AT ) — POP ... 1-17-32
Carmen— ES 6-1-16
Carmen — EAS 1928
Carmen — F 11-4-15
Carmen — PAR 11-4-15
Carmen of the Klondike—
SEX. .2-28-18
Carmen of the North — HAL
5-23-20
Carnation Kid (PT & S) —
PAR. .3-3-29
Carnival — UA 7-3-21
Carnival (AT) — COL. .. 2-15-35
Carnival Boat (AT) — RKO
3-27-32
Carnival Girl— AE 1926
Carnival in Vienna (AT-
German) — XX. .1939
Carnival Lady (AT) —
GOS. .11-29-33
Carnival of Crime — Ufa 7-14-29
Carnival Queen (AT) — U .1937
Carolina (AT) — F 2-2-34
17,238 TITLES
Carolyn of the Corners — PAT
1919
Caryl of the Mountains (AT)
— REB. .4-9 36
Casanova — M-G-M 1928
Cascarrabias (AT) — PAR
10 31-33
Case Against Mrs. Ames, The
(AT) — PAR. .5-5-36
Case at Law. A — ETR 11-15-17
Case of Becky — PAR . 10-16-21
Case of Becky — PAR.. 9-23-15
Case of Jonathan Drew — LEE
1928
Case of Lena Smith — PAR
1-20-29
Case of Sergeant Grischa
(AT) — RKO. .3-2-30
Case of the Black Cat. The
(AT) — FN. .12-28-36
Case of the Curious Bride
(AT) — FN. .4-4-35
Case of the Howling Dog (AT)
— WA. .10-17-34
Case of the Lucky Legs
(AT) — WA. .11-1-35
Case of the Missing Man
(AT) — COL. .11-22-35
Case of the Stuttering Bishop
(AT) — WA. .8-10-37
Case of the Velvet Claws, The
Casey at the Bat — FAT 6-22-16
Casey at the Bat — PAR 4-17-27
Casey Jones — RA 2-12-28
Casino Murder Case (AT) — -
MGM. .3-2-35
Cassidy — ETR 10-18-17
Cassidy of Bar 20 (AT) —
PAR. .2-9-38
Casta Diva (AT-Italian) —
(AT) — FN. .8-29-36
CIL. . 10-8-37
Caste— VIT 7-26-17
Cast-Off, The — INC 3-7-18
Castles for Two — PAR. .3-8-17
Castles in the Air — M....1919
Castles in the Air (AT-
Spanish) — XX 1938
Cat and the Canary — U. 5-15-27
Cat and the Canary, The
(AT) — PAR. .10-31-39
Cat and the Fiddle (AT) —
MGM. .2-14-34
Cat Creeps, The (AT) — U
10-26-30
Cat's Paw (AT) — F... 7-30-34
Catch as Catch Can — LUM
8-7-27
Catch My Dust — F
Catch My Smoke — F . . 12-31-22
Cat's Pajamas — PAR .... 1926
Catherine the Great (AT) —
UA — 2-2-34
Catspaw — EDK 1-20-16
Cattle Raiders (AT) —
COL. .5-4-38
Cattle Thief, The (AT) — COL
5- 26-36
Catwalk, The (AT-German)
—XX. .1938
Caucasian Love — AM.. 12-8-29
Caught (AT) — PAR. . .10-4-31
Caught Bluffing — U ...9-17-22
Caught Cheating (AT) —
TIF. .1-4-31
Caught in the Act — F. 12-15-18
Caught in the Fog (PT & S) —
WA. .12-9-28
Caught Plastered (AT) —
RKO. .8-9-31
Caught Short (AT) — MGH
6- 22-30
Cause for Divorce — SEZ
I- 27-24
Cavalcade (AT) — F 1-7-33
Cavalcade of the West (AT)
— DIV. .10-6-36
Cavalier. The (S-SE) — TIF
II- 4-28
Cavalier of the West (AT) —
ARC. .11-22-31
Cavalry (AT) — REP. .. 10-5-36
Cavalry, Attention! (AT-
German) — XX 1938
Cavanaugh of the Forest Ran-
gers— VIT 2-28. '8
Cave Girl — FN 2-26-22
Cave Man — WA 3-7-26
Cavell Case— SE 1918
Caveman — VIT 12-2-15
Cecilia of the Pink Roses —
GRA. .5 26-18
Ceiling Zero (AT) —
WA. . 12-24-35
Celos (AT-Spanish) — XX
4-18-36
Cemetery of the Eagles (AT-
Spanish ) — XX . . 1939
Central Airport (AT) — FN
3-29 33
Central Park (AT) — FN
12-9-32
Century Daredevil — AGF . . 1929
Certain Rich Man — HOD
10 9-21
Certain Rich Man — SEZ
Certain Young Man — M-G-M
6-17-28
Cette Vielle Canaille (AT-
French) — KIT. .1-16-35
Chain Invisible — EQ... 4-27-16
Chain Lightning — ARW 3-19-22
Chain Lightning — F. . .9-18-27
Chained (AT) — MGM . . 8-31-34
Chains of Evidence — HAL
3-7-20
Chalice of Sorrow — BL. 9-28-16
Chalk Marks — PDC. . .11-23-24
Challenge — AR 1922
Challenge — PAT 12-14-16
Challenge Accepted — HOD
12-22-18
474
Challenge of Chance — WIL
7-6-19
Challenge of the Law — F
10- 17-20
Challenge, The (AT) — FIA
10-5-39
Chalutzim (AT) — XX ..4-3-34
Chamber Mystery — ARW
Champ, The (AT) — MGM
11- 15-31
Champagne Charlie (AT) — F
5-7-36
Champagne for Breakfast
(AT) — COL. .7-6-35
Champagne Waltz (AT) —
PAR. .2-5 37
Champion of Lost Causes — F
3- 15-25
Champs-Elysees (AT-French)
— TRN. .3-2-39
Chance at Heaven (AT) —
RKO. .12-23-33
Chances (AT) — FN . . . 6-14-31
Chandu the Magician (AT) — -
F. .9-16 32
Chang — PAR 4-17-27
Chang and the Law — PS
Change of Heart (AT) — F
5- 11-34
Change of Heart (AT) —
F. .3-15-38
Changing Husbands — PAR
6- 29-24
Changing Women — VIT
8- 18-18
Channel Crossing (AT) — GB
5-24-34
Channing of the Northwest —
SEZ. .1922
Chapayev (AT-Russian) —
AM. .1-15-35
Chaperon — ES 11-23-16
Chapter in Her Life — U. 9-9-23
Charge It — EQU 5-29-21
Charge It to Me — PAT 4-27-19
Charge of the Gauchos — FBO
9 30-28
Charge of the Light Brigade.
The (AT) — WA.. 10-20-36
Charity — XX 1928
Charity Castle — AMU.. 9-13-17
Charlatan. The (PT & S) — U
4- 21-29
Charlemagne (AT) — XX
9- 10-35
Charley's Aunt — COL. 12-28-30
Charley's Aunt — PDC. 2-15-25
Charlie Chan at Monte Carlo
(AT) — F. .11-5-37
Charlie Chan at the Circus
(AT) — F. .3-17-30
Charlie Chan at the Olympics
(AT) — F. .10-18-37
Charlie Chan at the Opera
(AT) — F. .11-16-36
Charlie Chan at the Race Track
(AT) — F. .7-14-36
Charlie Chan at Treasure
Island (AT) — F . . 9-11-39
Charlie Chan Carries On
(AT) — F. .3-22-31
Charlie Chan's Chance (AT) —
F. .1-24-32
Charlie Chan's Courage (AT) —
F. .8-25-34
Charlie Chan's Greatest Case
(AT) — PAR. .10-7-33
Charlie Chan in City in
Darkness (AT) — F . . 12-20-39
Charlie Chan in Egypt (AT) —
F . . 6-4-35
Charlie Chan in Honolulu
(AT) — F 12-20-38
Charlie Chan in London (AT) —
F. .9-13-34
Charlie Chan in Paris (AT) —
F. .1-22-35
Charlie Chan in Reno (AT)
— F. .6-5-39
Charlie Chan in Shanghai (AT'
— F. .10-14-35
Charlie Chan on Broadway
(AT) — F. . 10-18-3?
Charlie Chan's Secret (AT)
— F. .1-18-36
Charlie McCarthy, Detective
(AT) — V. .12-20-39
Charlotte — COM 11-29-17
Charlotte Loewenskold (AT-
Swedish) — STP. .2-28-32
Charm School — PAR .... 1-9-21
Charm of La Boheme (AT-
German) — XX 1938
Charmer — BL 8-30-17
Charmer — PAR 4-19-25
Charming Deceiver — VIT.1921
Charming Deceiver (AT) —
MAJ. .12-9-33
Charming Sinners (AT) — PAR
7-14-29
Chase — FAB 7-8-23
Chaser — FN 4-15-28
Chaser, The (AT) — MGM. 8-8-38
Chasing Danger (AT) — F
5-29-39
Chasing Rainbows — F. . 8-24-19
Chasing Rainbows (AT) —
MGM. .2-23-30
Chasing the Moon — F... 2 5-22
Chasing Thru Europe (S-SE) —
F. .9-22-29
Chasing Trouble — U ..7-18-26
Chasing Yesterday (AT)
RKO. .9-28-35
Chasity— FN 5-4-24
Chattel — VIT 9-14-16
Chatterbox (AT) — RKO
1-23-36
Cheap Kisses — FBO 1924
Cheaper to Marry — MG 2-15-25
Cheat — PAR 9-2-23
Cheat — PAR 12-16-15
Cheat. The (AT) — PAR
12-13-31
Cheated Love — U 5-29-21
Cheated Hearts — U.... 12-4-21
Cheater — M 6-20-20
Cheater Reformed — F. . 2-27-21
Cheaters (AT) — LUB. .5-11-34
Cheaters— TIF 3-20-27
Cheaters at Play (AT) — F
2- 28-32
Cheating Blondes (AT) —
CAP. .5-20-33
Cheating Cheaters (AT) — U
12-4-34
Cheating Cheaters — SE 1-19-19
Cheating Cheaters — U .12-11-27
Cheating Herself — F 1919
Cheating the Public — F. 1-24-1 8
Chechahcos — AE 5-18-24
Check and Double Check
(AT) — RKO. .10-12-30
Checkered Flag — STE . . 1-24-26
Checkers — F 8-3-19
Checkers (AT) — F 12-8-37
Checkmate — BAM 5-31-17
Cheer Leader — LUM . . . 1-15-28
Cheer Up and Smile (AT) —
F. .8-3-30
Cheerful Fraud— U 12-12-26
Cheerful Givers — FAT .4-19-17
Cheers of the Crowd (AT) —
REP. .8-6 -35
Chelsea 7750— PAR 1913
Cherie (AT-French) — PAR
6- 14-31
Cherokee Kid — FBO .. 11-13-27
Cherokee Strip (AT) —
WA . . 193?
Chess Player, The — UNP
5- 25-30
Cheyenne — FN 3-3-29
Cheyenne Cyclone (AT) —
KET. .1-10-32
Cheyenne Kid (AT) — RKO
7- 13-33
Cheyenne Trails — AI 1928
Chicago — PAT 1-1-28
Chicago After Midnight — FBO
3- 11-28
Chicken a la King — F. . 6-17-28
Chicken Casey — INC. . .1-25-17
Chicken in the Case — SEZ
2-6-21
Chicken Wagon Family (AT)
— F. .9-28-39
Chickens — PAR 3-13-21
Chickie — FN 5-3-25
Chief, The (AT) — MGM
12-2 33
Child for Sale — GRA. .3-28-20
Child of Destiny — CM... 8-3-16
Child of Manhattan (AT) —
COL. .2-11-33
Child of Mystery — U
Child of the Paris Street — FAT
6- 18-16
Child of the Wild — F 1917
Child of M'sieu — TRI....1919
Child Thou Gavest Me — FN
1921
475
I 7,238 TITLES
Childhood of Maxim Gorky
(AT-Russian) — AM .10-5-38
Children in the House — FAT
4-20- 10
Children Must Laugh (AT-
Polish) — XX 1938
Children Not Wanted — SEZ
1920
Children of Banishment — SE
3-2-19
Children of Chance (AT) —
BI. .1-25-31
Children of Destiny — SEZ. 1922
Children of Divorce — PAR
4-24-27
Children of Dreams (AT) —
WA. .7-19-31
Children of Dust — FN. 6-10-23
Children of Jazz — PAR . . . 1923
Children of Night — F. . 6-19-21
Children of No Importance—
NF. .4-8-28
Children of Pleasure (AT) —
MGM. .8-10-30
Children of the Feud — FAT
11-30-16
Children of the New Day —
AM. .7-6-30
Children of the Ritz (S-SE) —
FN. .4-7- 39
Children of the Whirlwind —
ARW. .10-18-25
Children Pay — FAT... 12-7-16
Chimmie Fadden — PAR.. 1915
Chimmie Fadden Out West —
PAR. .12-2-16
China Bound — M-G-M . . 7-21-29
China Clipper (AT) — FN
8-12-36
China Express — AM... 3-16-30
China Passage (AT) —
RKO. .4-16-37
China Seas (AT) — MGM
7- 25-35
China Slaver — TPC 1929
Chinatown After Dark (AT)
— ACT. .10-25-31
Chinatown Charlie — FN 6-17-28
Chinatown Nights (AT & S) —
PAR. .4-7-29
Chinatown Squad (AT) —
U. .5-31-35
Chinese Parrott— U 1-8-28
Chinese Revolution (AT-
Chinese) — XX 1938
Chip of the Flying U — U
3-28-26
Chivalrous Charley — SEZ . 1922
Choosing a Wife — FN.. 8-17-19
Chorus Girl's Romance — -M
8- 22-20
Chorus Kid — GOT 4-16-28
Chorus Lady — PAR 10-2-15
Chorus Lady — PDC. ... 2-28-25
Christian — VIT 1923
1 7,238 TITLES
Christian — O 1-28-23
Christina (PT & S) — F 4-7-29
Christine of the Big Tops —
STE. .1020
Christine of the Hungry Heart
— FN. .10-26-24
Christmas Carol, A (AT) —
MOM. .12-12-38
Christopher Bean (AT) —
MGM. .11-22-33
Christopher Strong (AT) —
RKO. .3-11-33
Christus — ARP 1028
Chu Chin Chow (AT) — GB
0-22-34
Chu Chin Chow — MG .2-15-26
Chucho El Roto (AT-Spanish)
— CIX. .12-5-34
Church Mouse. The (AT) —
FN. .10-29-35
Ciboulette (AT-French) — XX
0-14-36
Cieca Di Sorrento — (AT-Italian)
— NUO . . 1936
Cielito Lindo (AT-Spanish) —
XX. .11-10-36
Cigarette Girl — PAT. .. 6-28-17
Cimarron (AT) — RKO 1-18-31
Cimzett Ismeretlen (AT-
Hungarian) — XX. .2-8-36
Cinderella, — PAR 1014
Cinderella Man — G... 12-20-17
Cinderella of the Hills — F
10-30-21
Cinderella's Twin — M... 1-9-21
Cinema Murder — PAR. . 1-25-20
Cipher Bureau (AT) — GN
10-26-38
Circe, The Enchantress — MG
9-14-24
Circle — MG 10-4-25
Circle of Death (AT) —
SYN. .4-11-35
Circular Staircase — SEL
6-23-15
Circumstantial Evidence — ARW
Circumstantial Evidence — CHE
4-7-29
Circumstantial Evidence (AT)
— CHE. .7-17-35
Circus — UA 1-22-28
Circus Ace — F 6-10-27
Circus Clown (AT) — FN
6-13-34
Circus Cowboy — F ....4-27-24
Circus Cyclone — U ....8-23-25
Circus Days — FN 7-22-23
Circus Girl (AT) —
REP. .2-24-37
Circus Jim — PS
Circus Kid (PT & S) — FBO
9-16-28
Circus Man — PAR 1914
Circus of Life — U 1917
Circus Queen Murder (AT) —
COL. .5-6-33
Circus Romance — EQ... 2-3-16
Circus Rookies — M-G-M
5-20-28
Circus Shadows (AT) —
PEE . . 5-3-35
Cisco Kid (AT) — F... 10-25-31
Cisco Kid and the Lady, The
(AT) — F. .1030
Citadel of Silence (AT-
French) — FIA . . 1939
Citadel, The (AT) — MGM
10-25-38
Citadel of Warsaw (AT-
German) — XX 1938
Cities and Years — AM.. 4-12-31
City — CWD 1-20-16
City — F 11-2126
City Crime (AT-Chinese) —
XX. .1938
City Girl (PT) — F 4-6-30
City Girl (AT) — F ...12-29-37
City Gone Wild — PAR 12-17-27
City Lights — UA 2-15-31
City Limits (AT) — MOP
3- 28-34
City Park (AT) — CHE 7-6-34
City of Comrades — G. . 7-20-19
City of Dim Faces — PAR
7-14-19
City of Illusion — IV. . .4-11-16
City of Masks — PAR.. 7-18-29
City of Purple Dreams — FIL
1918
City of Purple Dreams — RA
9- 30-28
City of Shadows — FBO... 1927
City of Silent Men — PAR
4- 10-21
City of Song (AT-German) —
WOD. .5-15-32
City of Song (AT) —
WOD. .2-3-33
City of Tears — U 6-30-18
City of Temptation — GOU
9-8-29
City of Youth (AT-Russian)
— AM. .1938
City Sparrow — PAR ...9-12-20
City Streets (AT) — PAR
4-19-31
City Streets (AT) — COL
7-29-38
City That Never Sleeps — PAR
10- 5-24
City Without Jews — AY.. 1928
Civilian Clothes — PAR 11-28-20
Civilization — INC 6-8-16
Civilization (Re-issue) — ATA
8 16-31
Civilization's Child — TRI
4-20-16
Claim — M 4-11-18
Clairvoyant, The (AT) —
GB. .6-8-35
Clancy in Wall Street (AT) —
ARO. .3-16 30
476
Clancy's Kosher Wedding — ■
FBO — 8-21-27
Clarence — PAR 10-22-22
Clarence (AT) — PAR ..3-10-37
Clarion — EQW 2-17-16
Clash of the Wolves — WA
11-22-25
Classified — FN 10-11-25
Classmates — FN 11-23-24
Claw — SE 6-0-18
Claw — U 6-22-27
Claws of the Hun — PAR
7-7-18
Clay Dollars — SEZ . . . 10-23-21
Clean Gun — RAL 1017
Clean Heart — VIT ....9-28-24
Clean-Up — EXP 3-24-29
Clean-Up — U 9-16-23
Clean-Dp — BL 8-0-17
Clean Up Man — U 1028
Clear All Wires (AT) —
MGM. .3-4-33
Clear the Decks (PT & S) — U
4-7-20
Clearing the Range (AT) —
CAP. .6-24-31
Clearing the Trail — U. 10-14-28
Clemencia (AT-Spanish) —
XX. .8-22-35
Cleopatra (AT) — PAR 7-25-34
Cleopatra — F 10-18-17
Clever Mrs. Carfax — PAR
11-8-17
Climax. The (AT) — U 2-16-30
Climber — RAL 1917
Climbing High (AT) — F
6-7-39
Climbers — VIT 11-0 19
Climbers — WA 5-8-27
Clinging Vine — PDC 8-8-26
Clipped Wings (AT) — TRC
6-4-38
Clive of India (AT) —
UA. .1-17-35
Clock — BL 4-5-17
Clodhopper — TRI 6-28-17
Cloistered — BES 5-20-36
Close Harmony (AT) — PAR
4-14-29
Closed Doors — VIT 5-22-21
Closed Gates — STE ...5-19-27
Closed Road — PBA 4-2-16
Closin' In — TRI 6-23-18
Closing Net — PAT ...10-14-15
Clothes — M 9-19-20
Clothes — PAR 1020
Clothes Make the Pirate — FN
11-29-25
Clothes Make the Woman — TIF
6-24-28
Cloud — VAN 3-16-17
Cloudburst — LBR 1922
Cloud Dodger — U 11-18-28
Clouded Name — WO... 8-24-19
Cloud Rider — FBO 1925
Clouded Name — PGO. . 2-25-23
Clouds Over Europe (AT) —
COL. .6-19-39
Cloven Tongue — PAT.... 1918
Clover's Rebellion — VIT
5-24-17
Clown — COL 1928
Clown — PAR 6-22-16
Clown George — AM 8-27-32
Clown Must Laugh, A (AT)
— GB. .10-17-38
Club De Femmes (AT-
French) — MAB. .10-26-37
Clutch of Circumstances — VIT
8-25-18
Co Moj Maz Rebi W Nocy?
(AT-Polish) — XX. .12 2-35
Coast Guard (AT) — COL. 9-7-39
Coast of Folly — PAR.. 9-13-25
Coast of Opportunity — HOD
12-19-20
Coast Patrol — BAR 1925
Coax Me — WO 8-3-19
Cobra, — PAR 12-13-25
Cock O* The Walk (AT) —
WW. .4-13-30
Cock O' The Walk — PAR. 1919
Cock of the Air (AT) — UA
1-31-32
Cockeyed Cavaliers (AT) —
RKO. .7-3-34
Cock-Eyed World (AT & S) —
F. .8-4-20
Cocktail Hour (AT) —
COL. .6-3-33
Cocoanut Grove (AT) — PAR
5-18-38
Cocoanuts, The (AT) — PAR
6- 2-29
Code of Cow Country — PAT
1927
Code of Honor (AT) — SYN
11-16-30
Code of Marcia Gray — PAR
3- 16-16
Code of the Air — BIS 12-16-28
Code of the Fearless (AT)
— SPE. .1-16-39
Code of the Mounted (AT) —
AMB. .6-31-35
Code of the Northwest — AE
1926
Code of the Range — RA
5-15-27
Code of the Rangers (AT) —
MOP. .4-13-38
Code of the Scarlet — FN
7-15-28
Code of the Sea — PAR 6-1-24
Code of the Secret Service
(AT) — WA. .6-23-39
Code of the Streets (AT) —
U. .1939
Code of the West — PAR
4- 26-25
Code of the West — SYN
7-27-30
Code of the Wilderness — VIT
7- 6-24
Code of the Yukon — SCR
12-8-18
Cognasse (AT-Freneh) —
PAR. .4-16-35
Cohens and Kellys — U.. 3-7-26
Cohens and Kellys in Africa
(AT) — U. .12-21-30
Cohens and Kellys in Atlantic
City (PT & S) — U. .3-24-29
Cohens and Kellys in Holly-
wood (AT) — U. .4-24-32
Cohens and Kellys in Paris — U
2-12-28
Cohens and Kellys in Scotland
(AT) — U. .3-2-30
Cohens and Kellys in Trouble
(AT) — U. .4-15-33
Coiffeur Pour Dames (AT-
French) — PAR. .10-29-32
Coincidence — M 5-8-21
Cold Deck — INC 11-8-17
Cold Steel — R.C 6-5-21
Colleen — F 9-11-27
Colleen (AT) — WA 3-6-36
Colleen of the Pines — FBO
7-9-22
College (AT-German) — XX
1939
College — UA 9-18-27
College Boob — FBO. .. .8-22-26
College Coach (AT) — WB
11- 10-33
College Coquette (AT & S) —
COL. .9-1-29
College Days — TIF. .. 10-24-26
College Girl (AT-German) —
XX. .1938
College Hero — COL. .. 11-27-27
College Holiday (AT) — PAR
12- 19-3(5
College Humor (AT) — PAR
6-14-33
College Love (AT & S)— U
8-11-29
College Lovers (AT) — FN
11-30-30
College Orphan — U... 10-21-15
College Rhythm (AT) — PAR
11-1-34
College Scandal (AT) —
PAR. .7-12-35
College Swing (AT) — PAR
4-28-38
College Widow — WA ..11-6-27
Collegiate (AT) — PAR... 1935
Collegiate (AT) — PAR. 1-23-36
Colonel Bridau — ENT 1919
Colonel's Wife — PAT
Colorado — U 2-27-21
Colorado Kid (AT) —
REP. .12-11-37
Colorado Pluck — F 5-8-21
Colorado Sunset (AT) —
REP. .8-2-39
Colorado Trail (AT) — COL
11-9-38
Combat — PAT 10-9-27
Combat— U 2-14-26
Combat — VIT 9-21-16
Combat of the Matterhorn
(AT-German) — XX 1938
477
I 7,238 TITLES
Come Again Smith-
Come and Get It-
Come Across (PT & S) — U
7-14-2!!
-HOD
1- 26-19
-RKO
2- 17-29
Come and Get It (AT) — UA
10- 29-36
Come-Back, The — M . . .5-14-16
Come Closer. Folks (AT) — COL
11- 24-36
Come on Cowboys — ARW 1924
Come On, Cowboys! (AT) —
REP. .5-21-37
Come on Danger (AT) — RKO
1932
Come on Danger (AT) —
RKO. .2-16-33
Come On In — PAR. .. .9-22-18
Come On, Leathernecks (AT)
— REP. .8-23-38
Come On Marines (AT) — PAR
3- 24-34
Come On Over — G 3-19-22
Come On Rangers (AT) —
REP. .11-28-38
Come on Tarzan (AT) — ■
WOW. .1-4-33
Come Out of the Kitchen — PAR
5 25-19
Come Through — U 1925
Come to My House — F 2-5-28
Comet Over Broadway (AT)
— WA. .12-23-38
Comin' 'Round the Mountain
(AT) — REP. .3-31-36
Comin' Through the Rye —
HEP — 12-14-24
Coming An' Going — ARC. 1926
Coming of Amos — PDC 9-27-25
Coming of the Law — F 5-18-19
Coming Out Party (AT) — F
3-17-34
Coming Through — PAR 2-22-25
Command Performance (AT) —
TIF. .1-18-3'
Commercial Pirates — ARW
1919
Cause — VIT. .12-8-18
Clay (AT) — F 8-3-30
Clay — PAT. . .1-26-19
Ground — PAR .8-3-16
Law — SEZ. . .11-4 -23
Law (AT) — PAT
7-19-31
Level — TRA . . . 1920
Property — U 1920
Sense — SEZ
Sin, The — SEZ.. 1920
Marriage — FN
11-11-28
-WA 11-1-26
(AT) — BI
1-18-31
Common
Common
Common
Common
Common
Common
Common
Common
Common
Common
Companionate
Compromise-
Compromised
I 7,238 TITLES
Compromised (AT) — FN
11-8-31
Comrade John — PAT ....1915
Comrades — FD 3-4-28
Comrades of 1918 (AT-Ger-
man) — TOB. .2-22-31
Comrades of the Sea (AT-
German) — XX. . 1939
Conceit — SEZ 12-25-21
Concert — G 2-27-21
Concentratin' Kid (AT) — U
10- 26-30
Concentration Camp (AT-
Russian) — AM. .4-8-39
Condemned (AT) — UA
11- 10-2!)
Condemned to Death (AT) —
FD. .7-14-32
Condemned to Live (AT) —
CHE. .1935
Condemned Women (AT) —
RKO. .3-10-38
Conductor 1492 — WA.. 3-23-24
Coney Island — FBO . . . 2-26-28
Coney Island Princess — PAR
12-7-16
Confession — F 6-16-19
Confession — FN 1920
Confession (AT) — WA .7-20-37
Confessions of a Co-ed (AT)
— PAR. .6-21-31
Confessions of a Nazi Spy
(AT) — WA. .4-28-39
Confessions of a Queen — MG
3-29-25
Confessions of a Wife — EXP
3-24-29
Confetti — FN 1928
Confidence — U 9-24-22
Confidence Man — PAR 4-20-24
Confidential (AT) —
MAP. .10-17-35
Conflict — U 10-30-21
Conflict — VIT 7-6-16
Conflict (AT) — U 11-28-36
Congorilla (AT) — F ...7-20-32
Congress Dances (AT) — UA
5-15-32
Connecticut Yankee, A (AT)
— F. .4-12-31
Connecticut Yankee at King-
Arthur's Court — F.... 2-6-21
Conquered Hearts — KES..1918
Conquering- Horde (AT) —
PAR. .3-29-31
Conquering Power — M. 7-10-21
Conquering the Woman — AE
12-17-23
Conqueror — TRI 1-6-16
Conqueror — F 10-25-17
Conquerors, The (AT) — RKO
11-19-32
Conquerors of the Arctic
AM. .11-29 37
Conquerors of the Night
(AT) — AM. .8-1-33
Conquest (AT & S) — WA
2-17-2!)
Conquest (AT) —
MGM . . 10-26-37
Conquest of Canaan — FRO
10-5-16
Conquest of Canaan — PAR
7-17-21
Conquest of the Holy Land —
OP. .8-25-29
Conquests of Peter the Great
(AT-Russian) — AM. .1939
Conrad in Quest of His Youth —
PAR. .11-14-20
Conscience — F 1917
Conscience of John David — -
HMU. .4-27-16
Consolation Marriage (AT) —
RKO. .11-1-31
Conspiracy (AT) — RKO
10-12-30
Conspiracy — PAR 1914
Conspiracy (AT) — RKO. 9-5-39
Constant Nymph — BIG 7-21-29
Constant Nymph (AT) — F
4-7-34
Constant Woman (AT) —
WOW. .6-23-33
Content — SEZ 1920
Contra La Corriente (AT-
Spanish) — XX. .3-12-36
Contraband — PAR .... 3-29-25
Contrast — LAB 6-5-21
Convention City (AT) — FN
12-14-33
Convention Girl (AT) —
FD. .5-14-35
Convict 993 — PAT . . . 12-20-17
Convict 13 — M 1920
Convict's Code. The (AT) —
SYN. .10 5-30
Convicted (AT) — ARC 10-4-31
Convicted (AT) — COL.. 8-24-38
Convicts at Large (AT) —
PRI. .12-23-38
Convict's Code (AT) — MOP
1939
Convoy — FN 5-15-27
Cook of Canyon Camp — PAR
7-19-17
Co-Optimists. The (AT) — ERA
3-9-30
Cop — PAT 9-9-28
Copperhead — PAR .... 2-15-20
Coquette (AT) — UA ..4-14-29
Coquille et le Clergyman —
FGU. .1928
Cora— M . . 1915
Corazon Bandelero (AT-
Spanish) — XX. .3-6-35
Corazones en Derrota (AT) —
XX. .10-11-34
Cordelia the Magnificent — M
5-20-23
Corner — TRI 12-16-15
Corner Grocer — PAR . 10-11-17
478
Corner in Cotton — M.... 3-9-16
Cornered — WA 10-19-24
Cornered (AT) — COL... 2-1-33
Coronado (AT) — PAR 12-19-35
Corporal Jim's Ward — PS 1921
Corporal Kate — PDC. . 12-26-26
Corruption (AT) — IML
6 21-33
Corsair (AT) — UA ...11-22-31
Corsican Brothers — UNI
12-28-19
Co-Respondent — U 1917
Corte D'Assi6e (AT-Italian)
— TRL. .10-4-31
Cosi E La Vita (AT-Italian)
THL. .11-8-31
Cossack Whip — EKE .11-16-16
Cossacks — M-G-M 7-1-28
Cossacks in Exile (AT-
Ukrainian) — AV. .2-2-39
Cossacks of the Don (S-SE) —
AM. .3-20-32
Cost — PAR 4-18-20
Cost of Hatred — PAR.. 4-19-17
Costello Case (AT) — WW
10-19 30
Cotton and Cattle — WES.. 1921
Cotton King — WO 9-9 15
Cougar, the King Killer
(S-SE) — SNO. .5-23-33
Counsel for Crime (AT) —
COL. .10-18-37
Counsel for the Defense — -AE
1- 17-26
Counsellor at Law (AT) —
U. .11-28 33
Count of Luxembourg — CHA
2- 14-26
Count of Monte Cristo (AT) —
UA . . 8-29-34
Count of Monte Cristo — PAR
1913
Count of Ten — U 3-18-28
Counterfeit — PAR ...11-30-19
Counterfeit Lady (AT) —
COL. .1-12-37
Counterfeit Love — PGO
6-24-23
Counterfeit (AT) — COL. .6-5-36
Countess Charming — PAR
9-27-17
Countess of Monte-Cri6to (ATI
— U. .3 31-34
Countess Parma (AT-Italian)
— XX. .1938
Country Beyond — F... 10-24-26
Country Beyond. The (AT) — F
4-7-36
Country Chairman — PAR. 1914
Country Cousin — SEZ. 12-14-19
Country Doctor — PDC. 9-11-27
Country Doctor. The (AT) — F
3- 2-36
Country Bride (AT-Russian)
— AM. .6-8-38
Country Flapper — PS. .9-13-22
Country Gentlemen (AT) —
REP. .10-24-36
Country God Forgot — EES
10- 6-16
Country Kid. The — WA 11-4-23
Country Mouse — PAR .... 1914
County Chairman. The (AT) —
F. .1-3-35
County Fair (AT) — MOP
6-1-32
County Fair — PI 1-23-21
County Fair (AT) —
MOP. .11-17-37
Courage — FN 6-19-21
Courage (AT) — WA. . .5-25-30
Courage for Two — WO. .2-9-19
Courage of Commonplace — -PFT
11-22-17
Courage of Marge O'Doone —
VIT. .6-6-20
Courage of Silence — VIT
2-8-17
Courage of the North (AT) —
FD. .19.35
Courage of the West (AT) —
U. .12-10-3?
Courageous Avenger (AT) —
SUM. .11-30-35
Courageous Coward — EXI.1919
Courageous Coward — SAB. 1924
Courier of Lyons (AT-
French) — PAX 6-8-38
Court Martial — COL. . 10-28-28
Court Martialed — U 1915
Courtesan — AMU 5-25-16
Courtin' Wildcats (AT & S) —
U. .12-22-29
Courtship of Miles Standish —
AE. .11-4-23
Cousin Kate — VIT 1921
Covered Trailer, The (AT)
— REP. .11-16-39
Covered Wagon — PAR .3-25-23
Covered Wagon Trails — STN
5-18-30
Coward — FBO 8-28-27
Coward — TRI 10-7-15
Cowardice Court — F 1919
Cowboy and the Bandit (AT) —
FD. .1935
Cowboy and the Countess — F
2-7-26
Cowboy and the Kid, The (AT)
— U. .6-2-36
Cowboy and the Lady — PAR
11- 12-22
Cowboy and the Lady, The
(AT) — UA 11-11-38
Cowboy and the Outlaw. The —
SYN. .2-23-30
Cowboy Cavalier — PAT 1-29-28
Cowboy Counsellor (AT) —
ALL .2-1-33
Cowboy Courage — AY.... 1926
Cowboy from Brooklyn (AT)
— WA. .6-14-38
Cowboy Holiday (AT) — BE
12- 26-34
Cowboy Kid — F 7-16-28
Cowboy Millionaire. The
(AT) — F. .4-25-35
Cowboy Musketeer — FBO
12-20-25
Cowboy Quarterback (AT)
— WA. .12-15-39
Cowboys from Texas (AT)
— REP. .12-5-39
Coyote Fangs — FW. .. .9-28-24
Coyote Trails (AT) —
COE. .1935
Crab — INC 1-18-27
Crack O' Dawn — RA.. 10-18-25
Crackerjack — EC 5-24-25
Cracked Nuts (AT) — RKO
4-5-31
Crack-Up (AT) — F... 12-14-36
Cradle — PAR 3-26-22
Cradle Buster — AR .... 5-28-22
Cradle of Courage — PAR
9- 26-20
Cradle Snatchers — F. . . 6-12-27
Cradle Song (AT) — PAR
11- 18-33
Craig's Wife — PAT 8-26-28
Craig's Wife (AT) — COL
10- 2-36
Crainquebille (AT) — DUW
12- 11-34
Crash, The (AT) — FN.. 9-9-32
Crash, The — FN 11-11-28
Crash Donovan (AT) — U
8-11-36
Crashin' Thru — FBO. .. .4-1-23
Crashin' Thru Danger (AT)
— EXA. .11-11-38
Crashing Hollywood (AT) —
RKO. .1-8-38
Crashing Through — PAT
2-5-28
Crashing Thru (AT)— MOP
12-28-39
Crashing Through to Berlin —
U. .8-18-18
Craven — BOL 1922
Craving — HOF 9-29-18
Craving — AMU 3-2-16
Crazy That Way (AT) — F
4-27-30
Crazy to Marry — PAR. .8-7-21
Creaking Stairs — U 2-2-19
Cricket — BUT 11-29-17
Cricket on the Hearth — SEZ
1923
Crime Afloat (AT) — TRC
11- 9-38
Crime and Punishment — PAT
2- 15-17
Crime and Punishment — GOU
4-28-29
Crime and Punishment (AT) —
COL. .11-22-35
Crime Doctor (AT) — RKO
3- 14-34
Crime et Chatiment (AT-
French) — LEN. .11-14-35
Crime Nobody Saw, The (AT)
— PAR . . 4-8-37
479
17,238 TITLES
Crime of Dr. Crespi, The
(AT) — REP. .9-24-35
Crime of Dr. Forbes, The (AT)
— F. .6-16-36
"Crime" of Dr. Hallet (AT)
— U. .3-24-38
Crime of Helen Stanley (AT) —
COL. .7-3 34
Crime of the Century (AT) —
PAR. .2-18-33
Crime on the Hill (AT) — BI
10-13-34
Crime Over London (AT) —
GB. .8-3-38
Crime Patrol. The (AT) —
EMP. .5-13-36
Crime Ring (AT)— RKO 7-27-38
Crime School (AT) — WA
6-11-38
Crime Takes a Holiday
(AT) — COL 5-9-38
Crime Without Passion (AT) —
PAR. .8-18-34
Criminal. The — INC . . 10-26-10
Criminal at Large (AT) —
HEL. .12-20 33
Criminal Code (AT) — COL
1-4-31
Criminal Lawyer (AT) — ■
RKO. .1-28-37
Criminal Within, See: "Murder
at Glen Athol"
Criminals of the Air (AT) —
COL. .11-1-37
Crimson Canyon — U... 12-9-28
Crimson Challenge — PAR
4-23-22
Crimson Circle, The (PT) —
ERA. .2-9 30
Crimson Circle. The (AT) —
DUW. .12-30-36
Crimson City (S-SE) — WA
4-22-28
Crimson Clue — CC 1923
Crimson Cross — PI 1922
Crimson Dove — PRW. ... 6-7-17
Crimson Gardenia — G. . 6-15-19
Crimson Romance (AT)- — -MAP
9-26 34
Crimson Runner — PDC. . 6-7-25
Crimson Shoals — MON
10-26-19
Crimson Stain Mystery — CON
8-24-16
Crimson Trail, The (AT) —
U. .2-8-35
Crinoline and Romance — M
1-28-23
Crippled Hand — BL 4-20-16
Crisis* — SEL 10-5-16
Crisis (SSE) — MAB 3-20-39
Crisis Mundial (AT-Spanish) —
XX. .2-18-37
Critical Age — HOD 5-6-23
17,238 TITLES
Crook of Dreams — WO. 2-23-19
Crooked Alley — U 12-2-23
Crooked Circle, The (AT) —
WW. .9-23-32
Crooked Romance — PAT
9-27-17
Crooked Straight— PAR 11-2-19
Crooked Streets — PAR.. 8-1-20
Crooks Can't Win — PBO
6-3-28
Crooky — VIT
Crooner (AT) — FN 8-6-32
Crosby Case (AT) — U. 3-23-34
Cross-Bearer — PWO ...4-18-18
Cross Breed — BIS 10-16-27
Cross Country Cruise (AT) — U
1-10-34
Cross Currents — FAT . .12-9-15
Cross Examination (AT) —
ARC. .2-14-32
Crossfire (AT) — RKO . . 8-16-3J
Cross Roads — SMI 1923
Crossroads of Love — HM..1928
Cross Roads of New York — FN
6-28-22
Cross Streets (AT) — CHE
7-6-34
Crossed Signals — RA .... 1926
Crossed Trails — IND. . .4-20-24
Crossed Wires — U 5-20-23
Crossing: Trails — APH....1922
Crossroads (AT-French) —
THN. .3-21-39
Crouching- Beast. The (AT)
— OLM. .8-22-36
Crowd — M-G-M 2-26-28
Crowd Roars. The (AT) —
WA. .3-27-32
Crowd Roars, The (AT) —
MGM. .8-2-38
Crowded Hour — PAR... 5-3-25
Crown Jewels — TRI ..12-22-18
Crown of Lies — PAR. . .4-11-26
Crown of Thorns (AT) —
Unknown. .3-30-34
Crown Prince's Double — VIT
1-6-16
Crow's Nest — AY 1922
Crucial Test — BRA ....7-6-16
Crucible — PAR 1914
Cruel Truth — STE 8-14-27
Cruise of the Hellion — RA
9-18-27
Cruise of the Jasper B — PDC
1926
Cruise of the Makebelieve —
PAR. .9-8-18
Crusader — F 1923
Crusader. The (AT) —
MAJ. .10-5-32
Crusades. The (AT) —
PAR. .8-6-36
Cruz Diablo (AT) —
COL. .4-10-35
Cruz Diablo (AT-Spanish) —
COL. .1938
Cry of the Weak — PAT. 4-20-19
Cry of the World (AT) —
F. .5-8-32
Crystal Cup — FN 10-9-27
Crystal Gazer — PAR. . .9-20-17
Csak Ecy Kislany (AT-
Hungarian) — ERA. .3-27-32
Csak Egy Ejszaka (AT-
Hungarian) — XX. .3-19-36
Cuando Canta La Ley (AT-
Spanish) — PAR. .6-5-39
Cub Reporter — GOL. . .9-24-22
Cuban Love Song (AT) —
MGM. .12-6-31
Cuckoos. The (AT) — RKO
4-27-30
Cuesta Abajo (AT) — PAR
7- 18-34
Cumberland Romance — REA
8- 15-20
Cup of Fury — G 4-11-20
Cup of Life — AE 9-11-21
Cupid by Proxy — PAT. .7-14-18
Cupid Forecloses — VIT. . 7-6-19
Cupid, the Cowpuncher — G
8-1-20
Cupid's Brand — ARW 1921
Cupid's Fireman — F. . .12-16-23
Cupid's Round-up — F....1918
Curly Top (AT) — F.... 8-2-35
Curlytop — F 1925
Curse of Drink — APO . . . 9-3-22
Curse of Eve — COR. . .10-18-17
Curse of Iku — ES 3-28-18
Curtain — FN 10-10-20
Curtain at Eight (AT) — MAJ
2-1-34
Curtain Falls (AT) — CHE
10-2-34
Custard Cup — F 1-21-23
Cy Wittaker's Ward — EES 1917
Cycle of Fate — SEL. .. .4-6-16
Cyclone — F 1-18-20
Cyclone Bliss — ARW 1921
Cyclone Cavalier — RA. . 10-4-25
Cyclone Cowboy — PAT. 1-16-27
Cyelone Jones — AY 9-30-23
Cyclone Kid (AT) — BIF
12-22-31
Cyclone of Higgins, D.D. — M
6- 19-18
Cyclone of the Range — FBO
5-1-27
Cyclone of the Saddle (AT) —
FD. .1935
Cyclone Ranger (AT) —
SPE. .3-20-35
Cyclone Rider — F 10-5-24
Cynara (AT) — UA. .. 11-12-32
Cynthia of the Minute — HOD
7- 11-20
Cyrano De Bergerac — ATL
7-19-25
Cy thereat — FN 4-20-24
Czar Ivan, the Terrible. . 1928
480
Czar of Broadway (AT) — U
6-29-30
Cfcar WantB to Sleep (AT) —
AM. .12-11-34
Czardos: Ihre Tollste Nacht
(AT-German) — XX. .6-24-37
Czarina Commands, The (AT-
Russian) — KIT. . 1935
D
Dad's Girl — SEZ 1920
Daddies — WA 2-17-24
Daddy — FN 3-11-23
Daddy Long Legs — FN 5-18-19
Daddy Long Legs (AT) — F
6-7-31
Daddy's Girl — PAT. ... 2-21-18
Daddy's Gone A'Hunting — MG
3-8-25
Daddy's Love — KLU 1922
Daggerwoman — PAT . . . 5-2-18
Damaged Goods — BEN 9-30-15
Damaged Goods (AT) —
GN. .6-24 37
Damaged Heartss — FBO. . . 1924
Damaged Love (AT) — WW
1-25-31
Damaged Souls (S-SE) — PWP
1929
Dame Chance— ACI. .. 10-24-26
Dame De Pique (AT-French)
— LEN. .1939
Dames (AT) — WA 8-16-34
Dames Ahoy (AT) — U. 3-30-30
Damocles — PS
Damon and Pythias — U...1915
Damsel in Distress — PAT
10- 19-19
Damsel in Distress, A (AT) —
RKO. .11-20-37
Dance Band (AT) — ALL
6-6-35
Dance. Charlie, Dance (AT) —
WA . . 8-27-37
Dance Fever — Ufa. ... .9-23-28
Dance, Fools, Dance (AT) —
M-G-M. .2-1-31
Dance, Girl, Dance (AT) —
INV. .12-26-33
Dance Hall (AT & S) — RKO
12-22-29
Dance Hall Hostess (AT) —
MAF. .8-26-33
Dance Madness — M-G-M
2-7-26
Dance Magic — FN 7-31-27
Dance of Life (AT & S) — PAR
8-25-29
Dance Team (AT) — F. . 1-3-32
Dancer of Barcelona — CUR
10-6-29
Dancer of Paris — FN... 4-4-26
Dancer of the Nile — FBO
11- 18-23
Danger on the Air (AT) —
U. .6-20-38
Dancers. The (AT) — FN
11-16-30
Dancers. The — F 1-18-25
Dancers in the Dark (AT) — -
PAR . . 3-20-32
Dancer's Peril — PBW. . .3-8-17
Dancer's Romance — ARW ....
Dancin' Fool — PAR 5-9-20
Dancing: Cheat — U 4-20-24
Dancing- Co-ed (AT) — MGM
10- 13-39
Dancing- Days — PRE. .. 9-19-26
Dancing- Dynamite (AT) —
CAP. .8-16-31
Dancing- Feet (AT) — REP
1- 20 36
Dancing- Lady (AT) — MGM
12-2-33
Dancing- Man (AT) — PYM
7- 14 34
Dancing- Mothers — PAR
2- 28-26
Dancing- Pirate (AT) — RKO
5-8-36
Dancing- Sweeties (AT) — WA
8- 17-30
Dancin? Vienna — FN ..2-24-29
Danger — ELF 1923
Danger Ahead — GOL . . 9-30-23
Dang-er Ahead — U 7-21-21
Danger Ahead (AT) —
VIC. .7-19-35
Danger Flight (AT) — MOP
11- 10-39
Danger Game — G 4-25-18
Danger Girl — PDC 1-31-26
Danger, Go Slow — D... 12-8-18
Danger Lights (AT) — RKO
12- 14-30
Danger Line — -FBO .... 5-18-24
Danger — Love at Work (AT) —
F. .9-30-37
Danger Man — COS 4-27-30
Danger Mark — ART. . .7-14-18
Danger Path — U
Danger Patrol — RA 1928
Danger Patrol (AT) —
RKO. . 11-27-37
Danger Quest — RA 1926
Danger Rider — U 12-2-28
Danger Signal — EDK .11-25-15
Danger Signal — COL .... 8-9-25
Danger Street — FBO ... 10-7-28
Danger Trail — RAL 1928
Danger Trail — SEL. .. .5-10-17
Danger Trail (AT) — FD..1935
Danger Valley — IND 1921
Danger Valley (AT) —
MOP. .1937
Danger Within — BL 5-2-18
Danger Zone — F 1-19-19
Dangerous (AT) — WA 12-6-35
Dangerous Adventure — WA
1922
Dangerous Adventure. A (AT)
— COL. A937
Dangerous Affair — HAL. . 1920
Dangerous Affair. A (AT) —
COL. .11-29-31
Dangerous Age — FN .... 2-4-23
Dangerous Blond — U. . .5-11-24
Dangerous Business — FN
12-5-20
Dangerous Corner (AT) — RKO
12-4-34
Dangerous Coward — FBO
6-1-24
Dangerous Crossing (AT-
German) — UFA 1938
Dangerous Curve Ahead — G
10 9-21
Dangerous Curves (AT & S) —
PAR. .7-21-29
Dangerous Days — G.... 3-21-20
Dangerous Dub — AE 1926
Dangerous Dude — RA . . 8-29-26
Dangerous Flirt — FBO... 1924
Dangerous Friends — STE
11-7-26
Dangerous Game — U 1923
Dangerous Holiday (AT) —
REP. .6-25-37
Dangerous Hours — PAR . 2-8-~ )
Dangerous Innocence — U
3-15-25
Dangerous Intrigue (AT) —
COL. .1-18-36
Dangerous Lies — PAR .... 1921
Dangerous Little Demon — U
3-12-22
Dangerous Love — CBC....1921
Dangerous Maid — FN . 1 2-16-23
Dangerous Moment — U 4-10-21
Dangerous Money — PAR
10-19-24
Dangerous Nan McGrew (AT)
— PAR. .6-22-30
Dangerous Number (AT) —
MGM. .1-27-37
Dangerous Secrets (AT) —
GN. .10-27-38
Dangerous Paradise (AT) —
PAR. .2-16-30
Dangerous Paradise — SEZ
10-24-20
Pastime — EAS.1921
Paths — ARW. .1921
Talent — PAT
3-14-20
Dangerous To Know (AT) —
PAR. .3-14-38
to Men — M 4-18-20
Traffic — GOO. .1926
Trails — AMB 4-6-24
Virtue — LBR
11-7-26
Dangerous Waters — MT
9-21-10
Dangerous Waters (AT) — U
1-23-36
Dangerous Woman (AT) — PAR
5-26-29
Dangerously Yours (AT) —
F. .2-24-33
481
Dangerous
Dangerous
Dangerous
Dangerous
Dangerous
Dangerous
Dangerous
17,238 TITLES
Dangerously Tours (AT) —
F. .9-21-37
Dangers of the Arctic (AT) —
EXO. .7-2-32
Daniel Boone (AT) — RKO
9- 22-36
Daniel Boone Thru the Wilder-
ness— SU 1920
Dante's Inferno — F . . 10-12-24
Dante's Inferno (AT) — F
8-1-35
Danton (AT-German) —
CAP. .9-13-31
Danton (AT-German) — XX
1938
Daphne and the Pirate — FAX
2-24-16
Daredevil Drivers. The (AT)
— WA. .2-25-38
Daredevil — F 3-14-20
Daredevil — EXI 1920
Daredevil Kate — F .... 8-24-16
Daredevil's Reward — -F . 1-15-28
Daring Chances — U ...8-31-24
Daring Danger — AR 1922
Daring Danger (AT) —
COL. .7-27-32
Daring Daughters (AT) —
CAP. .3-25-33
Daring Deeds — RA 1927
Daring Hearts, — VIT. . .7-27-19
Daring Love — TRU 6-29-24
Daring of Diana — VIT 7-27-16
Daring Years — EQD . . . 12-9-23
Daring Young Man, The
(AT) — F. .7-18-35
Daring Youth— PRI ... 5-18-24
Dark Angel — FN 10-18-25
Dark Angel. The (AT) —
UA. .8-30-35
Dark Eyes (AT-French) —
KAS. .4-21-38
Dark Hazard (AT) — FN
2- 23-34
Dark Horse (AT) — FN
6- 11-32
Dark Hour. The (AT) —
CHE. .1935
Dark Hour. The (AT) — CHE
8-1-36
Dark Journey (AT) —
UA. .8-24-37
Dark Lantern — REA .... 8-8-20
Dark Mirror — PAR 1920
Dark Rapture (AT) — U
10- 11-38
Dark Red Roses (AT) — INT
3- 23-30
Dark Road — INC 3-22-17
Dark Sands (AT) — REH
7- 22-38
Dark Secrets — PAR 1-28-23
Dark Silence — PWO . . . 9-21-16
17 ,2 3 8 TITLES
Dark Skies (AT) — CAP
12-15-29
Dark Stairways — U.... 6-22-24
Dark Star — PAR 8-24-19
Dark Streets (AT & S) — PN
10-13-29
Dark Swan — WA 12-7-24
Dark Victory (AT) — WA
3-17-39
Darkened Rooms (AT & S) —
PAR. .1929
Darkened Skies (AT) — BIL
1930
Darkest Africa (AT) — REP
1936
Darkest Hour — VIT 1920
Darkest Russia — PBW .4-26-17
Darkness and Daylight — BAN
1923
Darling Mine — SEZ 1921
Darling of New York — U
10 28-23
Darling of Paris — F... 2-15-17
Darling of the Rich — SEZ
1-14-23
Daro' Un Milione (AT-
Italian) — XX. .4-8-37
D'Artagnan — FAT ....2-10-16
Darwin Was Right — F. 10-26-24
Das Alte Lied (AT-German)
— KAU. .9-13-33
Das Blaue vom Himmel (AT)
— DAN. .9-13-34
Das Cabinet des Dr. Lari-
fari (AT-German) — SCN
9 13-31
Das Einmaleins Der Liebe
(AT-German)— XX. .1-4-37
Das Ekel (AT-German) —
UFA. .1-31-32
Das Ekel (AT-German) —
UFA . . 1939
Das Erbe in Pretoria (AT-
German) — BAU. .4-21-36
Das Floetenkonzert Von Sans-
Souci (AT-German) —
UFA. .10-18-31
Das Freundin Eines Grossen
Mannes (AT) — UFA 9-13-34
Das Gaesschen Zum Paradies
( AT-German ) — AMT . 8-27-37
Das Hofkonzert (AT-German)
UFA. .3-30 37
Dae Lied 1st Aus (AT-
German) — ASS. .1-31-32
Das Lied vom Glueck (AT-
German) — XX. .1935
Das Lied Vom Leben (AT-
German) — TOB. .10-18-31
Das Lockende Ziel (AT) —
XX. .1933
Das Maedchen Irene (AT-
German) — UFA. .6-1-37
Das Maedchen Johanna (AT-
German) — UFA. .10-9-35
Das Maedel von der Reep-
erbahn (AT-German) —
TPE. .1-25-31
Das Nachtigall Maedel (AT)
CAP. .1-28-33
Das Rheinlandmaedel (AT-
German) — CAP. .9-20-31
Das Schicksal der Benate
Langen (AT) — XX.. 11-6-33
Das Schloss Im Flandern (AT-
German) — AMT. .8-18-37
Das Schloss Im Sueden (AT-
German) — UFA. .2-25-36
Das Schoene Abenteur (AT-
German) — UFA. .12-10-32
Das Schweigen In Walde (AT-
German) — UFA. .12-15-37
Das Spiel Im Sommerwind
(AT-German) — UFA. .1939
Das Unsterbliche Herz (AT-
German — UFA . . 1939
Das Verlorene Tal (AT-
German) — XX. .6-3-36
Daughter Angele — TRI. 8-25-18
Daughter of Destiny — FN
12-27-17
Daughter of Eve — COM . . 1922
Daughter of France — F 4-18-18
Daughter of Israel — SYN
5-27-28
Daughter of Luxury — PAR
12-10-22
Daughter of MacGregor — PAR
9-21-16
Daughter of Maryland — EMU
11- 8-17
Daughter of Mine — G. .4-27-19
Daughter of Shanghai (AT) —
PAR. .12-21-37
Daughter of the City — ES
12-23-15
Daughter of the Don — ARW
1920
Daughter of the Dragon (AT)
— PAR. .8-23-31
Daughter of the Gods — F
10-19-16
Daughter of the Hills — PAR . .
Daughter of the Law — U
8-7-21
Daughter of the Old South —
PAR — 10-25-18
Daughter of the Poor — FAT
3-15-17
Daughter of the Samuri
(AT-Japanese) — MOD ..1938
Daughter of the Sea — EQ
12- 2-15
Daughter of the Sioux — DAV
10-11-25
Daughter of the Tong (AT)
— TIM . .8-28-39
Daughter of the West — PAT
5-19-18
482
Daughter of the Wolf — PAR
1919
Daughter of Two Worlds — FN
1-11-20
Daughter Pays — SEZ .. 11-28-20
Daughters Courageous (AT)
— WA.. 6-16-39
Daughters of Desire — EXP
6-19 2!(
Daughters of Pleasure — PRI
6-15-24
Daughters of the Night — F
11-30-24
Daughters of the Rich — PRE
6-24-23
Daughters of Today — SEZ
3- 9-24
Daughters of Two Fathers —
SHO. .3-24-29
Daughters Who Pay — BAE
5-10-25
David and Jonathan — SEC 1922
David Copperfield — AE
11- 11-23
David Copperfield (AT) —
MGM . . 1-8 35
David Garrick — PAR 1916
David Golder (AT-French) —
PRX. .10-21-32
David Harum (AT) — F. 3-2-34
Davy Crockett — PAR. . .4-20-16
Davy Crockett at the Fall of
the Alamo — SU 1926
Dawn — COL 6-3-28
Dawn — PAT 12-17-19
Dawn of a Tomorrow — PAR
4- 6-24
Dawn of Freedom — VIT
8-17-16
Dawn of Love — -M .... 10-5-16
Dawn of Revenge — AY . . . 1922
Dawn of the East — F KR
'0-9-21
Dawn of Understanding — VIT
1918
Dawn Over Ireland (AT) —
ALW. .2-19-38
Dawn Patrol (AT) — WA
12- 14-38
Dawn Patrol. The (AT) — i S
7-13-30
Dawn Rider. The (AT) —
MOP. .7-9-35
Dawn Trail (AT) — COL.. 1934
Dawnmaker — INC 9-14-16
Day at the Races. A (AT) —
MGM. .6-15-37
Day Break — M 1-10-18
Daybreak (AT) — MGM 5-31-31
Day Dreams — G 1-19-19
Day of a Dog — PAR
Day of Days — PAR 1914
Day of Faith — G 12-2-23
Day of Reckoning (AT) —
MGM. .11-4-33
Day She Paid — U. ... 12-14-19
Day the Bookies Wept, The
(AT) — RKO. .9-18-39
Days of Jesse James (AT)
— REP. .12-15-39
Day's Pleasure — FN. .12-21-19
Day-Time Wife (AT) — F
11-16-39
Daytime Wives — FBO . . . 9-2-23
De Be Van Het Regiment (AT-
Dutch) — HOB. .1939
De Luxe Annie — SCE. .5-26-18
Dead Alive — GAU 2-17-16
Dead End (AT) — UA ...8-3-37
Dead Game — D 4-22-23
Dead or Alive — ARW....1921
Dead Line — FBO 8-15-26
Dead Line — F 5-9-20
Dead Line — EXI 1919
Dead Melody (AT-German)
UFA. .1938
Dead Men Tell No Tales
(AT) — ALL. .8-3-39
Deadlier Sex — PAT. .. .3-21-20
Deadline. The (AT) — COL
1-24-32
Deadline. The (AT) — COL
1931
Deadline at Eleven — VIT
3-14-20
Dead Man's Curve — FBO
11- 20-27
Dead March. The (AT) —
IML. .8-19-37
Dead Men Tell No Tales — VIT
12- 19-20
Dead-Shot Baker — VIT
10- 18-17
Deadwood Coach — F . . . 1-25-25
Deadwood Pass (AT) — PRE
6-6-33
Dealers in Death (AT) — TOP
11- 30-34
Dearie — WA 6 19-27
Death Dance — SEL ...7-21-18
Death Flies East (AT) —
COL. .2-27-35
Death From a Distance (AT) —
INV. .9-17-35
Death Goes North (AT) —
WAW. .7-27-39
Death in the Air (AT) —
PAR. .2-15-37
Death Kiss (AT) — WOW
1-28-33
Death Kiss. The (AT)— WW
1932
Death of a Champion (AT)
— PAR. .9-7-39
Death of Censorship — NAM
10-12-16
Death on the Diamond (AT) —
MGM. .9-22-34
Death Takes a Holiday (AT) —
PAR. .2-23-34
Death Valley — FD 7-31-27
Debt — PMU 5-3-17
Debt of Honor — F. . . .4-11-18
Decameron Nights — Ufa.. 1928
Deceiver — ARW 1921
Deceiver, The (AT) — COL
11-29-31
Deception — PAR 4-24-21
Deception (AT) — COL 1-10-33
Deciding Kiss — U 7-14-18
Declasse — FN 4-5-26
Decoy — LED 7-6-16
Deemster — ARW 4-19-17
Deep Purple — REA ....5-9-20
Deep Waters — PAR 1921
Deerslayer — SEZ 1923
Defend Yourself — ELB . . . 1926
Defenders of the Law (AT)
— SYN. .5-24-31
Defense of Voloehayevsk
(AT-Russian) — AM ..9-1-38
Defense Rests — (AT) — COL
8-15-34
Defying Destiny — SEZ.. 1-13-24
Delicious (AT) — F ..12-27-31
Delicious Little Devil — U
4-20-19
Delightful Rogue (AT & S) —
RKO. .10-20-29
Deliverance — LIE 8-24-19
De Luxe Annie 5-26-18
Deluge, The (AT) — RKO
10-7-33
Demented Hero — FGU 1928
Demi-Bride — M-G-M 4-3-27
Democracy, The Vision Re-
stored— DEM 8-29-20
Demon — M 7-28-18
Demon — U 1926
Demon Barber of Fleet Street
(AT) — SE. .10-11-39
Demon for Trouble (AT) —
STI. .8-10-34
Demon of the Steppes — AM
2-2-30
Demon Rider — DAV 1926
Denare E D'Amore (AT-
Italian) — XX. .3-22-37
Denial — MG 3-22-25
Denny from Ireland — KRA
1919
Denver Dude — U 2-13-27
Der Adjutant Seiner Hoheit
(AT) — Unknown. .10-22-34
Der Andere (AT-German) —
TOB. .1-17-32
Der Arme Millionair (AT-
German) — UFA. .1939
Der Ball (AT-German) —
PRX. .1932
Der Bettelstudent (AT-
German) — UFA. .12-29-36
Der Bettlestudent (AT) —
XX . . 10-28-33
Der Biberpelz (AT-German)
— UFA. .1939
Der Blaufuchs (AT-German)
— UFA. .1939
Der Brave Sunder (AT) —
XX. .1932
Der Choral von Leuthen (AT-
German) — UFA. .1-22-35
483
17,238 TITLES
Der Doppelbraetigam (AT-
German) — GFS. .3-27-35
Der Dschungel Ruft (AT-
German) — XX. .4-27-37
Der Etappenhase (AT-
German) — CAO 1-6-38
Der Fall Des Oberst Redl
(AT-German) — CAP. .8-20-32
Der Falsche Ehemann (AT-
German) — UFA. .10-18-32
Der Falsche Feldmarschall
(AT-German) — CAP. .7-2-32
Der Feldherrn Shuesgel (AT) —
Unknown. .4-24-34
Der Florentiner Hut (AT-
German— UFA . . 1939
Der Frechdachs (AT) — UFA
1-9-34
Der Gipfelsturmer (AT-
German) — XX. .4-14-37
Der Glueckszylinder (AT) —
Unknown. .3-13-34
Der Gouverneuer (AT-German)
— UFA. .1939
Der Grosse Tenor (AT-Ger-
man)— UFA. .6-31-31
Der Grosse Tenor (AT-
German) — UFA. .1932
Der Hampelmann (AT-Ger-
man)— TOB. .9-13-31
Der Hauptman von Koepenick
(AT) — AMR. .1-20-33
Der Hellseher (AT) — XX
9-13-33
Der Herr Burovorstcher (AT-
German) — CAP. .1932
Der Herr der Welt (AT-
German) — GFS. .12-17-35
Der Himmel auf Erden (AT-
German) — XX. .12-30-35
Der Hochtourist (AT) — UFA
1-16-34
Der Hoehere Befehl (AT-
German) — UFA. .4-1-36
Der Jager Von Fall (AT-
German) — UFA. .4-27-37
Der Judas von Tirol (AT-
German) — XX. .4-29-35
Der Junge Graf (AT-German)
— UFA. .12-14-36
Der Kampf (AT-Russian) —
AM. .9-11-36
Der Kaiser Von Kalifornien
(AT-German) — XX. .5-13-37
Der Katzensteg (AT-German)
— AMT. .2-1-38
Der Kleine Seitensprung
(AT-German) — UFA. .1-10-32
Der Korvettenkapitaen (AT)
XX. .1933
Der Kosterjaeger (AT-
German) — UFA. .1935
Der Kosterjaeger (AT-
German — UFA. .1-4-36
17,238 TITLES
Der Letzte Waltzer (AT-
German) — XX. .4-19-37
Der Liebling von Wien
(AT) — EUR. .6-14-33
Der Meisterboxer (AT-
German) — GFS. .1935
Der Meisterdetektiv (AT) — -
Unknown. .2-14-34
Der Afuede Theodor (AT-
German) — XX. .10-27-36
Der Mutige Seefahrer (AT-
German — XX. .11-25-36
Der Page vom Dalmasse-
Hotel (AT-German)
XX. .3-27-35
Der Postilion Von Lonjumeau
(AT-German) — SWI. .11-23-37
Der Purimspieler (AT-
Tiddish)— SPI. .1-21-37
Der Raub Der Mona Lisa
(AT-German) — TOB. .4-3-32
Der Raub Der Sabinerinnen
( AT German ) — AMT. .1-20-37
Der Schimmelreiter (AT-
German) — GFS. .1935
Der Schlemihl (AT) — Unknown
11-5-34
Der Sehrecken Der Garnison
(At-German) — CAP. .6-5-32
Der Sehritt Vom Wege
(AT-German — UFA . . 1 939
Der Sclvuechterne Felix (AT-
German) — XX. .9-10-35
Der Schueschterne Casanova
(AT-German) — XX. .8-25-36
Der Schuetzen Koenisr (AT) —
GEF. .5-10-33
Der Schwarz Husar (AT) —
BRX. .12-23-32
Der Sohn der Weissen Berge
(AT) — ITA. .10-28-33
Der Stern von Valencia (AT) —
UFA. .1934
Der Stolz Der 3 Kompagnie
(AT-German) — CAP. .7-22-32
Der Storch Hat Uns Getraut
(AT) — XX. .12-5-33
Der Storch Streikht (AT-
German)— TOB. .5-8-32
Der Tanz Gent Weiter (AT-
German) — WA. .1-11-31
Der Teufelsbruder (AT-
German) — TRL. .4-10-32
Der Tiger Von Berlin (AT-
German) — UFA. .1932
Der Tolle Bombert (AT-
German) — XX. .10-28-35
Der Traum vom Rhein (AT-
German) — XX. .12-10-35
Der Traumende Mund (AT) —
Unknown. .2-6-34
Der Umwider9teh]iche
(AT-German) — AMT 1-11-38
. 1939
. 1939
(AT-
Der Unbekannte (AT-German)
— XX. .6-4-35
Der Ungetreue Ecke Hart
(AT-German) — TOB. .1-24-32
Der Unsterbliche Lump (AT-
German ) — UFA . . 1932
Der Unsterbliche Walzer
(AT German) — UFA.
Der Verkannte Lebemann
(AT-German)- — UFA .
Der Vetter Aus Dingsda
German) — UFA. .2-4-36
Der Wackere Schustermeister
(AT-German) — GEG. .7-8-36
Der Wahre Jakob (AT-Ger-
man)— TRA. .8 16-31
Der Zerbrochene Krug
(AT-German) — AMT 1-17-38
Der Zigeunerbarcn (AT-
German) — UFA. . 1935
Derelict (AT) — PAR .. 11-23-30
Derelict — F 5-3-17
Desert Blossoms — F... 12-11-21
Bride — COL 6-10-28
Bridegroom — ARW
1922
Demon — ARC 1926
Driven — FBO . . 6-17-23
Dust — U 12-25-27
Flower — FN 6-7-25
Gold — PAR 4-4 26
Gold — HOD ...11-16-19
Gold (AT) — PAR
5-8-36
Greed — GOO 1926
Guns (AT) — BEU 1935
Guns (AT) — BEU
1-13-36
Desert Justice (AT) — ATN
4 22-36
Law — TRI 9-22-18
Love — F 4-18-20
Man — TRI . . . .4-19-17
Men, The (AT) —
FD. .1935
Nights (S-SE) — M-G-M
4-14 29
Desert of the Lost — PAT
10-14-28
Desert Outlaw — F ....8-31-24
Desert Patrol (AT) — REP
6-3-38
Desert Phantom (AT) — SUM
3-21-36
Desert Pirate — FBO 1927
Desert Rider — M-G-M . .7-7-29
Desert Scorpion — EMP . . . 1920
Desert Sheik — TRU ...7-27-24
Desert Song (AT) — WA 5-5-29
Desert Trail (AT) —
MOP. .8-20-35
Desert Valley — F 1-9-27
Desert Vengeance (AT) —
COL. .3-1-31
Desert Wooing — PAR .6-16-18
Desert's Crucible — ARW . 1922
Desent's Price — F 12-6-25
484
Desert
Desert
Desert
Desert
Desert
Desert
Desert
Desert
Desert
Desert
Desert
Desert
Desert
Desert
Desert
Desert
Desert
Desert's Toll — M-G-M 11-21-26
Deserted at the Altar — GOL
10-1-22
Deserter (AT) — AM ..10-15-34
Deserter — INC 6-22-16
Design for Living (AT) —
PAR. .11-17-33
Desirable (AT) — WA. . 9-15-34
Desire — M 9-23-23
Desire (AT) — PAR ....2-4-36
Desire of the Moth — BL
10-25-17
Desired Woman — VIT. .4-11-18
Desired Woman — WA . . . 9-4-27
Desperate Adventure — IND
1924
Desperate Adventure, A (AT)
— REP. .8-6-38
Desperate Chance — RA...1926
Desperate Courage — PAT
1-1-28
Desperate Game — U ...12-6-25
Desperate Hero — SEZ . . 6-20-20
Desperate Moment — STE
12-26-25
Desperate Odds — SIE ...1926
Desperate Trails — U . . . 6-26-21
Desperate Trails (AT) — U
10- 24-39
Desperate Youth — U.... 6-1 -21
Despoiler — INC 12-30-15
Destination Unknown (AT) —
U. .4-8-33
Destino Di Donna (AT-
Italian)— PIE. .6-22-37
Destiny — ARC 1922
Destiny — TRI 8-17-19
Destiny (AT-Italian) — CIL
1938
Destiny or Soul of a Woman —
M. .9-9-15
Destiny's Isle — -AR 7-9-22
Destiny's Toy — PAR ... 6-22-16
Destroyers — VIT 6-8-16
Destroying Angel — AE . . 9-2-23
Destruction — F 12-30-15
Destry Rides Again (AT) —
U. .1932
Destry Rides Again (AT) — U
11- 30-39
Detectives — M-G-M ...10-23-28
Determination — LBR . .3-12-22
Deuce Duncan — TRI 1918
Deuce High — ARC 1926
Deuce of Spades — FN . . 6-14-22
Devil — PAT 1-23-21
Devil and the Deep (AT) —
PAR. .8-4-32
Devil at His Elbow — M. 8-10-16
Devil Dancer — UA ...12-15-27
Devil Dodger — TRI ...10-4-17
Devil Dog Dawson — ARW 1921
Devil Dogs — CRE 9-2-28
Devil Dogs of the Air (AT) —
WA . . 2-7-35
Devil-Doll, The (AT) — M-G-M
7-7-36
Devil Horse — PAT .... 7-18-26
Devil Is a Sissy (AT) — M-G-M
9-9-36
Devil Is a Woman. The (AT) —
PAR. .4-17-35
Devil Is An Empress, The
(AT-French) — COL. .12-15-39
Devil is Driving- (AT) —
PAR. .12-16-32
Devil Is Driving:. The (AT) —
COL. .7-20-37
Devil MeCare — TRI 1919
Devil May Care (AT & S) —
M-G-M. .12-29-29
Devil on Deck (AT) —
WW. .2-28-32
Devil On Horseback, The (AT)
— GN. .9-30-36
Devil Plays (AT)— CHE
12-20-31
Devil to Pay — PAT. ... 12-5-20
Devil to Pay (AT) — UA
12-21-30
Devil Tiger (AT) — F... 2-8-34
Devil With Women. A (AT) —
P. .10-19-30
Devil Within — P 11-20-21
Devil's Apple Tree — TIF
3- 24-29
Devil's Assistant — POM
4- 12-17
Devil's Battalion (AT) — RKO
1930
Devil's Bondwoman — U...1916
Devil's Brother (AT) — MGM
6-10-33
Devil's Cage — FD ....8-26-28
Devil's Cargo — PAR ...2-15-25
Devil's Chaplain — RA.. 5-26-29
Devil's Circus — M-G-M 4-18-26
Devil's Claim — RC 6-16-20
Devil's Confession — CIR
3-13-21
Devil's Daughter — F 1915
Devil's Dice — STE .... 10-31-26
Devil's Door Yard — ARW 1923
Devil's Double — INC. .. 11-9-16
Devil's Garden — FN. . .10-31-20
Devil's Godmother (AT-
Spanish) — XX 1938
Devil's Holiday (AT) — PAR
6- 11-30
Devil's in Love (AT) — F
7- 28-33
Devil's Island — CHA .... 8-8-26
Devil's Island (AT) — WA.1939
Devil's Lottery (AT) — F
4-3-32
Devil's Mate (AT)— MOP
9-23-33
Devil's Needle — FAT. . .7-20-16
Devil's Partner — IRO 1922
Devil's Party (AT) — U .6-2-38
Devili9h Fellow (AT-German)
— XX. .1938
Devil's Pass Key — U. . .4-11-20
Devil's Passion — ARA. . 6-27-28
Devil's Pawn — PAR. . .6-18-22
Devil's Pay Day — BL. . 1-28-17
Devil's Pit — U 10-20-29
Devil's Pit — U 3-16-30
Devil's Playground— ALA
6-23-18
Devil's Playground (AT) —
PRIO. .11-12-32
Devil's Playground (AT) —
COL. .2-16-37
Devil's Prayer Book — KLE
1-6-16
Devil's Prize — VIT .... 11-2-16
Devil's Riddle — F 2-29-20
Devil's Saddle — FN. .. .8-14-27
Devil's Saddle Legion (AT) —
WA. .1937
Devil's Skipper — TIF. . .4-22-28
Devil's Squadron (AT) — COL
5- 12-36
Devil's Stone — ART. .. 12-20-17
Devil's Toy — PRW 3-9-16
Devil's Tower — RA .... 5-19-29
Devil's Trade-Mark — FBO
6-2-28
Devil's Trail — WO 6-15-19
Devil's Twin — PAT 1919
Devil's Twin — PAT . . . 10-16-27
Devil's Wheel — F ....4-18-18
Devotion — APR 7-5-21
Devotion (AT)— PAT 10-4-31
Diamond Carlisle — GC .... 1922
Diamond Handcuffs — M-G-M
1928
Diamond Jim (AT) — U 8-24-35
Diamond Trail (AT) — MOP
4-19-33
Diamonds Adrift — VIT... 1921
Diamonds and Pearls — PBW
1-3-18
Diana of the Green Van — HUM
3- 16-19
Diana of the Huntress — -PLU
6- 29-16
Diana of Star Hollow — PS
4- 10-21
Diane of the Follies — FAT
9-14-16
Diary of a Revolutionist
(AT-Russian) — AM. .6-13-32
Dice of Destiny — PAT 12-5-20
Dice Woman — PDC. . . . 6-20-26
Dick Turpin — F 2-1-26
Dictator — PAR 7-9-22
Dictator, The (AT) —
GB. .3-11-36
Dictionary of Success — SEZ. . .
Die Beiden Seehunde (AT-
German) — XX. .4-12-35
Die Blaumenfrau von Lindenau
(AT-German) — PRX. .7-9-32
Die Blonde Christl (AT) —
Unknown. .2-28-34
Die Blonde Nachtigall (AT-
German) — UFA. .8-23-31
Die Csardas Fuerstin (AT-
German) — UFA. .4-26-35
Die Csikos Baroness (AT-
German) — CAP. .4-3-32
485
17,238 TITLES
Die Drei von der Tankstelle
(AT-German) — UFA. .6-21-31
Die Fahrt In die Jungend
(AT-German) — TRE. .9-1-36
Die Fahrt Ins Gruene (AT-
German) — XX. .5-25-36
Die Finanzen des Grossherzogs
(AT-German) — GFS. .4-10-35
Die Forsterchristl (AT-Ger-
man)— CAP. .5-3-31
Die Frau von Der Man
Spricht (AT)— XX. .4-26-33
Die Fraunen Vom Tannhof
(AT-German) — XX. .2-19-36
Die Galavorstellung (AT) —
XX. .12-11-33
Die Ganze Welt Dreht Sich Um
Liebe (AT-German) — XX
11-30-36
Die Grobe Adele (AT-
German) — XX. .5-18-37
Die Grosse Attraktion lAT) —
BAV. .7-25-33
Die Grosse Chance (AT-
German) — XX. .5-9-35
Die Grosse Liebe (AT-
German) — FAF. .2-28-32
Die Grosse Sehnsucht (AT-
German) — TOB. .10-11-31
Die Heilige un Ihr Narr (AT-
German) — UFA. .12-2-35
Die Herren Von Maxim (AT-
German) — XX. .3-30-37
Die Kalte Mansell (AT-
German) — XX. .1-16-35
Die Kleine Schwinderlin (AT-
German)- — XX. .3-30-37
Die Kluge Schwiegermutter
(AT-German) — UFA. .1939
Die Letzte Kompagnie (AT-
German) — UFA. .8-26-32
Die Liebe und die Erste
Eisenbahn (AT-German)
UFA. .2-20-85
Die Lindenwirten von Rhein
(AT-German) — ACA. .9-27-31
Die Lustigen Musikanten
(AT) — XX. .6-31-33
Die Lustigen Weiber von
Wien (AT-German) —
CAP. .7-12 -31
Die Marquise Von Pompadour
(AT-German) — XX. .2-4-36
Die Mutter der Kompagmie
(AT) Unknown. .3-13-34
Die 3 Groschenoper (AT-
German) — WA. .5-24-31
Die Nacht Der Grossen Liebe
(AT-German) — UNG. .10-8-37
Die Nacht Gehoert Uns (AT-
German) — PRX. 1932
Die Nacht Mit Dem Kaiser
(AT-German) — AMT. .8-26-37
17,238 TITLES
Die Privatsekretaerin (AT-
German) — CAP. .6-21-31
Die Privatsekretaerin Heiratet
( AT-German ) — BAU
12-7-36
Die Reiter von Deutsch-
Ostafrika (AT-German) —
XX. .6-10 35
Die Schlacbt Von 3ademuende
(AT-German) — UFA 11-22-31
Die Schwebende Jungfrau
(AT German) — SWI. .8-27-37
Die Selige Excellenz (AT-
German) — GEG. .6-22-37
Die Singende Stadt (AT-
German) — KIT. .1935
Die Sonne Geht Auf (AT-
German) — XX. .2-20-35
Die Sporchschen Jaeger (AT-
German) — XX. .2-26-37
Die Stimme Der Liebe (AT-
German) — XX. .5-18-36
Die Tochter des Regiments
(AT) — Unknown 1934
Die Toerichte Jungfrau (AT-
German) — UFA. .9-10-35
Die Unschult vom Lande
(AT-German) — XX. .5-14-35
Die Vier Musketiere (AT-
German) — XX. .11-12-35
Die Von Rummelplatz (AT-
German) — CAP. .1-10-32
Dienst 1st Dienst (AT-
German) — NER. .1932
Dimples — M 2-24-16
Dimples (AT) — F 9-26-36
Dinky (AT) — WA ....6-28-35
Dinner at Eight (AT) —
MGM. .8-25-33
Dinner at the Ritz (AT) —
F. .12-9-37
Dinty — FN 11-28-20
Diplomacy — PAR 9-19-26
Diplomacy — PAR 3-2-16
Diplomaniacs (AT) — RKO
4-29-33
Diplomatic Mission — VIT
9-29-18
Diplomatic Wife (AT)-
Polish) — XX 1938
Dir Gehoert Mein Herz
(AT-German) — UFA. .1939
Dirigible (AT) — COL .4-12-31
Disbarred (AT) — PAR.. 1-10-39
Discard — ES 3-9-16
Discarded Lovers (AT) —
TOW. .1-3-32
Discarded Woman — HAL
6-27-20
Discontented Husbands — CBC
3-9-24
Discontented Wives — AE
9-25-21
Discord — PAT 11-6-27
Disciple — INC 10-28-15
Disgraced 1 ( AT) — PAR
7-17-33
Dishonored (AT) — PAR 3-8-31
Diskretion Ehrensache
(AT-German) — UFA. .1939
Disney's Academy Award
Revue — UA 1937
Disorderly Conduct (AT) —
F. .4-10-32
Disputed Passage (AT) — PAR
10-20-39
Disraeli — UA 8-28-21
Disraeli (AT & S) — WA
10-13-29
Dividend — INC 6-8-16
Divine Lady (S-SE) — FN
3-3-29
Divine Sacrifice — PWO .2-7-18
Divine Sinner — RA . . . 9-23-28
Divine Woman — M-G-M 1-22-28
Divorce — FBO 6-10-23
Divorce — VIT 9-13-17
Divorce Among Friends (AT)
— WA. .4-5-31
Divorce and the Daughter
— PAT. .11-23-16
Divorce Coupons — VIT . . 7-2-22
Divorce Game — PWO ... 6-28-17
Divorce in the Family (AT) —
MGM. .10-29-32
Divorce Made Easy (AT & S) —
PAR. .1929
Divorce of Convenience — SEZ
1921
Divorce of Lady X (AT) —
UA. .1-14-38
Divorce Trap — F 6-1-19
Divorced — TE 11-4-15
Divorcee — M 1-26-19
Divorcee, The (AT) — -MGM
4-20-30
Dixiana (AT) — RKO .... 9-7-30
Dixie Flyer — RA 10-24-26
Dixie Handicap — MG.... 1-4-25
Dixie Merchant — F 3-7-26
Dizzy Dames (AT)LIB. 7-18-36
Dizzy Heights and Daring
Hearts — TRI 1-6-16
Do and Dare — F 9-24-22
Do It Now — GOL 2-24-24
Do Tour Duty — FN. .. 11-11-28
Dock on the Havel (AT-
German) — XX 1938
Docks of Hamburg — PFA
7-20-30
Docks of New York — PAR
9-23-28
Docks of San Francisco (AT)
— MAF. .1-24-32
Doctor and the Woman— U
5-2-18
Doctor Bull (AT) — F. . 8-31-33
Doctor Epameinondas (AT-
Greek) — PAN 4-9-38
Dr. Jack — PAT 12-31-22
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (AT)
— PAR . . 1-3-32
486
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde — PAR
4-3-20
Dr. Jim — U 11-20-21
Dr. Knock (AT-French) —
FRM . . 5-7-37
Dr. Monica (AT) — WA 6-22-34
Dr. Neighborhood — U
Dr. Rhythm (AT) — PAR
4-30-38
Dr. Socrates (AT) — WA
10-3-35
Doctor Syn (AT) —
GB. .10-20 37
Doctor X (AT) — FN. . .7-8-32
Doctor's Diary, A (AT) —
PAR. .1 23-37
Doctor's Secret (AT) — PAR
2-10-29
Doctors Wives (AT) — F
4-26-31
Doctor's Women — WW . . . 1929
Dodek Na Froncie (AT-
Polish) — XX. .1936
Dodge City Trail (AT) —
COL. .1937
Dodge City (AT) — WA. . .4-5-39
Dodsworth (AT) — UA. .9-19-36
Dodging a Million — G... 2-7-18
Does It Pay? — F 8-26-23
Dog Justice — FBO 1928
Dog Law — FBO 10-14-28
Dog of Flanders. A (AT) —
RKO. .7-13-35
Dog of the Regiment — -WA
11-6-27
Dog's Life — FN 1918
Doing Their Bit — F 8-4-18
Doll. The; — FFS 1928
Doll's House — UA 2-19-22
Doll's House — BL 6-7-17
Doll's House — ART 6-2-18
Dollar a Year Man — PAR
3-27-21
Dollar and the Law — VIT
11- 23-16
Dollar Devils — HOD. . . 1-28-23
Dollar Down — TRU 8-16-25
Dollar for Dollar — PAT 4-25-20
Dollars and Sense — G. . 6-27-20
Dollars and the Woman — LUB
3- 30-16
Dollars and the Woman — VIT
5- 30-20
Dolly Does Her Bit — PAT
4- 25-18
Dolly Macht Karriere (AT-
German) — UFA. .7-26-31
Dolly's Vacation — PAT
12- 22-18
Dombey & Son — TRI 1919
Domestic Meddlers — TIF
12-9-28
Domestic Relations — FN
6- 11-22
Domestic Troubles (S-SE)
— WA. .7-29-28
Don Bosco (AT-Italian) — XX
5- 28-36
Don Daredevil — U 1825
Don Desperado — PAT... 5-1-27
Don Juan — WA 8-15-26
Don Juan's Three Nights — FN
10-3-26
Don Mike — FBO 2-20-27
Don Q — UA 6-21-25
Don Quickshot of the Rio
Grande — U 6-3-23
Don Quixote (AT) — BEW
12-26-34
Don Quixote — FAT ..12-10-15
Don X — GOO 1926
Dona Francisquita (AT-
Spanish) — XX. 4-2»-3.->
Donner.Blitz Und Sonnencchein
(AT-German) — CAO. .11-19-37
Donogoo Tonka (AT-German)
—UFA. .4-15-36
Donovan Affair (AT & S) —
COL. .5-5-29
Don't— M-G-M 2-21-26
Don't Bet on Blondes (AT) —
WA. .7-20-35
Don't Bet on Love (AT) —
U. .7-29-33
Don't Bet on Women (AT)
— F. .2-15-31
Don't Blame Your Children —
FBO. .1922
Don't Call It Love — PAR
12-30-23
Don't Call Me Little Girl —
REA. .6-26-21
Don't Change Your Husband —
ART. .1-26-19
Don't Doubt Your Husband—
MG. .5-25-24
Don't Doubt Your Wife — ART
5-28-22
Don't Ever Marry — FN 4-25-20
Don't Gamble With Love (AT)
— COL. .2-29-36
Don't Get Personal — U. . 1-8-22
Don't Get Personal (AT) — U
2-24-36
Don't Leave Your Husband —
FED. .4-24-21
Don't Marry — F 5-87-28
Don't Marry for Money — WEB
8-26-23
Don't Neglect Your Wife — G
7-31-21
Don't Shoot — U 8-20-22
Don't Tell Everything — PAR
12-18-21
Don't Tell the Wife — WA
2-6-27
Don't Tell the Wife (AT) —
RKO. .2-20-37
Don't Turn 'Em Loose (AT)
— RKO. .9-24 36
Don't Worry ( AT-Hungarian)
— XX. .1938
Don't Write Letters — M 4-30-22
Doomed at Sundown (AT) —
REP. . 1937
Doomed Battalion (AT) — U
1932
Doomsday — PAR 4-8-28
Door Between — BL 1917
Door That Has No Key — ALL
1922
Doorsteps — MT 7-27-16
Doorway to Hell (AT) — WA
11-2-30
Dopo una Notte D'amore (AT-
Italian) — RAO. .10-30-35
Dorian's Divorce — M ..6-15-16
Dormant Power — POW
10-26-17
Dorothy Vernon of Haddon Hall
UA. .5-25-24
Dos Mas Uno Dos (AT) — F
10-30-34
Dos Monjes (AT-Spanish) —
XX. .1-22-35
Dos Mujeres y un Don Juan
(AT) — Unknown. .6-5-34
Dos Noches (AT) — HOB
5-10-33
Double Crime In the Maginot
Line ( AT-Freneh ) — TOW
4-13-39
Double Cross Roads (AT) —
F. .4-27-30
Double Crossed — PAR.. 9-27-17
Double Danger (AT) — RKO
2-11-38
Double Daring — ARC 1926
Double Deal (AT) — INR
12-14-39
Double Dealing — U 5-27-23
Double Door (AT) — PAR
5-5-34
Double Dyed Deceiver — G
6- 20-20
Double Fisted — RA 1926
Double Harness (AT) — RKO
7- 13-33
Double O — ARW 1923
Double or Nothing (AT) —
PAR. .8-16-37
Double Room Mystery — RED
1-11-17
Double Speed — PAR 2-8-20
Double Stakes — PSR 1922
Double Standard — U.... 8-2-17
Double Wedding (AT) —
MGM. .9-23-37
Doubling for Romeo — G
10-30-21
Doubting Thomas (AT) —
F. .7-11-35
Dough Boys (AT) — MGM
9-21-30
Doughnuts and Society (AT)
— MAP. .3-17-36
Dove — UA 1-8-28
Down by the Rio Grande
— GOL. .6-22-24
Down Grade — LUM ...8-21-27
Down Home — HOD . . 10-24-20
Down in "Arkansaw" (AT) —
REP. .10-7-38
487
17,238 TITLES
Down on the Farm — UA
5-2-20
Down on the Farm (AT) — F
10-11-38
Down on the Farm (AT)- — F
1-6-39
Down the Stretch— U .. 4-10-27
Down the Stretch (AT) — FN
11-5-36
Down the Wyoming Trail
(AT) — MOP. .6-14-39
Down to Their Last Yacht
(AT) — RKO. .9-22-34
Down Upon the Suwanee River
LBR. .1925
Down to the Sea in Ships —
HOD. .2-18-23
Down to the Sea (AT — REP
6-30-36
Down to Earth — ART.. 8-16-17
Down to Earth (AT) — F
9-2-32
Downhill — WW 1928
Downstairs (AT) — MGM
10-10-32
Dracula (AT) — U 2-15-3i
Dracula's Daughter (AT)— U
5-18-36
Draegerman Courage (AT) — ■
WA. .5-24-37
Drag (AT & S) — FN. .6-30-29
Drag Harlan — FN 10-24-20
Drag Net — PAR 6-10-28
Dragnet, The (AT) — BTZ
5-13-36
Dragnet Patrol (AT) — ACT
1931
Dragnet Patrol (AT) — MAF
1-3-32
Dragon — EQW ...... .1-13-16
Dragon Murder Case (AT) —
FN. .8-23-34
Dragon Painter — RC. 10-12-19
Drake Case (AT & S) — U
9-22-29
Dramatic School (AT) —
MGM. .12-6-38
Dreaded Bandit — CIN... 4-1-28
Dream Cheater — HOD .3-21-20
Dream Doll — KES 1917
Dream Girl — PAR 7-27-16
Dream Lady — U 7-28-18
Dream Melody — EXP. .. 3-10-29
Dream of Love — M-G-M
12-30-28
Dream of My People (AT) —
PAA. .2-28-34
Dream Street — UA 4-17-21
Dreaming Lips (AT) — -
UA. .5-20-37
Drei Blaue Jungs — Ein Blondes
Maedel (AT-German) — XX
12-30-36
Drei Kaiserjaeger (AT-
German) — XX. .3-19-35
17,238 TITLES
Drei Maederl Um Schubert
(AT-German) — AMT. .6-14-37
Drei Tage Mittelarrest (AT) —
XX. .5 18-33
Drei Unteroffiziere (AT-
German) — UFA. .1939
Drei von der Kavallerie (AT-
German) — XX. .4-16-35
D reiki ang (AT-German) —
UFA. .1938
Dress Parade — PAT. .. 10-30-27
Dressed to Kill — F 3-18-28
Dressed to Thrill (AT) —
F. .10-8-35
Dressmaker from Paris — PAR
3-22-25
Draft 258 — M 2-7-18
Dreyfus Case (AT) — COL
8-30 31
Drift Fence (AT) — PAR. . 1935
Drift Fence (AT) — PAR
3-6-36
Drifter — GAU 2-3-16
Drifter — RKO 1929
Drifter. The (AT) — KET
1-10-32
Drifters — BI 7-6-30
Drifters — HOD 12-29-18
Drif tin' Sands — FBO 1928
Driftin' Thru — PAT. .. 2-21-26
Drifting: — U 8-26-23
Drifting- Souls (AT) — TOW
8-9-32
Drifting Westward (AT)
— MOP. .1939
Driftwood — COL 11-25-28
Driftwood— OCE 3-23-16
Driven— U 11-26-22
Driven from Home — CHA
2- 6-27
Drivin' Fool — HOD 9-2-23
Drop Kick — FN 9-18-27
Drug- Store Cowboy — IND 1925
Drugra Mlodosc (AT-Polish)
— POA. .11-1-39
Drugged Waters — U 1916
Drum Fire on the Western
Front (AT-German) — XX
1938
Drum Taps (AT) — WOW
2-26-33
Drums (AT) — UA ....7-20-38
Drums Along- the Mohawk
(AT)— F. .11-6-39
Drums O' Voodoo (AT) — INS
6-12-34
Drums of Destiny (AT) —
CRE. .6-15-37
Drums of Doom (AT) — MAF
10-4 33
Drums of Fate — PAR . 1-21-23
Drums of Jeopardy — TRU
3- 9-24
Drums of Jeopardy (AT) —
TIF. .8-8-81
Drums of Love — UA. . . . 2-5-28
Drums of the Desert — PAR
8-21-27
Drunter Und Drueber (AT-
German) — UNG. .12-23-32
Drusilla With a Million — FBO
6-7-25
Dry Martini (S-SE) — F
11-11-28
Du Gamla. du Fria (AT-
Swedish) — SCA . .4-6-39
Du. Oder Keine (AT) —
Unknown . . 10-30-34
Dub — PAR 1-19-19
Du Barry — F 1917
DuBarry, Woman of Passion
(AT) — UA. .11-2-30
Dubrovsky (AT-Rusian) — AM
4-1-36
Duchess of Buffalo — FN
8-22-26
Duchess of Doubt — M . . . 6-7-17
Duck Soup (AT) — PAR
11-17-33
Ducks and Drakes — REA
4-3-21
Dude Bandit (AT) — ALI
6-21-33
Dude Cowboy — FBO 1926
Dude Ranch (AT) — PAR
4- 26-31
Dude Rang-er (AT) — F 9-29-34
Dude Wrangler (AT) — WW
5- 25-30
Duds — G 3-21-20
Dugan of the Bad Lands
(AT) — MOP. .8-2-31
Dugan of the Dugouts — CRE
8-5-28
Duke Comes Back. The (AT) —
REP. .12-3 37
Duke of Chimney Butte — FED
1-20-21
Duke of Reichstadt — BRO 1928
Duke of West Point (AT) —
UA. .12-16-38
Duke Steps Out (PT & S) —
M-G-M. .4-21-29
Dalcie's Adventure — AMU
10-5-16
Dulcy — FN 9-23-23
Dumb Girl of Portici — U
4-13-16
Dumbbells in Ermine (AT) —
WA. .7-27 30
Dummy — PAR 3-22-1 V
Dummy (AT) — PAR ... 3-10 -39
Dupe — PAR 7-13-16
Durand of the Bad Lands— F
8-30-17
Durand of the Bad Lands — F
10-25-25
Dusk to Dawn — AE.... 9-3-22
Dusky Sentries (AT-Italian)
— XX. .1938
Dust Be My Destiny (AT)
— WA. .10-10-39
Dust Flower — G 7-9-22
488
Dust of Desire — WO . . . 7-13-18
Dust of Egypt — VIT. .10-28-15
Duty First — SAN 1923
Duty's Reward — ELB. . 4-24-27
Dwelling Place of Light — HOD
9-12-20
Dybbuk. The (AT-Tiddish) —
GEI. .2-1-38
Dynamite (AT) — PAT.... 1929
Dynamite Allan — F.... 2-27-21
Dynamite Dan — SU 1924
Dynamite Delaney (AT) —
IML. .1-27-38
Dynamite Denny (AT) —
MAF. .7-8-32
Dynamite Ranch (AT) — WW
12-22-32
Dynamite Smith — PAT..9-7-.M
E
Each Dawn I Die (AT) — WA
7-18-39
Each Pearl a Tear — PAR
9-7-16
Each to His Kind — PAH
2-8-1/
Eager Lips — FD 8-21-27
Eagle — UA 11-22-25
Eagle— BL 6-16-18
Eagle and the Hawk (AT) —
PAR. .5-6 33
Eagle of the Caucasus (S) —
AM. .9-27-32
Eagle of the Sea — PAR
11-21-26
Eagle's Brood. The (AT) —
Par. . 10-10-35
Eagle's Feather — M ...9-30-23
Eagle's Nest — VIT
Eagle's Mate — PAR 1913
Eagle's Wines — BL. .. 11-30-16
Earl of Pawtucket — U
Early Bird — EC 12-21-24
Early to Bed (AT) — PAR
5-25-36
Early to Wed — F 5-16-26
Earth, Love and Suffering
(AT-Spanish) — XX 1938
Earth Woman — AE .... 4-18-26
Earthbound — G 8-15-20
Earthworm Tractors (AT) —
FN. .6-16-36
Easiest Way (AT) — MGM
3-1-31
East is West (AT) — U
11-2-30
East is West — FN 9-3-22
East is West — MT 11-9 16
East Lynne — F 6-22-16
East Lynne — F 11-1-25
East Lynne — HOD 3-13-21
East Lynne — TAR 1921
East Lynne (AT)— F .2-22-31
East Meets West (AT) — GB
9-19-36
East of Borneo (AT) — U
8-23-31
East of Broadway — AE
11- 16-24
East of Fifth Avenue (AT) —
COL. .11-28-33
East of Java (AT) —
U. .12-17-35
East of Shanghai (AT) —
POP. .3-27-32
East of Suez — PAR. ... 1-11-25
East Side of Heaven (AT)
— U. .4-10-39
East Side Sadie — WAD .6-2-29
East Side, West Side — F
10-30-27
East Side, West Side — PRI
4-15-23
Easy Come, Easy Go — PAR
6-13-28
Easy Going — ARC 1926
Easy Going Gordon — GER
10-11-25
Easy Living (AT) —
PAR. .7-7-37
Easy Millions (AT) — FRE
9-6-33
Easy Money — PWO. . .11-29-17
Easy Money — RA 5-24-25
Easy Money (AT)— INV.7-11-36
Easy Pickings — FN 2-27-27
Easy Road — PAR 2-27-21
Easy to Get — PAR .... 2-29-20
Easy to Love (AT)— WA
1-13-34
Easy to Make Money — -M 1019
Easy to Take (AT) — PAR
10-20-36
Easy Virtue — WW 1928
Easiest Way — SEZ ....5-17-17
Eastward Ho — F 11-23-19
Eat 'Em Alive (S-SE) —
AUH. .11-4-33
Ebb Tide — PAR 11-26-22
Ebb Tide (AT) —
PAR. .9-28-37
Echo of a Dream (AT-Ger-
man) — GLF. .12-7-30
Echo of Youth — GRA... 2-2-19
Ecstasy (AT-Czechoslovakian)
— JEW. .1937
Ecstasy of Young Love (AT-
Czechoslovakian) — MEO
3-10-36
Edelweisskoenig (AT-German)
— UFA. .1939
Eden and Return — FBO
12- 25-21
Edes Mostoba (AT-Hun-
garian) — XX. .11-23-35
Edge of the Abyss — TRI
12-9-15
Edge of the Law — U 1917
Edge of the World — UFA. 1928
Edge of the World (AT) —
PAX. .9-0-38
Edge of Youth — GAU .10-9-21
Educating Father (AT) — F
6-23-36
Education of Elizabeth — PAR
1921
Efficiency Edgar's Courtship—
ES. .9-13-17
Egg-Crate Wallop — PAR
10-12-19
Egy Ej Velenceben (AT-
Hungarian) — XX. .12-30 36
Ehestreik (AT-German) —
UFA. .9-10-36
Eidia Que Me Quieras (AT-
Spanish) — PAR. .4-3-35
Eight Bells (AT) — COL 5-11-35
Eight Girls in a Boat (AT) —
PAR. .1-13-34
"813" — RC 1-23-21
Ein Ausgekochter Junge
(AT-German) — CAP. .5-8-32
Ein Auto Und Kein Geld (AT-
German) — XX. .8-11-36
Ein Burschenlied Aus Hei-
delberg (AT-German) —
UFA. .9-20-31
Ein Falscher Fuffziger (AT-
German) — XX. .2-15-37
Ein Frau Wie Du (AT) —
BAU. .12-27-34
Ein Ganzer Kerl (AT-German)
— BAU. .4-27-36
Ein Gewisser Herr Gran (AT)
UFA. .2-24-34
Ein Hoffnungsloser Fall
(AT-German— UFA. .1939
Ein Idealer Gatte (AT-
German) — XX. .1-14-37
Ein Junges Madchen — Ein
Junger Mann (AT-German)' —
BAU. .3-2-36
Ein Liebesroman Im House
Hapsburg (AT-German) — CAO
10-13-36
Ein Lied, Ein Kuss, Ein Maedel
(AT-German) — XX
12-14-36
Ein Lied Geht Um Die Welt
(AT-German) — XX. .9-28-36
Ein Maedel der Strasse (AT) —
XX. .4-10-33
Ein Maedel Mit Tempo (AT-
German) — CAS. .8-30-37
Ein Mann Will Nach Deutsch-
land (AT) — UFA. . 11-14-34
Ein Prinz Verliebt Sich (AT-
German) — CAP. .5-1-32
Ein Saltsamer Gast (AT-
German) — UFA. .7-15-37
Ein Stadt Steht Kopf (AT) —
ELI. .2-1-34
Ein Stelldichein Im Schwarz-
wald (AT-German) —
XX. .3-5-37
Ein Toller Einfall (AT) — UFA
6-22-34
Ein Walzer Fuer Dich (AT-
German) — XX. .9-28-36
Ein Walzer Von Strauss
(AT-German) — BEX. .2-14-32
489
17,238 TITLES
Eine Frau Die Weiss Was Sie
Will (AT-German) — XX
7-20-36
Eine Freundin So Goldig Wie
Du (AT-German) — TOB
10-25-31
Eine Liebesnacht (AT) — XX
5-18-33
Eine Nacht im Paradies
(AT) — AMR. .2-23-33
Eine Tuer Geht Auf (AT) —
PRX. .2-8-33
Eines Prinzen Junge Liebe
(AT) — UFA. .3-28-34
Einer Zu Viel An Bord (AT-
German) — UFA. .1-28-36
Einmal Eine Grosse Dame Sein
(AT) — UFA. .10-30 34
Eisenstein in Mexico (S-SE) —
PRI. .11-2-33
El Agua en el Suelo (AT-
Spanish) — COL. .2-6-35
El Asesinato de Los Penitentes
(AT-Spanish) — KIO. .1936
El Caballo Del Pueblo (AT-
Spanish) — XX. .12-17-35
El Cantante De Napoles (AT-
Spanish) — WA. .2-26-36
El Calvario De Una Esposa
(AT-Spanish) — XX. .9-28-86
El Capitan Adventurero (AT-
Spanish— XX. .10-12-39
El Crimen De Media Noche
(AT-Spanish) — REB. .2-25-36
El Dancing (AT-Spanish) —
HOB. .1-30-36
El Desaparicido (AT-Spanish)
— XX. .6-3-86
El Diablo Del Mar (AT-
Spanish) — THC. .4-2-36
El Diablo Rides (AT) — MEP
12-5-39
El Escandalo (AT) — Unknown
9-24-34
El Fantasma del Convento (AT-
Spanish) — XX. .4-24-35
El Heroe de Nacozari (AT-
Spanish) — XX. .9-24-35
El Hombre Que Assesino (AT-
Spanish) — PAR. .1932
El Hombre Que Se Reia del
Amor (AT-Spanish) —
XX. .7-19-35
El Imposter (AT-Spanish) — -
XX. .4-14-37
El Octavo Mandamiento (AT-
Spanish) — XX. .3-15-37
El Paradiso Recobrado (AT-
Spanish) — XX. .4-30-36
El Precio de un Beso (AT) — F
8-1-33
El Principe Gondolero (AT) —
PAR. .9-13-33
17,238 TITLES
El Prisionero 13 (AT) — CIX
3-30-34
El Pulpo Humano (AT-
Spanish) — HOB. .5-9-35
El Rayo (AT-Spanish) —
XX. .10-21-35
EI Rey de Los Gitanos
(AT) — F 5-31-33
EI Relicario (AT-Spanish) —
XX. .1-2-36
El Rosal Bendito (AT-
Spanish) — XX. .2-8-37
El Tango en Broadway (AT-
Spanish) — PAR. .1-3-35
El Tesoro De Pancho Villa
(AT-Spanish) — XX. .1-28-36
El Tigre de Yautepec (AT) —
Unknown — 10-22-34
El Traidor (AT-Spanish) —
XX. .4-18-38
El Vuelo de la Muerte (AT-
Spanish) — XX. .4-18-35
Elephant Boy (AT) —
UA. .4-6-37
Elephants on His Hands — PS
1921
Eleven Who Were Loyal
— UFA. .5-26-29
Eleventh Commandment — -ADV
6-16-18
Eleventh Commandment (AT)
— ALL .3-25-33
Eleventh Hour — F ....7-29-23
Elinor Norton (AT)— F 1-22-35
Elizabeth of England (AT) —
ALL. .6-8-35
Elisabeth Von Oesterreieh
(AT-German) — TOB. .12-13-31
Ella Cinders — FN ....6-13-26
Elmer and Elsie (AT) — PAR
8-4-34
Elmer the Great (AT) — FN
5- 26-33
Elnokkisasszony (AT-Hun-
garian) — XX. .10-9-35
Elope If You Must — F 3-19-22
Elusive Isabel — BL ....5-4-16
Embarrassing Moments (AT) —
U. .6-15-30
Embarrassing Moments (AT)
— U. .9-5-34
Embarrassing Moments — U
1929
Embarrassment of Riches —
HOD. .9-29-18
Embers — AMU 3-2-16
Emergency Call (AT) — RKO
6- 24-33
Emil (AT) — OLM 4-18-38
Emil Und Die Detektive (AT-
German) — UFA. .12-20-31
Emma (AT) — MGM .... 1-3-32
Emmy of Stork's Nest — M
10-21-15
Empire of Diamonds — PAT
12-19-20
Emperor Jones (AT) — UA
9-16-33
Emperor's Candlesticks, The
(AT) — MGM. .6-29-37
Employees' Entrance (AT) —
FN. .1-21-33
Empress — PAT 3-1-17
Empty Arms — PHL 1920
Empty Cab — U 7-7-18
Empty Cradle (AT-Spanish)
— XX. .1938
Empty Hands— PAR . . 8-24-24
Empty Heartss — BAE 1924
Empty Holsters (AT) —
WA. .1937
Empty Pockets — FN 1918
Empty Saddies (AT) — U
10- 17-36
En Glad Gutt (AT) — SCA
11- 27-33
En Kvinnas Ansikte (AT-
Swedish) — SCA. .9-18-39
En Natt (AT-Swedish) —
XX. .1-30-35
En Saga (ATS wedish ) — XX
1- 11-38
En Saga (AT-Swedish) — HOB
1939
Enchanted April (AT) —
RKO. .1-16-35
Enchanted Barn — VIT .1-19-19
Enchanted Cottage— FN
4-20-24
Enchanted Hill — PAR 1-10-26
Enchanted Island — TIF 6-19-27
Enchantment — PAR ...11-6-21
End of a Day, The (AT-
French) — PAX. .9-18-39
End of St. Petersburg — -HAM
6-10-28
End of the Game — PAT
3- 23-19
End of the Rainbow — BL
10-26-16
End of the Road — PHF
10-12-15
End of the Rope — AY. .7-29-23
End of the Tour — M.. 2-15-17
End of the Trail — F... 8-10-16
End of the Trail (AT) — COL
2- 23-33
End of the Trail (AT) — COL
10-31-36
End of the World (AT) — AUT
4- 17-34
End of the World — GRN
6-1-16
End of the World — APD..1924
Endstation ( AT-German ) — -
XX. .7-21-37
Enemies of Children — MAM
12- 16-23
Enemies of Progress (AT) —
Unknown. .1-16-34
Enemies of the Law (AT) —
REG. .7-12-31
490
Enemies of Women — -G .4-8-23
Enemies of Youth — MOE
6-28-25
Enemigos (AT) — Unknown
7-23-34
Enemy — VIT 12-14-16
Enemy — MGM 1-1-28
Enemy of Men — COL .1-10-26
Enemy Sex — PAR 7-6-24
Enemy to Society — M 10-14-15
Enemy to the King — VIT
11-23-16
Enlighten Thy Daughter — IV
2-8-17
Enlighten Thy Daughter (AT)
— EXQ. .12-27-33
Enter Madame — M ....11-5-22
Enter Madame (AT) —
PAR. .1-12-35
Enticement — FN 2-1-25
Environment — AMU ...5-10-17
Environment — PRI . . . 12-24-22
Envy — TRI 1-25-17
Episode (AT-German) —
MEO. .5 18 37
Eravamo Sette Sorella (AT-
Italian) — ESP. .3-14-39
Erik a Buzakalasz (AT-
Hungarian) — DAN. .9-18-39
Ermine and Rhinestones — JA
8- 16-26
Erstwhile Susan — REA 12-7-19
Es Gibt Nur Eine Liebe (AT-
German) — XX. .2-5-37
Es War Eine Rauschwnde Ball-
nacht (AT-German) — UFA
1939
Escapade (AT) — INV .5-29-32
Escapade (AT) — MGM .7-6-35
Escapade (AT-German) — X
1938
Escape (AT)— RKO. . .11-2-30
Escape— F 5-13-28
Escape — U 4-4-26
Escape, The (AT)— F .. 11-9-39
Escape By Night (AT) —
REP. .8-31-37
Escape from Devil's Island
(AT) — COL. .11-26-35
Escaped from Dartmoor — BI
4-20-30
Escape From Yesterday (AT-
French ) — HOB . . 5-11-39
Escape Me Never (AT) —
UA. .5 24-35
Escape to Paradise (AT)
— RKO. .1939
Escaped from Hell — AEP
2-3-29
Eskimo (AT) — MGM 11-16-33
Esmeralda — PAR 9-16-15
Espano Heroica (AT-Spanish)
— XX. .1938
Espionage (AT) — MGM .3-6-37
Espionage Agent (AT) — WA
9- 25-39
Es War Einmal Ein Walzer
(AT) — XX. .10-15-34
Es Wird Schon Wieder Besser
(AT) — UFA. .1-24-34
Eternal City — FN 11-11-23
Eternal City — PAR 1924
Eternal Flame — FN ...9-24-22
Eternal Fools ( AT- Yiddish ) —
JUD. .1930
Eternal Grind — PAR ..4-13-16
Eternal Love — D 5-3-17
Eternal Love (S-SE) — UA
5-19-29
Eternal Magdalene — G 5-25-19
Eternal Mask, The (AT-
German) — MAB
.1-12-37
Eternal
Mother — UM
. . .1920
Eternal
Mother — M . .
.12-6-17
Eternal
Prayer — COH
1929
Eternal
Question — M
.7-20-16
Eternal
Sappho — F .
.5-11-16
Eternal
Sin — SEZ . .
.3-22-17
Eternal
Struggle — M
.9-16-23
Eternal
Temptress — PAR
12-13-17
Eternal
Three — G . .
.10-7-23
Eternal
Woman — COL
. .4-7-29
Eternally Yours (AT)— UA
10-3-39
Eva and the Grasshopper —
UFA. .12-2-28
Eva, Das Fabrikmaedel
(AT-German) — SW5. .1-13-38
Evangeline — F 8-24-19
Evangeline (PT & S) — UA
8-14-29
Eve in Exile — PAT. .. 12-14-19
Eve's Daughter — PAR .3-21-18
Eve's Leaves — PDC ...5-30-26
Eve's Lover — WA 8-2-25
Eve's Secret — PAR ...6-21-25
Evelyn Prentice (AT) — MGM
11-10-34
Even as Ever — FN 1920
Even As You and I — U 4-5-17
Even Break, An — TRI. . 8-9-17
Evening's for Sale (AT) —
PAR. .11-12-32
Evensong (AT) — GB.. 11-14-34
Ever in My Heart (AT) —
WA. .10-13-33
Ever Since Eve (AT) — F
3-27-34
Ever Since Eve — F. .. .7-31-21
Ever Since Eve (AT) —
WA. .6-22-37
Evergreen (AT) — GB.. 1-11-35
Everlasting Whisper — F
10-25-25
Every Day's a Holiday (AT) —
PAR. .12-27-37
Every Girl's Dream — F 9-13-17
Every Man's Price — SR.. 1921
Every Man's Wife — F 5-31-25
Every Mother's Son — F 1-5-19
Every Night at Eight (AT) —
PAR. .7-30-35
Every Saturday Night (AT) — F
3-14-36
Every Woman's Problem —
PLY. .3-27-21
Everybody Dance (AT) —
GB. .1937
Everybody Sing (AT) — MGM
1-26-38
Everybody's Acting — PAR
11-14-26
Everybody's Baby (AT) — F
1939
Everybody's Business — WH
1919
Everybody's Doing It (AT)
— RKO. .3-17-38
Everybody's Girl — VIT
11-17-18
Everybody's Hobby (AT)
— WA. .9-29-39
Everybody's Old Man (AT) — F
3-27-36
Everybody's Sweetheart — -SEZ
10-24-20
Everyman's Law (AT) — SUM
7- 21-36
Everything's On Ice (AT)
— RKO. .9-7-39
Everything But the Truth — U
5-16-20
Everything Happens at Night
(AT) — F. .12-18-39
Everything for Sale — REA
10-2-21
Everything Is Rhythm (AT)
— AST. .1939
Everything Is Thunder (AT) —
GB. .11-20-36
Everything's Rosie (AT) —
RKO. .5-24-31
Everywoman — PAR . . 12-21-19
Everywoman's Husband — TRI
7-7-18
Evfordula ( AT-Hungarian) —
HUN. .10-21-37
Evidence — SEZ 6-18-22
Evidence — SWO 9-23-15
Evidence — TRI 1-17-18
Evidence (AT & S) — WA
10-6-29
Evil Eye — PAR 1-11-17
Evil Thereof — PAR ...6-29-16
Evil Women Do — BL. . 9-14-1 6
Evolution — SEA 7-19-25
Evolution of Man — AY... 1921
Ex-Bad Boy (AT) — U 9-27-31
Ex-Champ (AT) — U 5-17-39
Ex-Flame (AT) — LIB 1930
Ex-Flame (AT) — TIF.. 1-25-31
Ex-Lady (AT) — WA. . .5-13-33
Ex-Mrs. Bradford, The (AT) —
RKO. .4-23-36
Exalted Flapper (S-SE) — F
8- 11-29
Excess Baggage — M-G-M
9- 30-28
Exchange of Wives — MG
10-18-25
Exciters — PAR 6-10-23
Excitement — U 4-13-24
491
17,238 TITLES
Exclusive (AT) — PAR .7-22-37
Exclusive Rights — PRE
1-23-27
Exclusive Story (AT) — M-G-M
1- 18-36
Excuse Me — MG 8-2 25
Excuse Me— PAT 1-6-1.-
Excuse My Dust — PAR 3-28-20
Exile — ART 11-22-17
Exile Express (AT) — GN. 2-8-39
Exiled to Shanghai (AT) —
REP. .12-13-37
Exiles — F 1923
Exit Smiling — M-G-M 11-14-26
Exit the Vamp — PAR... 2-6-22
Expensive Husbands (AT) —
WA. .9 9-3"
Expensive Women (AT) —
FN. .11-15-31
Experience — PAR 8-14-21
Experimental Marriage — SE
3-30-1!)
Expert, The (AT) — WA
2- 28-32
Exploits of a German Sub-
marine— CBP 1-11-20
Explorer — EDK 9-23-15
Explorers of the World (AT)
— RAS. .9-6-31
Exposed (AT) — EAG ..9-24-32
Exposed (AT) — U ...11-28-38
Exposure (AT) — CAP 8-20-32
Express 13 (AT-German) —
UFA. .8-9-31
Exquisite Sinner — M-G-M 1926
Exquisite Thief — U 1919
Extortion (AT) — COL ..5-9-38
Extra, Extra — F 2-19-22
Extra Girl — AE 1-27-34
Extravagance — M 3-6-21
Extravagance — M ....11-16-16
Extravagance (AT) — TIF
12-7-30
Eye for Eye — M 12-29-18
Eye of Envy — HAD. . .8-30-17
Eye of God — BL 5-25-16
Eye of the Night — INC
7- 13-16
Eyes of Julia Deep — PAT
8- 11-18
Eyes of Mystery — M... 1-24-18
Eyes of the Desert — SIE 1926
Eyes of the Forest — F. . . .1924
Eyes of the Heart — REA
11-7-20
Eyes of the Mummy — PAR
1922
Eyes of the Soul — ART 4-27-19
Eyes of the Totem — PAT
5-15-27
Eyes of the Underworld — U
1929
Eyes of the World (AT) —
UA. .8-17-30
17,238 TITLES
Eyes of the World — CLU
7-7-18
Eyes of Truth — G 1021
Eyes of Youth — EQU 11-16-19
Eyes Right — GOO 1926
I
F. P. 1 f AT) — F 9-16-33
F-Man (AT) — PAR 5-5-36
Fabiola — MAR 10-31-20
Face at Your Window — F
11-14-20
Face Between — M 5-28-22
Face in the Dark — G .4-25-18
Face in the Fog- (AT) — VIC
1935
Face in the Fog — PAR 10-15-22
Face in the Sky (AT) — F
2-18 33
Face in the World — HOD
7-24-21
Face on the Barroom Floor
(AT) — INV. .10-14-32
Face on the Barroom Floor —
F. .1-7-23
Face to Face — AE .... 10-1-22
Face Value — BL 1-3-18
Face Value — STE 1927
Faces of Children — ZAK
12-30-28
Faded Butterfly — SEZ
Faded Flame — IV 8-17-16
Faded Tracks (AT-German)
— XX. .1939
Fagasa — FD 1928
Faint Perfume — SCH .... 1925
Fair and Warmer — M. .10-19-19
Fair Barbarian — PAR. 12-27-17
Fair Cheat — FBO 10-7-23
Fair Co-Ed — M-G-M . . . 10-30-27
Fair Enough — PAT ..12-22-18
Fair Lady — DA 3-26-22
Fair Play — ST 8-2-25
Fair Pretender — G 5-26-18
Fair Warning (AT) — F
2-8-31
Fair Warning (AT) —
F. .3-26-37
Fair Week — PAR 1924
Faith — F 2-8-20
Faith — M 2-9-19
Faith Endurin' — TRI ..4-18-18
Faith Healer — PAR ...3-20-21
Faith of the Strong — SEZ
9-21-19
Faithful Heart (AT) — HEL
8-15-33
Faithless (AT) — -M6M
11-19-32
Faithless Lover — KRE 3-11-28
Faithless Sex — SIG 1922
Faker — COL 3-10-29
Fakir — PS
Fall Guy (AT) — RKO 5-25-30
Fall of a Nation — NF 6-15-16
Fall of Babylon — GRI 7-27-19
Fall of Eve (AT) — COL
6-23-29
Fall of the Romanoffs — WOO
10-11-17
Fallen Angel — F 7-28-18
Fallen Idol — F 10-26-19
Falling In Love (AT) — TIM
10-19-36
False Alarm — COL ...11-28-26
False Ambitions — TRI .7-21-18
False Brands — PSR . . .3-12-22
False Code — PAT 1920
False Colors — PAR 1914
False Evidence — M 1919
False Faces — PAR 2-23-19
False Faces (AT) — WW
11-3-32
False Feathers — ELD 1929
False Friend — PBW ...6-14-17
False Friends — GOO 1926
False Fronts — AR ....6-11-22
FaUe God — PAT 10-5-19
False Kisses — U 1922
False Madonna (AT) — PAR
2-7-32
False Pretenses (AT) —
CHE. .10-25-35
False Road — PAR 5-16-20
False Trail — PS 1924
False Uniforms (S-SE) —
AM . . 11-23-32
False Women — AYC ....1921
Fame and Fortune — F. . 8-25-18
Famous Ferguson Case (AT) —
FN. .4-24-32
Famous Mrs. Fair — M 3-11-23
Familienparade (AT-German) — -
XX. .3-30-37
Familjen Andersson (AT-
Swedish) — SCA. .1-26-39
Familjen Som Var En Karusel
(AT-Swedish) — SCA. .6-1-37
Family Affair. A (AT) —
MGM. .4-22-37
Family Closet — AE ...9-25-21
Family Cupboard — WO
10-14-15
Family Honor — FN ....5-2-20
Family Honor — PBW .4-12-17
Family Hummel ( AT-German) —
XX. .1939
Family Next Door, The (AT) —
U. .4-14-39
Family Schinek (AT-German) —
XX. .1939
Family Secret — U 6-8-24
Family Skeleton — INC .3-21-18
Family Stain — F 1916
Family Tree — M 1919
Family Upstairs — F . . .7-26-26
Fan Fan — F 11-24-18
Fanatics — TRI 1917
Fancy Baggage (PT & S) —
WA. .3-17-29
492
Fang and Claw (AT) —
RKO. .12 21-36
Fangs of Destiny — U. 12-17-27
Fangs of Fate — PAT.. 6-24-28
Fang6 of Justice — BIS.. 2-6-27
Fangs of the Wild — FBO
1-15-28
Fangs of the Wolf — ARC 1924
Fanny Elssler (AT-German) —
UFA. .12-30-37
Fanny Foley Herself (AT) —
RKO. .10-25-31
Fanny Hawthorne — EXP
11-17-29
Fantomas (AT) — DUW
3- 13-34
Far Call (S-SE) — F. . .6-16-29
Far Cry — FN 2-28-26
Far From the Madding Crowd —
MT. .6-29-16
Far Western Trails — AI..1929
Farewell Again (AT) —
UA. .1937
Farewell to Arms (AT) —
PAR. .12-10-32
Fargo Express (AT) — WW
1932
Fargo Express (AT) — WOW
3-1-33
Farmer in the Dell. The (AT)
— RKO . . 3-7-36
Farmer Takes a Wife (AT) —
F. .6-11-35
Farmer's Daughter — F 11-11-28
Farmer's Wife. The — UED
1- 12-30
Fascinating Youth — PAR
3-7-26
Fascination — M 4-23-22
Fascination (AT) — POP
4- 10-32
Fashionable Fakirs — FBO 1923
Fashion Madness — COL 2-26-28
Fashion Row — M 12-2-23
Fashions for Women — PAR
4-10-27
Fashions in Love (AT & S) —
PAR. .7-7-29
Fashions of 1934 (AT) — FN
1-9-34
Fast and Fearless — ARC
10-12-24
Fast and Furious — U. . 7-10-27
Fast and Furious (AT) —
MGM. .10-20-39
Fast and Loose (AT) —
PAR. .11-30 30
Fast and Loose (AT) — MGM
2- 17-39
Fast Bullets (AT) — REB
2-24-36
Fast Companions (AT) — U
1932
Fast Company — BL ...3-28-18
Fast Company (AT & S) —
PAR. .10-6-29
Fast Company (AT) — MGM
6-30-38
Past Freight — RA 1926
Fast Life (AT & S) — FN
10-27-29
Fast Lift (AT)- — -MUM
12-24-32
Fast Mail — F 7-9-22
Fast Set — PAR 11-23-24
Fast Worker — U 9-28-24
Fast Workers (AT) — MGM
3-18-33
Fatal Card — PAR 10-7-15
Fatal Hour — M 10-31-20
Fatal Lady (AT) — PAR
6-19-36
Fatal Plunge — ARC 1924
Fatal 30 — PAC 1927
Fate of a Flirt — COL.... 1926
Fate's Boomerang — WO
6-25-16
Fate's Stepchild (AT-French)
— XX. .1938
Fated Hour — CIE 4-19-17
Father and the Boys— U .1915
Father and Son — MT. .7-27-16
Father and Son (PT & S) —
COL. .6-9 -29
Father Brown, Detective (AT)
— PAR. .1-18-35
Father O'Flynn (AT) — HOB
1-3-39
Father Torn — AP 1922
Father's Son (AT) — FN
11-16-30
Father of Men— VIT. . .7-13-16
Father of the Country (AT-
Italian) — XX 1938
Fatherhood — -U 1915
Fatty & Broadway Stars — TRI
12-16-15
Fatty and Mabel Adrift — TRI
2-3-16
Faust — M-G-M 12-12-26
Favor to a Friend — M...1919
Favorite Fool — TRI . . . 10-7-15
Fazil (S-SE) — F 5-10-28
Fear Bound — VIT 1925
Fear Fighter — RA .... 10-11-25
Fear Market — REA ...1-11-20
Fear Not — BUT 11-29-17
Fear of Poverty — PAT
9-7-16
Fear Women — G 7-13-19
Fearless Lover — PFT. .. .8-2-26
Fearless Rider — U .... 1-29-28
Feast of Life — WO 5-4-16
Feather, The (S-SE) — UA 1929
Feather in Her Hat, A (AT) —
COL. .10-25-36
Feathertop — GAU ....4-20-16
Federal Agent (AT) — REP
4-14-36
Federal Bullets (AT) —
MOP. .10-26-37
Federal Man-Hunt (AT) —
REP. .1938
Federal Man-Hunt (AT) —
REP. .1-10-39
Fedora — PAR 7-28-18
Feel My Pulse — PAR. . .3-4-28
Feet First (AT) — PAR
11-2-30
Feet of Clay — RAL 1917
Feet of Clay— PAR. .. .9-28-20
Fehervari Huszarok (AT-
Hungarian) — DAN. .9-21-39
Felix O'Day — PAT 9-12-20
Female — PAR 9-7-24
Female (AT) — FN 11-4-33
Female Fugitive (AT) — MOP
4-16-38
Female of the Species — INC
12-21-16
Ferien vom Ieh (AT-
German) — UFA. .4-2-35
Festival of the Dove (AT-
Spanish) — XX 1938
Fettered Woman — TRI. 11-8-17
Feu Mathias Pascal (AT-
French) — FRM. .11-19-37
Feud — F 1920
Feud Girl — PAR 5-18-16
Feud of the West (AT) — DIV
6- 19-36
Feud Woman — PIZ 1928
Feud Woman — SIE 1926
Fiat Voluntas Dei (AT-Italian)
— NUO. .7-7-36
Fibbers — ES 10-18-17
Fickle Woman — SCW ... 8-15-20
Fiddlin' Buekaroo (AT) — U
12-20-33
Fidelity — AY 1922
Fidlovacka (AT-Czechoslo-
vakian) — DRK. .7-5-31
Field of Honor — U.... 6-21-17
Fields of Honor — G.... 1-24-18
15 Maiden Lane (AT) — F
9-29-36
Fifteen Wives (AT) — INV
7- 17-34
Fifth Avenue — PDC ...2-28-26
Fifth Avenue Girl (AT) —
RKO. .8-22-39
Fifth Avenue Models — U
1-18-25
Fifty Candles — HOD. ... 1-8-22
Fifty Fathoms Deep (AT) —
COL. .8-16-31
Fifty-Fifty — FAT ....10-19-16
Fifty -Fifty — AE 8-2-25
Fifty-Fifty Girl — PAR .5-20-28
Fifty Million Frenchmen (AT)
— WA. .3-29-31
Fifty Roads to Town (AT) —
F. .3-29-37
52nd Street (AT) —
UA. .11-17-37
$50,000 Reward— ELF. . .1924
Fig Leaves — F 7-11-26
Figaro — FF 12-1-29
Figaro E la Sua Gran
Giornata (AT) — PIT
10-30-33
Figaro's Best Day (AT-Italian)
— KIT. .1935
Fight for Honor — PFT... 1924
493
17,238 TITLES
Fight for Love — U 3-9-19
Fight for Matterhorn — UED
8-4-29
Fight for Peace (AT) —
WAW. .4-19-38
Fight For Peace, The (AT) —
MOP. . 1939
Fight For Your Lady (AT) —
RKO. .9-28-37
Fight to a Finish — COL.. 1926
Fight to the Finish. A (AT) —
COL. .7-1-37
Fighter — SEZ 8-21-21
Fightin' Mad — M ....10-30-21
Blighting American — U. .6-1-24
Fighting Back — TRI ...11-1-17
Fighting Blade — FN. .. 10-21-23
Fighting Blood — F 3-2-16
Fighting Bob — M 1915
Fighting Boob — FBO .... 5-2-Z'i
Fighting Breed — AY... 8-14-21
Fighting Buekaroo — F 4-25-26
Fighting Caballero (AT) —
FD. .1935
Fighting Caravans (AT) —
PAR. .2-1-31
Fighting Champ, The (AT) —
MOP. .12-10-32
Fighting Chance — PAR 7-26-20
Fighting Cheat — ARC... 1926
Fighting Code (AT) — COL
1-10-34
Fighting Colleen— VIT 11-16-19
Fighting Comeback — PAT
4-17-27
Fighting Courage — DAV 7-5-25
Fighting Coward — PAR 3-23-24
Fighting Coward (AT) —
VIC. .1935
Fighting Cressy — PAT 12-14-19
Fighting Cub — TRU .... 8-9-25
Fighting Demon — FBO 5-24-25
Fighting Destiny — VIT 3-30-19
Fighting Eagle — PAT.. 8-28-17
Fighting Edge — WA 1926
Fighting Failure — HPI 2-13-27
Fighting Fate — RA . . . 1-17-26
Fighting Fool, The (AT) —
COL. .3-27-32
Fighting for Gold — F....1919
Fighting for Justice (AT) —
COL. .5-17-33
Fighting for Love — RED
1-11-17
Fighting for the Fatherland —
WW. . 9-1-29
Fighting Fury — U ....7-27-24
Fighting Gentleman, The
(AT) — FRE. .10-4-32
Fighting Gob — AY 1926
Fighting Grin — BL. ... 1-17-18
Fighting Gringo — U 1917
Fighting Gringo, The (AT) —
RKO. .11-28-39
17,238 TITLES
Fighting Guide — VIT 1922
Fighting Heart — F . . . 10-4-25
Fighting: Hero (AT) — STI
7-17-34
Fighting Hombre — FB0...1927
Fighting Lady (AT) —
ROY. .4-16-35
Fighting Legion (PT) — U
3- 16-30
Fighting Love — PDC ..5-29-27
Fighting Lover — U 1921
Fighting Luck — RA 1926
Fighting Mad — U 1917
Fighting Mad (AT) — TIF 1931
Fighting Mad (AT) — MOP
1939
Fighting Marine — PAT... 1926
Fighting Marshal, The
(AT) — COL. .2-28-32
Fighting Odds — G 10-4-17
Fighting Parson (AT) — A LI
8-2-33
Fighting Peacemaker — U..1926
Fighting Pilot, The (AT) —
AJ. .2-14-35
Fighting Pioneer (AT) —
RES. .5-21-35
Fighting President (AT) — U
4-8-33
Fighting Rangers (AT) — COL
4- 12-34
Fightin' Redhead — FBO
11-11-28
Fighting Rookie (AT) — MAY
7-13-34
Fighting Roosevelts — FN
1-26-19
Fighting Sap — FBO 1924
Fighting Shadows (AT) —
COL. .5-17-35
Fighting Shepherdess — FN
4-3-20
Fighting Sheriff — IND. .5-17-25
Fighting Sheriff (AT) —
COL. .6-28-31
Fighting Stallion — GOO . . . 1926
Fighting Stranger — CAN.. 1921
Fighting Streak — F . . .4-30-22
Fighting Terror — SYN. .12-8-29
Fighting Texans (AT) — MOP
7- 26-33
Fighting the Flames — COL
8- 23-25
Fighting the White Slave
Traffic (PT) — BER ...1929
Fighting Thoroughbreds (AT) —
REP. .1-16-39
Fighting Through (AT) — KEN
8-29-34
Fighting Through — -HOD
1-19-19
Fighting Thorobreds — RA.1926
Fighting Three — U 5-1-27
Fighting Trooper (AT) — AMB
11- 21-34
Fighting Tylers — PAT. . . . 1924
Fighting Youth (AT) —
U. .11-2-35
Figurehead — SEZ 6-20-20
Figures Don't Lie — PAR
1-15-28
File 113 (AT) — HOL. .2-21-32
Filleres Gyoers (AT) — XX
1933
Filling His Own Shoes — ES
6-21-17
Film Parade (S-SE) — BLC
12- 20-33
Filming of the Golden Eagle —
Unknown. .1929
Final Closeup — PAR .... 6-1-19
Final Curtain — KLE ... 2-10-16
Final Edition, The (AT) —
COL. .2-28-32
Final Extra — LUM .... 2-20-27
Final Hour, The (AT) — COL
8-1-36
Final Judgment — M . . 10-28-15
Final Melody, The (AT-
Spanish) — XX. .1939
Final Payment — F 6-14-17
Find the Witness (AT) —
COL. .5-1-37
Find the Woman— VIT. 6-9-18
Find the Woman — PAR. 5-28-22
Find Your Man — WA.. 9-28-24
Finders Keepers — PI .... 1921
Finders Keepers — U . . .3-11-28
Fine Clothes — FN 8-16-25
Fine Feathers — M 6-19-21
Fine Manners — PAR .... 9-5-26
Finger of Justice — ARW..1919
Finger Points (AT) — FN
3-29-31
Finger Prints — HYP 1923
Finger Prints — WA 1-16-27
Finishing School (AT) — RKO
4-6-34
Finn and Hattie (AT) —
PAR. .2-1-31
Finnegan'8 Ball — FD 1928
Fire and Steel — ELB . . . 5-29-27
Fire Brigade — AT G-M ... 1-2-27
Fir.' Bride — FBO 1922
Fire Cat — U 2-20-21
Fire Eater — U 12-25-21
Fire Flingers — U 4-6-19
Fire Over England (AT) —
UA. .1-14-37
Fira Patrol — CHA 5-25-24
Firebird (AT) — WA . . 11-15-34
Firebrand — F 6-9-18
Firebrand — GOL 1923
Firebrand Jordan (AT) — PIF
8-3-30
Firebrand Trevison — F. .7-18-20
Firefly, The (AT) —
MGM. .9-2-37
Firefly of France — PAR 7-14-18
Firefly of Tough Luck — TRI
10-18-17
494
Fireman — MT 6-8-16
Fireman Save My Child
(AT) — FN. .2-21-32
Fireman. Save My Child —
PAR. .10-16-27
Fires of Conscience — F...1916
Fires of Fate — PAR. . .5-11-19
Fires of Fate (AT) — POP
4-4-33
Fires of Rebellion — BL. .7-5-17
Fires of Youth — FN 1920
Fires of Youth (AT) — W 1931
Fires of Youth (PAT) 5-31-17
Firetrap, The (AT) —
EMP. .11-26-35
Firing Line — PAR 7-13-19
Firm of Girdlestone — VIT
10-19-10
First a Girl (AT) — GB..1935
First Aid (AT) — WW 7-12-31
First Auto — WA 8-14-27
First Baby, The (AT) — F
4-14-36
First Born — RC 2-6-21
First Degree — U 1923
First Hundred Years (AT)
— MGM.
.2-14-38
First
Kiss — PAR
.8-26-28
First
Lady (AT) — WA
. .9-3-37
First
Law — PAT
7-21-18
First
Love — PAR
12-25-21
First
Love (AT) — U..
.11-3-39
First
Night — TIF
3-6-27
First
Offenders (AT) — COL
1939
First
Unit Programme — IFC
5-11-19
First
Woman — FBO . . .
.4-23-22
First
World War (AT)
— F
11-8-34
First
Year — F
1-10-26
First
Year (AT) — F.
. . 8-4-32
Fisherman of Posillipo (S-SE)
— ARB. .11-25-28
Fisherman's Wharf (AT) —
RKO. .3-1-39
Fit for a King (AT) —
RKO. .9 1-37
Fit to Win— USP 4-13-19
Five and Ten (AT) — MGM
7-12-31
Five and Ten-Cent Annie
(S-SE) — WA. .9-16-28
Five Came Back (AT) —
RKO. .6-12-39
Five Days to Live — FBO
1-15-22
Five Dollar Baby — M . . . 6-4-22
Five Dollar Plate — PS
Five Faults of Flo — MT
1-13-16
Five Little Peppers and How
They Grew (AT) — COL
11-28-39
Five Millionen Suchen Einen
Erben (AT-German) — UFA
1939
Five of a Kind (AT) — P
10-14-38
Five Star Final (AT) — FN
9-13-31
Five Thousand an Hour — M
12-1-18
$5,000 Reward — BL... 6-12-18
Five Year Plan — AM. . . .6-7-31
Fixed by George — U.. 10-31-20
Fixer Dugan (AT) — RKO
6- 29-39
Fizessen Nagysad (AT-
Hungarian) — HUN. .6-14-37
Flame — STL 2-6-21
Flame of Desire — F 1926
Flame of Hellgate — R-C..1920
Flame of Lite — U 1-14-23
Flame of Love (AT) — BI
11-2-30
Flame of Passion — TER
10- 21-15
Flame of Passion — IND. 1-14-23
Flame of the Argentine — -
FBO. .8-16-26
Flame of the Desert — G
11-9-19
Flame of the Yukon — TRI
7- 19-17
Flame of the Yukon — PDC
7-11-26
Flame of Youth— F. .. 12-12-20
Flame of Youth— U ... 6-28-17
Flame Within. The (AT) —
MGM. .6-1-35
Flames— AE 8-29-26
Flames (AT) — MOP. .. 8-26-32
Flames of Chance — TRI
1-17-18
Flames of Johannes — LUB
4- 20-10
Flames of the Flesh — F
12-28-19
Flames on the Volga — AM
1929
Flaming Barriers — PAR . 2-3-24
Flaming Clue — VIT. . . .4-18 20
Flaming: Forest — M-G-M
11- 28-20
Flaming- Forties — PDC 2-25-25
Flaming- Frontier — U... 4-11-26
Flaming Fury — FBO 1926
Flaming Gold (AT) — RKO
1-18-34
Flaming Guns (AT) — U
6-17-33
Flaming Hour — U .... 12-31-22
Flaming Omen — VIT ... 11-1-17
Flaming Signal (AT) — INV
5- 25-33
Flaming Sword — M 1915
Flaming Waters — FBO 1-31-26
Flaming Youth — FN.. 11-18-23
Flapper — SEZ 5-23-20
Flapper Wives — SEZ. .. .5-4-24
Flare-Up Sal — PAR. .. .2-14-18
Flash of an Emerald — WO
10-21-15
Flash of Fate — U 2-28-18
Flash of the Forest — PIZ.1928
Flashing Fangs — FBO .... 1926
Flashing Spurs — -FBO .. 1-11-25
Flashlight — BL 5-10-17
Flattery — CHA 10-26-24
Fleet's In — PAR 10-7-28
Fleetwing — F 7-8-23
Flesh (AT) — MGM. . .12-10-32
Flesh and Blood — CUM 8-27-22
Flesh and the Devil — -M-G-M
1-16-27
Flesh and Spirit — LBR...1922
Flickorna Fran Gamla Stan
(AT) — Unknown. .12-28-34
Flight (AT) — COL 9-22-29
Flight at Midnight (AT) —
REP. .8-28-39
Flight from Glory (AT) —
RKO. .9-17-37
Flight into Darkness (AT-
French) — KAS 10-27-38
Flight into Nowhere (AT) —
COL. .6-20-38
Flight into Fame (AT) —
COL. .12-21-38
Flight of the Duchess — MT
3-9-16
Flirt — U 12-31-22
Flirt — BL 4-6-16
Flirtation (AT) — FD 1935
Flirtation Walk (AT)— FN
11-2-34
Flirting Widow, The (AT) —
FN. .8-3-30
Flirting With Danger (AT) —
MOP. .11-13-34
Flirting With Death — BL..1917
Flirting With Fate — FAT
6-29-16
Flirting with Fate (AT) —
MGM. .12-16-38
Flirting With Love — FN
8-24-24
Floating College — TIF . . . 1928
Flood (AT) — COL 5-3-31
Floodgates — LOW 3-2-24
Floor Below — G 3-14-18
Floorwalker — MT 5-11-16
Florentine Dagger, The (AT) —
WA. .4-26-35
Florida Enchantment — -VIT. . . .
Florida Special (AT) — PAR
4-21-36
Florodora Girl, The (AT) —
MGM. .6-1-30
Flowers from Nice (AT-
German) — XX. .1939
Flower of Doom — RED. 4-12-17
Flower of Faith — SGE . .9-21-10
Flower of Night — PAR
10-25-25
Flower of No Man's Land —
M . .7-6-16
Flower of the Dusk — M. .9-1-18
Flower of the North — VIT
1-22-22
Flowing Gold — FN 3-16-24
495
17,238 TITLES
Fluechtlinge (AT) — UFA
10-15-34
Fly-Away Baby (AT) — ■
WA. .7-12-37
Fly God — TRI 6-20-18
Flying Buckaroo — PAT
11-11-28
Flying Colors — TRI ...9-13-17
Flying Cow— U 1928
Flying Devils (AT) — RKO
8-26-33
Flying Down to Rio (AT) —
RKO. .12-20-33
Flying Deuces, The (AT) —
RKO. .10-10-39
Flying Dutchman — FBO
7-29-23
Flying Fists (AT) — TRC
2-25-38
Flying Fleet (S-SE) — M G-M
2-17-29
Flying Fool (AT & S) —
PAT. .8-25-29
Flying Fool (AT)— BI 10-18-31
Flying High — LUM . . . 2-27-27
Flying High (AT) — MGM
12-13-31
Flying Hoofs — U 1926
Flying Horseman — F ..9-19-26
Flying Hostess (AT) — U
12-16-36
Flying Irishman, The (AT) —
RKO. .3-17-39
Flying Lariats (AT) — BIF
1931
Flying Luck — PAT ...11-13-27
Flying Mail — AE 1926
Flying Marine (PT & S) —
COL. .8-25-29
Flying Pat — PAR ...12-26-20
Flying Romeos — FN . . .4-8-28
Flying Thru — DAV 1921
Flying Torpedo — FAT .3-16-16
Flying U Ranch— FBO 11-6-27
Flying With the Marines —
BPI. .6 30-18
Foch (AT-French) — MOD 1938
Fog (AT) — COL 1-6-34
Fog — M 7-1-23
Fog Bound — PAR 6-3-23
Fog Over Frisco (AT) — FN
6-7-34
Folies Bergere (AT) —
UA. .2-20-35
Follies Girl— TRI 1918
Follies of Desire — RED 8-10-16
Follow the Fleet (AT) — RKO
2-19-36
Follow the Girl — U 1917
Follow the Leader (AT) —
(reviewed as Manhattan Mary)
PAR. .10-12-30
Follow Thru (AT) — PAR
9-14-30
17,238 TITLES
Follow Your Heart (AT) — REP
8- 11-36
Follow Your Hunch — FBO 1927
Folly of Revenge — NOL
7-27-16
Folly of Vanity — F 2-8-25
Food for Scandal — REA
10-31-20
Food Gamblers — TRI ...8-9-17
Fool — F 5-10-25
Fool and His Money — SEZ
4-25-20
Fool and His Money — SR
1925
Fool There Was — F... 7-23-22
Fool's Awakening — MG. 2-3-24
Fool's Gold — ARW 5-4-19
Fool's Highway — U ....3-9-24
Fool's Paradise — IV. ... 2-10-16
Fool's Paradise — PAR 12-11-21
Fool's Revenge — F ....2-24-16
Fools and Riches — U. .5-20-23
Fools and Their Money — M
6- 22-19
Fools First — FN 8-13-22
Fools for Luck — ES. . . .10-4-17
Fools for Luck — PAR 6-17-28
Fools for Scandal (AT) —
WA. .3-29-38
Fools in the Dark — FBO
7- 20-24
Fools of Fashion — TIF... 1926
Fools of Fortune — AR 8-20-22
Foolish Age — FBO ....10-9-21
Foolish Matrons — APR .7-3-21
Foolish Monte Carlo — FBO
1922
Foolish Parents — AE (reviewed)
as "What a Child's Worth")
6- 17-23
Foolish Twins — LBR .... 1922
Foolish Virgin — CBC .. 12-14-24
Foolish Wives — U ....1-15-22
Footfalls — F 9-18-21
Footlight Parade (AT) — WA
9- 30-33
Footlight Ranger — F . . 1-21-23
Footlights — PAR 10-9-21
Footlights and Fate — VIT
8- 24-16
Footlights and Fools (AT &
S) — FN. .11-17-29
Footlights and Shadows —
SEZ. .2-15-20
Footloose Heiress, The (AT) —
WA. .10-13-37
Footloose Widows — WA
7- 18-26
Footsteps in the Night (AT) — ■
AUT. .1932
Footsteps in the Night (AT) — ■
INV. .5-10-33
For a Woman's Fair Name —
VIT. .2-24-16
For a Woman's Honor — MT
9-28-19
For Alimony Only — PDC
10-31-26
For Another Woman — RAY
1924
For Better, For Worse — ART
5-4-19
For Big Stakes — F.... 6-25-22
For Buen Camino (AT-Spanish)
— XX. .7-7-36
For Duty's Sake (AT-
Chinese) — XX 1938
For France — VIT . . . .9-27-17
For Freedom — F 12-29-18
For Heaven's Sake — PAR
4- 11-26
For Her Sake (AT-Swedish) —
MAL. .11-16-30
For Her People — CAP. 1-30-27
For His Sake — ZER 1922
For Husbands Only — WEB
5- 19-11
For Ladies Only — COL
10-16-27
For Liberty — F 1-24-18
For Love of You (AT) —
CEL. .12-9-35
For Love or Money — (AT) —
BD. .7-26-34
For Love or Money (AT) —
U. .5-8-39
For Sale — PAT 6-2-18
For Sale — FN 6-22-24
For the Defense (AT) — PAR
7-20-30
For the Defense — PAR. 3-16-16
For the Freedom of Ireland —
CRA. .1921
For the Freedom of the East- —
G. .1919
For the Freedom of the
World — G 1-17-18
For the Love of a Woman —
M. .9-9-15
For the Love of Lil (AT) —
COL. .11-30-30
For the Love of Mike — FN
9-4-27
For the Service (AT) — U
5-19-36
For the Soul of Rafael —
EQU. .5-30-20
For the Term of His Natural
Life — AUS 6-16-29
For Those We Love — G
12-4-21
For Valor — TRI 11-22-17
For Wives Only- — PDC . . 1-9-27
For Woman's Favor — LBR
10-12-24
For You, My Boy — ROU
4-29-23
For Your Daughter's Sake —
JW. .1922
Forbidden (AT) — COL
1-17-32
496
Forbidden — U 1-18-20
Forbidden Adventure — MT
12-9-15
Forbidden Adventure (AT)
— MAQ . .2-19-38
Forbidden Cargo — FBO 4-26-25
Forbidden City — SE. . . 10-13-18
Forbidden Company (AT) —
INV. .7-1-32
Forbidden Fire — REE.. 3-23-19
Forbidden Fruit — PAR . 1-30-21
Forbidden Fruit — IV ..2-24-16
Forbidden Grass — RAL
10-28-28
Forbidden Heaven (AT) — REP
1936
Forbidden Hours — M-G-M
7-29-28
Forbidden Love — PAT 9-30-28
Forbidden Love — WIS 4-10-21
Forbidden Lover — SEZ. . . . 1923
Forbidden Music (AT) —
WO. .12-28-38
Forbidden Path — F 1918
Forbidden Paths — PAR 6-28-17
Forbidden Paradise — PAR
11-30-24
Forbidden Room — F 1919
Forbidden Territory (AT) —
HOB. .11-21-38
Forbidden Territory (AT) —
HOB. .1939
Forbidden Thing — APR
11-21-20
Forbidden Trail (AT) — COL
1932
Forbidden Trail — COS.. 12-1-29
Forbidden Trail (AT) — COL
4-10-33
Forbidden Trails — AI .... 1928
Forbidden Trails — F . . . 5-23-20
Forbidden Valley — PAT
10-10-20
Forbidden Valley (AT) — U
5-2-38
Forbidden Waters — PDC
5-2-26
Forbidden Woman — EQU
2-29-20
Forbidden Women — PAT
10-30-27
Forced Landing (AT) —
REP. .11-26-35
Foreign Devils — M-G-M 4-15-28
Foreign Legion — U 7-1-28
Forest Havoc — ELB . . . 2-20-27
Forest King — PSR 1922
Forest People of Siberia —
AM. .10-13-29
Forest Rivals — WO ...9-21-19
Forever — PAR 10-23-21
Forever After — FN . . . 10-17-26
Forever Yours (AT) —
GN. .6-8-37
Forfeit — HOD 1919
Forged Bride — U 2-1-20
Forged Passport (AT) —
REP. .2-8-38
Forget-Me-Not — PBW ..4-12-12
Forget Me Not — M ...7-23-22
Forgive and Forget — CBC
10- 21-23
Forgotten (AT) — INV. .5-20-33
Forgotten Commandments
(AT) — PAR. .6-5-32
Forgotten Faces — PAR 8-12-18
Forgotten Faces (AT) — PAR
4-23-36
Forgotten Law — M ...10-22-22
Forgotten Men (S-SE) —
JEW. .5-13-33
Forgotten Woman — PI . . . 1921
Forgotten Woman (AT) — IMP
6-13-36
Forgotten Women (AT) —
MOP. .2-28-32
Forgotten Woman, The (AT) —
U. .7-6-39
Forlorn River — PAR ..9-19-26
Forlorn River (AT) —
PAR. .10-6-37
Forsaking All Others — U
12-10-23
Forsaking All Others (AT) —
MGM. .12-19-34
Fort Frayne — DAV . . . 8-23-25
Fortieth Door — PAT . . 8-24-24
Forty Horse Hawkins — U
4-27-24
Forty Naughty Girls (AT) —
RKO. .9-2-37
Forty Winks — PAR .... 2-8-25
Fortunate Youth — OCE. 3-23-16
Fortune Hunter — WA ..1-15-28
Fortune Hunter — VIT .2-22-20
Fortune from Heaven (AT-
German) — UFA 1938
Fortune of Christine McNab —
PGO. .1923
Fortune Teller — RC ...5-16-20
Fortune's Child — VIT ...1919
Fortune's Fool (S-SE) —
LOU. .8-26-28
Fortune's Mask — VIT . . . 1922
Fortunes of Fifl — PAR. .3-1-17
45 Calibre Echo (AT) —
HNE. .1932
Forty-Five Calibre War — PAT
2-10-29
45 Fathers (AT) — F .10-20-37
Forty-five Minutes from B'way
— FN. .9-5-20
Forty-Niners, The (AT) —
FRE. .12-14-32
'49-17 — U 1917
42nd Street (AT) — WA
2-4-33
Forward Pass (AT & S) —
FN. .1929
Found Alive (AT) — IDE
11- 8-33
Foundling — PAR 1-16-18
Fountain. The (AT) — RKO
8-23-34
Fountain of Youth — GRA.1922
Four Aces (S-SE) — -SYN
2- 24-33
Four Dare Devils — PS... 1921
Four Daughters (AT) — WA
8-10-38
Four Days' Wonder (AT) —
U. .1-5-37
Four Devils (PT & S) — F
6-30-29
Four Feathers — M 1921
Four Feathers (S-SE) — PAR
6-16-29
Four Feathers (AT) —
UA. .7-24-39
Four Flusher — M 1919
Four-Footed Ranger — U 4-8-28
Four Frightened People (AT)
— PAR. .1-27-34
Four Girls In White (AT) —
MGM. .1-24-39
Four Hearts — WPX 1922
Four Horsemen of the Apoca-
lypse— M 2-20-21
Four Hours to Kill (AT) —
PAR. .4-11-35
400 Million. The (S-SE) —
GAS. .3-9-39
Four Masked Men (AT) —
OLM. .11-9-35
Four Men and a Prayer
(AT) — F 4-26-38
Four Sons (S-SE) — F 2-19-28
Four Walls — M-G-M ..8-26-28
Four Wives (AT) — WA
11-28-39
Fourflusher — U 1-29-28
Four's a Crowd (AT) — WA
. 8-12-38
Fourth Alarm (AT) — JOH
11-9-30
Fourteenth Lover — M 11-27-21
Fourteenth Man — PAR 9-12-20
Fourth Commandment — U
10-24-26
Fourth Estate — F 1-27-16
Fourth Face — CC 1921
Fourth Horseman, The (AT) —
U. .1932
Fourth Horseman (AT) — U
2-8-33
Fourth Musketeer — FBO
3- 25-23
40 Little Mothers (AT-
French) — NAN 12-23-38
Fox — U 11-20-21
Fox Movietone Follies of
1929 (AT) — F.. 5-26-29
Fra Diavolo (AT-Italian) —
TRL. .11-22-31
Fragment of an Empire, A —
AM. .2-2-30
Fram For Framgang (AT-
Swedieh) — SCA ....12-8-38
Frame Up — U 11-4-15
Frame Up — IND 1924
Frame-Up, The (AT) —
COL. .8-12-37
Framed (AT) — RKO ... 3-30-30
497
17,238 TITLES
Framed — FN 6-26-27
Framing Framers — TRI. . 1-3-18
France in Arms — PAT. 11-1-17
Frankenstein (AT) — U 12-6-31
Frankie and Johnnie (AT) —
RKO. .6-25-35
Frasquita (AT-German) — DUW
1-20-36
Frau Lehmann's Toeehter
(AT)— XX. .10-28-33
Frau Sylvelin (AT-German) —
UFA . . 1939
Frauen um den Sonnenkoenig
(AT-German) — GFS. .1935
Fraulein-Falsch Verbunden
(AT) — Unknown. .1-16-34
Fraeulein Frau (AT-German) —
CAS. .7-8-37
Fraulein Liselott (AT-
German) — XX. .5-31-35
Freaks (AT) — MGM. .. .7-9-32
Freckled Rascal — RKO . . 1929
Freckles — FBO 1-22-28
Freckles — PAR 5-24-17
Freckles (AT) — RKO. .9-20-35
Free Air — HOD . .4-2-22
Free and Easy (AT)— MGM
4- 20-30
Free Kisses — AY 1926
Free Lips — FD 12-30-28
Free Love — U 12-14-30
Free Soul (AT) — MGM 6-7-31
Free to Love — SCH . . 11-29-25
Freedom — REF 11-25-28
Freedom of the Press — U
10-21-28
Freedom of the Seas (AT) —
BI. .10-3-34
Freeze-Out — U 4-10-21
Freighters of Destiny (AT) —
PAT. .11-8-31
French Doll — M 9-16-23
French Dressing — FN 12-25-27
French Leave (AT) — TPE
12-6-31
French Heels — HOD . . . 1-29-22
Frenzied Flames — -ELB
10-24-26
Freshie — KER 1923
Freshman — PAT 7-12-25
Freshman Love (AT) — WA
1-24-36
Freshman Year (AT) — U
8- 23-38
Freuhling Im Wien (AT-
German) — XX. .2-8-37
Freut Euch Des Lebens (AT)
UFA. .11-5-34
Frida's Visor (AT-Swedish)
— MAL. .10-25-31
Friday the 13th (AT) — GB
5- 15-34
Friday the Thirteenth — BRA
9- 14-16
17,238 TITLES
Fricderike (AT) — KIT. .3-4-33
Friend Husband — G ...8-11-18
Friendly Enemies — PDC
5-10-25
Friendly Husband — F ..1-14-23
Friends (AT-Russian) — AM
1938
Friends (AT-Russian) — AM
1- 23-39
Friends and Lovers (AT) —
RKO. .11-8-31
Friends of Mr. Sweeney (AT)
— WA . . 7-27-34
Friesennot (AT-German) — XX
10- 27-36
Fringe of Society — BAC
11- 15-17
Frischer Wind aus Kanada
(AT-German) — UFA. .9-24-35
Frisco Jenny (AT) — FN
1-7-33
Frisco Kid (AT) — WA
10- 30-35
Frisco Sally Levy — M-G-M
4-17-27
Frisco Waterfront (AT) —
REP. .12-3-35
Frisky Mrs. Johnson — -PAR
1-2-21
Frivolous Sal — FN .... 1-25-25
Frivolous Wives — FID . . . 1922
Froken Blir Piga (AT-
Swedish) — SCA . .6-24-37
From, The (AT) — F . . 12-11-39
From Broadway to a Throne —
RED. .7-13-16
From Broadway to Cheyenne
(AT) — MOP. .9-23-32
From Headquarters — VIT 1919
From Headquarters (PT &
S) — WA. .6-16-29
From Headquarters (AT)— WA
11- 16-33
From Hell to Heaven (AT) —
PAR. .3-18 33
From Nine to Nine (AT) —
STI. .1936
From Now On — F 9-19-20
From the Ground Up — G
10- 16-21
From the Manger to the
Cross — VIT 1910
From Two to Six — TRI
2- 28-18
Front Page (AT) — UA
3- 22-31
Front Page Story — VIT
12- 17-22
Front Page Woman (AT) —
WA. .7-11-35
Frontier (AT-Russian) —
AM. .12-30-35
Frontier Days (AT) — SPE
11- 15-34
Frontier Justice (AT) — FD
1-3-36
Frontier Marshal (AT) —
1-31-34
Frontier Marshal (AT) — F
7-31-39
Frontier of the Stars — PAR
1-23-21
Frontier Pony Express (AT) —
REP. .4-12-39
Frontier Scout (AT) — GN
9-16-38
Frontier Town (AT) — •
GN. .1937
Frontier Town (AT) — GN
3- 15-38
Frontier Trail — PAT ...7-4-26
Frontiers of '49 (AT) —
COL. .1939
Frontiersman — M-G-M .11-6-27
Frontiersman, The (AT) —
PAR. .11-25-38
Frozen Justice (AT & S) —
F. .10-27-29
Frozen River (PT & S) —
WA. .6-23-29
Frozen Warning — COM ..1917
Fruehlingsmaerchen (AT-
German) — GFS. .5-20-35
Fruits of Desire — WO 1-27-16
Fruits of Passion — TRI.. 1920
Fuel of Life — TRI 11-15-17
Fuerst Sepp'l (AT-German) —
BAU. .8-21-37
Fuerst Woronzeff (AT) — UFA
11- 19-34
Fugitive — PAT 8-24-16
Fugitive at Large (AT) —
COL. .8-2-39
Fugitives for a Night (AT) —
RKO. .10-6-38
Fugitive in the Sky (AT) —
WA. .1-6-37
Fugitive from Matrimony —
RC. .12-7-19
Fugitive, The (AT) — MOP
9-13-33
Fugitive Lady — (AT) — COL
12- 10-34
Fugitive Lovers — (AT) — MGM
1-3-34
Fugitive Road (AT) — INV
11-13-34
Fugitive Sheriff, The (AT) —
COL. .10-20-36
Fugitives (S-SE) — F ..3-24-29
Full Confession (AT) — RKO
9-11-39
Full House — PAR 9-12-20
Full of Notions (AT) —
RKO. . 1931
Full of Pep— ...M 1919
Furlough on Parole (AT-
German) — UFA 1938
Furies. The (AT) — FN
4- 20-30
Furnace — REA 11-28-20
Fury — FN 2-4-23
498
Fury (AT) — M-G-M 6-22-36
Fury and theWoman (AT) —
RIA. .4-5-37
Fury Below (AT) — TRC
Fury of the Jungle (AT) —
COL. .2-8-34
Fury of the Wild — RKO
1-27-29
Fury Over Spain (AT-Spanish)
— MOD. .1938
Fuss and Feathers — PAR
12-15-18
Fury Over Spain — MOD. 7-20-37
G
G-Men (AT) — WA 4-18-35
Gables Mystery (AT) —
POP. .4-3-32
Gabriel Over the White House
(AT) — MGM . .4-1-33
Gabriele 1. 2, 3 (AT-
German) — XX 1938
Gaiety Girl — U 6-1-24
Gaiety Girls (AT) — UA 2-28-38
Gallant Defender (AT) —
COL. .1935
Gallant Fool — RA 3-6-27
Gallant Fool (AT) — MOP
8-9-33
Gallant Lady (AT) — UA
12-7-33
Galley Slave — F 12-2-15
Galloper — PAT 9-16-15
Galloping Ace — U 4-6-24
Galloping Cowboy — AE 9-19-26
Galloping Devil — CAN .5-21-21
Galloping Dynamite (AT) —
AMB. .7-8-37
Galloping Fish — FN ...5-4-24
Galloping Fury — U ...11-13-27
Galloping Gallagher — FBO
4-6-24
Galloping Gobs — PAT. . 2-13-27
Galloping Jinx — ARC 1926
Galloping Kid — U 9-10-22
Galloping On — ARC 1926
Galloping Romeo (AT) — MOP
11-2-33
Galloping Thru (AT) —
MOP. .2-7-32
Galloping Thunder — FBO 1927
Galloping Vengeance — FBO
1925
Gamble in Lines — PS
Gamble in Souls — INC.. 12-7-16
Gamblers — VIT 7-27-19
Gamblers (AT & S) — WA
8-25-29
Gambling (AT) — F ...12-4-34
Gambling Fool — IND . . . 5-3-25
Gambling in Souls — F 3-16-19
Gambling Lady (AT) — WA
3-7-34
Gambling Sex (AT) — FRE
12-14-32
Gambling Ship (AT) — PAR
7-13-33
Gambling Ship (AT) — U
12-20-38
Gambling Ship (AT) — U..1939
Gambling- Terror, The (AT) —
REP. .1937
Gambling With Souls (AT) —
JDK . . 1936
Gambling- Wives — ARW 4-6-24
Game Chicken — PAR 1922
Game of Wits — AMU 11-15-17
Game Old Knight and Her
Painted Hero- — TRI 10-28-15
Game With Fate — VIT 6-16-18
Game That Kills, The (AT) —
COL. .9-30 37
Game's Up — U 1-19-19
Gamesters — PAT 1921
Gang Buster (AT) — PAR
1-25-31
Gangway (AT) — GB ...8-18-37
Gang Bullets (AT) — MOP
12-7-38
Gang War (PT & S) —
FBO. .8-6-28
Gangs of New York (AT) —
REP. .6-23-38
Gangster's Boy (AT) — MOP
11-8-38
Garden Murder Case, The (AT)
— M-G-M. .2-29-36
Garden of Allah — M-G-M
9-11-27
Garden of Allah, The (AT) —
UA. .11-3-36
Garden of Eden — UA. .3-25-28
Garden of Life — U
Garden of Resurrection — STL
3-20-21
Garden of the Moon (AT) —
WA. .9-16-38
Garden of Weeds — PAR
11-9-24
Garments of Truth— M 9-4-21
Garrison's Finish — APA 6-3-23
Garter Girl — VIT 1920
Gas, Oil & Water — FN
3-26-22
Gasoline Cowboy — SIE...1926
Gasoline Gus — PAR 1921
Gasparone (AT-German) —
UFA. .1938
Gate Crasher— U 12-16-28
Gates of Brass — PAT .6-29-19
Gates of Doom — RED. .3-1-17
Gates of Eden — M 11-9-16
Gates of Gladness — WO... 1918
Gateway (AT) — F 8-2-38
Gateway of the Caucasus —
AM. .1-25-31
Gateway of the Moon — F
1-15-28
Gaucho — UA 11-27-27
Gauntlet — VIT 7-26-20
Gay Adventurer — ABA
8-26-28
Gay and Devilish — FBO
6- 21-22
Gay Bride (AT) — MGM
12-15-34
Gay Buckaroo (AT) — HOL
1-17-32
Gay Cabellero (AT) — F 2-14-32
Gay Deceiver — M-G-M .9-19-26
Gay Deception, The (AT) —
COL. .1935
Gay Defender — PAR 1-1-28
Gay Desperado. The (AT) — UA
10-3-36
Gay Diplomat (AT) — RKO
8-23-31
Gay Divorcee (AT) — RKO
10-3-34
Gay Lord Quex — G... 12-21-19
Gay Lord Waring — BL 4-13-16
Gay Love (AT) — MAC. 6-10-36
Gay Nineties (AT) — AST. .1939
Gay Old Bird — WA 3-20-27
Gay Old Dog — PAT. .. 11-9-19
Gay Retreat — F 9-25-27
Gay Vagabonds (AT-German)
— XX. .1938
Geezer — U 1927
Gefahren der Liebe (AT) —
MAD. .5-1-33
Gehenna (AT-Polish) — KIP
1939
Gehetzte Menshen (AT) —
Unknown. .6-6-34
Geld Regiert Die Welt (AT) —
Unknown. .5-15-34
General — UA 2-20-27
General Crack (AT & S) —
WA. .12-8-29
General Custer at Little Big
Horn — SU 1926
General Died at Dawn, The
(AT) — PAR. .9-3-36
General Housecleaning (AT-
German) — XX 1938
General Spanky (AT) — M-G-M
10-27-36
Generals without Buttons
(AT-French) — MAB ..2-1-38
Gentle Cyclone — F 7-18-26
Gentle Julian — F 1-6-24
Gentle Julia (AT) — F. .2-19-36
Gentleman Burglar (AT) —
KIO. .1936
Gentleman from Arizona, The
(AT) — MOP. .12-14-39
Gentleman From Louisiana
(AT) — REP. .8-15-36
Gentleman of Leisure — PAR
8-5-23
Gentleman of Paris — PAR
10-9-27
Gentleman of Quality — VIT
3-9-19
Gentleman's Agreement — VIT
7- 28-18
Gentleman's Fate (AT) —
MGM. .6-28-31
499
17,238 TITLES
Gentlemen Are Born (AT) —
FN. .11-22-34
Gentlemen from America — U
2- 11-23
Gentlemen from Indiana —
PAR. .12-2-15
Gentlemen of the Press (AT) —
PAR. .5-19-2!)
Gentlemen Prefer Blondes —
PAR. .1-22-28
Gentlemen Preferred — TPC
1928
George Washington, Jr. —
WA . . 1924
George Washington Cohen — ■
TIF. .6-19-2!)
George White's 1935 Scandals
(AT) — F. .4-2-35
George White's Scandals (AT)
— F. .3-17-34
Gerald Cranston's Lady — F
1925
Geraldine (PT & S) — PAT
12-16-28
German Curse in Russia —
PAT. .1918
Germany at War— CUM
3- 23-10
Germany's Side of the War — -
FFS. .1928
Geronimo (AT) — PAR
11-21-39
Geschichten aus dem Wiener-
wald (AT-German) —
XX. .11-4-35
Gesuzza, La Sposa Garibaldina
AT-Italian) — XX. .11-4-36
Get-Rich-Quick Wallingford —
PAR. .12-11-21
Get That Girl (AT) — MER
5- 15-32
Get That Man (AT) —
EMP. .7-25-35
Get Your Man — F. .. .6-29-21
Get Your Man — PAR 12-25-27
Getting Gertie's Garter — PDC
2- 13-27
Getting Mary Married — SE
4-6-19
Ghetto Shamrock — COO. . . 1926
Ghost Breaker — PAR ..9-17-22
Ghost City — APP 2-26-22
Ghost City (AT) — MOP
3- 20 32
Ghost Flower — TRI ...8-18-18
Ghost Goes West, The (AT) —
UA . . 1-11-36
Ghost House — PAR 1917
Ghost in the Garret — PAR
1921
Ghost of Old Morro — KES
6- 28-17
Ghost of Rosy Taylor — MT
7- 14-18
17,238 TITLES
Ghost of the Rancho — PAT
8-4-18
Ghost of Yesterday — SEL
1- 10-18
Ghost Patrol — D 1-21-23
Ghost Patrol (AT) — PUR
9-10-36
Ghost Rider. The (AT) —
FD. .1935
Ghost Talks (AT) — F 2-24-29
Ghost Train (AT) — GB
2- 18-33
Ghost Town Gold (AT) —
REP. .4-8-37
Ghost Valley (AT) — RKO
8-12-32
Ghost Walks, The (AT) —
CHE. .3 30 35
Ghoul, The (AT) — GB
11-25-33
Gift Girl — L)L 3-8-17
Gift o' Gab — E3 12-6-17
Gift of Gab (AT)— U. .9-25-34
Gift Supreme — SEZ ....5-9-20
Glgolette (AT)— RKO .5-14-35
Gigolettes of Paris (AT) — EQ
7-19-33
Gigolo — PDC 10-3-26
Gilded Butterfly — F . . . 1-24-26
Gilded Cage — BRA ...10-12-16
Gilded Dream — D 10-24-20
Gilded Fool — F 1915
Gilded Highway — WA .4-25-26
Gilded Lies — SEZ 5-8-21
Gilded Lily — PAR ....3-13-21
Gilded Lily, The (AT) —
PAR. .2-9-35
Gilded Spider— BL ....4-27-16
Gimmie — G 1-21-23
Ginger — WO 4-27-19
Ginger (AT) — F 5-28-35
Gingham Girl — FBO ..7-24-27
Ginsberg the Great — WA
1- 29-28
Girl Alaska — WO 8-17-19
Girl Angle — MT 1917
Girl and the Crisis — RED
2- 22-17
Girl and the Gambler, The
(AT) — RKO. .1939
Girl and the Judge — EMU
4-11-18
Girl at Bay — VIT 6-22-19
Girl at Home — PAR 1917
Girl by the Roadside — BL.1917
Girl Crazy (AT) — RKO
3- 27-32
Girl Dodger — PAR 3-2-19
Girl. Don't Say No (AT-
Czeeh) — KIT. .1935
Girl Downstairs (AT) —
MGM. .1938
Girl Downstairs (A8) — MGM
1-31-39
Girl Friend, The (AT) —
COL. .9-28-35
Girl from Beyond — VIT
4-25-18
Girl from Bohemia — PAT
8-18-18
Girl from Calgary (AT) —
MOP. .11-17-32
Girl from Chicago — WA
12-26-27
Girl from Everywhere — PAT
10-30-27
Girl from Gay Paree — TIF
1927
Girl from God's Country —
FBW. .9-18-21
Girl from Havana (AT & S) —
F. .9-8-29
Girl from Mandalay (AT) —
REP. .4-14-36
Girl From Maxims
(AT) — HOF. .9-16-36
Girl from Mexico, The (AT) —
RKO. .5-17-39
Girl from Missouri (AT) —
MGM. .8-3-34
Girl from Montmartre — FN
3-7-26
Girl from Nowhere — PI... 1919
Girl from Nowhere — SEZ
7- 17-21
Girl from Porcupine — ARW
12-4-21
Girl from Rio — LUM... 9-4-27
Girl from Rio. The (AT) —
MOP. .9-11-39
Girl from Rocky Point — PSR
3-5-22
Girl From Scotland Yard (AT)
—PAR. .6-4-37
Girl from 10th Avenue (AT) —
FN. .5-25-35
Girl from the Outside — G
8- 24-19
Girl from Wool worths (AT &
S) — FN. .12-22-29
Girl Habit (AT) — PAR
6-14-3J
Girl He Didn't Buy — PEE
7-8-28
Girl I Left Behind Me... 1915
Girl I Loved — UA 2-18-23
Girl in Bohemia — F .... 11-9-19
Girl in Checkered Coat — U
1917
Girl in Danger (AT) — COL
9- 11-34
Girl in Every Port — F 2-26-28
Girl in 419 (AT) — PAR
5- 20-33
Girl in His House— VIT
6- 23-18
Girl in His Room — VIT. . 1922
Girl in Number 29 — U.. 4-3-20
Girl in the Dark — BL. 3-14-18
Girl in the Glass Cage (PT
& S) — FN. .9-22-29
500
Girl in the Limousine — FN
1924
Girl in the Pullman — PAT
10-30-27
Girl in the Rain — U . . . 6-27-20
Girl in the Show (AT) —
MGM. .4-20-30
Girl in the Street (AT) — GB
6- 27-38
Girl in the Taxi — FN . . 6-28-22
Girl in the Web — PAT 7-25-20
Girl Like That — PAR.. 1-25-17
Girl Loves Bay (AT) —
GN. .3-17-37
Girl Missing (AT) — WA
3- 18 33
Girl Montana — PAT 1-2-21
Girl Named Mary — PAR 1-25-20
Girl O' My Dreams (AT) —
MOP. .11-6-34
Girl O' the Port (AT & S) —
RKO. .1929
Girl of Gold — PDC 1925
Girl of Lost Lake — BL 8-17-16
Girl of My Dreams — EXI.1918
Girl of My Heart — F. . 12-12-20
Girl of the Golden West —
FN. .6-3-23
Girl of the Golden West (AT)
— FN. .10-26-30
Girl of the Golden West
(AT) — MGM 3-17-38
Girl of the Last Night (AT-
German) — UFA 1938
Girl of the Limberlost (AT) —
MOP. .8-29-34
Girl of the Limberlost — FBO
4- 27-24
Girl of the Ozarks (AT) — PAR
6-1-36
Girl of the Port (AT) — RKO
7- 20-30
Girl of the Rio (AT) — RKO
1-10-32
Girl of the Sea — SEZ 1920
Girl of the Timber Claims —
TRI. .1-25-17
Girl of Today — VIT. .. 9-22-18
Girl of Yesterday — PAR
10-14-15
Girl on the Barge (PT &
S) — U. .3-3-29
Girl on the Front Page, The
(AT) — U. .9-19-36
Girl on the Stairs — PDC. 1924
Girl Overboard (PT & S) —
U. .8-11-29
Girl Overboard (AT) —
U. .3-2-37
Girl Phillipa — VIT 1-4-17
Girl Problem — VIT 2-23-19
Girl Said No, The (AT) —
MGM. .4-6-30
Girl Said No. The (AT) —
GN. .5-21-37
Girl Shy — PAT 4-6-24
Girl-Shy Cowboy — F 9-2-28
Girl Thief (AT) — TIM .1-14-38
Girl Was Young- (AT) — GB
1-19-38
Girl Who Came Back — PRE
4-22-23
Girl Who Came Back — PAR
9-1-18
Girl Who Came Back (AT) —
CHE. .9-20-35
Girl Who Couldn't Grow Up —
MT. .9-27-17
Girl Who Couldn't Think —
CRT. .2-1-17
Girl Who Dared — SEZ . 8-22-20
Girl Who Lost — RED. .3-15-17
Girl Who Ran Wild — U 10-1-21
Girl Who Stayed at Home —
ART. .3-30-19
Girl Who Won Out — U...1917
Girl Who Wouldn't Quit — U
4-11-18
Girl Who Wouldn't Work —
SCH. .8-16-25
Girl With a Jazz Heart — G
1-2-21
Girl With Ideas, A (AT) —
U. .11-5-37
Girl With No Regrets — F
2-16-19
Girl with the Bandbox — AM
1920
Girl With the Champagne
Eyes — F 4-4-18
Girl With the Oheckered Coat
— BL. .4-5-17
Girl With the Green Eyes —
PAT. .5-11-16
Girl Without a Room (AT) —
PAR. .12-7-33
Girl Without a Soul — M
8-30-17
Girl Woman — VIT 8-10-19
Girl's Decision — RAI 1921
Girl's Desire — VIT 9-17-22
Girl's Dormitory (AT) — F
8- 29-36
Girl's Folly — PBW 3-1-17
Girl's School (AT) — COL
9- 27-38
Girls — PAR 7-6-19
Girls About Town (AT) —
PAR. .11-1-31
Girls Can Play (AT) —
COL. .6-23-37
Girls Demand Excitement
(AT)— F. .2-8-31
Girls Don't Gamble — SCW
9-5-20
Girls Gone Wild (S-SE) — F
4-28-29
Girls Men Forget — PRI..1924
Girls of Nowolipek (AT-
Polish) — XX 1938
Girls on Probation (AT) —
WA. .10-26-38
Girls Who Dare — TPC
7-28-29
Girls Will Be Boys (AT) —
CHE. .6-7-35
Git Along Little Dogies (AT)
— REP. .3-27-37
Gitta Entdeckt Ihr Herz (AT-
German) — WOD. .10-1-32
Give and Take (S-SE) — U
12-30-28
Give Her a Ring (AT) —
ALL. .6-6-35
Give Me a Sailor (AT) — PAR
7-26-38
Give Me My Son — GHA
2-19-22
Give Me Your Heart (AT) —
WA. .7-14-36
(Reviewed as "I Give My
Heart")
Give Us This Night (AT) —
PAR. .4-7-36
Giving Becky a Chance — PAR
6-7-17
Glad Rag Doll (AT & S) —
WA. .6-9-29
Gladiator, The (AT) — COL
8-8-38
Glamorous Night (AT) —
REP. .1937
Glamour (AT) — U.... 5-12-34
Glass House — M 2-19-22
Glass Key, The (AT) — . .
PAR. .6-15-35
Gleam O' Dawn — F 1-1-22
Glenister of the Mounted —
FBO. .6-13-26
Glimpses of the Moon — PAR
4-8-23
Glittering Stars (AT-German)
—XX. .1938
Gloria (AT-German) — NER
10-29-32
Gloria's Romance — KLE 6-1-16
Gloriana — BL 11-2-16
Glorifying the American Girl
(AT) — PAR. . 1929
Glorious Adventure — G. 8-18-18
Glorious Adventure -UA
4-30-22
Glorious Besty (PT & S) —
WA. .4-29-28
Glorious Fool— G 3-26-22
Glorious Lady — SEZ. .. 11-9-18
Glorious Trail — FN ... 10-14-28
Glory— UNI 3-1-17
Glory and the Faith (AT-
French) — SE 12-1-38
Glory Girl — TRI 6-7-17
Glory of Clementina/ — FBO
6-4-22
Glory of Yolande — VIA 1-26-17
Glory Trail, The (AT) — CRE
7-10-36
Glos Pustyni (AT) — XX
4-26-33
Glueckliche Reise (AT-German)
—XX. .1-21-36
Glueckskinder (AT-German) —
UFA. .6-14-37
501
17,238 TITLES
Glueckspilze (AT-German) —
CAO. .10-27-36
Go and Get It — FN. .. .7-25-20
Go Chase Yourself (AT) —
RKO. .4-19-38
Go Get 'Em Garringer — PAT
1919
Go-Get-'Em Haines (AT) —
REP. .10-22-86
Go Getter — PAR 4-15-23
Go Getter, The (AT) —
WA. .4-27-37
Go Into Your Dance (AT) —
FN. .3-19-35
Go Straight — SCH 5-3-25
Go Straight — U 10-9-2T
Go West — MG 11-1-25
Go West Young Man — G
2-2-19
Go West. Young Man (AT) —
PAR. .11-6-36
Goal in the Clouds (AT-
German) — XX. .1939
Goat — M 9-29-18
Goat Getter — RA 1925
Gobsek (AT-Russian) —
AM. .7-20-37
God Gave Me Twenty Cents
— PAR. .11-28-26
God of. Little Children — APO
2-1-17
God of Mankind — HM .... 1928
God's Country and the Law —
ARW. .7-9-22
God's Country and the Man
(AT) — SYN. .6-7-31
God's Country and the Man
(AT) — MOP. .1937
God's Country and the Woman
(AT) — WA. .12-19-36
God's Crucible — HOD. .. 9-11-21
God's Gift to Women (AT)
WA. .4-19-31
God's Gold — PIN 1921
God's Good Man — STL... 1921
God's Great Wilderness — ACI
1-23-27
God's Half Acre — M... 8-17-16
God's Law and Man's — M
5-10-17
God's Man — FRO 4-12-17
Gods of Fate — LUB 2-3-16
God's Outlaw — M 1919
Goddess of Lost Lake — HOD
1918
Godless Girl (PT & S) —
PAT. .3-10-29
Godless Men — G 2-6-21
God's Country and the Wo-
man— VIT 6-29-16
Goethe's Jugendgeliebte (AT-
German) — NER. .12-28-32
Goin' to Town (AT) —
PAR. .4-25-35
17,238 TITLES
Going Crooked — F .... 12-19-26
Going Highbrow (AT) —
WA. .8-23-35
Goingr Hollywood (AT) — MGM
12-22-33
Going Places (AT) — WA
12-28-38
Going Some — G 7-25-20
Going Straight — FAT . . 6-25-16
Going the Limit — FBO . . . 1926
Going the Limit — GER 9-13-25
Going Up— AE 10-14-23
Going Wild (AT) — WA 2-1-31
Gold (AT) — MAJ 10-5-32
Gold (AT) — UFA 1934
Gold and Grit — ARC 4-5-25
Gold and the Girl — F. .2-22-25
Gold and the Woman — F
3-23-16
Gold Chevrons — BIG .. 10-21-28
Gold Cure — M 1-12-19
Gold Diggers — WA 9-16-23
Gold Diggers in Paris (AT)
— WA. .6-17-38
Gold Is Where You Find It
(AT)— WA 1-25-38
Gold Diggers of Broadway
(AT & S) — WA.. 9-8-29
Gold Diggers of 1933 (AT) —
WA. .5-25-33
Gold Diggers of 1935 (AT) —
FN. .3-16-35
Gold Diggers of 1937 (AT) —
FN. .12-2-36
Gold Dust Gertie (AT) —
WA. .5-31-31
Gold from Weepah — PAT
11-20-27
Gold Grabbers — SMI 1922
Gold Heels — F 1-25-25
Gold Hunters — DAV 1925
Gold Madness — PRI. .. 10-14-23
Gold Mine in the Sky (AT)
— REP. .7-5-38
Gold Racket, The (AT) —
GN. .4-24-37
Gold Rush — UA 8-30-25
Golden Arrow, The (AT) — FN
6-4-36
Golden Bed— PAR 1-25-25
Golden Boy (AT) — COL
8-21-39
Golden Calf. The (AT) — F
6- 11-30
Golden Chance — PAR. . 12-30-15
Golden Clown — PAT 1927
Golden Cocoon — WA. . 12-20-25
Golden Dawn — COQ 1928
Golden Dawn (AT) — WA
7- 27-30
Golden Dreams — G 6-11-22
Golden Fetter — PAR 2-1-17
Golden Fleece — TRI 8-4-18
Golde.i Gallows — U 2-12-22
Golden Gift — M 12-4-21
Golden Goal — VIT 5-19-18
Golden Harvest (AT) — PAR
11-8-33
Golden Hope — RC 1921
Golden Horse (AT-Chinese)
— XX. .1938
Golden Idiot — ES 7-26-17
Golden Key, The (AT-Russian)
— AM. .12-28-39
Golden Mountains (AT-
Russian) — AM. .4-17-32
Golden Princess — PAR. 9-13-25
Golden Rule Kate — TRI 8-30-17
Golden Shackles — PEE . . . 1928
Golden Shower — VIT. . 12-21-19
Golden Snare — FN 7-17-21
Golden Strain — F 12-20-25
Golden Taiga (AT-Russian) —
AM . . 8-3-35
Golden Trail — ARW 1921
Golden Wall — WO 7-21-18
Golden Web — LUM 1926
Golden West (AT) — F. . 12-3-32
Golden Yukon 1928
Goldfish — FN 5-11-24
Goldie (AT) — F 6-28-31
Goldie Gets Along (AT) — RKO
6-3-33
Goldwyn Follies (AT) — UA
1-27-38
Golem — PAR 6-26-21
Golem. The (AT-French) —
MES. .3-24-37
Golgotha (AT) — GOG .2-10-37
Golf Widows — COL. . . .8-26-28
Gone With the Wind (AT) —
MGM. .12-13-39
Good and Evil — FBW. .9-25-21
Good and Naughty — PAR
6-20-26
Good as Gold — F 7-17-27
Good Bad Boy — PRI 6-8-24
Good Bad Girl (AT) — COL
5-17-31
Good Bad Man — FAT. .4-13-16
Good Bad Wife — FED 10-24-20
Goodbye Again (AT) — FN
9-2-33
Good Bye Bill — PAR. .. 12-8-18
Goodbye Broadway (AT) — U
5-17-38
Good Bye, Girls — F 3-11-23
Good-Bye Kiss (S-SE) — FN
11- 18-28
Goodbye Love (AT) — RKO
3-13-34
Goodbye Love (AT) — RKO
1933
Goodbye, Mr. Chips (AT) —
MGM. .5-16-39
Good Companions, The (AT) —
F. .10-10-33
Good Fellow — SEZ
Good-For-Nothing — PWO
12- 27-17
Good Girls Go to Paris (AT) —
COL. .6-20-39
502
Good Gracious Annabelle —
PAR. .4-6-19
Good Dame (AT) — PAR
3-17-34
Good Earth. The (AT) —
MGM. .2-3-37
Good Fairy. The (AT) —
U. .2-1-35
Good Intentions (AT) — F
7-27-30
Good Little Devil — PAR.. 1914
Good Loser — TRI 7-14-18
Good Men and Bad — SEZ. 1923
Good Men and True — FBO
11-12-22
Good Morning Judge — U
10-7-28
Good News (AT) — MGM
9 7-30
Good Night Paul — SEZ
6-16-18
Good Old Soak (AT) —
MGM. .4-20-37
Good Provider — PAR ... 4-16-22
Good References— FN . . 9-26-20
Good Ship Rock N Rye — U ....
Good Sport (AT) — F 12-13-31
Good Woman, A — PI 1921
Good Women — RC ....7-24-21
Goona-Goona (SYN) — FD
8-20-32
Goose and the Gander. The
(AT) — WA. .9 12-35
Goose Girl — PAR 1915
Goose Hangs High — PAR
3-22-25
Goose Step (AT) — PRP (Re-
viewed as "Beasts of Berlin")
11- 22-39
Goose Woman — U 7-26-25
Gordian, Der Tyrann (AT-
German) — ALL. .6-29-37
Gorgeous Hussy, The (AT) —
M-G-M. .9-1-36
Gorilla — FN 11-13-27
Gorilla (AT)— FN 3-1-31
Gorilla. The ( AT)— F .. 5-24-39
Gorilla Hunt — FBO 1-2-27
Gorilla Ship (AT) — MAF
7-20-32
Gossip — U 3-4-23
Goucho Chivalry (AT-
Spanish)— XX 1938
Governor's Lady — F... 12-23-23
Governor, The (AT-German) —
XX. .1939
Gow (S-SE)— FIM 12-2-33
Gown of Destiny — TRI
12- 27-17
Gracie Allen Murder Case, The
(AT) — PAR. .5-17-39
Graefin Mariza (AT-German) —
XX. .1-28-35
Graft (AT)— U 11-29-31
Grafters— TRI 8-30-17
Grail— F 12-23-23
Grain (AT-Russian) — AM
1-17-36
Grain of Dust — CRB . . . 1-24-18
Grain of Dust — TIF. . . .9-30-28
Grand Canary (AT) — F
7-20-34
Grand Duchess and the Wai-
ter— PAR 2-21-26
Grand Exit (AT) — COL 11-5-35
Grand Hotel (AT) — MGM
4-17-32
Grand Illusion (AT-French)
— WO. .9-16-38
Grand Jury (AT) — RKO. 8-1-36
Grand Jury Secrets (AT) —
PAR. .6-7-39
Grand Larceny — G 3-5-22
Grand Old Girl (AT) —
RKO. .1-9-35
Grand Parade (AT) — PAT
1- 26-30
Grand Passion — BL ..12-27-17
Grand Slam (AT) — WA
2- 23-33
Grandaderos Del Amor (AT) —
F. .9-5-34
Grandeur Et Decadence (AT-
French) — FRM. .6-18-37
Grandma's Boy — AE . .9-10-22
Grasp of Greed — BL. . .7-16-16
Grass — PAR 4-12-25
Graustark — FN 9-20-25
Grave of the Unknown Sol-
dier— STA 1928
Gray Dawn — HOD ....4-30-22
Gray Horizon — EXI ....9-7-19
Gray Mask — SWO .... 12-9-15
Gray Parasol — TRI ...9-29-18
Gray Towers of Mystery —
VIT. .11-2-19
Gray Wolf's Ghost — RC...1920
Greased Lightning — PAR
6-4-19
Greased Lightning- — U .7-22-28
Great Accident — G 1920
Great Adventure — PAT. 2-28-18
Great Adventure — FN.. 1-30-21
Great Air Robbery — U. . 1-4-20
Great Alone — AR 6-18-22
Great Bradley Mystery — APO
4-19-17
Great City — SEZ 1923
Great Citizen, The (AT-Russian)
— AM. .1-26-39
Great Commandment, The (AT)
— F. .10-5-39
Great Day — PAR 4-3-21
Great Deception — FN.. 8-22-26
Great Defender (AT) — BI
7-26-34
Great Diamond Mystery — F
10-26-24
Great Divide — PAR . . . 12-23-15
Great Divide — MG ....2-15-25
Great Divide. The (AT) —
FN. .2-23-30
Great Expectation — PAR
1-11-17
Great Expectations (AT) — U
12-26-34
Great Flirtation (AT)— PAR
6-23-34
Great Gabbo (AT) — WW
9- 16-29
Great Gambini, The (AT) —
PAR. .6-7-37
Great Garrick, The (AT) —
WA. .9-28-37
Great Gatsby — PAR .. 11-28-26
Great God Gold (AT) —
MOP. .3-6-35
Great Guy (AT) — GN. 12-9-36
Great Hospital Mystery, The
(AT) — F. .7-21-37
Great Hotel Murder (AT) —
F. .2-27-35
Great Impersonation — PAR
10- 2-21
Great Impersonation, The (AT)
— U. .12-14-35
Great Jasper (AT) — RKO
2- 17-33
Great Jewel Robbery — KER
1920
Great John Ericsson (AT-
Swedish) — SCA 5-23-38
Great K & A Train Robbery —
F. .10-10-26
Great Love — GRI 8-18-18
Great Lover — G 12-5-20
Great Lover (AT) — MGM
8-30-31
Great Mail Robbery — FBO
6-26-27
Great Man Votes, The — (AT)
RKO. .1-11-39
Great Meadow (AT) — MGM
3- 15-31
Great Menace — RES 1923
Great Moment — PAR. . .7-31-21
Great Night — F 1922
Great O'Malley. The (AT) —
WA. .3-9-37
Great Power (PT & S) —
FWA. .1929
Great Power, The (AT) —
EXE. .7-20-30
Great Problem — BL. .. .4-13-10
Great Redeemer— M .... 8-29-20
Great Romance — M 1919
Great Ruby — LUB 9-23-15
Great Sensation — PFT. .9-13-25
Great Shadow — SEZ 1920
Great Unknown — AEP....1928
Great Victor Herbert, The (AT)
— PAR. .12-1-39
Great Victory — M 1919
Great Waltz (AT) — MGM
11-4-38
Great White North — F...1928
Great White Trail — WTL
6-14-17
Great White Way — MG
1-13-24
Great Ziegrfeld, The (AT) —
M-G-M. .4-9-36
Greater Claim — M 2-20-21
503
17,238 TITLES
Greater Duty — EC 1922
Greater Glory — FN .... 5-16-26
Greater Law — BL 7-19-17
Greater Love Hath No Man —
M. .1915
Greater Profit — RC .... 6-26-21
Greater Than a Crown — F
9 6-36
Greater Than Fame — SEZ
1-18-20
Greater Than Love — APR
7-24-21
Greater Than Marriaee— VIT
I- 18-26
Greater Will — PAT. . . 12-16-16
Greater Woman — PMU
3- 28-17
Greatest Love — SEZ ... 1-30-21
Greatest Love of All — AB
11-23-24
Greatest Power — M .... 6-29-17
Greatest Question — FN. . 1-4-20
Greatest Sacrifice — F. . . 5-15-21
Greatest Thing in Life — GRI
1-2-19
Greatest Truth — PAR .... 1922
Greed— MG 12-7-24
Greed — TRI 2-8-17
Greeks Had a Word for Them
(AT)— UA. .2-7-32
Greel Mystery — VIT ..11-22-17
Green Cloak — EDK ... 10-28-16
Green-Eyed Monster — F. . 1-6-16
Green Eyes (AT) — CHE
II- 3-34
Green Eyes — PAR 8-18-18
Green Fields (AT- Jewish) —
CFP. .10-20-37
Green Flame — HOD. .. .7-11-20
Green God — VIT 9-1-18
Green Goddess — G 8-19-23
Green Goddess (AT) — WA
2-16-30
Green Grass Widows — TIF
8-26-28
Green Light (AT) — WA .1-6-37
Green Pastures, The (AT) —
WA. .6-19-30
Green Stockings — VIT.. 1-13-16
Green Swamp — UA 1920
Green Swamp — TRI. .. 1-13-16
Green Temptation — PAR
4- 2-22
Greene Murder Case (AT &
S) — PAR. .8-11-29
Gretchen the Greenhorn — FAT
8-25-16
Gretel and Liesel (AT-Ger-
man) — FFF. .2-1-31
Gretl Zieht das Grosse Los
(AT-German) — XX. .2-12-35
Gretna Green — PAR 1915
Grey Devil — RA 1-30-27
17,238 TITLES
Greyhound Limited (PT &
S) — WA. .4-14-29
Gridiron Flash (AT) — KKO
11-3-34
Grief Street (AT) — CHE
10-11-31
Grim Comedian — G .... 1-29-22
Grim Game — PAR 9-7-19
Grinning- Guns — U 5-1-27
Grip of Jealousy— BL. . .3-9-16
Grip of the Yukon — U. 7-15-28
Grit — PDC 1-6-24
Grit Wins — U 3-3-29
Grouch — WO 12-1-18
Grouch. The (AT-German) —
XX. .1939
Grounds for Divorce — PAR
7-19-25
Growth of Soil — FGC
10-13-29
Grub Stake — SEZ 3-18-23
Gruen 1st die Heide (AT-
German) — XX. .10-17-35
Grumpy — PAR 4-1-23
Grumpy (AT) — PAR 8-3-30
Gruss Und Kuss. Veronika (AT-
German) — XX. .2-25-36
Guard That Girl (AT) —
COL. .11-2-35
Guardians of the North — IND
1921
Guardians of the Wild — U
10- 14-28
Guardsman (AT) — MGM
9-13-31
Guiding: Spirit — BUR 1921
Guile of Women — G.... 3-6-21
Guilt of Silence — BL.... 6-2-1 8
Guilty — UFA 11-25-28
Guilty (AT) — COL 4-13-30
Builty as Hell (AT) — PAR
8-6-32
Guilty Conscience — -VIT...1922
Guilty Generation (AT) —
COL. .11-22-31
Guilty Hands (AT) — MGM
8-30-31
Guilty Man — PAR 2-21-18
Guilty of Love — PAR.. 9-19-20
Guilty One — PAR 6-22-24
Guilty or Not Guilty (AT) —
MOP. .12-10-32
Guilty Parents (AT) — SYN
4-6-34
Guilty Wife — RAL
Gulliver's Travels (AT) —
PAR. .12-21-39
Gun Fighter — INC 2-1-17
Gunfig-hter — F 1923
Gunga Din (AT) — RKO
1-26-39
Gun Fighting Gentlemen — U
11- 30-19
Gun Gospel — FN 1927
Gun-Hand Garrison — RA . . 1927
Gun Justice (AT) — U. .2-14-34
Gun Law — RKO 1929
Gun Law (AT) — MAJ 7-13-33
Gun Law (AT) — RKO .6-28-38
Gun Lords of Stirrup Basin
(AT) — REP. .5-18-37
Gun Packer (AT) — MOP
11-9-38
Gun Play (AT) — FD. . 12-27-35
Gun Ranger. The (AT) —
REP. .2-9-37
Gun-Runner — TIF ....12-30-28
Gun Shy — SR 1922
Gun Smoke (AT) — PAR
4-26-31
Gun Smoke Trail (AT) — MOP
1938
Gun Woman — TRI ....1-24-18
Gunfire (AT) — FD 1935
Gunners and Guns (AT) —
BEU. .8-22-35
Guns and Guitars (AT) — REP
12-22-36
Guns at Loos — ERA 1928
Guns in the Dark (AT) —
REP. .5-13-37
Guns of the Pecos (AT) —
FN. .4-3-37
Gunsmoke Ranch (AT) —
REP. .9-9-37
Gutter Snipe — U 1-1-22
Gutter Magdalene. A — PAR
6- 18-16
Gyimesi Vadvirag (AT-
Hungarian) — HUN. .11-1-39
Gypsies (AT-Russian) — AM
7- 30-36
Gypsy Blood — FN 5-15-21
Gypsy of the North — RA
5-6-28
Gypsy Passion — VIT. . 10-30-21
Gypsy Trail — PAR 1918
II
Habit — FN 1921
Habit of Happiness — FAT
3-23-16
Hail the Hero — FBO 1924
Hail the Woman — FN... 1-8-22
Hair Trigger Baxter — FBO
1926
Hair-Trigger Casey (AT) — ATN
2-19-36
Hairpins — PAR 8-8-2f
Haldane of the Secret Ser-
vice— FBO 10-14-23
Half a Bride — PAR 9-2-28
Half a Chance — PAT. . 10-24-20
Half-a-Dollar-Bill — MG .12-9-23
Half a Rogue — U 1916
Half a Sinner (AT) — U
6-23-24
Half an Hour — PAR. . .12-5-20
Half Angel (AT) — F. . . .6-4-36
Half Breed — FN 6-25-22
504
Half Breed — FAT 7-13-16
Half Marriage— (AT & S) —
RKO. .8-25-29
Half-Naked Truth (AT) —
RKO. .12-31-32
Half Million Bribe — M. 4-20-16
Half Shot At Sunrise (AT) —
RKO. .10-12-30
Half- Way Girl — FN 8-16-25
Half Way to Heaven (AT &
S) — PAR. .12-8-29
Hallelujah (AT & S) —
MGM. .8-25-29
Halleluiah. I'm a Bum (AT) —
UA. .1-27-33
Halka (AT-Polish) — STA
2-1-38
Halsingar (AT) — XX... 9-26-34
Ham and Eggs at the Front —
WA. .1927
Hamlet — ASA 11-13-21
Hand at the Window —
TRI. .4-25-18
Hand in Hand (AT-Spanish)
— XX. .19J8
Hand Invisible — WO.... 3-9-19
Hand of Peril — PBW. . .3-23-16
Hand that Rocks the Cradle —
WEB. .5-13-17
Handcuffed (AT) — RA. 11-3-29
Handcuffs and Kisses —
SEZ. .10-2-21
Handicap— KRA 1921
Handicapped Engagement
(AT-Greek) — XX 1938
Handle With Care — AE...1922
Handle With Care (AT) — F
12-24-32
Hands Across the Border —
FBO. .5-30-26
Hands Across the Table (AT) —
PAR. .10-25-35
Hands Down — BL 2-14-18
Hands of Nara — M.... 8-13-22
Hands of Orlac — AY... 8-26-28
Hands Off— F 4-3-21
Hands Off — U 1927
Hands Up— FAT 4-26-17
Hands Up — PAR 1-24-26
Handsome Brute — COL 7-18-26
Handy Andy (AT) — F.. 6-1-34
Hangman's House — F. . . 5-20-28
Happiest Couple in Vienna
(AT-German) — XX 1938
Happiness — TRI 5-10-17
Happiness — ROM 1921
Happiness — MG 3-2-24
Happiness Ahead (AT) — FN
9-27-34
Happiness Ahead— FN . . 6-24-28
Happiness a La Mode —
SE. .6-15 -19
Happiness C. O. D. (AT) —
CHE. .12-21-35
Happiness of Three Women —
PAR. .1-18-17
Happy Days (AT) — F. 2-16-30
Happy Go Lucky (AT) — REP
12-5-36
Happy Landing (AT) — MOP
7-31-34
Happy Landing (AT) — F
1-22-38
Happy Though Married —
PAR. .2-16-10
Happy Warrior — VIT ... 7-12-25
Harapos Ferj ( AT-Hungarian) —
HUN. .2-1-39
Harbor Lights — AE ...8-26-23
Hard Boiled — PAR 2-2-19
Hard Boiled Haggerty — FN
9-11-27
Hard Fista — U 1927
Hard Hittin' Hamilton — ARC
10-19-24
Hard Hombre (AT) — HOF
9-20-31
Hard Luck — M 1921
Hard Rock Breed — TRI. 3-21-18
Hard Rock Harrigan (AT) —
F. .7-1-35
Hard to Get (AT & S) —
FN. .9-29-29
Hard to Get (AT) — WA 11-9-38
Hard to Handle (AT) — WA
2-3-33
Hardboiled — F 8-15-26
Hardboiled — RKO 2-24-29
Hardboiled Rose (PT & S) —
WA. .8-11-29
Hardest Way — JO 1922
Hardys Ride High. The (AT) —
MGM. .4-14-39
Harlem on the Prairie (AT) —
ASF. .2-5-38
Harlem Rides the Range (AT) —
HOL. .6-20-39
Harmonica (AT-Czecho-
slovakian) — XX. .1939
Harmony at Home vAT) — F
1-26-30
Harmony Lane (AT) —
MAP. .8-15-35
Harold Teen (AT) — WA
3-7-34
Harold Teen— FN 8-19-28
Harom Sarkany (AT-Hun-
garian)— XX. .12-23-36
Harp in Hock — PAT. . 10-30-27
Harriet and the Piper — FN
10-24-20
Harvest (AT-French) — FCC
7-25-39
Harvest Moon — HOD. . .4-11-20
Harvest of Hate — U 2-3-29
Harvester — FBO 11-20-27
Harvester, The (AT) — REP
4-18-36
Has the World Gone Mad —
EQU. .1923
Hashimura Togo — PAR... 1917
Hat Check Girl (AT) — F
9-23-32
Hat, Coat and Glove (AT) —
RKO . . 7-27-34
Hatchet Man The (AT) — FN
2-7-32
Hate — FAI 8-9-17
Hate — M 5-7-22
Hate Ship (AT) — BI. . 11-16-30
Hate Trail — CC 1922
Hater of Men — TRI .... 6-21-17
Hats Off (AT) — GN.. 12-16-36
Haunted Bedroom — PAR
6-8-19
Haunted Gold (AT) — WA
1-11-33
Haunted House (S-SE) —
FN. .12-23-28
Haunted House — TRI.. 9-20-17
Haunted Monar — GAU. .3-30-16
Haunted Pajamas — M .6-21-17
Haunted Ranch — DAV. .9-13-25
Haunted Ship — TIF. .. .1-29-28
Haunting- Shadows — RC 1-18-20
Havana Widows (AT) — FN
11-25-33
Have a Heart (AT) — MGM
10-19-34
Haven't You Met Korff
(AT-German) — XX. .1939
Having Wonderful Time (AT)
— RKO. .6-30-38
Havoc — F 9-13-25
Havoc — ES 3-30-16
Hawaii Calls (AT) — RKO
2-25-38
Hawaiian Buckaroo (AT) — F
3-4-38
Hawaiian Nights (AT) — U
10-3-39
Hawk — VIT 6-3-17
Hawk, The (AT) — HEW
7-13-36
Hawk of the Hills — PAT. 1929
Hawk's Nest — FN 6-3-28
Hawthorne of the U. S. A. —
PAR. .11-30-19
Hay Foot, Straw Foot — PAR
6-29-19
Hazardous Valleys — ELB
9-25-27
Hazel Kirke — PAT 2-10-16
He (AT) — AST 12-28-33
He Comes Up Smiling — ART
9-15-18
He Couldn't Say No (AT) —
WA. .4-4-38
He Couldn't Take It (AT) —
MOP. .12-13-33
He Did and He Didn't —
TRI. .2-10-16
He Knew Women (AT) —
RKO. .4-20-30
He Fell in Love with His
Wife — PAR 2-17-16
He Learned About Women
(AT) — PAR. . 1932
He Learned About Women
(AT) — PAR. .3-2-33
He Loved an Actress (AT)
— GN. .4-11-38
505
17,238 TITLES
He-Man's Country — RA . . . 1936
He Was Her Man (AT) — WA
5-18-34
He Who Gets Slapped — MG
11-2-34
Head Hunters of Papua
(AT) — REI. .9-7-32
Head Hunters of the South
Seas — AE 1-21-23
Head of the Family — GOT
12-16-28
Head Over Heels — G 1922
Head Over Heels in Love
(AT) — GB. .2-6-37
Head Man — FN 10-7-28
Head Winds — U 3-22-25
Headin' East (AT) —
COL. .11-27-37
Headin' for Danger — FBO
12-23-28
Headin' for Rio Grande (AT) —
GN. .12-8-36
Headin' for Trouble (AT) —
BIF. .9 6-31
Headin' Home — YAN. . .9-26-30
Headin' North— ARW. . 9-24-22
Headin' North (AT) —
TIF. . 12-28-30
Headin' South — ART. . .3-21-18
Headin' Through — PHD... 1924
Headin' West — U 1-29-22
Headin' Westward — SYN
7-14-29
Headless Horseman — -HOD
10-22-22
Headleys at Home, The (AT)
— STH. .12-1-38
Headline Crasher (AT) —
CNN. .4-6-37
Headline Woman, The (AT) —
MOP. .5-11-35
Headline Shooter (AT) — RKO
10-21-33
Heads Up — FBO 1925
Heads Up (AT) — PAR 10-12-30
Headlines — AE 1925
Headwater — PON 7-7-29
Healer. The (AT) —
MOP. .5-28-35
Heart and Soul — F.... 6-14-17
Heart Bandit — MG 1-13-24
Heartbreak (AT) — F.. 10-18-31
Heartbeat (AT-French) —
FRM. .9-14-39
Heart Buster — F 7-6-24
Heart in Pawn — EXI 1919
Heart Line — PAT 5-29-21
Heart of Arizona (AT) —
PAR. .4-13-38
Heart o' the Hills — -FN 12-7-19
Heart of a Clown — PAT. .1928
Heart of a Child — RED
6-22-16
Heart of a Child — M... 4-11-20
17,238 TITLES
Heart
of
a Coward — RA
8-22-26
Heart
of
a Fool — FN 1920
Heart
of
a Follies Girl — FN
3-18-28
Heart
of
a Girl — WO. . .7-7-18
Heart
of
a Gypsy — HAL
12-7-19
Heart
of
a Hero — PBW
10-26-16
Heart
of
a Lion — F. . .12-27-17
Heart
of
a Painted Woman —
M. .1915
Heart
of
a Siren — FN 8-15-25
Heart
of
a Texan — ST. . .1922
Heart
of
a Woman — PEE. 1921
Heart
of
Broadway — RA. .1928
Heart
of
Ezra Greer — PAT
10-4-17
Heart
of Fire (AT-Czecho-
slovakian) — XX. .1939
Heart
of
Gold — WO 2-2-19
Heart
of
Humanity — U. .1-4-19
Heart
of
Jennifer — PAR
9-9-15
Heart
of
Juanita — RC . 12-7-19
Heart
of
Maryland — VIT
5-22-21
Heart
of
Maryland — WA
7-17-27
Heart
of
New York (AT) —
WA. .3-6-32
Heart
of
New York — CLA
2-24-16
Heart
of
Nora — PAR 1916
Heart
of Paris (AT-French) —
TRN. .1-18-39
Heart
of
Paula — PAR. .3-16-16
Heart
of
Rachael — HOD 10-6-18
Heart
of
Romance — F. . . . 1918
Heart
of
Salome — F. . . .5-1-27
Heart
of
Tara — MT 3-9-16
Heart
of
Texas Ryan, The —
SEL. .2-22-17
Heart
of
the Blue Ridge —
WO. .10-21-15
Heart
of
the West (AT) — PAR
7-7-36
Heart
of
the North — DAV
9-25-21
Heart
of
the North (AT) —
WA. .12-22-38
Heart
of
the Rockies (AT) —
REP. .1937
Heart
of
the Sunset — G
4-18-18
Heart
of
the Wilds — ART
8-25-18
Heart
of
the Yukon — PAT
5-22-27
Heart
of
Twenty — RC. .6-27-20
Heart
of
Wetona — SEL
12-29-18
Heart
of
Youth — PAR. 9-14-19
Heart Punch (AT) — MAA
10- 18-32
Heart Raider — PAR .... 6-10-23
Heart Son? (AT) — F... 5-6-34
Heart Specialist — PAR.. 4-22-22
Heart Strings — F 1-4-20
Heart Thief — PDC 5-15-27
Heart Thief (AT-German) —
XX. .1938
Heart to Heart — FN... 8-19-28
Heart to Let, A — REA
7- 24-21
Heart Trouble — FN .... 10-7-28
Heart's Desire (AT) —
GB. .7-15-37
Heart's Desire — PAR. .. .5-3-17
Heart's Haven — HOD. .. 8-13-22
Heart's Melody (AT) — UFA
8- 31-30
Heart's Revenge — F 1918
Heartless Husbands — SU
11- 22-25
Hearts Adrift — PAR 1914
Hearts Aflame — M .... 12-24-22
Hearts and the Highway —
VIT. .1915
Hearts and Fists — AE. 2-28-26
Hearts and Masks — FED.. 1921
Hearts and Spangles — LUM
1926
Hearts and Spurts — F. . . 8-2-25
Hearts are Trumps — -M
12-12-20
Hearts Asleep — EXI 1919
Hearts Divided (AT) — FN
6-9-36
Hearts in Bondage (AT) — REP
6-26-36
Hearts in Dixie (AT) — F
3-3-29
Hearts in Exile (AT & S) —
WA. .1929
Hearts o' The Range — FOR
2-13-21
Hearts of Flint — ARW
Hearts of Humanity (AT) —
MA J. .9-21-32
Hearts of Love — ARW
Hearts in Love (AT-German) —
XX. .1939
Hearts of Men — AN. . . .9-2-28
Hearts of Men — WO.. 11-18-15
Hearts of Men— AB. .. .4-13-19
Hearts of Oak — F 10-5-24
Hearts of Oak — PAR 1923
Hearts of the World — -CWO
5- 12-18
Hearts of Youth — F 1921
Hearts or Diamonds? — MT
5-2-18
Hearts Up — U 1-2-21
Heartsease — G 9-14-19
Heat Lightning (AT) — WA
3-7-34
Heather, The (AT-Polish)
— XX. .1938
Heaven on Earth — MGM
6- 26-27
506
Heaven on Earth (AT) —
U. .12-20-31
Heaven With a Barbed Wire
Fence (AT) — F. .1939
Heedless Moths — EQU.. 6-19-21
Hei Tiki (AT) — ED.... 2-2-35
Heidi (AT) — F 10-12-37
Heideschulmeister Uwe Karsten
(AT) — UFA. .4-17-34
Heights of Hazard — VIT
12-2-15
Heimat Am Rhein (AT)
Unknown. .12-10-34
Heimaterde (AT-German)
TRL. .11-11-32
Heimatsklange — TRP .2-22-31
Heir of the Ages — PAR
6-28-17
Heir to the Hoorah — PAR
11-2-16
Heir to Trouble (AT) —
COL. .12-17-35
Heiress at Coffee Dan's — FAT
12-21-16
Heiress for a Day — TRI
2-28-18
Heisses Blut (AT-German) —
UFA. .9-28-36
Held by the Enemy — PAR
10-3-20
Held by the Law — U... 2-20-27
Held for Ransom (AT) — GN
7-23-38
Held in Trust — M 8-15-20
Held to Answer — M... 10-28-23
Helen of the North — PAR
9-9-16
Helen of Troy — FN (Review-
ed as Private Life of Helen
of Troy) 12-18-27
Helene (AT-French) — FRM
1- 26-38
Helen's Babies — PRI. .. 1-18-25
Helion — PAT 10-5-19
Heliotrope — PAR .... 11-28-20
Hell and High Water (AT) —
PAR. .12-16-33
Hell Below (AT) — MGM
4-27-33
Hell Below Zero — TPE
6-28-31
Hell Bent — U 6-23-18
Hell Bent for Frisco (AT) —
WW. .7-12-31
Hell Bent For Heaven — WA
5-9 26
Hell Bent for Love (AT) —
COL. .6-13-34
Hell Bound (AT) — TIF 3-1-31
Hell Cat (AT) — COL 7-7-34
Hell Cat — G 12-8-18
Hell Diggers — PAR 8-28-21
Hell Divers (AT) — MGM
12-27-31
Hell Fire Austin (AT) — TIF
6-22-32
Hell Harbor (AT) — UA
2- 23-30
Hell in the Heavens (AT) — F
12-12-34
Hell Morgan's Girl — BL
3-15-17
Hell on Earth (AT) — AEO
3-31-33
Hell Roarin' Reform — F 2-16-19
Hell Ship — CP 8-26-28
Hell Ship — F 2-15-20
Hellship Bronson — GOT.. 5-6-28
Hell-Ship Morgan (AT) — COL
3-10 36
Hell to Pay Austin — FAT
8-10-16
Hell's Angels (AT) — UA
8-24-30
Hell's Border — WET 1922
Hell's Crater — U
Hell's End — TRI 7-14-18
Hell's 400 — F 5-30-26
Hell's Headquarters (AT) —
RKO. .5-15-32
Hell's Heroes (AT) — U
12-29-29
Hell's Highroad— PDC. .8-30-25
Hell's Highway (AT) — RKO
9-27-32
Hell's Hinges — TRI 2-17-16
Hell's Hole — F 1923
Hell's Holiday (AT) — SUR
• 7-19-33
Hell's House (AT) — CAP
2-14-32
Hell's Island (AT) — COL
7-20-30
Hell's Kitchen (AT) — WA
7-12-39
Hell's Oasis — IND 1921
Hell's Valley (AT) — NAT
1931
Hell's Valley — BIF 1930
Helldorado (AT) — F 1-5-35
Hello, Budapest (AT-Hun-
garian) — XX. .11-18-35
Hello Cheyenne — F 5-13-28
Hello, Everybody! (AT)— PAR
1-28-33
Hello Sister (AT) — WW
3-9-30
Hello Sister (AT) — F. .4-14-33
Hello Trouble (AT) — COL
10-12-32
Hellhounds of the Plains —
GOO. .1926
Help. Help Police — F. . 5-14-19
Help Me to Live (AT-
Spanish) — XX 1938
Help Wanted Male — PAT
8-22-20
Help Yourself — G 1921
Henry Goes Arizona (AT) —
MGM. .1939
Her Accidental Husband —
CBC. .5-6-23
Her American Husband — TRI
1-24-18
Her American Prince — MT
8-3-16
Her Aviator — ARW
Her Beloved Enemy — PAT 1917
Her Beloved Villain — REA
1-2-21
Her Better Self — PAR. 5-17-17
Her Big Adventure — KER 1926
Her Big Night — U 8-22-26
Her Bitter Cup — U 3-30-16
Her Body in Bond — MUR
6- 23-18
Her Bodyguard (AT) — PAR
8- 5-33
Her Boy— M 2-14-18
Her Code of Honor — TRB
3-19-19
Her Country Firsts — PAR
9- 1-18
Her Country's Call — MT..1917
Her Debt of Honor — M 1-27-16
Her Decision — TRI 5-12-18
Her Doctor (AT-Polish) — XX
1938
Her Double Life — F. . . .10-5-16
Her Elephant Man — F. . .2-1-20
Her Excellency the Governor —
FAT. .7-5-17
Her Face Value — PAR 11-16-21
Her Fatal Millions — M
7- 22-23
Her Father Said So — FBO
1927
Her Father's Gold — MT
5-11-16
Her Father's Keeper — FAT
3-22-17
Her Father's Son — PAR
9-28-16
Her Fighting Chance — JAC
8- 16-17
Her Final Reckoning — PAR
6-9-18
Her First Elopement — REA
1-23-21
Her First Mate (AT) — U
9-2-33
Her Five Foot Highness — U
4-3-20
Her Forgotten Past (AT) —
MAF. .10-31-33
Her Game — UNI 1919
Her Guardsman (AT-German)
— XX. .1938
Her Gilded Cage— PAR
8-20-22
Her
Good
Name — VAN
.2-1-17
Her
Great
Hour — EQW
1-13-16
Her
Great
Match — M . .
9-16-13
Her
Great
Price — M . .
3-30-16
Her
Greatest Chance — SEL
12-22-18
Her Greatest Love — F. .4-26-17
Her Greatest Peiformance —
TRI. .8-3-19
Her Half Brother — CRP..1922
Her Honor, the Governor —
FBO. .8-1-26
Her Honor, The Mayor — F
8-22-20
507
17,238 TITLES
Her Hour — PWO 12-6-17
Her Husband's Friend — PAR
11-20
Her Husband's Honor — AMU
8- 11-13
Her Husband Lies (AT) —
PAR. .3-22-37
Her Husband's Secret — FN
5- 24-25
Her Husband's Secretary
(AT) — WB. .3-22-37
Her Husband's Trade-Mark —
PAR. .2-26-22
Her Husband's Wife — IV
6- 29-16
Her Inspiration — M 1918
Her Jungle Love (AT) —
PAR. .3-22-38
Her Kingdom of Dreams —
FN. .10-5-19
Her Life and His — PAT. 2-8-17
Her Lord and Master — VIT
1921
Her Love Story — PAR 10-12-24
Her Mad Bargain — FN... 1922
Her Mad Night (AT) —
MAF. .10-12-32
Her Majesty — AE 1922
Her Majesty. Love (AT) —
FN. .11-29-31
Her Man— PAT 8-25-18
Her Man (AT) — PAT.. 9-21-30
Her Man O'War — PDC 10-24-26
Her Market Value — PDC. 1925
Her Master's Voice (AT) —
PAR. .1935
Her Master's Voice (AT) — PAR
2 21-36
Her Maternal Right — WO
5-11-16
Her Mistake — FCH 1918
Her Moment — RAL. ... 7-21-18
Her Marriage Vow — WA..1924
Her Mother's Secret — F...1916
Her New York — PAT 1917
Her Night of Nights — U 6-25-22
Her Night of Romance — FN
11-30-24
Her Official Fathers — TRI
4-26-17
Her One Mistake — F 1918
Her Only Way — SEL. . .8-25-18
Her Own Free Will — PDC
9- 14-24
Her Own Money — PAR.. 2-6-22
Her Own People— PAR 2-15-17
Her Own Story — GOO .... 1926
Her Own Way — M 1921
Her Price — F 7-14-18
Her Private Affair (AT & S) —
PAT. .1929
Her Private Life (AT & S) —
FN. .1929
Her Purchase Price — RC
8-31-19
17,238 TITLES
Her Reputation — FN 1923
Her Resale Value (AT) — ■
MAF. .6-21-33
Her Right to Live — VIT
1-18-17
Her Sacrifice — SAN. . . . 1-30-27
Her Second Chance — FN
4-25-20
Her Second Husband — EMU
1-10-18
Her Secret — VIT 5-3-17
Her Secret (AT) — IDE
12-19-33
Her Silent Sacrifice — SEL
I- 17-18
Her Sister — EMU 1-3-18
Her Sister from Paris — FN
8-30-25
Her Sister's Rival — PAT
12-6-17
Her Social Value — FN.. 2-19-22
Her Song: of Love (AT) —
HUR. .6-26-35
Her Soul's Inspiration — BL
I- 11-17
Her Splendid Folly (AT) —
PRG. . 10-28-33
Her Story — SEC 1922
Her Strange Desire (AT) —
POP. .8-5-32
Her Strange Wedding- — PAR
6-21-17
Her Sturdy Oak — REA. .8-7-21
Her Summer Hero — FBO
12-25-27
Her Surrender — IV. ... 10-26-16
Her Temporary Husband — FN
12-16-23
Her Temptation — F. .. .5-10-17
Her Unborn Child (AT) —
WIP. .1930
Her Unborn Child (AT) — -
WIP. .10-10-33
Her Unwilling Husband — PAT
II- 21-20
Her Way of Love — AM
8- 25-29
Her Wedding Night (AT) —
PAR. .9-28-3C
Her Wild Oat — FN 2-12-28
Her Winning Way — REA
9- 25-21
Here Comes Carter! (AT) — Fl>
II- 14-3€
Here Comes Cookie (AT) —
PAR. .9-10-3c
Here Comes the Band (AT) —
MGM. .9-21-35
Here Comes the Bride — PAR
Here Comes the Groom (AT) —
PAR. .5-16-34
Here Comes the Navy (AT) —
WA. .6-28-34
Here Comes Trouble (AT) — P
8-7-36
Here He Comes — SIE 1927
Here I Am a Stranger (AT) —
F. .10-3-39
Here Is My Heart (AT) —
PAR. .12-22-34
Here's Flash Casey (AT) —
GN. .10-20-37
Here's To Romance (AT) —
F. .8-27-35
Heritage — ROU 8-15-2C
Heritage of Hate — RED 11-9-16
Heritage of the Desert — PAR
1-27-24
Heritage of the Desert (AT) —
PAR. .3-11-33
Heritage of the Desert (AT) —
PAR. .3-17-39
Heredity — WO 8-11-18
Hermine und die Sieben
Aufrechten (AT-German) —
XX. .9 24-35
Hero — PRE 1-14-23
Hero For a Day (AT) —
U. .11-16-39
Hero for a Night — U.. 11-27-27
Hero of Submarine D-2— VIT
1916
Hero of the Big Snows — WA
1926
Hero of the Circus — U 12-16-28
Hero of the Hour — U
Hero on Horseback — U. 7-24-27
Heroes — PAR
Heroes All — IML 10 25-31
Heroes and Husbands — FN 1922
Heroes for Sale (AT) — FN
7-22 33
Heroes in Blue — RA .... 1-8-28
Heroes in Blue (AT) —
MOP. . 11-20-39
Heroes of the Alamo (AT) —
COL. .8-6-37
Heroes of the Arctic (AT) —
AM. .9 29-34
Heroes of the Arctic (AT) —
AM. .5-26-35
Heroes of the Hills (AT) —
REP. .7-29-38
Heroes of the Marne (AT-
French) — SPE. .4-26-39
Heroes of the Night — LUM
1-16-27
Heroes of the Range (AT) —
COL. .8-18-36
Heroes of the Street — -WA
12-24-23
Heroic Lover — PAP 1929
Heroic Lover — RAL. .. .3-16-30
Herr Kobin Geht Auf Aben-
teur (AT German) —
UFA. .11-27-35
Hertha's Erwachen (AT) —
PRX. .3-13-33
Herzblut (AT-German) — TRL
10-4-32
508
Hesper of the Mountains — VIT
1916
Hetenkent. Egyszer (AT-
Hungarian)— DAN. .10-21-37
Heute Nacht-Eventuell (AT) —
XX. .7-7-33
Hey, Hey. Cowboy — U .4-17-27
Hey. Rube! — FBO 3-10-29
Hi Gaucho (AT) — RK0..1935
Hi, Gaucho (AT) — RKO. 3-3-36
Hi, Nellie (AT) — WA... 2-1-34
Hickville to Broadway — F
9 4-21
Hide-Out (AT) — MGM. 8-18-34
Hidden Aces — PAT. ... 8-21-27
Hidden Children — M.... 4-5-17
Hidden Code — PI 1920
Hidden Fires — G 11-24-18
Hidden Gold (AT) — U...1932
Hidden Gold (AT) — U 3-22-33
Hidden Light — COM 1921
Hidden Loot — U 10-25-25
Hidden Pearls — PAR .... 2-7-18
Hidden Power (AT) —
COL. .5-24-39
Hidden Scar — BRA 10-5-16
Hidden Spring — M 8-2-17
Hidden Truth — SEL .... 2-2-19
Hidden Valley — PAT. . 11-30-16
Hidden Way — AE 1926
Hidden Woman — AR, .... 1922
Hideaway (AT) — RKO .7-23-37
Hideaway Girl (AT) —
PAR . .1-14 37
Hideout (AT)— U 4-13-30
Hideout in the Alps (AT) —
GN. .4-26-38
Higgins Family (AT) — REP
9-7-38
High and Handsome — FBO
9-6-25
High Command (AT) — GN
7-28-38
High Finance — F 4-19-17
High Flyer — RA 11-7-26
High Flyers (AT) —
RKO. .12-15-37
High Gear (AT) — GOS
3-22-33
High Hand — PAT 9-19-26
High Hat — FN 3-20-27
High Heels — U 10-16-21
High-Jacking Rustlers — RA
1926
High Play — AMU 4-19-17
High Pockets — AM U 1919
High Pressure (AT) — WA
1-31-32
High Road — BOL 1922
High School Girl (AT) —
BFP. .3-16-35
High School Hero — F. . 11-6-27
High Sign — M
High Sign — U 1921
High Society Blues (AT) —
F .4-20-30
High Speed — HAL 1-11-20
High Speed (AT) — COL
4-10-32
High-Speed Lee — ARW
High Stakes — TRI 5-28-18
High Stakes (AT) — RKO
6- 31-31
High Steppers — FN 1926
High Tension (AT)— P. 6-16-36
High Tide — TRI 9-1-18
High Treason (AT) —
OLM. .1 29-37
High Treason (AT) — TIP
1930
High Voltage (AT & S)— PAT
7- 28-29
High, Wide and Handsome
(AT) — PAR. .7-22-37
Highbinders — AE 5-2-26
Higher Learning (AT-German)
— XX. .1939
Highest Bid — AMU 6-29-16
Highest Bidder — G 1921
Highest Law — SEZ 1921
Highest Trump — VIT ... 1-26-19
Highway of Hope — PAR
5-24-18
Highway Patrol (AT) — COL
8-5-38
Hilde Petersen, Postlabernd
(At-German) — UFA. .7-6-37
Hill Billy — APA 3-23-24
Hlllcrest Mystery — PAT
4-11-18
Hills of Hate — ARW 1921
Hills of Kentucky — WA 2-27-27
Hills of Missing Men — AE 1922
Hills of Old Wyoming (AT) —
PAR. .4-13-37
Hills of Peril — F 5-15-27
Hinton's Double — PAT. 4-26 17
Hips. Hips Hooray (AT) —
RKO. .1-24-34
Hired Man — PAR 1-31-18
Hired Wife (AT) — PIN.. 2-1-34
Hirsekorn Greift Ein (AT-
German) — CAP. .6-15-32
His Back Against the Wall — G
6-21-22
His Best Friend (AT-German)
— XX. .1938
His Birthright — HWA.. 9-15-18
His Bonded Wife — M... 12-1-18
His Bridal Night — SEL. 7-27-19
His Brother's Keeper — PI. 1921
His Brother's Place — M...1919
His Brother's Wife — BRA
6-1-16
His Brother's Wife (AT) —
M-G-M-. .8-1-36
His Buddy's Wife — AE. 7-19-25
His Captive Woman (PT * S)
FN. .4-7-29
His Children's Children — PAR
11-11-23
His Darker Self — PDC . 3-30-24
His Daughter is Peter (AT-
German) — XX 1938
His Daughter Pays — DOO 1919
His Debt — RC 5-25-19
His Divorced Wife — U. . 11-9-19
His Dog — PAT 8-28-27
His Double Life (AT) — PAR
12-16-33
His Enemy, The Law — TRI
6-16-18
His Exciting Night (AT) — U
1938
His Family Tree (AT) —
RKO. .9 17-35
His Father's Son — M... 3-22-17
His Father's Wife— WO ... 1919
His Fighting Blood (AT) —
AMB. .10-7-35
His First Command (AT) —
PAT. .1930
His Foreign Wife — PAT
10-23-27
His Forgotten Wife — FBO
4-6-24
His Glorious Night (AT) —
M-G-M. .10-6-29
His Greatest Battle — AY..19S6
His Greatest Gamble (AT) —
RKO. .8-18-34
His Greatest Sacrifice — F
6-1-21
His Greatest Success (AT-
German) — CAO 1938
His Hour — MG 9-14-24
His House in Order — -PAR
3-14-20
His Jazz Bride — WA.... 5-2-26
His Last Battle — EXH...1928
His Last Dollar — PAR. . . .1914
His Last Haul— FBO. . .3-17-29
His Last Race — GOL .... 9-9-23
His Late Excellency — UFA 1929
His Life for His Country
(AT-German) — X 1938
His Lucky Day (PT & S) — U
1929
His Majesty. Bunker Bean —
PAR. .4-18-18
His Majesty Bunker Bean —
WA. .9-20-26
His Majesty the American — UA
9-28-19
His Master's Voice — LUM
10- 26-26
His Mortgaged Wife — U. . .1918
His Mother's Boy — PAR
1-8 18
His Mystery Girl — U. . 12-23-23
His Neighbor's Wife — PAR
1913
His New York Wife — PRE
11- 12-26
His Nibs — EXC 1922
His Night Out (AT) —
U. .10-19-86
His Official Fiancee — PAR
5-19-18
His Old Fashioned Dad — PAR
1917
His Own Home Town — -PAR
5-19-18
His Own Law — G 2-8-21
His Own Law — SR 1924
509
17,238 TITLES
His Own People — VIT... 1-3-1 8
His Parisian Wife — ART
1-19-19
His People — U 11-16-25
His Picture in the Papers —
FAT. .2-10-16
His Private Life — PAR 11-18-28
His Private Secretary (AT) —
SHP. .6-6-33
His Rise to Fame — EXP
3- 20-27
His Robe of Honor — HOD
1-31-18
His Royal Highness — PWO
3-7-18
His Secretary — MG. ... 12-27-25
His Supreme Moment — FN
4- 19-25
His Sweetheart — PAR... 2-1-17
His Temporary Wife — HOD
1- 25-20
His Tiger Lady — PAR... 6-3-28
His Wife's Friend — PAR
2- 15-20
His Wife's Good Name — VIT
9-14-16
His Wife's Husband — AR
6-14-22
His Wife's Money — SEZ
2-29-20
His Woman — U
His Woman (AT) — PAR
12-6-31
History Is Made at Night
(AT) — UA. .3-8-37
History of the Inquisition
(AT-Spanish) — XX ....1938
Hit and Run — U 8-10-24
Hit of the Show (PT & S) —
FBO. .7-1-28
Hit or Miss — WO 3-16-19
Hit the Deck (AT) — RKO
1-19-30
Hit Parade. The (AT) —
REP. .4-3-37
Hit the Saddle (AT) —
REP. .1937
Hitch Hike Lady (AT) —
REP. .12-17-35
Hitch Hike to Heaven (AT) —
CHE. .1935
Hitch Hike to Heaven (AT) —
INV. .3-13 36
Hitchin' Posts — U 8-29-20
Hit-The-Trail-Holiday — ART
6-9-18
Hitler's Reign of Terror (AT)
— JEW. .4-27-34
Hittin' the Trail (AT) —
GN. .9-13-37
Hitting a New High (AT) —
RKO. .12-3-37
Hitting the High Spots — M
12-8-18
17,238 TITLES
Hitting: the Trail — WO 12-8-18
Hjartats Rost (AT-Swedish) —
PAR. .6-28-31
Ho Perduto Mio Marito (AT-
Italian) — ESP. .11-1-39
Hoarded Assets — VIT . 12-22-18
Hobbs in a Hurry — PAT
10-6-18
Hoehzeit Am Wolfgrang-see
(AT) — XX. .11-19-34
Hochzeitsreise (AT-German) —
UFA . . 1939
Hogran's Alley — WA ... 11-29-25
Hogueras En La Noche (AT-
Spanish) — XX. .3-22-37
Hold Devil — AEP 1928
Hold 'Em Jail (AT) — RKO
8- 20-32
Hold 'Em Navy (AT) —
PAR. .10-19-37
Hold 'Em Yale — PAT... 8-5-28
Hold 'Em Yale (AT) —
PAR. .4-27-35
Hold Everything- (AT) — WA
3-30-30
Hold Me Tig-ht (AT) — F
5-20 33
Hold that Co-ed (AT) — F
9- 16-38
Hold That Girl (AT)— F
3- 24-34
Hold that Kiss (AT) — MGM
5-12-38
Hold That Lion — PAR 9-12-26
Hold That River — HOC. .7-1-36
Hold the Press (AT) — COL
12-1-33
Hold Your Breath — PDC
6- 1-24
Hold Your Horses — G... 2-6-21
Hold Your Man (AT & S) — U
10-27-29
Hold Your Man (AT) — MGM
7- 1-33
Holdane of the Secret Service —
HOU. .1922
Hole in the Wall (AT) — PAR
4- 21-29
Hole in the Wall — M.. 11-27-21
Holiday (AT) — PAT. . .6-15-30
Holiday (AT) — COL ...5-20-38
Hollow of Her Hand— SEL
1-5-19
Holy Terror (AT) — F. .7-19-31
Hollywood — PAR 8-5-23
Hollywood Boulevard (AT) —
PAR. .8-4-36
Hollywood Cavalcade (AT) —
F. .10-4-39
Hollywood. Ciudad de Ensueno
(AT) — XX. .4-10-34
Hollywood Cowboy (AT) —
RKO. .5-4-37
Hollywood Hoodlum (AT) —
REG. .6-21-34
Hollywood Hotel (AT) —
WA. .12-27-37
Hollywood Party (AT) — MGM
5-25-34
Hollywood Revue of 1929 <AT)
M-G-M. .8-18-29
Hollywood Round-Up (AT) —
COL. .10-19-37
Hollywood Speaks (AT) —
COL. .7-1-32
Hollywood Stadium Mystery
(AT) — REP 2-28-38
Holy Devil — EUR 1928
Holy Terror (AT) — F ..1-2-37
Holzapfel Weiss Alles (AT) —
CAP. .1-12-33
Home — U 1919
Home — INC 8-10-16
Home Breaker — PAR .... 5-4-19
Home Is Calling- (AT-German)
— UFA. .1938
Home James — U 9-23-28
Home Keeping- Hearts — AE
10-2-21
Home Made — FN 12-25-27
Home Maker — U 7-26-25
Home on the Prairie (AT) —
REP. .2-6-39
Home on the Range (AT) —
PAR. .2-8-35
Home Stretch — PAR ...5-8-21
Home Struck — FBO 1-16-27
Home Stuff — M 6-19-21
Home Talent — APR 6-19-21
Home Towners (AT) — WA
10-28-28
Home Town Girl — PAR
5-25-19
Home Trail — VIT 4-4-18
Home Wanted — WO .... 6-29-19
Homecoming- (AT-German)
— UFA. .1938
Homecoming-, The (S-SE) —
PAR. .11-25-28
Homer Comes Home — PAR
7-4-20
Homesick — F 1928
Homesick ( S-SE ) — F . . 1-27-29
Homespun — PAT 1919
Homespun Folks — APR. 9-6-20
Homespun Vamp — PAR... 1922
Homeward Bound — PAR
8-19-23
Homicide Bureau (AT) —
COL. .2-2-39
Homicide Squad (AT) — U
8- 30-31
Honest Hutch — G 9-19-20
Honest Man — TRI 1918
Honesty — the Best Policy — F
9- 12-26
Honey (AT) — PAR .... 3-30-30
Honey Bee, The — PAT. .5-23-30
Honeymoon — M-G-M ...8-11-29
Honeymoon — SEL 1917
Honeymoon Abroad — WW
5-5-29
Honeymoon Express- — WA 1926
510
Honeymoon Flats — U. . 11-25-28
Honeymoon Hate — PAR
12-25-27
Honeymoon in Bali (AT) —
PAR. .9-13-39
Honeymoon Lane (AT) —
PAR. .8-2-31
Honeymoon Limited (AT) —
MOP. .6-25-35
Honeymoon Ranch — LUB
10-24-20
Honeymoon's Over, The (AT) —
F. . 12-20-39
Honeysuckle, The (AT-Spanish>
— XX. .1939
Hong- Kong- Nigrhts (AT) —
FD. .12-24-35
Honky Tonk (AT & S)— WA
6-9-29
Honolulu (AT) — MGM.. 2-3-39
Honor — ACA 9-15-29
Honor — AM 1928
Honor Among- Men — F...1924
Honor Among- Lovers (AT) —
PAR. .3-1-31
Honor Bound — F 1928
Honor Bound — U 11-7-20
Honor First — F 1922
Honor of His House — -PAR
4-18-18
Honor of Mary Blake — BL
12-14-16
Honor of the Family (AT) —
FN. .10-18-31
Honor of the Mounted (AT) —
MOP. .9-29-32
Honor of the Press (AT) —
MAF. .7-14-32
Honor System — F 5-3-17
Honor Thy Name— INC
7-27-16
Honor's Altar — TRI. .. .3-2-16
Honor's Cross — G 5-2-18
Honorable Algy — INC .11-2-16
Honorable Cad — U
Honorable Friend — PAR
8-31-16
Honraras A Tus Padres (AT-
Spanish) — XX. .4-9-37
Hoodlum — FN 9-7-19
Hoodman Blind — F. . . . 1-20-24
Hoodoo Ann — FAT 4-6-16
Hoodoo Ranch — ARC .... 1926
Hoof Mark's — PAT. ... 12-11-27
Hoofbeats of Vengeance — U
6-9-29
Hook and Ladder — U... 1-6-24
Hook and Ladder No. 9 — FBO
10-16-27
Hook, Line and Sinker (AT) —
RKO. . 12-14-30
Hoopla (AT) — F 12-2-33
Hoop-La — EXI 1919
Hoops of Steel— HOD
Hooray for Love (AT) —
RKO. .5-20-35
Hoosier Romance — SEL
8-25-18
Hoosier Schoolboy, The (AT)
— MOP. .6-29-37
Hoosier Schoolmaster — PDC
g 20 Zi
Hoosier Schoolmaster, The
(AT) — MOP. .4-9-35
Hop-A-Long Cassidy (AT) —
PAR. .7-30-35
Hopalong Cassidy Returns (AT)
— PAR. .10-12-36
Hopalong Rides Again (AT) —
PAR. .8-17-37
Hop, the Devil's Brew — BL
2- 24-16
Hope — M 1920
Hope Chest — PAR 1-12-10
Hopeless Case, The (AT-
German) — XX. . 1939
Hopper — TRI 2-7-18
Horizon (AT) — AM... 5-13-33
Hornet's Nest — VIT. .. 7-13-19
Horse Ate the Hat — MOV
9-6-31
Horse Feathers (AT) — PAR
8-12-32
Horse Shoes — PAT. .. .4-24-27
Horseman of the Plains — F
3- 18-28
Hostage — PAR 9-27-17
Hot
Curves
(AT)— TIF
7-6-30
Hot
for Paris (AT) — F
. . 1929
Hot
Heels-
-U
6-10-28
Hot
Heiress
(AT) — FN
3-16-31
Hot
Money
(AT) — WA.
7-25-36
Hot
News —
-PAR
7-29-28
Hot
Off the
Press (AT)
VIC. .
10-9-35
Hot
Pepper
(AT) — F. .
1-21-33
Hot Saturday (AT) — PAR
11-6-32
Hot Stuff (PT & S) — FN
4-21-29
Hot Tip (AT) — RKO.. 8-20-35
Hat Water — PAT 11-2-24
Hot Water (AT) — F ..11-10-37
Hotel Continental (AT) —
TIF. .3-20-32
Hotel for Women (AT) — F
8- 28-39
Hotel Haywire (AT) —
PAR. .6-15-37
Hotel Imperial — PAR... 1-9-27
Hotel Imperial (AT) —
PAR. .5-17-39
Hotel Kikelet ( AT-Hunsrarian )
Hotel Sacher (AT-German) —
UFA. .1939
— HUN. .11-3-37
Hotel Variety (AT) — SCR
1-4-33
Hotels of Lunatics (AT-Spanish)
— XX. .1939
Hottentot — FN 12-17-22
Hottentot (AT & S) — WA
9- 2-29
Hound of Silver Creek — U
9-2-28
Hound of the Baskervilles (AT)
— FD. .4-10-32
Hound of the Baskervilles —
FBO. .9-17-22
Hound of the Baskervilles. The
(AT) — F. .3-27-39
Hour Before Dawn — PAR 1913
Hour of Reckoning — DAV
12-11-27
House Built Upon Sand — FAT
1-18-17
House Divided — FCH 1919
House Divided, A (AT) — U
1-10-32
House of a Thousand Candles —
SEL. .9-9-15
House of a Thousand Candles,
The (AT) — REP. .4-3-36
House of Danger (AT) — HOL
11-10-34
House of Death (AT-Russian)
— AM. .8-13-32
House of Fear — PAT. . .12-9-15
House of Fear, The (AT) —
U. .6-5-39
House of Glass — SEL... 3-7-18
House of Gold — M .... 6-30-18
House of Greed (AT) — AM
8- 16-34
House of Horror (PT & S) —
FN. .6-23-20
House of Intrigue — EXI..1919
House of Lies — PAR ... 9-21-16
House of Mirrors — MT. 8-10-16
House of Mirth — M . . . 8-11-18
House of Mystery — ARW
House of Mystery (AT) —
COL. .1-6-38
House of Rothschild (AT) —
UA. .3-8-34
House of Scandal — TIF. 7-15-28
House of Secrets (AT) — CHE
5-26-29
House of Shame — CHE 8-26-28
House of Silence — PAR. 4-18-18
House of Solomon — AR...1922
House of Tears — M... 12-16-15
House of Temperly — PAR
House of the Golden Windows
— PAR. .8-10-10
House of the Orge (AT-Spanlsh)
— XX. .1939
House of the Tolling Bell — PAT
9- 6-20
House of Toys — PAT. . .5-30-20
House of Whispers — HOD
9-26-20
House of Youth — PDC 11-30-24
House on 66th Street (AT) —
WA . . 12-2-33
House That Jazz Built — REA
6-15-21
House Without Children — FIL
8-10-19
Housekeeper's Daughter, The
(AT) — UA. .9-14-39
Housemaster (AT) — ALL. 1939
Housewife (AT) — WA.. 8-11-34
511
17,238 TITLES
How Baxter Butted in — WA
7-5-25
How Britain Prepared — PAI
6- 1-16
How Could You. Caroline?
PAT. .5-2-18
How Could You, Jean? — ART
6- 16-18
How He Lied to Her Husband
(AT) — BI. .1-18-31
How Molly Made Good — STE
10-14-16
How to Educate a Wife — WA
8-17-24
How to Handle Women — U
7- 8-28
How Women Love — BB 8-27-22
Hoy Comienza La Vida (AT-
Spanish) — KIO. .6-30-36
Huapango (AT-Spanish) — XX
1938
Huck and Tom — PAR. .3-14-18
Huckleberry Finn — PAR
2-29-20
Huckleberry Finn (AT)
PAR. .8-9-31
Huckleberry Finn, See: Adven-
tures of Huckleberry Finn.
Huddle (AT) — MGM ... 5-29-32
Hugon. The Mighty — U
10-13-18
Hula — PAR 9-4-27
Hulda from Holland — PAR
7-20-16
Human Cargo (AT) — F. 4-21-36
Human Clay — IV 1919
Human Collateral — VIT... 1920
Human Driftwood — EQW
4 13-16
Human Hearts — U ....7-16-22
Human Passions — TY. . . . 1919
Human Side (AT) — U. 9-15-34
Human Stuff — U 6-20-20
Human Targets (AT) — BIF
1-24-32
Human Tornado — FBO 6-28-25
Human Wreckage — FBO
7- 1-23
Humanity (AT) — F ...4-22-33
Humdrum Brown — HOD
4-18-18
Humoresque — PAR ....5-9-20
Humming Bird — PAR.. 1-20-24
Hun Within — PAR 9-1-18
Hunch — M 10-9-21
Hunchback — FGU 1928
Hunchback of Notre Dame — U
9-16-23
Hunchback of Notre Dame, The
(AT) — RKO. .12-15-39
Hundredth Chance — STL 1-2-21
Hungarian Nights — AGF
6-8-30
Hungarian Rhapsody (S-SE) —
PAR. .8-11-29
17,238 TITLES
Hungry Eyes — BL 3-14-18
Hungry Heart — PBW ... 1-25-17
Hungrry Heart — PAR. . 11-29-17
Hungry Hearts — G .... 12-3-22
Huns Within Our Gates — ARW
Hunted (AT & S) — RKO. 1929
Hunted People — ABA .10-14-28
Hunted Men — SYN .... 5-25-30
Hunted Men (AT) — PAR
5- 14-38
Hunted Woman— VIT. . .3-9-16
Hunted Woman — F. .. .3-29-25
Huntin' Trouble — PHD... 1924
Hunting Big Game in Africa —
U. .1-14-23
Hunting of the Hawk — PAT
4-5-17
Hunting Tigers in India (AT) —
TPE. .10-27-29
Huntingtower — PAR .... 1928
Huntress — FN 10-7-23
Huntress of Men — U... 4-27-16
Hurra! Ein Junge (AT-
German) — CAP. .6-24-32
Hurrah, I'm Alive — UFA
6- 22-30
Hurricane (AT & 3) — COL
11-3-29
Hurricane Horseman — ARC
1926
Hurricane Horseman (AT) —
WK. .10-11-31
Hurricane Kid — U 12-28-24
Hurricane. The (AT) —
UA. .11-10-37
Hurricane's Gal — FN.. 7-30-22
Husband and Wife — BRA
8-24-16
Husband Hunter — F ...9 19-20
Husband Hunters — TIF . . 1927
Husband's Holiday (AT) —
PAR. .1-3-32
Husbands and Lovers — FN
12-28-24
Husbands and Lovers — RIM
11-27-27
Husbands and Wives — GAU
1920
Husbands by Proxy — FFS 1928
Husbands for Rent — WA
9-30-28
Hush — EQU 5-1-21
Hush Money — PAR . . . 11-27-21
Hush Money (AT) — F. 7-12-31
Hushed Hour — GAR 1919
Huszarserelem (AT-Hun-
garian) — DAN. .4-24-35
Hutch of the U. S. A. — STE
8-10-24
Hypnotized (AT) — WW
12-17-32
Hypocrisy — F 6-8-16
Hypocrites — PAR 1914
Hypocrites — PS
Hypocrites — LON 5-12-18
Hyppolit. A lakaj (AT) — ICE
1-20-33
I
I Am a Criminal (AT) —
MOP. .12-2-38
I Am a Fugitive from a Chain
Gang (AT) — WA. . 10-21-32
I Am a Thief (AT) —
WA . . 1-2-35
I Am From Siam (AT) —
PIC. .9-6-31
I Am Guilty — APR .... 4-24-21
I Am In Oberbayern (AT-
German) — UFA. .1939
I Am the Law — AFF... 5-7-22
I Am the Law (AT) — COL
8-24-38
I Am the Man — CHA .... 1924
I Am the Woman — KRE..1921
I Am Suzanne (AT) — F 1-19-34
I Believe — TCS 7-5-17
I Believed In You (AT) — F
4-10-34
I Can Explain — M 2-19-22
I Can't Escape (AT) — BEA
7-5-34
I Conquer the Sea (AT) — ACD
1-16-36
I Cover Chinatown (AT) — ST
8-25-36
I Cover the War (AT) —
U. .6-29-37
I Cover the Waterfront (AT) —
UA. .5-19-33
I Do — AE 1921
I Defy — ARI 1922
I Demand Payment (AT) —
IML. .12-13-38
I Dream Two Much (AT) —
RKO. .11-27-35
I Due Sergenti (AT-Italian) —
XX. .11-29-39
I Found Stella Parish (AT) —
FN. .11-2-35
I Give My Love (AT) — U
7-17-34
I Have Lived (AT) — CHE
7-19-33
I Hate Women (AT) — GOS
7-11-34
I Kiss Your Hand Madame
(S-SE) — SDC. .8-30-32
I Like It That Way (AT) —
4-11-34
I Like Your Nerve (AT) —
FN. .9-13-31
I Live for Love (AT) —
WA. .10-18-35
I Live My Life (AT) —
MGM. .10-14-35
I Love You — TRI 1-10-18
I Lost My Heart in Heidelberg
— WIN. .1928
I Love That Man (AT) — PAR
7-8-33
512
I Loved a Woman (AT) — FN
9-21-33
I Loved You Wednesday
(AT) — F. .6-16-33
I Married a Doctor (AT) — FN
3-31-38
I Married a Spy (AT) — GN
7-11-38
I Met a Murderer (AT) —
YOR. .9-28-39
I Met Him in Paris (AT) —
PAR. .5-24-37
I Met My Love Again (AT)
— UA. .1-8-38
I Promise to Pay (AT) —
COL. .2-18-37
I Sell Anything (AT) — FN
12-26-34
I Stand Accused (AT) — REP
10-19-38
I Stand Condemned (AT) — UA
6-9-36
I Stole a Million (AT) —
U. .8-22-39
I Take This Woman (AT) —
PAR. .6-14-31
I Tre Innamorato (AT-Italian)
— PIE . . 6-24-37
I Want My Man — FN. .4-19-25
I Want to Be a Mother (AT-
Yiddish) — JEF. .3-15-37
I Want to Forget — F. .12-29-18
I Was a Captive of Nazi Ger-
many (AT) — MAW.. 8-4-36
I Was a Convict (AT) —
REP. .3-6-39
I Was a Spy (AT) — F
1-13-34
I Will Repay — VIT. .. 11-15-17
Ibanez' Torrent — M-G-M 3-7-26
Ice Flood — U 9-19-26
Ice Follies of 1939. The (AT) —
MGM. .3-7-39
Icebound — PAR 3-9-24
Iced Bullet — INC 2-1-17
Iceland Fishermen (AT-French)
— DUW. .9-21-35
Ich Glaub Nie Mehr an Eine
Frau (AT) — BAV .. 10-13-33
Ich Kenn Dich Nicht und
Liebe Dich (AT-German) —
XX. .11-19-35
Ich Sehne Mich Nach Dir (AT-
German) — XX. .9-9-36
Ich Sing Mich in Dein Herz
Hinein (AT-German) —
XX. .6-4-35
Ich und die Kaiserin (AT-
Germany) — UFA. .1935
Ich Will Nicht Wissen Wer du
Bist ( AT ) — INW . . 2-17-33
I'd Give My Life (AT) — PAR
7-28-36
Idaho Kid (AT) — GN. .8-6-36
Idaho Red (S-SE) — RKO
4-28-29
Idiot's Delight (AT) —
MGM. .1-31-39
Idle Class — FN 10 2-21
Idle Hands — PI 1021
Idle Rich (AT) — M-G-M
6-23-29
Idle Rich — M 11-0-21
Idle Tongues — FN .... 12-14-24
Idle Wives — U 0-28-16
Idler — F 1914
Idol Dancer — FN 3-28-20
Idol of the Crowds (AT) —
U. .0-30 37
ldul of the North — PAR
5- 22-21
Idol of the Stage — GAU
1-27-10
idolaters — TR1 0-13-17
ldolos de la Radio (AT-
Spanish) — XX. .7-6-35
Idols of Clay — PAR. .11-23-20
11 I Had a Million l AT) —
PAR. .12-3-32
II 1 Marry Again — FN. 1-18-26
II 1 Were Free (AT) — RKO
12-8-33
If I Were King — F 7-4-20
It I Were King (AT) — PAR
0-10-36
11 I Were Queen — FBO
10-22-22
If I Were Single — WA . . 1-1-28
If Marriage Fails — FRO
6- 14-25
If My Country Should Call —
RED. .0-7-10
If Only Jim — U 2-27-21
If Women Only Knew — J4C
5-20-21
If War Comes (AT-Russian)
— AM. .7-18-38
If Winter Comes — F .... 0-0-23
If You Believe It, It's So—
PAR. .7-10-22
If You Could Only Cook (AT)
Igdenbu — AM 12-7-30
— COL. .12-27-35
Igloi Diakok (AT-Hun-
garian) — XX. .6-25-35
Igloo (S-SE) — U 1032
lhr Groesster Erfolg (AT-
German) — CAO 2-18-38
Ihre Hoheit Befiehlt (AT-
German) — UFA .... 11-8-31
Ihre Majestaet Die Liebe
(AT) — WA. .2-8-33
II Cappollo A Tre Punte (AT-
Italian) — NUO. .0-30-3(1
II Corraggio Delia Dioventu
Mussaliniania (AT-Italian) —
WO. .2-0-80
11 Corsaro Nero (AT-Italian) —
ESP. .5-11-30
II Delitto Di Mastrovanni (AT-
Italian) — MPS. .8-1-35
II Dotter Antonio (AT-Italian)
— XX. .12-15-30
II Est Charmant (AT-
French) — PAR. .4-10-32
II Re Burlone (At-Italian) — XX
4-1-36
II Richiamo Del Cuore (AT-
Italian) — PAR. .3-8-31
II Serpente A Sonagli (AT-
Italian) — NUO. .8-18-36
(1 Signor Max (AT-Italian) —
ESP. .10-20-39
III Be There — SIE 1927
111 Fix It (AT) — COL
11-10-34
1 11 Get Him Yet — PAR
5- 26-10
I'll Give a Million (AT) — F
7-18-38
I'll Love You Always (AT) —
COD. .3-30-35
I'll Say So — F 1018
I'll Show You the Town — U
6- 31-26
I'll Take Romance (AT) —
COL. .12-17-37
111 Tell the World (AT)— U
4-21-34
Illegal (AT) — WA ...9 29-32
Illegal Traffic (AT)— PAR
11-2-38
Illicit (AT) — WA 1-18-31
Illusion (AT & S) — PAR
9-29-20
Illusions — ROM 1021
Illustrious Prince — RC. 11-10-10
Im Geheimdienst (AT-Ger-
man) — UFA. .3-0-32
I'm Glad My Boy Grew Up to
Be a Soldier — SEL. . 12-10-16
I'm No Angel (AT) — PAR
10- 14-33
I'm From Missouri (AT) —
PAR. .3-23-39
I'm from the City (AT) —
RKO. .7-28-38
Im Heidekrug (AT-German) —
XX. .1-3-35
Image Maker — PAT. ... 1-11-17
Imitation of Life (AT) — -U
11- 23-34
Immediate Lee — AMU. 11-16-10
Immigrant — PAR .... 12-23-16
Immortal Flame — IV... 3-2-10
Immortal Vagabond (AT) —
TPE. .8-2-31
Immortal Waltzes (AT-Germani
— XX. .1930
Imp — SEZ 1020
Important Melodies (AT-
German) — XX 1038
Impatient Maiden (AT) — U
3-6-32
Important Witness (AT) —
TOW. .0-0-33
Impossible Boy — PAC. . . . 1922
Impossible Catherine — -PAT
1910
Impossible Mrs. Belle w — PAR
10-29-22
Impossible Susan — AMU
7-28-18
Imposter — EMU 1-31-18
Imposter — FBO 0-27-26
513
17,238 TITLES
Impulse — ARW 1922
In a Moment of Temptation —
FBO. .10-9-27
In a Monastery Garden (AT) —
SAG. .3-13-35
In Again-Out Again — ART
6-3-17
In Bad — AMU 2-14-18
In Borrowed Plumes — ARW
3-7-20
In Broncho Land — RA...1920
In Caliente (AT) — -FN. 6-27-35
In Early Arizona (AT) — COL
1038
In Every Woman's Life —
FN. .11-2-24
In Fast Company — TRU
6-16-24
In 40 Minutes (AT-German)
— UFA. .1938
lu Folly's Trail — U.... 8-22-20
In for Thirty Days — M. 2-2-19
In Gay Madrid (AT) — MGM
6- 22-30
In High Gear — SU 2-8 26
In His Brother's Place — M
7- 13-10
In His Steps (AT) — GN
0-22-30
In Hollywood with Potash and
Perlmutter — FN ....0-28-24
In Honor's Web — VIT .11-0-10
In Judgment ol — M... 8-25-18
In Line of Duty (AT) —
MOP. .11-20-31
In Love With Life (AT) — CHE
6-12-34
In Love with Love — F...1025
In Mizzoura — PAR ... 10 10-10
In Name Only (AT) —
RKO. .8-3-30
In Old Arizona (AT & S) —
F. .1-20-20
In Old Caliente (AT) —
REP. .7-14-30
lu Old California (AT & S) —
AUD. .9-16-29
In Old Cheyenne (AT) —
WW. .6-3-31
lu Old Chicago (AT) — F 1-4-38
In Old Kentucky — FN
12-28-19
In Old Kentucky — M-G-M
11-27-27
In Old Kentucky (AT) —
F. .7-5-35
In Old Mexico (AT) — PAR
8-2-38
In Old Montana (AT) —
SPE. .4-6-30
In Old Monterey (AT) —
REP. .8-7-39
In Old Sante Fe (AT) — MAP
11-16-34
In Old Siberia — AM... 7-28-20
17,238 TITLES
In Paris. A.W.O.L. (AT) —
ROW. .4-7-36
In Person (AT) — RKO. 11-2-35
In Pursuit of Polly — PAR 1018
In Search of Arcady — EXI 1919
In Search of a Hero — GER 1926
In Search of a Sinner — FN
3-14-20
In Search of a Thrill — M
11- 4-23
In Self Defense — GHA. 4-30-22
In Slumberland — TRI... 8-9-17
In Society — PI 1021
In Spite of Danger (AT) —
COL. .4-9-36
In the Far East (AT-
Russian) — AM. .1937
In the Headlines (AT & S) —
WA. .1929
In the Land of the Soviets
(AT) — AM. .6-28-34
In the Name of Love — PAR
8-30-25
In the Next Room (AT) —
FN. .4-6-30
In The Rough (AT-Spanish) —
XX — 1939
In the South Seas With Mr.
& Mrs. Pinehot — TPE..1930
In the Balance — VIT 1917
In the Days of St. Patrick —
KEL. .1921
In the Days of the Crusaders
(S-SE) — AM. .9-27-32
In the Diplomatic Service — M
10-26-10
In the First Degree — STE 1927
In the Hands of the Law —
BM. .4-19-17
In the Heart of a Fool — FN
1921
In the Hollow of Her Hand —
SEZ. .1918
In the Money (AT) — CHE
1-6-34
In the Name of the Law — FBO
7-16-22
In the Night — PS 1922
In the Palace of the King — ES
10-7-15
In the Palace of the King — G
12- 9-23
In Walked Mary — PAT 2-29-20
In Wien Hab Ich Einmal Ein
Maedel Geliebt (AT) —
XX. .5-29-34
In Wrong — FN 12-21-19
Incertidumbre (AT-Spanish) —
UA. .9-22-36
Incorrigible Dukane — PAR
9-9-15
Indestructible Wife — SEL . 1919
India Speaks (S-SE) — RKO
6-6-33
Indian. The (AT-Spanlsh) —
XX — 19.'J!l
Indian Tomb (AT-German) —
XX. .1038
Indianapolis Speedway (AT) —
WA. .7-26-39
Indiscreet (AT) — UA. .5-10-31
Indiscreet Corinne — TRI 11-8-17
Indisuretion — VIT 1-18-17
Indiscretion — PI 1921
Inevitable. The — ERB. .4-12-17
Inez from Hollywood — FN
12-21-24
Infamous Miss Revelle — M
9-4 21
Infatuation — AMU 9-9-15
Infatuation — FN 1-10-26
Infatuation of Youth — GAU
1021
Inferior Sex — FN 5-0-20
Infernal Machine (AT) — F
4-8-33
Infidel. The — FN 4-23-22
Infidelity (AT-Spanish) —
XX. .1939
Information Kid (AT) — U 1932
Informer. The (AT) —
RKO. .5-1-35
Ingagi — COG 3-16-31
Inge Unde Die Millionen (AT)
— UFA. .4-17-34
Inherited Passions — HGA
9-2116
Inkognito (AT-German) —
UFA. .4-19-37
Inn of the Blue Moon — SHE
8-18-18
Inner Chamber — VIT.. 9-25-21
Inner Man — SYR 1923
Inner Man — PS 1922
Inner Ring — U
Inner Shrine— PAR 8-2-17
Inner Struggle — AMU . . 6-22-16
Inner Voice — AME 3-28-20
Inner Voice — PAT 2-14-18
Innocence — CBC 1923
Innocence (AT-German) —
XX. .1939
Innocence of Ruth — EDK2-3-16
Innocent — PAT 1-17-18
Innocent Adventures — PAR
1919
Innocent Cheat — ARW . . 6-25-22
Innocent Lie — PAR .... 5-11-16
Innocent Magdalene — FAT
6-8-16
Innocent Sinner — F 8-9-17
Innocent Thief (AT-German)
UFA. .1938
Innocent's Progress — TRI
4-4-1S
Innocents of Paris (AT & S) —
PAR. .4-28-29
Inside Information (AT) —
SS. .9-25 34
Inside Information (AT) —
U. .6-23-39
Inside of the Cup — PAR
1-16-21
514
Inside of the Lines — PYR
9-1-18
Inside Story (AT) — F 10-20-38
Inside the Lines (AT) — RKO
7-13-30
Insinuation — CLR 1922
Inspector General. The (AT-
Czechoslovakian) —
GAS. . 11-29 37
Inspector Hornleigh (AT) —
F. .6-19-39
Inspector Hornleigh on Holiday
(AT) — F. .1939
Inspiration — EXP 5-27-28
Inspiration (AT) — MGM
2-8-31
Interference (AT & S) — PAR
11-18-28
Interferin" Gent — PAT ..9-4-27
Interloper — WO 6-9-18
Intermezzo (AT-Swedish) —
SCA. .12-30-37
Intermezzo (AT-German) —
AMT. .9-3-37
Intermezzo: A Love Story
(AT) — UA. .10-4-39
International Crime (AT) —
GN. .4-20-38
International House (AT) —
PAR. .5-27-33
International Marriage — PAR
8-3-16
International Settlement
(AT) — F 1-25-38
Internes Can't Take Money
(AT) — PAR. .4-12-37
Into Her Kingdom — FN 8-22-26
Into No Man's Land — EXP
9-23-28
Into the Net — PAT 1924
Into the Night — RAE . . 8-26-28
Into the Primitive — SEL
5-25-16
Intolerance 1916
Intrigue — VIT 3-15-17
Intrigue — LEV 1922
Intrigue — PAR 9-28-16
Introduce Me — AE 3-15-25
Intruder. The (AT) — ALI
3- 13-33
Intrusion of Isabel — PAT 4-6-19
Invaders (S-SE) — SYN
11-24-29
Invisible Bond — PAR 1919
Invisible Divorce — NF . . . 8-8-20
Invisible Enemy — RKO 4-20-16
Invisible Enemy (AT) — REP
4- 11-38
Invisible Fear — FN 4-2-22
Invisible Man (AT) — U
11-18-33
Invisible Menace (AT) — WA
2-16-38
Invisible Power — G.... 10-2-21
Invisible Ray. The (AT) — U
1-11-36
Invisible Stripes (AT) —
WA. .1939
Invitation to Happiness (AT) —
PAR. .5-9-39
Invitation to the Waltz (AT)
— HOB. .7-9-38
Io-Tu-Y-Ella (AT) — F 12-11-33
Ireland's Border Line (AT) —
ALW. .10-24-39
Irene — FN 3-7-26
Iris — PAT 1917
Irish and Proud of It (AT)
— GUA . . 11-7-38
Irish Destiny — EPP. .. .4-17-27
Irish Eyes — TRI 1918
Irish Hearts — WA 5-29-27
Irish in Us, The (AT) —
WA. .8-1-35
Irish Luck— PAR 11-29-25
Irish Luck (AT) — MOP
9-29-39
Irma, La Mala (At-Spanish) —
XX. .10-8-36
Iron Duke. The (AT) —
GB. .1-25-35
Iron Fist — RA 1926
Iron Hand — U
Iron Heart — PWO 8-9-17
Iron Horse — F 9-7-24
Iron Man — CHA 6-28-25
Iron Man (AT) — U.... 4-19-31
Iron Mask (PT & S) — UA
3-24-29
Iron Master (AT) — ALI
2-4-33
Iron Rider — F 11-28-20
Iron Ring — PWO 8-9-17
Iron Strain — M 10-12-16
Iron to Gold— F 3-12-22
Iron Trail — UA 11-6-21
Iron Woman — M 10-12-16
Irresistible Lover — U... 9-4-27
Is Any Girl Safe? — ANT
9-21-16
Is Divorce a Failure? — -AE
1923
Is Everybody Happy? — (AT &
S) — WA. .11-10-29
Is Life Worth Living? — SEZ
7-24-21
Is Love Everything? — AE
11-2-24
Is Matrimony a Failure? — PAR
4-23-22
Is Money Everything-? — LBR
1923
Is My Face Red (AT)
RKO. .6-11-32
Is That Nice? — FBO ....1927
Is There Justice? (AT) —
WW. .9-20-31
Is This Love (AT-Italian) —
CAT. .11-16-30
Is Zat So? — F 5-22-27
Island Captives (AT) —
PRI. .7-29-37
Island in the Sky (AT) —
F. .5-9-38
Island of Desire — F .... 1-4-17
Island of Doom (AT) — AM
7-20-33
Island of Intrigue — M ...1919
Island of Lost Men (AT) —
PAR. .9-7-39
Island of Lost Souls (AT) —
PAR. .1-12-33
Island of Regeneration — VIT
1915
Island of Surprise — VIT. 2-3-16
Island Wives — VIT 3-26-22
Isle of Conquest — SEZ .11-9-19
Isle of Destiny — RIA 1921
Isle of Doubt — AE . . . 9-17-22
Isle of Escape (AT) — WA
4-6-30
Isle of Forgotten Women —
COL. .12-4-27
Isle of Fury (AT) — WA
12-2-36
Isle of Hope — FBO . . . 8-23-25
Isle of Life — RED . . 10-26-16
Isle of Lost Men — RA . . 12-9-28
Isle of Lost Ships — FN. 3-18-23
Isle of Lost Ships (AT & S) —
FN. .10-27-29
Isle of Love — GAU ...5-18-16
Isle of Paradise (AT)-ADP
7-22-32
Isle of Retribution — FBO
7-4-26
Isle of Vanishing Men — ALD
3-16-24
Isle of Zorda — PAT ...3-12-22
Insn't Life Wonderful? — UA
12-1-24
Isobel — DAV 12-5-20
1st Mein Mann Nicht Fabelhaft
( AT-German ) — C AO
12-7-36
It — PAR 2-13-27
It Can Be Done — VIT 1921
It Can Be Done (PT & S) —
U. .4-7-29
It Can't Last Forever (AT) —
COL. .1937
It Could Happen to You (AT)
— REP. .8-18-37
It Could Happen to You (AT) —
. .6-12-39
It Couldn't Have Happened
(AT) — INV. .9-11-36
It Had to Happen (AT) — F
2-15-36
It Happened in Hollywood
(AT) — COL. .10-6-37
It Happened in Honolulu — U. .
It Happened in Paris — TY
3-7-20
It Happened in New York
(AT) — U. .3-6-35
It Happened One Night (AT)
COL. .2-23-34
It Happened Out West (AT) —
F. .6-8-37
It Happened to Adele — PAT
1917
It Is the Law — F 9-7-24
S15
17,238 TITLES
It Isn't Being Done This
Season — VIT 1921
It Might Happen to You — SEE
11-14-20
It Must Be Love — FN. 10-10-26
It Pays to Advertise — PAR
11-30-19
It Pays to Advertise (AT) —
PAR. .2-22-31
It's a Bear — TRI 3-2-19
It's a Boy (AT) — GB. . 6-8-34
It's a Gift (AT) — PAR
11-17-34
It's a Great Life — G.... 9-5-20
It's a Great Life (AT & S) —
M-G-M-. .1929
It's a Great Life (AT) — PAR
1-31-36
It's Love Again (AT) — GB
5-12-36
It's a Small World (AT) —
F. .5-21-35
It's a Wise Child (AT) —
MGM. .5-4-39
It's a Wonderful World (AT) —
MGM. .5-17-31
It's All in Your Mind (AT)
— RAY. .3-29-38
It's All Yours (AT) —
COL. .2-1-38
It's Easy to Become a Father —
UFA. .6-30-29
It's Easy to Make Money — M
7-20-19
It's Great to be Alive (AT) —
F. .7-8-33
It's in the Air (AT) —
MGM. .10-10-35
It's Love I'm After (AT) —
FN. .7-30-37
It's the Old Army Game — PAR
7-18-26
It's Tough to be Famous
(AT) — FN. .4-10-32
Italian Battle Front — FOP. 191 8
Italy Speaks (S-SE) — CUE
1933
Italy's Flaming Front — FN
1918
Itching Palms — FBO . . . 7-22-23
Itto (AT-French) — TAP. 3-2-36
Tito (AT-French) — EUK
1-30-36
Ivan (AT) — GAS 2-23-33
Ivan the Terrible — AM... 1928
I've Been Around (AT) —
U. .3-5-35
I've Got Your Number (AT) —
WA. .2-3-34
Ivory Handled Gun, The
(AT) — U. .11-19-36
Ivory Snuff — WO 9-16-15
Iza Neni (AT) — XX... 6-5-34
17,238 TITLES
J
J' Accuse — UA 5-15-21
Jack Ahoy (AT) — GB ..2-9-35
Jack and Jill — PAR . . 11-22-17
Jack and the Beanstalk — F
10-11-17
Jack Knife Man— FN ... 8-8-20
Jack O'Clubs— U 2-10-24
Jack O'Hearts — ACI ..10-17-26
Jack Rider— AY 8-14-21
Jack Spurlock-Prodigal — F.1018
Jack Straw — PAR 4-3-20
Jackie — F 11-27-21
Jacqueline or Blazing Barriers —
ARW. .5-13-23
Jacques of the Silver North —
SEL. .6-8-19
Jade Casket — COS .... 6-30-29
Jade Cup — FBO 7-11-26
Jede Frau Hat Ein Geheimnis
(AT-German) — XX. .3-24-37
Jaffery — FRO 9-14-16
Jaguar's Claws — PAR . . . 6-7-17
Jailbird — PAR 10-3-20
Jailbreak (AT) — WA... 6-8-36
Jake the Plumber — FBO
12-17-27
Jalna (AT) — RKO ....7-26-35
Jamaica Inn (AT) — PAR
10-12-39
Jan of the Big: Snows — AR
7-9-22
Jana, Das Maedchan Aus Dem
Boehmerwald (AT-German) —
TRE. .6-23-36
Jane — PAR 12-9-15
Jane Eyre (AT)— MOP. 7-17-34
Jane Eyre — HOD .... 10-16-21
Jane Goes a-Wooing — PAR
1-12-19
Jango— QDE 1929
Janice Meredith — MG. . 8-10-24
Janoslk ( AT-Czechoslovakian)
— FRM. .6-21-36
Japanese Nightingale — PAT
9-1-18
Java Head — PAR 2-11-23
Java Head (AT) — FD. . 7-31-35
Jaws of Hell (AT) — WW
I- 11-31
Jaws of Steel — WA .... 9-25-27
Jazz Age — RKO 1-13-29
Jazz Cinderella (AT) — CHE
9-28-30
Jazz Girl — MPG 6-19-27
Jazz Heaven (AT & S) — RKO
II- 3-29
Jazz Land — QU 3-10-29
Jazz Mad — U 8-26-28
Jazz Monkey — U
Jazz Singer — WA 10-23-27
Jazzmania — M 2-18-23
Jealous Husbands — FN. .2-3-24
Jealousy ( AT) — COL . . 11-23-34
Jealousy — F 11-23-16
Jealousy — UFA 10-7-28
Jealousy (AT) — PAR. .9-15-29
Jean De La Lune (AT-
French) — TOB. .3-13-32
Jeanne Dore — BL .... 1-20-16
Jeanne Dore — FFS 1928
Jeanne of the Gutter — M..1919
Jean of the Woods — WO
7-28-18
Jeannie — SEZ 1920
Jede Frau Hat Etwas (AT-
German) — PAR. .6-24-31
Jeepers Creepers (AT) —
REP. .11-1-39
Jegro Wielka Milosc (At-Polish)
— XX. .3-25-36
Jennie Gerhardt (AT) — PAR
6-9-33
Jenny Be Good — REA. .5-16-20
Jes' Call Me Jim — G. . . .5-30-20
Jesse James — PAR 10-23-27
Jesse James (AT) — F. . .1-13-39
Jew at War — AM ....7-26-31
Jewel — U 1915
Jewel in Pawn — BL. .. .4-19-17
Jewel Robbery (AT) — WA
7-23-32
Jewels of Desire — PDC. . . .1927
Jezebel (AT) — WA 3-11-38
Jilt — U 11-26-22
Jilted Janet — AMD ...2-28-18
Jim Bludso — FAT 2-1-17
Jim Grimsby's Boy — INC
10-19-16
Jim Hanvey, Detective (AT) —
REP. .5-11-37
Jim the Conqueror — PDC
1-16-27
Jim the Penman — FN. .3-27-21
Jimmie Higgins (S) — GAS
3-4-33
Jimmie'8 Millions — FBO 3-1-25
Jimmy and Sally (AT) — I"
1933
Jimmy the Gent (AT) — WA
3-26-34
Jinx — G 9-28-19
Jo As Oregr A Naznal (AT-
Hungarian) — DAN. .2-6-35
Joan of Plattsburg — G. 5-12-18
Joan of the Woods — WO 1918
Joan the Woman — PAR. 1-4-17
Joanna — FN 12-20-25
Joe and Ethel Turp Cal on the
President (AT) — MGM
12-7-39
Johanna Enlists — ART. .9-8-18
Johannisnacht (AT-German) —
XX. .2-26 35
John Barleycorn — PAR... 1914
John Ermine of Yellowstone — U
1917
John Forest Finds Himself —
HEP. .12-11-21
John Gladye's Honour — PAT
1916
516
John Guns (AT-Spanlsh) —
XX. .1938
John Meade's Woman (AT) —
PAR. .2-11-37
John Needham's Double — BL
4-13-16
John Petticoats — PAR. 11-23-19
John Smith — SEZ 1922
John, the Soldier of Vengeance
(AT-Spanish) — XX. .1939
Johnny — SEZ
Johnny Get Your Gun — ART
3- 23-19
Johnny Get Your Hair Cut —
M-G-M. .2-6-27
Johnny-on-the-Spot — M 2-23-19
Johnny Ring and the Captain's
Sword — TEM 8-28-21
Johnstown Flood — F ...3-7-26
Join the Marines (AT) —
REP. .1-4-37
Jolly Peasant — FER 1929
Jolt — F 1922
Jones Family in Hollywood
(AT) — F. .1939
Jordan in a Hard Road — FAT
11-25-15
Joselyn's Wife — EXI 1919
Josely's Wife — TD7. .. 11-14-26
Joseph in the Land of Egypt
(At-Yiddish) — GUA. .5-22-32
Josette (AT) — F 6-11-38
Journal of a Crime (AT) — FN
2-24-34
Journey's End — HOD.. 6-19-21
Journey's End — WO. . . .6-19-18
Journey's End (AT) — TIF
4- 13-30
Joy — PS
Joy and the Dragon — PAT 1916
Joyful Cruise (AT-German)
— XX. .1938
Joy Girl — F 9-11-27
Joy of Living (AT) —
RKO. .3-22-38
Joy Street (S-SE) — F. . .8-4-29
Joyous Liar — PAT 12-14-19
Joyous Troublemaker — F
8-20-20
Juarez (AT) — WA 4-26-39
Juarez and Maximilian, See:
The Mad Empress
Juarez Y Maximiliano (AT-
Spanish) — COL. .2-20-35
Jubilo — G 12-14-19
Jucklins — PAR 12-26-20
Judas (AT-Spanish) —
Judge Hardy and Son (AT) —
MGM. .12-15-39
Judge Hardy's Children
(AT) — MGM . .4-4-38
XX. .4-27-37
Judge Not — D 9-16-16
Judge Priest (AT) — F. . 8-13-34
Judgment — WO 10-2-21
Judgment Book. The (AT) —
BED. .10-17-35
Judgment House -PAR
11- 2917
Judgement of God (AT)-
Finnish) — XX. .1939
Judgment of the Hills — FBO
8-14-27
Judgment of the Storm — FBO
12- 30-23
Judith of the Cumberlands — MT
8- 10-16
Judy Forgot — U 1915
Judy of Rogue's Harbor —
RBA. .2-8-20
Jusend (AT-German) —
XX. .1939
Juggernaut — VIT 1915
Juggernaut (AT) — GN ..5-7-37
Jules of the Strong Heart —
PAR. .1-24-18
Juliet a Compra un Hijo (AT-
Spanish)— F. .3-27-35
Julius Caesar KLE. .2-12-22
June Madness — M 10-1-22
June Moon (AT) — PAR
3-15-31
Jungfrau Gegen Moenich (AT-
German) — UFA. .3-19 35
Jungle Adventures — SEZ
9- 18-21
Jungle Bride (AT) — MOP
5-13-33
Jungle Child — INC 9-14-16
Jungle Gentleman — U
Jungle Killer, The (AT) —
CEN. .11-26-32
Jungle Princess, The (AT) —
PAR. .11-20-36
Jungle Trial — F 4-13-19
Juno and the Payeock (AT) —
BI. .6-29-30
Jury of Fate — M 8-16-17
Jury's Secret (AT) — U. . 1-18-38
Just a Gigolo (AT) — MGM
6 14-31
Just a Song at Twilight — PS
1922
Just a Wife — SEZ 1920
Just a Woman — FN. . . .5-31-25
Just a Woman — STG .... 5-2-18
Just Another Blond — FN
12-19-26
Just Around the Corner — PAR
1-8-22
Just Around the Corner
(AT) — F. .11-2-38
Just For a Song (AT) —
WW. .4-26-31
Just for Tonight — G 1918
Just Imagine (AT) — F
10-19-30
Just Jim — U 1915
Just Like a Woman — HOD
3-18-23
Just Like a Woman (AT) —
ALL. .1939
Just Like Heaven (AT) — TIF
10-10-30
Just Like the Leaves (AT — -
Italian) — XX. .1938
Just Married — PAR. .. .8-19-28
Just My Luck (AT) — COR
1935
Just My Luck (AT) — COR
1- 15-36
Just Off Broadway — F. .2-3-24
Just Off Broadway — CHE
2- 10-29
Just Out of College — G 2-13-21
Just Outside the Door — SEZ
1921
Just Pals — F 11-21-20
Just Smith (AT) — GB. .4-24-34
Just Squaw — EXI 1919
Just Suppose — FN 1-24-26
Just Sylvia — WO 11-24-18
Just Tony — F 8-20-22
Just Travelin' — SIE 1926
Justice of Pancho Villa
(AT-Spanish) — XX. .1939
Justice of the Range (AT) —
COL. .6-4-35
Justice Raffles — HEP 1924
Justice Takes a Holiday
(AT) — MAF. .4-19-33
Juvenile Court (AT) —
COL. .9-15-38
K
K-The Unknown — U... 8-31-24
Kadetten (AT) — FIM. 12-29-33
Kaiser in Peace and War, The
R. .2-2-30
Kaiser, The — The Beast of
Berlin — U 3-14-18
Kaiser's Finish — WA. . 12-15-18
Kaiser's Shadow — PAR 6-23-18
Kaiserliebchen (AT-German)
— TOB. .11-15-31
Kaiserwalzer (AT-German) —
GFS. .1-3-35
Kalda Ruby — SEZ
Kameraden Auf See (AT-
German) — UFA. .1939
Kameradschaft (AT-German) —
ASS. .11-10-32
Kansas City Princess (AT) —
WA. .11-3 34
Kara Slakten (AT) — XX
5-16-34
Kansas Terrors, The (AT) —
REP. .10-19-39
Karamazov (AT-German) —
TOB. .9-27-31
Karl Fredrik Regerar
(AT-Swedlsh) — XX. .2-4-38
Karneval Und Liebe (AT-
German) — LEN. .4-7-36
Kathleen (AT) — HOB. . .1-27-38
Kathleen Mavoureen — F ..1919
Kathleen Mavoureen (AT) —
TIF. .7-20-30
Katia (AT-French) — MAB.1939
Kautscb.uk (AT-German) —
UFA. .1030
517
17,238 TITLES
Kazan — EPI 2-20-21
Keep 'Em Rolling (AT) —
RKO. .3-1-34
Keep Going — SIE 1926
Keep Moving — EDK. . . 11-25-15
Keep Goin" — SIE 1928
Keep Going — PIZ 1928
Keep Smiling — AE 7-19-26
Keep Smiling (AT) — F. .6-13-38
Keeper of the Bees — FBO
11-8-25
Keeper of the Bees (AT) —
MOP. .6-11-35
Keepers of Youth (AT) —
POP. .3-13-32
Keeping Up With Lizzie —
HOD. .5-15-21
Keine Angst Vor Liebe (AT-
German) -XX. .1-22-36
Keine Feier Ohne Meyer (AT)-
German) — UNG. .11-2-32
Keith of the Border — TRI
3-7-18
Kelly of the Secret Service
(AT) — VIC. .1935
Kelly of the Secret Service
(AT) — PRI. .7-22-36
Kelly the Second (AT) — M-G-M
4-21-36
Kennedy Square — VIT. .2-17-16
Kennel Murder Case (AT) —
WA. .10-28-33
Kentuckians — PAR ...2-13-21
Kentucky (AT)— F 12-20-38
Kentucky Blue Streak (AT) —
PUR. .6-7 36
Kentucky Cinderella — BL
6-28-17
Kentucky Colonel — HOD
9-19-20
Kentucky Days — F 3-2-24
Kentucky Derby — U... 10-22-22
Kentucky Handicap — RA . 1926
Kentucky Kernels (AT) — RKO
11- 22-34
Kentucky Moonshine (AT)
— F. .5-3-38
Kentucky Pride — F 8-23-25
Kept Husbands (AT) —
RKO. .2-8 31
Keseru Kezeshetek (AT-
Hungarian) — DAN. .10-25-39
Ket Fgoly ( AT-Hungrarian) —
HUN. .1-19-39
Key, The (AT) — WA.. 5-31-34
Key to Power — EDU. . 12-16-18
Keyhole. The (AT) — WA
3 31-33
Keys of the Righteous — PAR
1918
Kibitzer, The (AT) — PAR
12- 22-29
Kick-Back — FBO 7-30-22
Kick In — PAR 12-24-23
Kick In — PAT 1-11-17
17,238 TITLES
Kick In (AT) — PAR.. 5-24-31
Kick -Off — EXP 9-5-26
Kid— VIT 8-2X-1C
Kid — FN 1-16-20
Kid Boots — PAR 10-31-26
Kid Brother — PAR. . . . 1-30-27
Kid Comes Back (AT) —
WA. .2-9-38
Kid Courageous (AT) —
STI. .7-5-35
Kid Prom Arizona (AT)
COS. .5-10-31
Kid From Kokomo, The (AT)
WA. .5-23-39
Kid from Spain (AT) — UA
11-19-32
Kid Prom Texas. The (AT)
MGM. .4-4-39
Kid Galahad (AT) —
WA. .5-4-37
Kid Gloves (Pt & S) — WA
6-23-29
Kid Millions (AT) — UA
10-17-34
Kid Nightingale (AT)
WA. .12-11-39
Kid Is Clever — P 6-30-18
Kid Sister — COL 9-11-27
Kidder & Ko. — PAT 6-9-18
Kid's Clever — UNI 3-3-29
Kidnaping- Gorillas (AT) KIT
12-1-34
Kidnapped (AT) — F.... 5-28-38
Kif Tebbi — AID 1929
Kiki— PN 4-11-26
Kiki (AT) — UA 3-8-31
Kildare of Storm — M . . . 9-29-18
Kill-Joy — KES 1917
Killer— PAT 1-30-21
Killer at Large (AT) — COL
10-27-36
Killers of the Sea (AT) —
GN. .6-11-37
Killing to Live (AT) — AM
12-20-31
Kimiko (AT-Japanese) —
INT. .4-16-37
Kincaid, Gambler —
Kind Lady (AT) —
MGM. .12-27-35
Kinderarzt Dr. Engel (AT-
German) — CAS. .9-27-37
Kindled Courage — U 1923
Kindred of the Dust — PN
9-3-22
King and the Chorus Girl, The
(AT)— WA. .2-25-37
King Cowboy — PBO 1928
King Fisher's Roost — PIN 1922
King for a Night (AT) — U
12-9-33
King Kelly of the U. S. A.
(AT) — MOP. .9-11-34
King Kong (AT) — RKO
2-25-33
King Lear — PAT 12-14-16
King Murder, The (AT) —
CHE. .10-10-32
King of Alcatraz (AT) —
PAR. .10-12-38
King of Burlesque (AT) —
P. .12-26-35
Kin? of Chinatown (AT) —
PAR. .3-21-39
King of Diamonds — VIT
10- 13-18
King of Gamblers (AT) —
PAR. .4-16-37
King of Hockey (AT) — WA
11-3-36
King of Jazz (AT) — U
3-30-30
King of Kings — PAT. ... 5-1-27
King of the Arena (AT) — U
8-23-33
King of the Campus (PT) — U
1929
King of the Damned (AT) — GB
2-1-36
King of the Herd — MAT.. 1929
King of the Jungle (AT) —
PAR. .2-25-33
King of the Newsboys
(AT) — REP. .3-30-38
King of the Pack — LUM
11- 14 26
King of the Pecos (AT) — REP
1936
King of the Rodeo — U 1-20-29
King of the Royal Mounted
(AT) — P. .9-29-36
King of the Saddle — AE..1926
King of the Turf — FBO. 3-7-26
King of the Turf (AT) —
UA. .2-9-39
King of the Underworld (AT) —
WA. .1-13-39
King of the Wild Horses (AT)
— COL. .3-21-34
King of Wild Horses — PAT
3-30-24
King on Main Street — PAR
11-1-25
King Queen Joker — PAR
6-5-21
King Solomon's Mines (AT) —
GB. .7-2-37
King Solomon of Broadway
(AT) — U. .10-19-35
King Spruce — HOD 3-20-20
King Steps Out, The (AT) —
COL. .5-18-36
King's Creek Law — STE..1924
King's Game — PAT. ... 1-13-16
King's People, The (AT) —
COA. .6-14-37
King's Vacation (AT) — WA
1-20-33
Kingdom of Love — P. . . 1-10-18
Kingdom of Youth — G 10-13-18
Kingdom Within — HOD
12-24-22
Kinkain. Gambler — RED
11-30-16
518
Kirwchen In Den Nachbar'n
Garten (AT-German ) —
XX. .5-18-37
Kismet — RC 10-31-20
Kismet (AT) — PN 11-2-30
Kiss — PAR 1921
Kiss — U 7-3-21
Kiss (S-SE) — M-G-M 11-17-29
Kiss and Make Up (AT) —
PAR. .6-30 34
Kiss Barrier — P 5-17-25
Kiss Before the Mirror (AT) —
U. .5-13-3.)
Kiss for Cinderella — PAR
1-3-26
Kiss for Susie — PAR.. 9-27-17
Kiss in a Taxi — PAR.. 3-27-27
Kiss in the Dark — PAR
4-19 25
Kiss in Time — REA .... 0-19-21
Kiss Me Again — WA .... 8-9-25
Kiss Me Again (AT) — FN
1- 11-31
Kiss Me Goodbye (AT) —
CEL. .11-30 35
Kiss of Hate — M 4-13-16
Kiss or Kill — U 11-24-18
Kissed — U 1922
Kisses 1922
Kit Carson — PAR 9-23-28
Kit Carson Over the Great
Divide — SU 1926
Kitty (PT & S) — WW 6-30-29
Kitty Kelly, M.D. — RC...1929
Kitty Mackay — VIT. ... 2-22-17
Kivalina of the Icelands — PAT
7-6-25
Klart Till Diabbning (AT-
Swedish) — SCA. .12-16 37
Klein Dorit (AT-German) —
BAU. .10-21-35
Kleines Bezirksgericht (AT-
German ) — UFA . .1939
Kliou. (lie Killer —
DUW. .8 -23-37
Klondike (AT) — MOP 9-24-32
Klondike Annie (AT) — PAR
2- 10-36
Knickerbocker Buckaroo — ART
6-1-19
Knife — SEL 2-21-18
Knight of the Plains
(AT) — SPE. .1938
Knight of the Range— U
2-3-16
Knight of the West — COD
10-30-21
Knight Without Armor (AT) —
UA. .7-9-37
Knights of the Square Table —
EDK. .7-26-17
Knock on the Door — CAP
9-30-23
Knockout — FN 11-8-25
Knockout Kid — RA 1925
Knockout Riley — PAR . 4-24-27
Know Your Man — P... 3-20-21
Kocha. Lubi, Szanuje (AT) —
XX. .11-6-34
Kochaj Tylko Mnie (AT-
Polish)— XX. .4-22-37
Koenigrin Der Liebe (AT-
German) — UFA. .5-5-36
Koenigin Der Unterwelt (AT-
German) — GLD. .12-14-32
Koeszoenoem Hogy Elgazolt
(AT-Hungarian) — XX. .5-9-35
Kol Nidre (AT-Yiddish) —
XX. .1939
Konga, The Wild Stallion (AT)
— COL. .1939
Kongro (AT) — MGM . . 11-17-32
Konjunkturriter (AT-German)
— XX. .4-29-35
Kosher Kitty Kelly— FBO
9-26-26
Krach Im Iolanthe (AT-
German) — GFS. .5-14-35
Krach Im Hinterhaus (AT-
German) — GEG. .12-16-37
Krassin (The Rescue Ship) —
AM. .4-21-29
Kreutzer Sonata — F 1915
Kreutzer Sonata — RUS...1928
Kreutzer Sonata (AT-
French) — FCA. .12-23-38
Kreuzer Emden (AT-German) —
WOD. .9-9-32
Kriemhild's Revenge — UFA
10-28-28
Ksiazatko (AT-Polish) —
STA. .1-13-38
Kuhle Wampe (AT) — KIT
4-26-33
Kultur — F 9-22-18
Kyritz-Pyritz (AT-German) —
WOD. .8-9-32
Kustens Glada Kavaljerer (AT-
Swedish) — SCA. .7-13-39
L
L'Agonie des Aigles (AT) —
DUW. .12-5-34
L'Albero de Adamo (AT-
Italian) — CIL. .2-1-38
L'Alibi (AT-French) —
COL. .4-14-39
L'Amore Che Canta (AT-
Italian) — WO. .4-8-37
L'Amour Maitre des Choses —
(AT-French) — CAP. .4-5-31
L'Ang-e Gardien (AT) — TAP
4-20-34
L' Apache — PAR 12-14-19
L'Aria del Continente (AT-
Italian) — ESP. .11-29-39
L' Autre (AT) — TOB 3-4-33
L'Avvocato Difensore (AT-
Italian) — XX. .11-14-35
L'Eridita Dello Zio (AT-
Italian) — MPS. .7-5-35
La Hermana San Sulpieio
(AT-Spanish) — XX. .4-27-37
L'Homme Des Folies Bergrere
(AT-French) — UA . .4-21-36
L'Invitation au Voyage — FGA
1928
L'ltalia Parla (AT) — CUE
2-20-33
L'Opera de Quat Sous (AT) —
WA. .12-11-33
L'Ordonnance (AT-French) —
XX. .7-2-35
L'Uomo Che Sorride (AT-
Italian) — NUO. 4-27-37
La Bataille (AT) — TAP
7- 10-34
La Belle Russe — F 9-21-19
La Boheme — M-G-M 3-7-26
La Buenaventura (AT) — WA
9-18-34
La Calandria (AT-Spanish) —
— XX. .10-13-36
La Caneion del Dia (AT) — XX
8- 28-33
La Canzone Dell-Amore (AT-
Italian) — CRE. .1-25-31
La Ch ance ( AT-French ) —
PAR. .6-5-32
La Cieca Di Sorrento (AT-
Italian) — NUO. .8-4-36
La Ciudad de Carton (AT) — F
2-28-34
La Conzione Del Sole (AT-
Italian) — NUO. .5-7-36
La Couturiere De Luneville
(AT-French) — PAR. .10-14-32
La Crime E Sorrisi (AT-
Italian ) — WO. .12-18-36
La Crise est Finie (AT-
French) — XX. .3-13-35
La Cruz y la Espada (AT) —
F. .2-0 34
La Dame Aux Camelias (AT-
French) — DUW. .3-21-35
La Damincella di Bard (AT-
Italian) — CIL. .2-10-38
La Donna D'una Notte (AT) . .
POR. .3-13-33
La Douceur D' Aimer (AT-
French) — FD. .12-13-31
La Familia Dressel (AT-
Spanish) — COL. .5-5-36
La Femme Nue (AT) — XX
8-28-33
La Frochard et les deux
Orphelines (AT) — XX 2-8-34
La Fusee (AT) — TAP. 3-15-34
La Inmaculada (AT-Spanish) —
UA. .7-19-39
La Isla Maldita (AT-Spanish) —
XX. .12-3-35
La Jaula de los Leones (AT-
Spanish) — HOB. .3-8-31
La Kermesse Heroique (AT-
French) — AMT. .9-24-36
La La Lucille — U 7-18-20
La Ley del Haren (AT) — F
6-20-33
La Llorna (AT-Spanish) —
XX. .7-24-35
La Maestrina (AT-Italian)
— ROC. .5-9-38
519
17,238 TITLES
La Marcia Nuziale (AT-
Italian) — FRA. .2-28-36
La Maternelle (AT) — TAP
4- 24-34
La Maternelle (AT-French) —
TAP. .10-17-35
La Melodia Prohibida (AT) — F
10- 10-33
La Mujer Del Puerto (AT-
Spanish) — XX. .8-25-36
La Noche del Pecado (AT) — C
12-29-33
La Nuit Est a Nous (AT-
French) — PRX. .2-22-31
La Paloma (AT-German) —
CAO. .10-22-36
La Porteuse De Pain (AT-
French) — LEN. .7-2-36
La Regina Di Sparta (PT-
Italian) — BOT. .3-8-31
La Ronde Des Heures (AT-
French) — FD. .1-31-32
La Sangre Manda (AT) —
XX. .5-16-34
La Signora Di Tutti (AT-
Italian) — XX. .4-1-36
La Sombra de Pancho Villa
(AT) — COL. .1-9-34
La Straniera (AT-Italian) —
CAP. .4-19-31
La Tosca — PAR 4-18-18
La Ultima Cita (AT-Spanish)
—COL. .1-23-36
La Vacanza Del Diavolo (AT-
Italian) — PAR. .3-22-31
La Vecchie Signora (AT-
Italian) — EPA. .12-1-32
La Vie De Boheme — BRA
6-15-16
La Vierge Folle (AT-French) —
WAS. .1-18-39
La Violetera (AT-Spanish-
French) — XX. .1-15-35
La Voce Lontana (AT-Italian)
— XX. .4-27-37
La Voce del Sangue (AT) —
SYA. .4-19-33
La Wally (AT-Italian) —
XX. .1-24-39
La Zandunga (AT-Spanish)
— XX. .3-17-38
Labyrinth — EQU ....12-23-15
Lac Aux Dames (AT-French) —
FRA. .1-16-36
Lachende Erben (AT) — UFA
11- 27-3M
Lad and the Lion — SEL
5- 24-17
Ladder Jinx — VIT 10-15-22
Ladder of Lies — PAR. .7-11-20
Laddie — FBO 8-22-26
Laddie (AT) — RKO 3-19-35
Laddie Be Good — PAT
12- 25-27
17,238 TITLES
Ladies at Ease — Fn... 10-0 27
Ladies at Play — FN ... 12-12-26
Ladies Beware — FBO 1927
Ladies Crave Excitement (AT)
— MAP. .6-17-35
Ladies in Distress (AT) —
REP. .7-20-38
Ladies In Love (AT) — CHE
5 4-30
Ladies in Love (AT) — P
10- 29 36
Ladies Love Brutes (AT) —
PAR. .6-18-30
Ladies Love Danger (AT) —
F. . 1935
Ladies Man (AT) — PAR
5-3-31
Ladies Must Dress — F 12-17-27
Ladies Must Live — PAR
12-4-21
Ladies Must Love (AT) — U
11- 16-33
Ladies Must Play (AT) —
COL. .8-24-30
Ladies Night in a Turkish Bath
FN. .3-18-28
Ladies of Leisure — COL.. 1926
Ladies of Leisure (AT) —
COL. .4-13-30
Ladies of the Big House
(AT) — PAR. .1-3-32
Ladies of the Jury (AT
RKO. .4-3-32
Ladles of the Mob — PAR
6- 24-28
Ladies of the Night Club —
TIF. .7-22-28
Ladies They Talk About
(AT) — WB. .2-25-33
Ladies to Board — F.... 2-10-24
Ladies Should Listen (AT) —
PAR. .7-28-34
Lady — FN 2-1-25
Lady and Gent (AT) — PAR
7- 16 32
Lady and the Mob, The (AT) —
COL — 4-13-39
Lady Behave (AT) —
REP. . 12-22-37
Lady Barnacle — M 6-21-17
Lady Be Careful (AT) — PAR
10-10 36
Lady Be Good — FN 6-3-28
Lady Bird — CHA 4-3-27
Lady by Choice (AT) — COL
10-6-34
Lady Consents. The (AT) —
RKO. .1-14-36
Lady Escapes. The (AT) —
F. . 1937
Ladyflngers — M -10-9-21
Lady Fights Back, The (AT) —
U. .11-10-37
Lady for a Day (AT) — COL
8-9-33
Lady from Hell — AE... 4-4-26
Lady from Longaere — F..1922
Lady From Nowhere (AT) —
CHE. .7-10-31
Lady From Nowhere (AT) —
COL. .12-23-36
Lady from Paris — AY.. 10-9-27
Lady Godiva — AE 6-14-22
Lady in Ermine — FN.. 1-23-27
Lady in Love — PAR. . .5-23-20
Lady in Scarlet. The (AT) —
CHE. .12-21-35
Lady in the Morgue (AT) —
V. .5-12-38
Lady in the Library — RAL
1917
Lady is Willing- (AT) — COL
8- 11-34
Lady Killer (AT) — WB
12-28-33
Lady Lies (AT & S) — PAR
9-8-29
Lady Luck (AT) — CHE
9- 14-36
Lady Objects (AT) —
COL. .10 12-38
Lady of Chance (PT & S) —
M-G-M. .1-20-29
Lady of Petrofrrad — AFF
9-16 28
Lady of Quality — U... 12-16-23
Lady of Quality — PAR... 1914
Lady of Red Butte — PAR
5-25-19
Lady of Scandal. The (AT) —
MGM. .6-1-30
Lady of Secrets (AT) — COL
2- 21-36
Lady of the Dugout — JEN
10-13-18
Lady of the Harem — -PAR
8-22-26
Lady of the Lake. The — FIT
10-12-30
Lady of the Night— MG
3- 15-25
Lady of the Pavements (PT
& S)— UA. .3-17-29
Lady of the Photograph —
EDK. .9-16-17
Lady of the Tropics (AT) —
MGM . . 8-15-39
Lady Raffles — COL 7-16-28
Lady Refuses (AT) — RKO
2 15-31
Lady Robinhood — FBO
7-16-25
Lady Rose's Daughter — PAR
9-5-20
Lady Surrenders. A (AT) —
U. .9-21-30
Lady to Love. A (AT) — -
MGM. .3-2-30
Lady Tubbs (AT) — U... 7-2-35
Lady Vanishes (AT) —
GB. . 10-5-38
Lady Who Dared (AT) —
FN. .6-7-31
520
Lady Who Lied — FN... 7-12-25
Lady Windemere's Fan — TRI
6-8-1 9
Lady Windemere's Fan — WA
12-6-25
Lady with a Past (AT) —
RKO. .2-21-32
Lady's From Kentucky, The
(AT) — PAR. .5-1-39
Lady's Morals. A (AT)
MGM. .11-9-30
Lady's Name — SEL. .. 12-15-18
Lady's Profession. A (AT) —
PAR. .3-25 33
Lafayette. We Come — AFF
9-15-18
Laffin' Fool — RA 1927
Lahoma — PAT 8-29-20
Lair of the Wolf — BU.. 9-6-17
Lamb — FAT 9-30-15
Lamb and the Lion — EXI
1919
Lamp in the Desert — CBC
1923
Lamplighter — F 4-10-21
Lancer Spy (AT) — F ..10-5-37
Lancieri de Savoia (AT-
Italian) — XX. .3-10-38
Land Beyond the Law — FN
7-3-27
Land Beyond the Law (AT) —
WA. .1937
Land Jrst Over Yonder —
DDD. .10 26-16
Land of Fighting Men
(AT) — MOP. .1938
Land of Hope — PAR 1921
Land of Jazz — F 1-16-21
Land of Liberty — MPPDA
6-14-39
Land of Long Shadow — ■
ES. .6-28-17
Land of Midnight Sun — NOR
1930
Land of Missing Men (AT) —
TIF. .10-5-30
Land of Promise — PAR
12-20-17
Land of Promise (PT) —
BLZ. .11-19 35
Land of the Free — F
Land of the Lawless — PAT
12-17-27
Land of the Silver Pox — -WA
12-23-28
Land of Wanted Men (AT) —
MOP. .2-21-32
Landloper — M 4-18-18
Landon's Legacy — D . . 12-30-15
Lane That Had No Turning —
PAR. .1-15-22
Laramie Kid (AT) — COE 1935
Larceny on the Air (AT) —
REP. .1-15 37
Larceny Lane (AT) — WA 1931
Lariat Kid — U 4-28-29
Lariats and Six Shooters (AT)
— COS. .10-25-31
Larsson I Andra Giftet (AT-
Swedish) — EUP. .10-21-35
Las Companas Capistrano
(AT-Spanish)— HOB. .11-29-31
Las Fronteras del Amor (AT)
— F. .12-5-34
Lasca — U 11-23-1!)
Lasca of the Rio Grande
(AT)— U. .12-13-31
Lash — PAR 10-12-16
Lash (AT) — FN 1-4-31
Lash of the Czar — AM
2-17-20
Lash of the Whip — ARW 1024
Lash of Power — BL. . . 11-8-17
Lash of the Pen! ten, tea (AT) —
TEL. .3-10-37
Last Act — TRI 3-16-16
Last Alarm — RA 1926
Last Assignment. The (AT) —
VIC. .5-1-36
Last Card — M 10-26-16
Last Chance — CAN 1922
Last Chance — CHE 1026
Last Command — PAR... 2-6-28
Last Company, The (AT) — •
UFA. .1931
Last Dance (AT) — AUD
4-6-30
Last Days of Pompeii (AT) —
RKO. . 10-3-35
Last Desire (AT-French) —
TRA. .12-28-39
Last Door — SEZ 6 26-21
Last Edition — FBO. . . 10 16-25
Last Effort (AT-Chinese) —
XX. .1938
Last Express (AT) — U. 10-14-38
Last Fligrht (AT) — FN 8-23-31
Last Fligrht — WIK .... 6-23-29
Last Frontier — PDC 1926
Last Gangster, The (AT) —
MGM. .11-9-37
Last Gentleman (AT) — UA
4-28-34
Last Hour — MAS 1-7-23
Last Insult. The (S) — AM
10-26-32
Last Journey. The (AT) — -ATN
4-27-36
Last Lap — DAI 1928
Last Laugh — U 1-4-25
Last Love (AT-German) —
XX. .1938
Last Man (AT) — COL 9-17-32
Last Man — VIT 10-26-16
Last Man on Earth — F
12-28-24
Last Meeting:. The (AT-Spanish)
— XX. .1939
Last Melody. The (AT-Spanish)
— XX. .1939
Last Mile (AT) — WW. 8-26-32
Last Moment — G 5-27-23
Last Moment — ZAK .... 3-11-28
Last Night. The (AT-Russian)
AM. .5-3-37
Last Warning. The (AT) —
U. .1939
Last of His People — SEZ
12-21-19
Last of Mrs. Cheney (PT &
S) — MGM. .8-18-20
Last of Mrs. Cheyney. The
(AT) — MGM . .2-19-37
Last of the Carnabys — PAT
8-9-17
Last of the Clintons (AT) —
AJ. .11-12-35
Last of the Duanes — F
10-5-19
Last of the Duanes — F 8-17-24
Last of the Duanes (AT) —
F. .9-14-30
Last of the Ingrams — INC
2-15-17
Last of the Lone Wolf (AT) —
COL. .10-19-30
Last of the Mohicans — APR
11-28-20
Last of the Mohicans, The
(AT) — UA. .8-12-36
Last of the Pagans (AT) —
MGM. .12-11-35
Last of the Warrens (AT) —
SUM. .7-2-36
Last Outlaw — PAR. .. 12-26-27
Last Outlaw, The (AT) — -RKO
6 3-36
Last Outpost, The (AT) —
PAR. .9-27-35
Last Payment — PAR ... 1-22-22
Last Parade (AT) — COL
3-1-31
Last Performance (PT & S) —
U. .11-10-29
Last Rebel — TRI 6-9-18
Last
Ride (AT)
— U. . .
2-14-32
Last
Round Up
(AT)-
-PAR
5-11-34
Last
Roundup —
5YN . .
8-25-29
Last
Stand. The
(AT)-
U
.6-3 38
Last
Last
Last
Trail — F
1922
Last
Trail (AT)
— F. . .
12-1-33
Last
Train from
Madrid, The
(AT)-
-PAR.
6-11-37
Last
Volunteer—
-PAT
Last Waltz — PAR 11-20-27
Last Warning- (PT & S) — U
1-13-20
Last Warning- (AT) — U. 12-7-38
Last Wilderness. The (AT) —
DUW. .6-16-35
Late Mathias Pascal (AT-
French) — FRM. .1937
Latest from Paris — MGM
3-11-28
Laugrh and Get Rich (AT) —
RKO. .3-22-31
Laugh, Clown, Laugrh — MGM
6-3-28
Laug-h Doctor (AT-German)
— CAO. .1938
521
17,238 TITLES
Laugh It Off (AT) —
U. .12-21-39
Laughing- at Dancer — FBO
1925
Laughing at Death — RKO
6-9-29
Laughing at Life (AT) — MAO
7- 12-33
Laughing at Trouble (AT) —
F. . 1-6-37
Laughing Bill Hyde — G
0- 29-18
Laughing Boy (AT) — MGM
5- 12-34
Laughing Irish Eyes (AT) —
REP. .3-4-36
Laughing Lady, the (AT) —
PAR. .1-5-30
Laughing Sinners (AT) —
MGM. .7-5-31
Laughter (AT) — PAR 9-21-3C
Laughter and Tears — PS
Laughter in Hell (AT) — U
1932
Laughter Through Tears
(S-SE) — WOK. .11-16-3:1
Laukenkolnie (AT) — GEF
6-9-33
Lavender and Old Lace — HOD
6-1-21
Lavender Bath Lady — U
11-12-22
Law and Lawless (AT) — MAJ
4-12-33
Law and Order (AT) — U
3-6-32
Law and the Lady — -AY
11-30-24
Law and the Man — RA 2-5-28
Law and the Woman — PAR
1- 22-22
Law Beyond the Range (AT) —
COL. .4-17-35
Law Comes to Texas (AT) —
COL. . 1930
Law Decides — VIT. .. .4-27-16
Law Demands — ARC .... 1924
Law Forbids — U 3-2-24
Law in Her Hands, The (AT)
— FN. .6-6-3(5
Law of Compensation — -SEL
4-26-17
Law of Fear — FBO. .. .3-11-28
Law of Loyalty — DAV. 10-11-25
Law of Men — PAR 1910
Law of Nature — ARW .1-19-10
Law of the Great Northwest —
TRI. .4-25 18
Law of the Land — PAR
8- 23-17
Law of the Lawless — -PAR
6- 24-23
Law of the Mounted — SYN
6-30-20
17,238 TITLES
Law ol the North — EDK
4-6-17
Law of the North (AT) —
MOP. .8-20-32
Law of the North — PAR
9-16-18
Law of the Pampas (AT) —
PAR. .10-17-39
Law of the Plains (AT) —
COL. .7-27-38
Law of the Range — M-G-M
6- 24-28
Law of the Ranger (AT) —
COL. .6-11-37
Law of the Rio Grande (AT)
— SYN. .8-9-31
Law of the Sea (AT) —
MOP. .5-1-32
Law of the Siberian Taiga —
AM. .8-10-30
Law of the Texan (AT) —
COL. .10-27-38
Law of the Tone: (AT) —
SYN. .12-20-31
Law of the Underworld
(AT) — RKO. .4-30-38
Law of the West (AT) —
WW. .3-20-32
Law of the Yukon — REA
9-19-20
Law Rustlers — ARW ..3-18-23
Law That Divides — HOD. 1919
Law That Failed — APO.3-29-17
Law Unto Herself — HOD
8-18-18
Law Unto Himself — HMU
3-2-16
Law West of Tombstone
(AT) — RKO. .11-15-38
Law's Lash — PAT 3-25-28
Law's Outlaw — TRI . . 1-10-18
Lawful Cheaters— SCH
12-20-25
Lawful Larceny — PAR .7-28-23
Lawful Larceny (AT) — RKO
7- 13-30
Lawless Border (AT) —
SPE. .12-11-35
Lawless Frontier (AT) —
MOP. .1-3-35
Lawless Land (AT) —
REP. .4-6-37
Lawless Leg-ion — FN ..3-31-29
Lawless Love — F 9-8-18
Lawless Nineties. The (AT) —
REP. .2-29-36
Lawless Range (AT) — ■
REP. .1935
Lawless Riders (AT) —
COL.. 1935
Lawless Trails — GON 1926
Lawless Valley (AT) —
RKO. .1938
Lawless Woman (AT)
CHE. .4-26-31
Lawman Is Born, A (AT) —
REP. .6-28-37
Lawyer Man (AT) — WA
12-23-32
Lawyer Quince — PAR
Lawyer's Secret (AT) —
PAR. .5-31-31
Lazy Lightning — U 1926
Lazy River (AT) — MGM
4-3-34
Lazybones — F 10-18-26
Le Bal (AT-French) — PRX
9-29-32
Le Barbier de Seville (AT-
French) — XX. .9-24-36
Le Bonheur (At-French) —
FRA. .2-29-36
Le Chasseur de Chez Maxim's
(AT-French) — PAR. .2-6-35
Le Collier De La Reine
(PT-French) — PRX. .2-8-31
Le Culte De Beaute (AT-
French) — OSO. .6-7-31
Le Dernier Milliardaire (AT-
French) — FRN. .10-22-35
Le Gendre de M. Poirier (AT-
French) — FRM. .1937
Le Grand Refrain (AT-
French) — MOD 1938
Le Juif Polonias (AT-French)
— FRA . . 9-24-37
Le Medecin Malgre Lui (AT-
French) — FRM . .1937
Le Million (AT-French) —
TOB. .5-24-31
Le Mystere de la Chambre
Jaune (AT-French) — OSO
6-31-31
Le Mystere De La Villa Rose
(AT-French) — FD. .1-17-32
Le Petit Cafe (AT-French) —
PAR. .1-25-31
Le Prince Jean (AT-French) —
XX. .12-14-36
Le Quai Brumes (AT-French) —
FIA. .11-1-39
Le Roi Des Resquilleurs (AT-
French) — PRX. .6-15-32
Le Roi S'ennuie (AT-French)
— RKO. .2-8-31
Le Sang D'un Poete (AT) —
XX. .11-13-33
Le Searpe Al Sole (AT-Italian)
— NUO. .1936
Le Serment (AT) — PRX
3-15-34
Le Sorprese di un Matrimonio
(AT-Italian) — XX. .10-20-39
Leah-Kleshna — PAR
League of Frightened Men
(AT) — COL. .5-25-37
Leanyvari Boszorkany (AT-
Hungarian) — HUN. .11-29-39
Leap to Fame — PWO. .5-2-18
Learnin' of Jim Benton — TRI
12-20-17
Learning to Love — FN . . 1-26-26
522
Leatherneck (Pt & S) — PAT
4-7-29
Leatherneeking (AT) — RKO
9- 14-30
Leathernecks Have Landed, The
(AT) — REP. .2-17-36
Leave It to Gerry — AHR
2-24-24
Leave it to Me — F.... 5-2-20
Leave It To Susan — GO
Leavenworth Case — VIT
11-18-23
Leavenworth Case, The (AT) —
REP. .1-6-36
Leech — P 1922
Left Hand Brand — NEW.. 1924
Leftover Ladies (AT) —
TIF. .10-18-31
Legally Dead — U 8-12-23
Legend of Bear's Wedding —
AM. .12-23-18
Legend of Costa Berling — CP
11- 4-28
Leghorn Hat, The (AT-
German) — XX. .1939
Legion of Death — M ....1918
Legion of Hollywood — PDC
12- 7-24
Legion of Honor — PAR
7- 29-28
Legion of Lost Flyers (AT) —
U. .11-9-39
Legion of Missing Men (AT) —
MOP. .1937
Legion of Terror (AT) — COL
11-3-36
Legion of the Condemned —
PAR. .3-25-28
Legion of the Street (AT-
Polish) — CAP. .1932
Legion on Parade (AT) —
TPE. .1931
Legionnaires in Paris — FBO
1-1-28
Legong (S-SE) — DUW. 10-3-35
Legy Jo Mindhalalig (AT-
Hungarian) — XX. .10-27-36
Leichte Kavallerie (AT-
German) — UFA. .1-10-36
Lelicek Ve Sherlocka Holmesa
( AT-Czechoslovakian ) — XX
1939
Lemon Drop Kid (AT) — PAR
10- 27-34
Lena Rivers — ARW ...6.31-25
Lena Rivers (AT) — TIF. 4-3-32
Lend Me Your Husband— BR
8- 17-24
Lend Me Your Name — M. 6-2-18
Lenin In 1918 (AT-Russian) —
AM. .7-13-39
Lenin in October (AT-Rus-
sian)— AM 4-9-38
Leopard Lady — PAT. . .3-11-28
Leopard Women — APR
10-17-20
Leopard's Bride — HMU. 4-20-16
Leopardess — PAR 4-1-23
Les Amours De Tont (AT-
French ) — XX.. 11-6-36
Les as du Turf (AT-
French) — PAR. .5-14-35
Les Miserables — F ....1-10-18
Les Miserables — D . . . .9-11-27
Les Miserables (AT) —
UA. .4-3-35
Les Miserables (AT-French) —
FRA. .10-29-36
Les Mysteres De Paris (AT-
French) — FRA. .2-6-37
Les Petits (AT-French) —
FRA. .1-2-37
Les Trois Mousquetaires
(AT) — CUC. .5-1-33
Less Than Kin — PAR .7-21-18
Less Than the Dust — ART
11-9-16
Lesson — SEL 1918
Lessons in Love — -FN. .6-12-21
Lest We Forget — M... 2-21-18
Let Freedom Ringr (AT) —
MGM. .2-20-39
Let 'Em Have It (AT) —
UA. .5-10-35
Let 'Er Buck — U 1-11-25
Let 'er Go Gallagher — PAT
1-22-28
Let It Rain — PAR 4-3-27
Let Katy Do It — TRI. 12-16-16
Let Not Man Put Asunder —
VIT. .1-27-24
Let Them Live I (AT) —
U. .6-4-37
Let Us Be Gay (AT) —
MGM. .7-13-30
Let Us Live (AT) —
COL. .2-20-39
Let's Be Fashionable — PAR
6-20-20
Let's Be Ritzy (AT) — U
5- 18-34
Let's Elope — PAR 1919
Let's Fall in Love (AT) —
COL. .1-20-34
Let's Get a Divorce — PAR
5-2-18
Let's Get Married — PAR
3-7-26
Let's Get Married (AT) —
COL. .4-14-37
Let's Go — TRU 11-11-23
Let's Go Gallagher — FBO
10-4-25
Let's Go Places (AT) — F
3-2-30
Let's Go Native (AT)— PAR
8-31-30
Let's Live Tonight (AT) —
COL. .3-16-35
Let's Make a Million (AT) —
PAR. .3-11-37
Let's Make a Night of It
(AT) — U. .8-12-38
Let's Sing Again (AT) — RKO
4-18-36
Let's Talk It Over (AT) — U
6- 16-34
Let's Try Again (AT) — RKO
6-22-34
Letter of Introduction
(AT)— U. .7-30-38
Letter, The (AT) — PAR
3-17-29
Letty Lynton (AT) — MGM
5-1-32
Letzte Rose (AT-German) —
XX. .10-12-36
Leutnant Warst Du Einst Bei
Den Husaren (AT-German)
— REC. .3-20-32
Lew Tyler's Wives — PRE. .1926
Liar — F 1918
Libeled Lady (AT) — M-G-M
10-7-36
Liberator— RAV 12-1-18
Libertine — TE 11-16-16
Lie — PAR 4-18-18
Liebe Auf Befehl (AT-
German) — U. .6-7-31
Liebe Auf Umwegan (AT-
German) — AMT. .12-30-37
Liebe Dumme Mama (AT-
German) — BAU. .3-6-35
Liebe in Uniform (AT) —
XX. .10-9-34
Liebe 1st Liebe (AT-Ger-
man)— UFA. .6-5-32
Liebe Kann Luegen (AT-
German) — UFA. .1939
Liebe Muss Verstanden Sein
(AT) — UFA. .3-21-34
Liebe Streng Verboten (AT-
German) — UFA. .1939
Liebe Tod und Teuffel (AT-
German) — UFA. .5-31-35
Liebe Uber Alles (AT-
German) — CAP. .4-19-31
Liebe und die Erste Eisenbahn
(AT-German) — UFA. .1935
Liebe Und Trompetenklang
(AT-German — XX. .4-15-36
Liebelei (AT-German) — GFF
2-29-36
Liebesbriefe Aus Dem Engadin
(AT-German) — UFA. .1939
Liebesgreschichten von Boccaccio
(AT-German) — UFA. .3-15-37
Liebeskommando (AT-Ger-
man)— TOB. .5-1-32
Liebesleute (AT-German) — XX
10-5-36
Liebeswalzer (AT-German) —
UFA. .5-3-31
Lie of Nina Petrova (AT-
French) — LEN 4-9-38
Lieut. Danny, U.S.A. — INC
8-10-16
Life — PAR 11-14-20
Life and Loves of Beethoven
(AT-French) — WO (Reviewed
as "Beethoven's Great Love")
1-29-37
Life Begins (AT) — FN. 8-12-32
Life Begins at 40 (AT)
F. .4-6-35
523
17,238 TITLES
Life Begins in College (AT) —
F. .9-28-37
Life Begins With Love (AT) —
COL. .1937
Life Goes On (AT) —
MIL. .2-24-38
Life in the Raw (AT) — F
10-19-33
Life Is a Tango (AT-Spanish) —
XX. .1939
Life is Beautiful (9) — AM
2- 17-33
Life Line — PAR ....10-12-19
Life Mask — FN 4-18-18
Life of Beethoven — FGU
3- 24-29
Life of an Actress — CHA
4- 24-27
Life of Dante — EXR ..5-18-24
Life of Edward VII, The— GB
12-10-36
Life of Emile Zola, The (AT)
— WA . . 7-2-37
Life of Honor — GRA . .4-11-18
Life of Jimmy Dolan (AT) —
WA. .6-14-33
Life of Our Savior — PAT.1916
Life of Riley — FN ...9-11-27
Life of the Party — PAR
12-5-20
Life of the Party, The (AT)
WA. .11-9-30
Life of the Party (AT) —
RKO. .8-24-37
Life of Tolstoy — FGU . . . 1928
Life of Virgie Winters (AT)
— RKO. .5-13-34
Life Returns (AT) — U. . 1-2-35
Life's a Funny Proposition —
EXI. .1919
Life's Blind Alley — AMU
2-17-16
Life's Crossroads — EXP
12-16-28
Life's Darn Funny — M. 7-31-21
Life's Greatest Game — FBO
10-5-24
Life's Greatest Problem — FCH
1919
Life's Greatest Question —
CBC. .9-10-22
Life's Mockery — CHA .7-29-28
Life's Passions — PS
Life's Shadows — M ..10-19-16
Life's Twist — RC 7-25-20
Life's Verdict (AT-Polish)
— XX. .1938
Life's Whirlpool — M.. 10-18-17
Life's Whirlpool — WO .1-20-16
Lifted Veil — M 9-13-17
Lifting Shadows — PAT. 3-28-20
Light — F 1-12-18
Light, The — AMU .... 9-14-16
Light Ahead (AT-Yiddish) —
ULT. .10-12-39
TITLES
Light at Dusk — LUB... 8-3-16
Light Fingers (PT) — COL
8- 18-29
Light in Asia — FGU .... 1928
Light in the Clearing — HOD
11-27-21
Light in the Dark — FN. 9-3-22
Light in the Window — RA
11-6-27
Light of Happiness — M. 9-14-16
Light of Victory — BL .3-2-16
Light of Western Stars — -SHU
9- 16-18
Light of Western Stars — PAR
7-26-25
Light of Western Stars (AT) —
PAR. .3-30 30
Light That Failed — PAT
11- 2-16
Light That Failed — PAR
12- 2-23
Light That Failed, The (AT) —
PAR. .12-26-39
Light Within — FN ...2-21-18
Light Woman — PAT ..9-26-20
Lighthouse by the Sea — WA
1-4-25
Lightnin' — F 7-26-26
Lightnin' (AT)— F ..11-2-30
Lightnin' Bill Carson (AT) —
PDR. .6-9-36
Lightnin' Crandall (AT) —
REP. .1937
Lightnin' Smith's Return
(AT) — SYN. .8-16-31
Lightning — TIF 9-25-27
Lightning Carson Rides
Again (AT) — PRI. . .10-17-38
Lightning Flyer (AT) —
COL. .4-5-31
Lightning Lariats — FBO
1-30-27
Lightning Reporter — ELB
1-30-27
Lightning Rider — PDC . . . 1924
Lightning Romance — RA .1924
Lightning Shot — RA .... 1928
Lightning Speed — FBO. 11-11-28
Lightning Strikes Twice (AT)
— RKO. .2-9-35
Lights of New York — VIT
6-1-16
Lights of New York — F..1923
Lights of New York (AT) —
WA. .7-15-28
Lights of Old Broadway —
MG. .11-8 26
Lights of Paris — SUP ..8-5-28
Lights of the Desert — F
6-18-22
Lights Out — FBO. . . . 10-21-23
Like Most Wives — PAR
Like Wildfire — U
Lila Akae ( AT-Hungarian) —
XX. .5-16-35
Lilac Time (S-SE) —
FN. .8-12-28
Lilies of the Field — FN
3- 16-24
Lilies of the Field (AT) —
FN. .2-23-30
Lilies of the Streets — FBO
4- 19-25
Liliom (AT) — F ....9-14-30
Liliom (AT-French) — F. 3-19-35
Lilly Christine (AT) —
PAR. .1932
Lilly Turner (AT) — FN
6-16 33
Lily — F 10-17-20
Lily and the Rose — FAT
11- 18-15
Lily of Kilarney (AT) —
XX. .1938
Lily of the Alley — HEP . 5-18-24
Lily of the Dust — PAR. 9-7-24
Limehouse Blues (AT) — PAR
12- 11-34
Limited Mail — WA. .. .9-13-25
Limousine Life — TRI...2-7-18
Limping Man (AT) — POP
8-13-32
Linda (S-SE)— FD 3-31-29
Line of Duty — PAR
Line-Up (AT) — COL. . .4-17-34
Lincoln Cycle — CHR .... 6-7-17
Lincoln Highwayman — F
1-14-20
Lingerie — TIF 8-26-28
Lion and the Lamb (AT) —
COL. .4-5-31
Lion and the Mouse (AT) —
WA. .6-24-28
Lion and the Mouse — VIT
2-16-19
Lion's Den— M 1919
Lion's Den. The (AT) — PUR
8-25-36
Lion's Mouse — HOD ..3-25-23
Liquid Gold — PI 1921
Listen. Darling (AT) —
MGM. .10-18-38
Listen. Lester — PRI 5-4-24
Little Accident (AT) — U
8-3-30
Little Accident (AT) —
U. .10-31-39
Little Adventuress — PDC .1927
Little Adventuress (AT) —
COL. .12-9 38
Little American — ART .7-12-17
Little Annie Rooney — UA
10-25-25
Little Big Shot (AT) —
WA. . 10-5-35
Little Boss — VIT 1919
Little Boy Scout — PAR. 7-12-17
Little Brother — INC . . 2-22-17
Little Brother of the Rich —
U. .9-16-15
524
Little Brother of the Rich —
U. .6 29 19
Little Buckaroo — FBO ...1928
Little Caesar (AT) —
FN. .11-16-30
Little Cafe — PAT 6-6-20
Little Clown — REA . . .4-10-21
Little Colonel (AT) — F. 3-22-35
Little Comrade — PAR ...1919
Little Country Court (AT-
German) — XX. .1939
Little Church Around The
Corner — WA 4-1-23
Little Damozel (AT-
German) — FD. .1935
Little Diplomat — PAT .6-25-19
Little Duchess — PWO .8-30-17
Little Eva Ascends— M
11- 20-21
Little Eva Egerton — BL
8-10 16
Little Firebrand — PAT .7-3-27
Little Flower of Jesus (AT-
French) — SUT 5-9-38
Little Fool — M 3-13-31
Little 'Fraid Lady — RC. 1-23-81
Little French Girl — PAR. 6-7-25
Little Friend (AT)- — GB
10-16-34
Little Giant (AT) — FN. 4-14-33
Little Giant— U 7-12-25
Little Girl in a Big City —
GOT. . . . 10-25-25
Little Girl Next Door —
MAK . .7-20-16
Little Girl Next Door— BLA
1923
Little Gray Lady — PAR . . 1914
Little Grey Mouse — F. 10-31-20
Little Gypsy — F 10-21-15
Little Home Nurse — EDU.1921
Little Intruder — WO ...3-30-19
Little Irish Girl — WA .5 23-26
Little Italy — REA ....7-24-21
Little Johnny Jones — WF
8-19-23
Little Johnny Jones (AT) —
FN. .2-2-30
Little Journey. A — M-G-M
1-23-27
Little Lady Eileen — PAR
8- 17-16
Little Liar — FAT ....8-31-16
Little Lord Fauntleroy — UA
9 18-21
Little Lord Fauntleroy (AT) —
UA. .2-25-36
Little Lost Sister — SEL. 3-22-17
Little Mademoiselle — WO
9- 30-15
Little Man. What Now? (AT)
— U. .6-1-34
Little Mary Sunshine — PAT
4-20-18
Litlle Meera's Romance —
FAT. .3-28-16
Little M«n (AT) — MAP
12- 13 34
Liule Mickey Grogan — FBO
2-5-28
Little Minister — PAR ..1-1-22
Little Minister (AT) — RKO
12-22-34
Little Minister — VIT .12-25-21
Little Miss Broadway (AT)
— F. .7-9-38
Little Miss Fortune — ERB
5-10-17
Little Miss Grown Up — RAL
1918
Liule Miss Happiness — F
9- 31-16
Little Miss Hawkshaw — F
10- 9-31
Little Miss Hoover — PAR
12-29-18
Little Miss Marker (AT) —
PAR. .5-19-34
Little Miss No Account —
VIT. .4-25-18
Little Miss Nobody — BL
4-26-17
Little Miss Nobody (AT) —
F. .3-24-30
Little Miss Optimist — -PAR
9-6-17
Little Miss Rebellion — PAR
9-26-20
Little Miss Roughneck
(AT) — COL. .7-1-38
Little Miss Smiles — F ..1-22-22
Little Miss Thoroughbred
(AT) — WA. .6-15-38
Little Old New York — G
8-6-23
Little Orphan — PAT ..6-21-17
Little Orphan — SR ....3-2-16
Little Orphan Annie — PI.. 1919
Little Orphan Annie (AT) —
RKO. .12-24-32
Little Orphan Annie (AT)
— PAR. .11-30-38
Little Patriot — PAT ..11-22-17
Little Pirate — BUT ..9-13-17
Little Princess — ART .11-22-17
Little Princess, The (AT) —
F. .2-24-39
Little Red Decides — TRI
2-28-18
Little Red Riding Hood —
SEZ. .1922
Little Red School House —
ARW. .6-3-23
Little Red School House (AT)
— CHE. .5-15-36
Little Reformer— TRI . . . 1917
Little Robinson Crusoe — MG
8-10-24
Little Rowdy — TRI 1919
Little Runaway — VIT .5-12-18
Little Savage — RKO . . 7-14-29
Little School Ma'am— FAT
7-6-16
Little Shepherd of Bargain
Row — ES 6-4-10
Little Shepherd of Kingdom
Come — GO
Little Shepherd of Kingdom
Come — FBO 5-20-28
Little Shoes — ES 1-25-17
Little Sister of Everybody —
PAT — 6-23-18
Little Snob (S-SE) — WA..1928
Little Terror — BL 8-2-17
Little Tough Guy (AT) —
U. .7-11-38
Little Tough Guys in So-
ciety (AT) — U 11-25-38
Little Wanderer — F . . . 8-15-20
Little White Savage — BL. 3-2-19
Little Wildcat — VIT ...9-10-22
Little Wildcat (PT & S) —
WA. .1-27-29
Little Wild Girl — TPC. . 2-10-29
Little Women — PAR .... 1919
Little Women (AT)— RKO
11-16-33
Little Yellow House — -FBO
4-29-28
Littlest Rebel. The (AT) —
F. .11-22-35
Littlest Scout — FCH ....1919
Live and Laugh (AT) — YID
12-8-33
Live and Let Live — RC. 5-29-21
Live, Love and Learn (AT) —
MGM. .10-20-37
Live Sparks — HOD . . . 1-26-20
Live Wire — FN 10-25-25
Live-Wire Hick — PAT 1920
Live Wires — F 7-3-21
Lives of a Bengal Lancer (AT)
— PAR. .1-12-35
Livet Paa Hegnsgaard (AT-
Danish) — SCA . .11-29 39
Living Corpse — FFF ..1-18-31
Living Dangerously (AT) — GB
12-5-36
Living Image — PHE 1928
Living Lies — CC 1922
Living Mask— FGA 1928
Living on Love (AT) —
RKO. . 11-1-37
Living on Velvet (AT) —
FN. .3-8-35
Living Russia — AM ..9-22-29
Livingstone in Africa — GLO
3-31-29
Ljubav I Strast (AT-
Yugoslavian) — XX. .12-7-32
Llano Kid, The (AT)— PAR
11-8-39
Lloyds of London (AT) — F
11-27-36
Lo Squadrone Bianco (AT-
Italian) — ESP. .12-15-39
Lo Stormo Atlantico —
TRF. .7-20-31
Loaded Dice — PAT. .. .2-14-18
Loaded Door — U 8-20-22
Local Bad Man (AT) —
AP. .3-27-32
525
17,238 TITLES
Local Boy Makes Good (AT)
—FN. .11-29-81
Locked Door, The (AT) —
UA. .1-26-30
Locked Doors — PAR . . 1-18-25
Locked Heart — RAL ..8-11-18
Locked Lips — U 4-18-20
Loekvogel (AT-German) —
UFA. .1-8-35
Loco Luck — U 1-23-27
Lodge in the Wilderness — TIF
9-26-26
Lodger — GLO 1928
Logan. U.S.A., Mr. — F
Lombard!. Ltd. — M 1919
London— PAR 10-31-26
London After Midnight — MGM
12-17-27
London by Night (AT) —
MGM. .7-20-37
Lone Avenger (AT) — WOW
6-30-33
Lone Chance — F 7-6-24
Lone Cowboy (AT) — PAR
1-27-34
Lone Eagle — U 12-25-27
Lone Fighter— AY 1924
Lone Hand — U 10-15-22
Lone Hand — ALE ....4-11-20
Lone Hand Sanders — FBO. 1926
Lone Hand Wilson — RGR.1921
Lone Horseman— ARW . . . 1923
Lone Horseman — SYN .12-8-29
Lone
Patrol — AY
1928
Lone
Ranger — F
. . . .6-29-19
Lone
Rider, The
(AT) — COL
7-13-30
Lone
Rider (AT) — COL.. 1934
Lone
Star Pioneers
(AT) —
COL. . 1939
Lone
Star Ranger-
— F. .9-16-23
Lone
Star Ranger
(AT) — F
1-19-30
Lone
Trail (AT) —
SYN. 3-13-32
Lone
Wagon — SAN
3 9-24
Lone
Wolf — AE
5-11-24
Lone
Wolf — SEZ
7-12-17
Lone
Wolf in Paris
(AT) —
COL. .5-25 38
Lone Wolf Returns — COL
8-15-26
Lone Wolf Returns. The (AT)
COL. .2-4-36
Lone Wolf Spy Hunt, The (AT)
— COL. .1-24-39
Lone Wolf's Daughter (PT
& S) — COL. .3-10-29
Lone Wolf's Daughter — HOD
12-14-19
Lonely Heart — AFF .... 1921
Lonely Road — FN 6-17-23
Lonely Trail — PRM . . . 1-15-22
Lonely Trail, The (AT) — REP
11-3-86
I7,23« TITLES
Lonely White Sail (AT-Rus-
sian) — AM 6-13-38
Lonely Wives (AT) —
PAT. .2-16-31
Lonely Woman — TRI ..6-2-18
Lonesome (PT &S) — U
6-24-28
Lonesome Chap — PAR. 4-19-17
Lonesome Corners — AE . . .1922
Lonesome Ladies — FN . . 8-7-27
Lonesome Trail, The (AT) —
SYN. .8-17-30
Long Arm of Mannister — PI
1920
Long Chance — U 10-1-22
Long Lane's Turning — EXI
2-16-19
Long Live the King — M . 11-4-23
Long, Long Trail (AT & S)
U. .11-10-29
Long Loop on the Pecos —
PAT. .1-16-27
Long Lost Father (AT) —
RKO. .2-17-34
Long Pants — FN 4-3-27
Long Shot (AT) — GN. .12-28-38
Long Trail — PAR ....9-13-17
Longest Night, The (AT) —
M-G-M. .9-15 36
Look Out for Love (AT) —
GB. .1937
Look Out for Love (AT) —
GB. .1938
Look-Out Girl — QU ... 10-28-28
Look Your Best — G 1923
Looking for Trouble (AT) . .
Looking for Trouble — U
6-23-26
Looking Forward (AT) — MGM
4-29-33
Looping the Loop (S-SE) —
PAR. .2-17-29
Loose Ankles (AT) — FN
2- 2-30
Loose Ends (AT) — BI. 10-19-30
Loot — U 10-5-19
Lord and Lady Algy — G. 9-1-19
Lord Byron of Broadway (AT)
— MGM. .3-9-30
Lord Jeff (AT) — MGM .. 6-23-38
Lord Jim — PAR 11-22-25
Lord Loves the Irish — HOD
1920
Lordagskvallar (AT-Swedish)
— XX. .2-14-36
Lords of High Decision — U
3- 2-16
Lorelei of the Sea — HAN
9-6-17
Lorenzino De Medici (AT-
Italian) — NUO. .4-15-36
Lorraine of the Lions — U
8-16-25
Lorna Doone — FN .... 12-10-23
Los Desheredados (AT-Spanish)
— XX. .3-24-36
Los Heroes Del Barrio (AT-
Spanish) — XX. .12-29-30
Los Muertos Hablan (AT-
Spanish) — XX. .11-26-35
Los Tres Berretines (AT-
Spanish) — XX. .1-8-36
Loser's End — ST 1-25-25
Lost — A Wife — -PAR. .6-28-25
Lost and Found — G... 3-25-23
Lost and Won — PAR . . . 1-25-17
Lost at Sea — TIF 8-22-26
Lost at the Front — FN . . . 1927
Lost Battalion — MCM... 7-6-19
Lost Bridegroom — PAR. 3-30-16
Lost Chord — ARW 1-18-25
Lost City, The (AT) —
KRB. .2-21 35
Lost Expedition — UFA. 10-21-28
Lost Express — RA 1920
Lost Gods — TPE 7-20-30
Lost Horizon (AT) — -
COL. .3-4-37
Lost in a Big City — ARW
8-26-23
Lost in the Arctic — F. .7-29-28
Lost in the Stratosphere (AT)
MOP. .10-23-34
Lost in Transit — PAR.. 9-13-17
Lost Jungle (AT) — MAP
5-9-34
Lost Lady (AT) — FN
10-5-34
Lost Lady — WA 1-25-26
Lost Limited — RA 5-1-27
Lost Love (AT-Italian) —
XX. .1938
Lost Money — F 12-7-19
Lost Paradise — PAR 1914
Lost Patrol (AT) — RKO. 2-9-34
Lost Patrol— PRO. .. .12-22-29
Lost Princess — F 11-2-19
Lost Romance — PAR ... 5-15-21
Lost Sentence — EDK .... 1-4-17
Lost Shadow — UFA 4-8-28
Lost Squadron. The (AT) —
RKO. .3-6-32
Lost Traces (AT-German) —
XX. .1939
Lost Trail — RA 1926
Lost Tribe — XX 1929
Lost World — FN 2-15-25
Lost Zeppelin (AT) — TIF
2-9-30
Lotte Nell'Ombra (AT-Italian)
- — ESP. .1939
Lottery Bride, The (AT) —
UA. .8-31-30
Lottery Lover (AT) —
F. .2-5-35
Lottery Man — PAR ... 10-19-19
Lottery Man — SR 2-17-16
Lotus Blossom — NF. ... 10-2-21
Lotus Eater — FN 12-4-21
Lotus Lady (AT) — AUD
1930
526
Loud Speaker (AT) — MOP
6- 8-34
Louisiana — PAR 7-27-19
Lovagias Ugy ( AT-Hungarian)
— HUN. .10-8-37
Love — APR 12-5-20
Love — MGM 12-17-27
Love Affair (AT) — COL.4-17-32
Love Affair (AT) — RKO.3-13-39
Love Aflame — RED. . . . 1-26-17
Love Among the Millionaires
(AT) — PAR. .7-13-30
Love and Glory — U.... 8-1 0-24
Love and Hate — F. . . .11-23-16
Love and Hisses (AT) —
F. .12-22-37
Love and Learn — PAR. 2-26-28
Love and Sacrifice (AT-
Yiddish) — SEI. .4-10-36
Love and the Devil (S-SE) —
FN. .6-23-29
Love and the Law — FCH. .1919
Love and the Woman — WO
6-22-19
Love at First Sight (AT) —
CHE. .12-15-29
Love Auction — F 2-9-19
Love Bandit — VIT 1924
Love Before Breakfast (AT) —
U. .3-14-36
Love Begins at Twenty (AT) —
FN. .5-23-36
Love Birds (AT) — U 5-4-34
Love Bound (AT) — PEE
7- 8-32
Love Brand — U 8-5-23
Love Brokers — TRI. .. .4-18-18
Love Burglar — PAR .... 8-3-19
Love Call — EXI 4-27-19
Love Can Lie (AT-German) —
XX. .1939
Love Captive (AT) — U. . 6-7-34
Love Charm — PAR. .. .12-18-21
Love Cheat — PAT 8-10-19
Love Comes Along (AT) —
RKO. .2-2-30
Love Defender — WO 3-23-19
Love Doctor — VIT 1917
Love Doctor (AT & S) —
PAR. .11-10-29
Love 'Em and Leave 'Em —
PAR. .12-19-26
Love Expert — FN 5-2-20
Love Finds Andy Hardy
(AT) — MGM. .7-13-38
Love Flower — UA 8-29-20
Love from a Stranger (AT) —
UA. .4-21-37
Love Gamble — GBG 7-26-25
Love Gambler — F 11-5-22
Love Girl — BL 6-29-16
Love Habit (AT) — BI.. 2-1-31
Love, Hate and a Woman —
ARW. .1921
Love, Honor and ? — HAL. . . .
Love. Honor and Behave —
FN. .6-20-21
Love. Honor and Behave
(AT) — WA. .2-18-38
Love. Honor and Obey — M
9-5-20
Love, Honor and Oh, Baby !
(AT) — U. .10-28-33
Love Hour — VIT 10-4-25
Love Hunger — HOD 1919
Love HungTy — F 4-22-28
Love in a Bungalow (AT) —
U . . 7-7-37
Love in a Hurry — WA. 1-19-19
Love in Bloom (AT) —
PAR. .4-20-35
Love in High Gear (AT) —
MAP. .5-8-32
Love in Morocco (AT) GB
3-20-33
Love in the Dark — M .11-19-22
Love in the Desert (PT &
S) — RKO. .5-5-29
Love in the Ring: (PT) — ALP
8-27-30
Love in the Rough (AT) —
MGM. .9-28-30
Love in Quarantine (AT-
Italian — XX 1938
Love in Stunt Plying- (AT-
German) — XX 1938
Love in Three Quarter Time
( AT-German ) — CAO ... 1 938
Love Insurance — PAR. .9-28-19
Love is a Headache (AT) —
MGM. .1-13-38
Love is a Lie — BRI 1928
Love is a Racket (AT) —
FN. .5-29-32
Love Is an Awful Thing- —
SEZ. .9-10-22
Love is Dangerous (AT) — CHE
4-29-33
Love is Like That (AT) — CHE
4-29-33
Love is Love — P 8-10-19
Love Is News (AT) —
F. .3-9-37
Love Is Not Allowed (AT-
German) — XX. . 1939
Love Is on the Air (AT) —
FN. .11-16-37
Love Kiss (AT) — CEL.12-28-30
Love Letter — (U) 2-4-23
Love Letters — P 1924
Love Letters — PAR ..12-27-17
Love Letters of a Star (AT)
U. .12-1-36
Love Liar — HMD 3-30-16
Love Light — UA 1-16-21
Love. Live & Laugh (AT) —
P. .11-10-29
Love Madness — HOD .... 8-8-20
Love Makes Us Blind — UFA
5-6-28
Love Makes Women Wild — F
4-3-27
Love Mart — FN 1-1-28
Love Mask — PAR 4-20-16
Love Master — FN 1-20-24
Love Me — PAR 3-28-18
Love Me and the World Is
Mine — U 2-12-28
Love Me Forever (AT) —
COL. .6-28-35
Love Me Tonight (AT) —
PAR. .8-13 32
Love Nest — PS
Love Nest — WO 1919
Love Never Dies — U 1921
Love Never Dies — FN. 11-20-21
Love of Sunya — UA. .. .3-30-27
Love of Woman — SEZ.. 7-6-24
Love on a Bet (AT) — RKO
2-28-36
Love on a Budget (AT) —
F. .1-10-38
Love on the Run (AT) — M-G-M
11-17-36
Love on Toast (AT) —
PAR. .2-25 38
Love or a Kingdom (AT-
Polish) — STA. .12-15-37
Love or Fame — SEL 1919
Love or Justice — TRI. . 6-14-17
Love or Money — HAL.... 1920
Love Over Night — PAT
12-23-28
Love Parade (AT) — PAR
11-24-29
Love Past Thirty (AT) — FRE
2-14-34
Love Piker — G 7-1-23
Love Pirate — FFS 1928
Love Pirate — FBO. . . . 11-11-23
Love Racket. The (AT) — FN
8 3-30
Love Slave — CLR 1922
Love Special — PAR. .. .3-27-21
Love Sublime — FAT. .. .3-22-17
Love Storm (AT) — BI. 10-18-31
Love S windle — U 1918
Love Takes Flight (AT)
GN 7-30-37
Love That Dares — F. . .4-20-19
Love That Doesn't Return
(AT-Italian) — XX 1938
Love That Lives — PAR... 1927
Love Thief — U 6-6-26
Love Thrill — U 6-15-27
Love Time (AT) — F. . . 11-3-34
Love Time — F 7-10-21
Love Toy — WA 3-21-26
Love Trader (AT) — TIP
11-23-30
Love Trail — PAT 1-27-16
Love Trap — AHR 9-30-23
Love Trap (PT & S) — U
9-1-29
Love Under Fire (AT) —
P 8-16-37
Love Waltz (AT) — UFA.. 1930
Love Watches — VIT. .. 7-21-18
Love Wins — HHA 1920
Love Without Question — JA
4-3-20
Love's Bargrain — FBO.. 3-15-25
Love's Battle — CC 9-1 2-20
527
17,238 TITLES
Love's Blindness — MGM
10-31-26
Love's Boomerang — PAR. 2-5-22
Love's Conquest — PAR.. 6-2-18
Love's Crucible — BRA. .2-17-16
Love's Flame — FID. ... 6-13-20
Love's Greatest Mistake—
PAR. .2-27-27
Love's Harvest — F 1920
Love's Lariat — BL 7-27-16
Love's Law — F 4-5-17
Love's Law — MT 9-8-18
Love's Loyalty — ORE.. 11-1-17
Love's Masquerade — SEZ
4-16-22
Love's Mockery — REL. . 11-4-28
Love's of Ricardo — BEB
8-22-26
Love's Old Sweet Song —
HOP. .1923
Love's Pay Day — TRI.... 191 8
Love's Penalty — FN. ... 6-12-21
Love's Pilgrimage to Amer-
ica;— U 1-6-16
Love's Plaything — RAD... 1921
Love's Prisoner — TRI. . .5-25-19
Love's Protegee — ARW
Love's Redemption — FN. 1-15-22
Love's Triumph (AT-Ital-
ian) — CEL. 1938
Love's Wilderness — FN. 12-14-24
Love's Whirlpool — PDC. 3-16-24
Lovebound — F 5-20-23
Lovelorn — MGM 12-26-27
Lovely Mary — M 3-23-16
Lover Come Back (AT) —
COL. .6-7-31
Lover Divine (AT) — GB..1935
Lover of Camille — WA. 11-16-24
Lover's Oath — AST 1925
Lover's Island — AE .... 2-14-26
Cover's Lane — WA. ... 11-23-24
Lovers — MGM 5-1-27
Lovers Courageous (AT) —
MGM. .2-21-32
Lovers in Quarantine — PAR
10-18-25
Lovers of Letty — G. . . .2-16-20
Loves of a Dictator (AT) —
GB. .1035
Loves of ?n Actress (S-SE)
— PAR. .8-5-28
Loves of Carmen — F... 10-2-27
Loves of Casanova — MGM
6-5-29
Loves of Jeanne Ney — UFA
7-16-28
Loves of Pharoah — PAR
2-26-22
Loves of Ricardo — FBO.. 1928
Lovetime — F 7-10-21
Lovey Mary — MGM 7-4-26
Lovin' Fool — SIE 1926
Lovin' the Ladies (AT) —
RKO. .3-23-30
17,238 TITLES
Loving Lies — APD 1923
Lower Depths, The (AT-
French) — MAB. .9 10-3?
Lowland Cinderella- — SEC. 1922
Loyal Wives — VIT 8-12-23
Loyalties (AT) — -AUT. 10-26-34
Loyal ty — BET 1918
Loyalty of Love (AT-Italianl
— XX. .3-15-37
Lxici Sommerse (AT-Italian) —
NUO. .6-23-36
Luck — BR 4-8-23
Luck and Pluck — P.... 2-2-19
Luck and Sand — ARC .... 1926
Luck in Pawn — PAR .. 12-21-19
Luck of Geraldine Laird —
RC. .2-1-20
Luck of Roaring Camp (AT) —
MOP. .1937
Luck of the Irish — REA
1-25-20
Luck of the Irish (AT) — GUA
6-2-36
Luckiest Girl in the World. The
(AT) — U. .10-22-36
Lucky Boy (PT & S) — TIF
1-6-29
Lucky Carson — VIT
Lucky Dan — GOL 1923
Lucky Devil — PAR 7-12-25
Lucky Devils (AT) — RKO
1-28-33
Lucky Dog (AT) — U... 8-30-33
Lucky Horseshoe — F. . . 8-23-25
Lucky in Love (AT) — PAT
12-15-29
Lucky Lady — PAR 6-27-26
Lucky Larkin — D 3-23-30
Lucky Larrigan (AT) — MOP
3-15-33
Lucky Night (AT) — MGM
5-1-39
Lucky Spurs — CHE 1926
Lucky Texan (AT) — MOP
1-6 34
Lucky Texan (AT) — MOP
1939
Lucretia Borgia — MT. . . . 1-6-29
Lucretia Lombard — WA
12-23-23
Luise. Konigin von Preussen
(AT-German) — ASS. .10-6-32
Lullaby — FBO 1-6-24
Lullaby (AT-Russian) —
AM . . 1938
Lummox ( AT)— UA ... 2-16-30
Lumpenball (AT-German) —
AGF. .4-26-31
Lunatic at Large — FN... 3-6-27
Luncheon for Three — PAR....
Lure of Alaska — EDU.. 7-27-16
Lure of Ambition — F. 11-16-19
Lure of Croning Waters — STL
1-16-21
Lure of Gold — ST 1922
Lure of Egypt — PAT.... 1921
Lure of Heart's Desire — M
1-20-16
Lure of Luxury — U... 10-13-18
Lure of the Jade — FBO. 11-6-21
Lure of the Night Club — FBO
7-3-27
Lure of the Orient — A .... 1921
Lure of the Ring (S-SE) —
WAF. .1-31-32
Lure of the West — CHE.. 1920
Lure of the Wild — COL.l -31-26
Lure of the Yukon — LB.7-20-24
Lure of Youth — M 1-16-21
Luring Lips — D 7-24-21
Lust of the Ages — OG. 8-23-17
Luther — REF 1929
Luxury — ARW 1921
Luxury Liner (AT) — PAR
2-4-33
Lydia Gilniore — PAR.. 12-30 16
Lying Lips — -APR 2-13-21
Lying Lips AMU 5-4-16
Lying Truth — AR 4-30-22
Lying Wives — IV 6-28-25
Lynn's Mail — TRI 1919
M
McFadden's Flats — FN.. 2-13-27
McFadden's Flats (AT)— PAR
3-12-35
McGuire of the Mounted — U
7-8-23
McKenna of the Mounted (AT)
— COL 11-7-32
M (AT) — PAR 1933
Macbeth — REI 6-8-16
Maciste — ITA 9-9-15
Maciste in Hell — OLY. . 6-28-31
Mad About Music (AT) —
U. .2-28-38
Mad Dancer — JA 4-26-25
Mad Empress. The (AT) — WA
5-4-39
(Reviewed as "Juarez and
Maximilian )
Mad Game (AT) — F.. 11-11-33
Mad Genius (AT) — WA
10-25-31
Mad Holiday (AT) — M-G-M
11-30-36
Mad Hour — FN 4-22-28
Mad Love (AT) —
MGM — 7-1-35
Mad Love — KRA 1921
Mad Love — G 3-11-23
Mad Lover — PAT 8-2-17
Mad Marriage — U 2-6-21
Mad Marriage — ROS 1925
Mad Miss Manton (AT) —
RKO . .10-27-38
Mad Parade (AT) —
PAR. .9-20-31
Mad Worn an — U
Mad Whirl — U 11-30-24
528
Madam Satan (AT) — MGM
10- 5-30
Madam Spy — U 1-10-18
Madam Who? — PAL .... 1-3-18
Madame Behave — PPC. 12-27-25
Madame Bo Peep — TRI. 6-24-17
Madame Bovary (AT) — -TAP
11-20-34
Madame Bovary (AT-German)
— CAS. . ] 1-1-37
Madame Butterfly — PAR
11-11-15
Madame Butterfly (AT) —
PAR. . 12-24-32
Madame Du Barry (AT) — WA
8-8-34
Madame Du Barry — F.. 1-31-18
Madame Jealousy — PAR. 2-7-18
Madame Peacock — M . . 10-10 20
Madame Pompadour — PAR
8-7-27
Madame President — PAR
2-17 16
Madame Racketeer (AT) —
PAR. .7-23-32
Madame Sans Gene — PAR
4-26-25
Madame Sherry — HOF.. 9-13-17
Madame Sphinx — TRI... 6-9-18
Madame Spy (AT) — U.. 2-10-34
Madame Wants No Children — P
6-12-27
Madame Wuenscht Keine
Kinder ( AT)— XX . . . . 6 3 33
Madame X — G 10-3-20
Madame X (AT) — MGM
4- 28 -20
Madame X (AT) —
MGM . .9-27-37
Madcap — U
Madcap Madge — TRI. .. .7-5-17
Made For Each Other (AT> —
UA. .2-6-39
Made for Love— PDC. . . .2-7-26
Made in America— PAT. . 2-9-19
Made in Heaven — GO. . . .5-1-21
Made on Broadway (AT) —
MGM. .1933
Made to Order Hero — U..1928
Mademoiselle Ma Mere (AT-
Freuch) — HOB. .9-21-39
Mademoiselle Midnight — MG
5- 11-24
Mademoiselle Modiste — FN
6 9-26
Madison Square Garden
(AT) — PAR. . 10-14 32
Madness of Helen — PBA. 11-9-16
Madness of Love — FBO... 1922
Madness of Youth — F.. 4-15-23
Madonna of Avenue A (PT &
S) — WA. .8-18-29
Madonna of the Sleeping Cars —
FFS. .10-20-29
Madonna of the Slums — U.1920
Madonna of the Streets — FN
11- 9-24
Madonna of the Streets (AT) —
COL. . 11-30-30
Madonna. Wo Bist Du? (AT-
German) — PAR. .3-23-36
Madonnas and Men — JA. 6-20-20
Madres Del Mundo (AT-
Spanish) — XX. .8-18-36
Mapdehen in Uniform (AT-
German) — KAC. .9-23-32
Maedchenraeuher (AT-German)
— XX. .8-17-36
Maelstrom — VIT 6-28-17
Maenner Muessen So Spin (AT-
German) — UFA. .193!)
Masra Lesz A Ferjem (AT-
Hungarian) — HUN ..10-12-38
Magda — SEL 10-18 17
Magdalen of the Hills — M
4-10 -17
Magdat Kiesapjak (AT-
Hungarian) — DAN . .10-12-38
Maggie Pepper — PAR.. 2-16-19
Marie Cup — REA 5-2-21
Magic Eye — BL 4-25-18
Magic Flame — UA 9-11-27
Magic Garden — FBO. . .2-20-27
Mag-ie Night (AT) — UA
1 1-3-32
Magic Toy Maker — KR. 12-2-15
Magician — MGM 10 31-26
Magnificent Brute — U. .3-20-21
Magnificent Brute. The (AT) —
U. .10-24-36
Magnificent Flirt — PAR. .7-1-28
Magnificent Fraud. The (AT)
— PAR . . 7-20-39
Magnificent Lie (AT) —
PAR. .7 26-31
Magnificent Meddler — VIT
6-7-17
Magnificent Obession (AT) —
U. . 12-31-35
Maid o' the Storm — PAT
7-21-18
Maid of Belgium — PWO
10-25-17
Maid of Salem (AT) —
PAR. .1-26-37
Maid of the Mountains (AT-
Spanish) — XX. .1939
Maid of the West — F. . .7-17-21
Maid's Night Out (AT) —
RKO. .6-23 38
Maid lo Order (AT) —
ARC. .1931
Mailman — FBO 12-2-23
Main Event — PAT. . . . 10 30-27
Main Event (AT) —
COL. .6-22-38
Main Street — WA 6-17-23
Main Street Lawyer (AT) —
REP. .11-8-39
Mainspring — RED . . . .11-30-16
Majd a Zsuzsi (AT-Hungar-
ian) — DAN 10-31-38
Maisie (AT) — MGM ....6-7-39
Maiysa ( AT-Bohemian) —
XX. .1938
Majesty of the Law — PAR
9-9-15
Make a Million (AT) —
MOP. .7-9-35
Make a Wish (AT) —
RKO. .8 27-37
Make Believe Wife — PAR. 1918
Make Me a Star (AT) —
PAR. .7-2-32
Make Way for a Lady (AT) —
RKO. .12-12-36
Make Way for Tomorrow
(AT) — PAR. .5-27-37
Maker of Men — PLY. . 11-13-21
Maker of Men (AT) —
COL. .12-20-31
Making a Man — PAR . .12-24-22
Making Good — SAN 1923
Making of a King. The (AT) —
GFS. .12-10-35
Making of Madalena — PAR
6-8-16
Making of O'Malley — FN
6- 28-25
Making the Grade — BUL. 1-8-23
Making the Grade (PT & S) —
F. .4-28-29
Making the Headlines (AT)
— COL. .4-1-38
Making the Varsity — EXP
8-26-28
Malay Nights (AT) — MAF
2-1-33
Malditas Sean La Mujeres (AT-
Spanish) — XX. .8-31-36
Male and Female — PAR
11-30-19
Maltese Falcon (AT) —
WA. .5-31-31
Mamba (AT) — TIF. . . .3-16-30
Mama (AT) — F 7-20-33
Mama Loves Papa (AT) — PAR
7- 22-33
Mama Runs Wild (AT) —
REP. .12-22-37
Mama Steps Out (AT) —
MGM. .5-20-37
Mamele (AT-Viddish) — SPI
1-18-39
Mami (AT-Hungarian) —
DAN. .2-21-38
Mamma's Affair — FN.... 2-6-21
Mammy (AT) — WA... 3-30 30
Mam'zelle Nitouche (AT) —
PRX — 11-18-33
Man About Town (AT) — F
5- 29-32
Man About Town (AT) — PAR
6- 13-39
Man Above the Law — TRI
1-3-18
Man Against Woman (AT) —
COL. .12-17-32
Man Alone — AN 2-25-23
Man and Beast — U. . . .7-19-17
Man and His Angel — TE
3-16-16
Man and His Money — G. 4-27-19
Man and His Soul — M. 2-24-16
529
17,238 TITLES
Man and Hi9 Woman — PAT
7-18-20
Man and Maid — MG... 4-12-25
Man and the Moment — AE.1922
Man and the Moment (PT & S)
FN. .8-11-29
Man and the Woman — USA
3- 29-17
Man and Wife — ARW . . 7-20-23
Man and Woman — JA . . 9-11-21
Man Bait — PDC 1-23-27
Man Behind the Curtain — VIT
6-22-16
Man Beneath — EXI. ... 7-13-19
Man Betrayed. A (AT) —
REP. . 1-8-37
Man Between — AE 1923
Man Braucht Kein Geld
(AT-German) — CAP. 1 1 -17-32
Man Called Back (AT) —
TIF. .7-15-32
Man Crazy — FN 1-1-28
Man Four Square — F... 6-6-26
Man from Arizona (AT) —
MOP. . 1932
Man from Beyond — HOU
4- 16-22
Man from Bitter Roots — F
7-6-16
Man from Blankley's (AT) —
WA. .4-6-30
Man from Brodney's — VIT
12-2-23
Man from Chicago (AT) —
COL. . 1-18-31
Man From Death Valley
(AT) — MOP. .10-11-31
Man from Downing St. — VIT
4-16-22
Man from Funeral Range — PAR
1918
Man from Glengary — HOD
3- 18-23
Man from Guntown (AT) —
PUR. .11-30-35
Man from Hardpan — PAT
2-20-27
Man from Headquarters — RA
10-7-28
Man from Hell (AT) — KEN
8-29-34
Man from Hell's Edges
(AT) — WW. .6-29-32
Man from Hell's River — WPX
4- 23-22
Man from Home — PAR.. 5-7-22
Man from Lost River — G
1-22-22
Man from Mexico — PAR.. 1914
Man from Montana — BU
11-29-17
Man from Monterey (AT) — WB
8-16-33
Man from Montreal (AT) — U
1939
17,238 TITLES
Man from Music Mountain
(AT) — REP. .8-13-38
Man from Nevada — SYN
9- 22-29
Man from New Mexico (AT) —
MOP. .8-24-32
Man from Nowhere — ARW
1921
Man from Nowhere — SYN. 1930
Man from Nowhere — U. 6-8-16
Man from Oklahoma — RA.1926
Man from Painted Post — ART
10- 4-17
Man from Red Oulch — PDC
12-20-25
Man from Sundown (AT) —
COL. .8-28-39
Man from Texas — PDC... 1924
Man from Texas (AT) —
MOP. .1939
Man from the West — U
11- 14-26
Man from Utah (AT) — MOP
5-23-34
Man from Wyoming- — U. 1-20-24
Man from Wyoming-, A (AT) —
PAR. .7-13-30
Man from Yesterday (AT) —
PAR. .6-25-32
Man Hater — TRI 10-25-17
Man Higher up — GOT.... 1928
Man Hunt — WO 6-23-18
Man Hunt (AT) — RKO
5- 5-33
Man Hunt (AT) — WA. 1-29-36
Man Hunter — P 2-23-19
Man Hunter. The (AT) — WA
4-6-30
Man Hunters of the Carib-
bean (AT) — INF 1-24-38
Man I Love (AT & S) — PAR
6- 2-29
Man I Marry. The (AT) — U
10-12-36
Man in Blue — U 2-22-25
Man in Blue, The (AT) —
U. .9-1-37
Man in Hobbles — TIP.. 1-20-29
Man in Possession (AT) —
MGM. .7-19-31
Man in the Iron Mask, The
(AT) — UA. .6-30-39
Man in the Mirror (AT) —
GN. .1937
Man in the Moonlight — U.1919
Man in the Open — UNI. 3-9-19
Man in the Rough — FB0..1928
Man in the Saddle — U....1926
Man in the Shadow — ACI.1926
Man Inside — U 1-20-16
Man Life Passed By — M
12- 23-23
Man-Made Woman — PAT
9-23-28
Man Must Fight (AT) — PAR
1929
Man Must Live — PAR... 2-8-25
Man Next Door — VIT ... 6-3-23
Man of Action (AT) — COL
0-0-33
Man of Action — FN .... 6-10-23
Man of Affairs (AT) —
GB. .1-16-37
Man of Aran (AT)GB
10- 20-34
Man of Bronze — WO.. 12-15-18
Man of Courage (AT) — CUO
1934
Man of Conquest (AT) —
REP. .4-10-39
Man of His Word — RAL..1917
Man of Honor — M 1919
Man of Iron (AT) — WA
12-7-35
Man of Might — VIT 1919
Man of Mystery — VIT.. 1-25-17
Man of Nerve — FBO 1925
Man of Quality — EXP. 10-31-26
Man of Sentiment (AT) — CHE
11- 10-33
Man of Shame — U 10-4-15
Man of Sorrow — F.... 4-27-16
Man of Stone — SEZ. . .11-27-21
Man of the Forest — PAR. 1920
Man of the Forest — HOD
6- 22-21
Man of the Forest (AT) —
PAR. .8-25-33
Man of the People (AT) —
MGM. .2-25-37
Man of the World (AT) —
PAR. .3-22-31
Man of Two Worlds (AT) —
RKO. .1-13-34
Man on the Box — PAR... 1925
Man on the Box — WA. 10-11-25
Man on the Flying Trapeze
(AT) — PAR. .8-3-35
Man Rustlin' — FBO 1920
Man She Brought Back — AE
10-8 22
Man Tamer — U 0-5-21
Man There Was — RAF. 2-29-20
Man They Couldn't Arrest
(AT) — GB. .3-13-33
Man They Could Not Hang, The
(AT) — COL. .9-28-39
Man to Man — U 2-5-22
Man to Man (AT) — WA.1-4-31
Man to Remember, A (AT)
— RKO. .10-3-38
Man Trackers — U 7-17-21
Man Trail — ES 9-23-15
Man Trailer (AT) — COL
5-23-34
Man Trap — BL 11-1-17
Man Trouble (AT) — F. 8-17-30
Man Unconquerable — PAR
7- 23-22
Man Under Cover — U. . .4-9-22
Man Upstairs — WA 1920
Man Wanted — CC 1922
530
Man Wanted (AT) — WA
4-17-32
Man Who — M 7-17-21
Man Who Broke the Bank
at Monte Carlo (AT) —
F. .19-28-35
Man Who Came Back — F
9 21-24
Man Who Came Back (AT) —
F. .1-4-31
Man Who Changed His Name
(AT) — DUW. .10-10-34
Man Who Cheated Life — AEP
2-17-29
Man Who Couldn't Beat Con-
science^— VIT
Man Who Could Not Beat God
VIT. .11-4-15
Man Who Could Work Miracles
(AT) — UA. .2-24-37
Man Who Cried Wolf. The
(AT) — U. .8-19-37
Man Who Dared — F.... 8-8-20
Man Who Dared (AT) — F
9-9-33
Man Who Dared. The (AT) —
WA. .9-28-39
Man Who Fights Alone — PAR
8-31-24
Man Who Forgot — BRA. 1-18-17
Man Who Found Himself — PAR
9-0-25
Man Who Found Himself, The
(AT) — RKO. .3-4-37
Man Who Had Everything — G
1921
Man Who Knew Too
Much. The (AT) — GB.3 22-35
Man Who Laughs — U. . . 5-0-28
Man Who Lived Again, The
(AT) — GB. .12-10-30
Man Who Lived Twice, The
(AT) — COL. .10-13-36
Man Who Lost Himself — SEZ
6-6-20
Man Who Made Good — FAT
5-3-17
Man Who Married His Own
Wife — U 4-30 22
Man Who Paid — PS .... 2-19-22
Man Who Played God — UA
10-8-22
Man Who Played God (AT) —
WA. .2-14-32
Man Who Played Square — F
1- 4-25
Man Who Reclaimed His
Head (AT) — U. .1-8-35
Man Who Saw Tomorrow —
PAR. .11-5-22
Man Who Stayed at Home — M
6-15-19
Man Who Stood Still — BRA
10-19-16
Man Who Took a Chance — BL
2- 8-17
Man Who Turned White, The —
EXI. .6-8-19
Man Who Waited — AE...1922
Man Who Was Afraid — ES
7-10-17
Man Who Woke Up — TRI
0-9-18
Man Who Won — F. . . .10-14-23
Man Who Won (AT) — POP
2-25-33
Man Who Won — VIT. . .0-29-19
Man Who Would Not Die —
AMU. .9-7-10
Man Who Wouldn't Tell — VIT
12-8-18
Man With 100 Faces (AT)
— GB. .11-7-38
Man with the Camera — AM
1929
Man With the Gun. The (AT-
Russian) — AM. .2-1-39
Man With Two Faces (AT) —
FN. .7-12-34
Man with Two Mothers — G
0-4-22
Man Without a Conscience — WA
0-7-25
Man Without a Country — U
1917
Man Without a Heart — BAE
1924
Man. Woman and Sin — MGM
12-17-27
Man Woman and Wife (S-SE)
U. .11-11-28
M an - Worn an -M am age — FN
1-10-20
Man's Best Friend (AT) —
KRB. .1-18-35
Man's Castle. A (AT) — COL
12-28-33
Man's Country — EXI ...7-0-19
Man's Country (AT) —
MOP. .8-3-38
Man's Desire — EXI ...7-3 3-19
Man's Fight — UNI 8-17 19
Man's Game, a (AT) — COL
7-24-34
Man's Home — SEZ ....10-2-21
Man's Land, A (AT) —
AP. .12-28-32
Man's Law and God's — AR
1922
Man's Making — LUB .12-23-15
Man's Man — TRI ....9-20-17
Man's Man (S-SE) — MGM
0-9-29
Man's Mate — F 4-13-24
Man's Past — U 9-11-27
Man's Plaything — -SEZ ...1920
Man's Size — F 12-17-22
Man's Woman — PBW ..3-29-17
Man's World — M 7-7-18
Mandalay (AT) — FN... 2-15-34
Mandarin Mystery, The (AT) —
REP. .0-23-37
Mandarin's Gold — WO. .2-10-10
Manewry Milosne (AT-Polish)
— XX. .11-12-30
Manhandled — PAR 8-3-24
Manhattan— PAR 11-2-24
Manhattan Butterfly (AT) —
IML. .8-14-35
Manhattan Cocktail (S-SE) —
PAR. .12-3-28
Manhattan Cowboy — SYN
5-12-29
Manhattan Knight — F .3-21-20
Manhattan Knights — EXP
9-9-28
Manhattan Love Song- (AT) —
MOP. .4-17-34
Manhattan Madness — FAT
9-21-10
Manhattan Madness — AE
5-28-25
Manhattan Melodrama (AT) —
M-G-M. .5-2-34
Manhattan Merry-Go-Round
(AT) — REP. .11-11-37
Manhattan Moon (AT) —
U. .7-22-36
Manhattan Parade (AT) —
WA. .1-3-32
Manhattan Shakedown (AT) —
SYN. .10-27-39
Manhattan Tower (AT) —
REM. .11-2-32
Manicure Girl — PAR .... 7-5-25
Mannequin — PAR 1-17-20
Mannequin (AT) —
MGM. .12-29-37
Mano in Mano (AT) — HOB
2-23-33
Manon Lescaut — UFA. 12-19-20
Manpower — PAR 7-31-27
Man-Proof (AT) — MGM. 1-11-38
Mansion of Aching Hearts. The
SCH. .3-8-25
Manslaughter — PAR ..9-24-22
Manslaughter (AT) — PAR
7-27-30
Mantle of Charity — PAT
9-29-18
Mantrap — PAR 7-25-20
Matrimonial Bed. The (AT) —
WA. .8-24-30
Manx Man — TCS 4-12-17
Manx Man — UFA 12-22-29
Many a Slip (AT) — U. 8-30-31
Many Happy Returns (AT) —
PAR. .0-9-34
Marble Heart — F 3-10-10
Marcellini Millions — PAR
5-10-17
March Hare — REA 7-24-21
March of the Machines — FGU
1928
Mare Nostrum — M-G-M 2-28-26
Marguerite: Drei (AT-Germant
— UFA. . 1939
Maria (AT-Spanish) — XX. 1939
Maria. Die Magr (AT-German)
CAS. .6-3-37
Maria Elena (AT-Spanish) —
COL. .2-20-30
Maria Nover (AT-Hungarian)
DAN. .4-14-37
531
17,238 TITLES
Maria Rosa — PAR 5-4-16
Marianne (AT & S) — M-G-M
10- 20-29
Marie Antoinette — UNP
3-10-29
Marie Antoinette (AT) —
MGM. .7-13-38
Marie Chapdelaine (AT-
French) — FRN. .9 27-35
Marie Galante (AT) — F
11- 20-34
Marie Ltd. — SEL 3-30-19
Marika (AT-Hungarian) —
DAN. .12-1-38
Marines Are Coming (AT) —
MAP. .12-1-34
Marines Are Here (AT) —
MOP. .7-5-38
Marion Das Gehoert Sich Nicht
(AT) — XX. .12-18-34
Marionettes (AT) AM.. 5-9-34
Marionettes — SEL ....2-14-18
Marius (AT) — PAR. . .4-19-33
Mark of Cain — RED. . .8-24-16
Mark of Cain — PAT. .. 11-1-17
Mark of the Beast — HOD
6-17-23
Mark of the Spur (AT) —
BIF. .3-6-32
Mark of the Vampire (AT) —
MGM. .3-28-35
Mark of Vain Desire — TRI
5-18-16
Mark of Zorro — UA... 12-6-20
Marked Man — U 1917
Marked Men — U 12-21-19
Marked Money (S-SE) — PAT
10-28-28
Marked Woman (AT) —
WA. .2-26-37
Market of Souls — PAR 9-21-19
Marlie. the Killer — PAT
3-18-28
Marooned Hearts — SEZ
10-17-20
Marquis Preferred — -PAR
1- 27-29
Marriage — F 2-20-27
Marriage — SHE 11-24-18
Marriage Bargain. The (AT) —
HOL. .2-20-35
Marriage by Contract (S-SE) —
TIF. . 10-14-28
Marriage Bubble — TRI . . . 1918
Marriage Chance — SEZ. 1-21-23
Marriage Cheat — FN .... 6-8-24
Marriage Circle — WA . . . 2-10-24
Marriage Clause — U. .. .6-20-26
Marriage for Convenience — SHE
2- 23-19
Marriage Gamble — ME.... 1921
Marriage in Transit — F. .5-3-25
Marriage Lie — BL 4-25-18
Marriage License — F ..8-29-20
17,238 TITLES
Marriage Maker — PAR 9-30-23
Marriage Market — CBC
12-23-23
Marriage Market — CBC . . . 1017
Marriage Morals — WEB 8-19-23
Marriage on Approval (AT) —
PRE. .12-27-33
Marriage of Kitty — PAR. 9-9-16
Marriage of Molly O — PAT
7-27-10
Marriage of Wm. Ashe — M
1-23-21
Marriage Pit — U 10-3-20
Marriage Playground (AT) —
PAR. .1929
Marriage Price — ART. .3-30-19
Marriage Ring — PAR... 9 8-18
Marriage Speculation — VIT
12-13-17
Marriage Whirl — FN. . .7-26-26
Marriages Are Made — P
10-13-18
Married? — JA 1926
Married Alive — P 8-21-27
Married Before Breakfast (AT)
— MOM . . 7-26-37
Married Flapper — U... 7-30-22
Married Flirts — MG. . . 10-19-24
Married in Haste — P 4-6-19
Married in Hollywood (AT) — F
9-29-29
Married in Name Only — TV
1917
Married Life — SKT. ... 6-27-20
Married People — HOD. .7-23-22
M arried Virgin — FID 1920
Marry Me — PAR 8-2-26
Marry in Haste — GOL. .2-10-24
Marry the Girl — STE.. 3-11-28
Marry the Girl (AT) —
WA. .7-13-37
Marry the Poor Girl — AE.1922
Marrying Widows (AT) — TOW
6-18-34
Mars Attacks the World
(AT)— U. .11-9-38
Marse Covington — M ....1916
Marseillaise (AT-French) —
WO. .11-10-39
Marshal of Mesa City (AT) —
RKO. .1939
Marshall of Money Mind —
ARW
Martha of the Lowlands
— PAR. .1914
Martin Eden — PAR 1914
Martin Garatuza (AT-
Spanish) — XX. .10-1-36
Martyr Sex — GOL 6-4-24
Martyrdom of Philip Strong —
PAR. .11-30-16
Martyrs of the Alamo — PAT
11-4-16
Maruja — EXI 1910
Mai uoia ( AT Ukrainian) —
UKR. .12-16-38
Mary Burns — Fugitive (AT) —
PAR. .11-9-35
Mary Ellen Comas to Town —
PAR. .3-28-20
Mary Jane's Pa — VIT . . 8-23-17
Mary Jane's Pa (AT) —
FN. .6-14-35
Mary Lawson's Secret — PAT
3-22-17
Mary Moreland— PMU .. 8-16-17
Mary of Scotland (AT) — RKO
7-24-36
Mary of the Movies — FBO
6-27-23
Mary O'Rourkei — PAT 1919
Mary Regan — FN 6-11-19
Mary Stevens. M.D. (AT) —
WA. .7-28-33
Mary's Ankle — PAR 8-7-20
Mary's Lamb — PAT 1915
Maryjka (AT) — XX... 12-6-34
Mas Alia De La Muerta (AT-
Spanish) — XX. .3-4-36
Mask — TRI 9-1-18
Mask — EPI 3-13-21
Mask of Pu Manchu (AT) —
MGM. .12-3-32
Mask of Lopez — FBO. 11-25-23
Mask of Riches — TRI.... 1918
Masked Angel — CHA. .. .4-1-28
Masked Bride — MG 12-6-25
Masked Dancer — PRI. . .6-25-24
Masked Dancer — VIT 1924
Masked Emotions (S-SE) — P
7-28-29
Masked Heart — AMU.. 7-19-17
M asked Lover — GSP 1928
Masked Motive — PAT 1914
Masked Rider — M 6-22-16
Masked Woman — FN... 2-20-27
Masks and Faces — WO... 1918
Masks of the Devil — M-G-M
12-2-28
Mason of the Mounted (AT) —
MOP. .9 3-32
Masquerade (AT & S) — P
9-8-29
Masquerade Bandit — FBO
7- 18-26
Masquerader. The (AT) — UA
3-8 33
Mass Struggle (AT) KIT
9-18-34
Massacre (AT) — FN... 1-18-34
Master of Beasts — AY .... 1922
Master of His Home — TRI
8- 23-17
Master of Men (AT) — COL
11-28-33
Master Man — PAT 6-11-19
Master Mind — PAR 1914
Master Mind — FN 9-19-20
Master Passion — KES.. 1-11-17
Master Shakespeare. Strolling
Player — MTL 4-20-16
Master Stroke — VIT 1920
532
Masters of Men— VIT ... 4 8 88
Masque of Life — FHG.. 11-2-18
Masquerader — FN 8-20-22
Masqueraders — PAR ...11-4-16
Mats Hari (AT) — MGM
1-3-32
Mata Hari — The Red Dancer —
BRI. .11-25-38
Match Breaker — M ....8-14-21
Match King, The (AT) —
PN. .12-9-32
Mate of the Sally Ann — AMU
12 6-17
Mater Nostra (AT-Spanish) —
XX. .9 10-36
Maternal Spark — TRI. 12-13 17
Maternite (AT-French) —
FRM. .6 24-37
Maternity — PBW 6-24-17
Matinee Idol — COL. . . .4-29-28
Matinee Ladies — WA... 4-17-27
Mating — VIT 10-8-18
Mating Call — PAR 10-14-28
Mating of Marcella — PAR
5- 19-18
Matto-Grosso (S-SE) — PRI
I- 14-33
Matrimaniac — FAT ...12-14-16
Matrimonial Martyr — PAT
6- 22-16
Matrimonial Web — VIT... 1922
Matrimonio Ideale (AT-Itallan)
— ESP. .12-21-39
Matrimony — INC 11-4-16
Mawas — BO 6-15-30
May Blossom — PAT 3-22-17
Maybe It's Love (AT) — WA
10- 19-30
Maybe It's Love (AT) —
PN. .2-9-35
Mayerling (AT-French) —
PAX. .9-9 37
Mayor, The (AT-Spanish) —
XX. .1939
Mayor of Filbert — TRI... 1919
Mayor of Hell (AT) — WB
6-23-33
Maytime — PRE 12-2-23
Maytime (AT) — MGM ..3-8-37
Me an' Me Pal — RED. . .2-8-17
Me and Captain Kidd — WO
II- 16-19
Me and My Gal— AR 1922
Me and My Gal (AT) — P
12-10-32
Me. Gangster (S-SE) — F
9-28-28
Meanest Gal in Town (AT) —
RKO. .2-17-34
Meanest Man in the World —
PN. .9-30-23
Measure of a Man — BL
11- 16-16
Measure of a Man — U. .9-21-24
Mechanics of the Brain — AM
1928
Med Folket For Posterlandet
(AT-Swedlsh) — SCA .3-14 3D
Meddler — U 6-24-25
Meddlin" Stranger — PAT
5 29-27
Meddling Women — CHA
10-12-24
Mediator — F 11-23-16
Medicine Bend — MTL. . .6-16-16
Medicine Man — TRI .... 11-8-17
Medicine Man, The (AT) —
TIP. .8-3-30
Meet Dr. Christian (AT) —
RKO. .10-19-39
Meet Miss Mozart (AT-French)
FRM. .11-30-37
Meet Nero Wolfe (AT) — COL
7-16-36
Meet the Baron (AT) — MGM
10-28-33
Meet the Boy Friend (AT) —
REP. .7-19-37
Meet the Girls (AT) —
P. .10-19-38
Meet the Mayor (AT) —
TIM. .10-17-38
Meet the Missus (AT) —
RKO. .5-25-37
Meet the Prince — PDC. 7-18-26
Meet the Wife (AT) —
COL. .6-21-31
Megvedtern Eery Asszonyt (AT-
Hung-arian) — DAN. .11-1-39
Mein Frau. Die Schuetzen-
koenlgin (AT-German) —
XX. .1-8 35
Mein Leben Fuer Maria-Isabell
(AT-German) — XX. .11-6-35
Mein Leopold (AT-German) —
CAP. .4-3-32
Mein Liebster Is Ein Jagger-
mann (AT-German) — XX
9-14-36
Meine Frau. Die Hochstapkerin
( AT-German ) — UFA . . 2-7-32
Meiseken (AT-German) —
XX . . 1938
Meistersingers — MOV . 12-22-20
Melissa of the Hills — AM
7-26-17
Melo (AT-German) — XX
2- 26-36
Melodia de Arrabol (AT) —
PAR. .8-9 33
Melodia Prohibida (AT) — P
3- 28 34
Melodia Der Liebe (AT) —
XX. .9-18-34
Melodie Des Herzen (AT-
German ) — UFA . . 1932
Melodies — GOO 1920
Melody Cruise (AT) — RKO
6-16-33
Melody for Two (AT) —
WA. .1-12-37
Melody In Spring (AT) —
FAR. .3-31-34
Melody of the Plains (AT) —
SPE. .4-2-37
Melody Lane (AT & S) — U
7-21-2!)
Melody Lingers On, The (AT)
— UA. .11-7-35
Melody of Love (AT) — U
10-28-28
Melody Man (AT) — COL
2-16-30
Melody Trail (AT) —
REP. .9-24-35
Melting Millions— F 1927
Meltosagos Kisasszony (AT-
Hungarian) — DAN. .9-16-37
Memory Lane — FN ...1-31-20
Men — PAR 5-25-24
Men — BBP 6 26-18
Men and Jobs (AT) — AM
1-6-33
Men and Women — PAR 4-5-25
Men Are Like That (AT) —
PAR. .12-29-29
Men Are Like That (AT) —
COL. .8-16-31
Men Are Not Gods (AT) —
UA. .1-20-37
Men are Such Fools (AT) —
RKO. .3-13-33
Men Are Such Fools (AT —
WA. .0-17-38
Men Call It Love (AT) —
MGM. .6-21-31
Men in Exile (AT) — FN. 5-7-37
Men in Her Life (AT) —
COL. .12-6-31
Men in the Raw — U... 11-4-23
Men in White (AT) — MGM
3-28-34
Men Like These (AT) — POP
1-10-32
Men Must Fight (AT) — MGM
3-11-33
Men of Action (AT) — -
CNN. .7-13 35
Men of America (AT) — RKO
3-1-33
Men of Chance (AT) — RKO
1-3-32
Men of Daring — U 4-3-27
Men of Ireland (AT) —
HOB. .10-6-38
Men of Steel — FN 7-18-20
Men of the Desert — ES. 10-4-17
Men of the Hour (AT) —
COL. .5-9-35
Men of the Night (AT) — COL
11- 28-34
Men of the Night — STE
8- 15-26
Men of the North (AT) — MGM
12- 14-30
Men of the Plains (AT) — GN
9- 29-36
Men of the Sea (AT-Span-
Uh) — XX 1938
Men of the Sea (AT-Rus-
ilan) — AM 7-1-38
Men of the Sky (AT) —
FN. .7-19-31
533
17,238 TITLES
Men of Tomorrow (AT) —
MUN. .4-16-35
Men of Zanzibar — F... 5-21-22
Men on Call (AT) — P
12-14-30
Men on Wings (AT-Russian) —
AM. .6-12-35
Men She Married — PBW
11-23-10
Men Who Have Made Love to
Me — ES 1-17-18
Men Who Forget — GEN
2-17 24
Men With Winga (AT) —
PAR. .10 24-38
Men Without Law (AT) —
COL. .11-30-30
Men Without Names (AT) —
PAR. .6-29-35
Men Without Women (AT) —
F. .2-2-30
Men. Women and Money — PAR
6-22-19
Menace (AT) — PAR .. 11-22-34
Menace — VIT 1-24-18
Menace. The (AT) — COL
1-31 32
Menace of the Mute — PAT
11-11-15
Mensch Ohne Namen (AT-
German) — UFA. .11-10-32
Mercedes (AT-Spanish) —
XX. .5 16-35
Merchant Father (AT-Spanish)
— XX. . 1939
Merely Mary Ann — F. . 2-24-10
Merely Mary Ann (AT) —
P. .9-13 31
Merely Players— WO. .. 8-25-18
Merlusse (AT-French) —
FRM . . 12-16-37
Merlusse (AT-French) —
XX. .1938
Merrily We Go to Hell (AT) —
PAR. .6-11-32
Merrily We Live (AT) —
MGM. .3-1-38
Merry Frinks (AT)— FN
6-27 34
Merry Go Round — F... 9-28-19
Merry-Go-Round — U 7-8-23
Merry-Go-Round of 1938 (AT)
— U. .10 26-37
Merry Monarch, The (AT) —
SYN. .7-16-35
Merry Peasant — SEV 1928
Merry Widow (AT) — MGM
10-13-34
Merry Widow — MG . . . 8-30-25
Merry Widow Ball (AT-
German) — XX. .1939
Merry Wives of Reno (AT) —
WA. .6-9-34
Merton of the Movies — PAR
9-14 24
17,238 TITLES
Meseauto ( AT-Hungarian) —
DAN. .11-11-36
Messalina — FBO 8-31-34
Message of the Mouse — VIT. .
Message from Mars — M 3-27-21
Message to Garcia. A (AT) —
F. .4-0-36
Metropolis — PAR 3-13-27
Metropolitan (AT) — F 10-13-35
Mexicali Kid (AT) —
MOP. .9-7-38
Mexicali Rose (AT) — COL
1-12-18
Mexicali Rose (AT) — REP
3-29-39
Mexican Rhapsody (AT-
Spanish — XX 1938
Mexican Spitfire (AT) — RKO
12-14-39
Mexican Woman (AT-Span-
ish)— XX 1938
Mexico Today — EDU ... 6-23-18
Miami— PDC 6-8-24
Mice and Men — PAR. .. 1-13-16
Michael Action (AT-Ger-
man) — UFA 1938
Michael and Mary 'AT) — U
I- 10-32-
Michael O'Halleran — HOD
6-17-23
Michael O'Halloran (AT) —
REP. .5-7-37
Michael Strogoff — U... 10-24-26
Miche (AT-French) — PAR
12-7-32
Michigan Kid — U 7-8-28
Mickey — WSR 8-11-18
Mickey the Kid (AT) — REP
6-27-39
Microbe — M 7-20-29
Microscope Mystery — FAT
II- 2-16
Middle Watch (AT) — BI
12-14-30
Mid Channel — EQU 9-19-20
Middleman — M 1915
Midlanders— FED 1921
Midnight (AT) — U 3-7-34
Midnight — PAR 1922
Midnight ( AT ) — PAR .. 3-15-30
Midnight Adventure — RA
7-1-38
Midnight Alarm — -VIT. . .8-5-23
Midnight Alibi (AT) — FN
7-5-34
Midnight Bell — FN 1921
Midnight Bride — VIT 2-1-20
Midnight Burglar — RAL..1918
Midnight Club (AT) — PAR
7- 29-33
Midnight Court (AT) —
WA. .1-27-37
Midnight Daddies (AT) — WW
8- 11-29
Midnight Express — CBC
11-23-24
Midnight Faces — GOO ...1920
Midnight Flower — AY ...1920
Midnight Flyer — FBO . . 1-10-20
Midnight Gambols — PI 0 27-20
Midnight Girl — CHA. . .7-12-25
Midnight Guest — U ...3-11-23
Midnight Intruder (AT) —
U. .1-31-38
Midnight Kiss — F ....10-31-20
Midnight Lady (AT) — CHE
5-15-32
Midnight Life — GOT ... 8-12-28
Midnight Limited — RA 12-20-25
Midnight Lovers — FN.. 11-7-20
Midnight Madness — BL. .0-2-18
Midnight Madness — PAT
8- 19-28
Midnight Madonna (AT) —
PAR. .0-8 37
Midnight Man — -U
Midnight Mary (AT) — MGM
7-17-33
Midnight Message — GOO
11- 7-20
Midnight Molly — FBO .3-15-25
Midnight Morals (AT) — MAF
8-9 32
Midnight Mystery (AT) —
RKO. .0-8-30
Midnight on the Barbary Coast
AI. .1929
Midnight Patrol (AT) —
MOP. .5-8-32
Midnight Patrol — SEL....1918
Midnight Phantom, The (AT)
— REB. .11-21-35
Midnight Riders — PS
Midnight Romance — FN
3-10-19
Midnight Rose— U 1928
Midnight Secrets — RA....1924
Midnight Special (AT) — CHE
12- 7-30
Midnight Stage — PAT... 1-5-19
Midnight Sun — U 5-2-26
Midnight Taxi (PT & S) — WA
11-4-28
Midnight Taxi (AT) — F .4-5-37
Midnight Trail — AMU.. 3-14-18
Midnight Warning (AT) —
MAF. .3-8-33
Midnight Watch — RA.. 3-13-17
Midshipman — MG 10-18-25
Midshipman Jack (AT) —
RKO. .11-17-33
Midstream (PT & S) — TIF
9- 15-29
Midsummer Madness — PAR
12-12-20
Midsummer Night's Dream —
FFS. .1028
Midsummer Night's Dream. A
(AT) — WA. .10-10-35
Might and the Man — FAT
6-17-17
Might of Love — U
534
Mighty (AT & S) — PAR.. 1029
Mighty. The (AT) — PAR
1-5-30
Mighty Barnum (AT) — UA
11-23-34
Mighty Lak A Rose — FN
2-11-23
Mighty Treve. The (AT) —
U. .1-12-37
Mignon — XX 8-5-23
Mikado, The (AT) — U. .5-10-39
Mike — M-G-M 1-17-26
Milady (AT) — GEF 9-13-33
Milady — SEZ 1-28-23
Milady of the Beanstalk — PAT
11- 24-18
Mile-a-Minute Kendall — PAR
5-12-18
Mile a Minute Love (AT) —
ACE. .4-6-37
Mile-a-Minute-Man — LUM 1926
Mile-a-Minute Morgan — -SAN
4-13-24
Mile-a-Minute Romeo — F..1023
Milestones — G 9-12-20
Milizia Territoriale (AT-Italian)
— NUO. .4-7-36
Milky Way, The (AT) — PAR
1-28-36
Mill of the Gods (AT-German)
— XX. .1939
Mill on the Floss — MT
12- 23-15
Mill on the Floss, The (AT) —
STJ. .11-16-39
Millie (AT) — RKO ...1-25-31
Million — PAR 1914
Million a Minute — M... 5-18-10
Million Bid — WA 0-12-27
Million Dollar Baby (AT) —
MOP. .1-2-35
Million Dollar Collar (PT & S)
WA. .2-24-29
Million Dollar Dollies — M 1918
Million Dollar Handicap — PDC
2-14-26
Million Dollar Haul (AT) —
FD. .1035
Million Dollar Legs (AT) —
PAR. .7-0-32
Million Dollar Legs (AT) —
PAR. .9-14-39
Million Dollar Mystery — RA
0-25-27
Million Dollar Racket (AT) —
VIC. .11-15-37
Million Dollar Ransom (AT)
— U. .0-10-34
Million for Love — STE 8-10-28
Million for Mary — AMU
8-17-16
Million to Burn — U... 11-4-23
Millionaire — U 11-6-21
Millionaire (AT) — WA 4-12-31
Millionaire Cowboy — FBO
10-10-24
Millionaire Kid — VIT. . .4-20-16
Millionaire Kid (AT) — REB
4-1-36
Millionaire Pirate — BL..2-1G-10
Millionaire Policeman — STE
7-18-26
Millionaire Vagrant — TRI
6-24-17
Millionaire's Double— M
6-10-17
Millionaires — WA .... 11-14-26
Millions in the Air (AT) —
PAR. .12-12-35
Mills of the Gods (AT) —
COL. .1-9-35
Milose Wszystko Zwycieza
(AT-Polish) — XX. .1-29-36
Mimi (AT) — ALL G-5-35
Min and Bill (AT) — MGM
11-23-30
Mind Over Motor — PRI . . 1923
Mind Reader (AT) — FN
4-7-33
Mind the Paint Girl — FN
11- 30-19
Mind Your Own Business (AT)
— PAR. .12-14-36
Mindent a Noert I (AT) — DAN
10-18-34
Mine to Keep — AHR. . .8-12-23
Mine with the Iron Door — PRI
12- 21-24
Mine With The Iron Door. The
(AT) — COL. .7-11-36
Minnie — FN 12-3-22
Minor Love and the Real
Thing ( AT - German ) —
XX. .1938
Mints of Hell — EXI 6-1-19
Miracle — COQ 1928
Miracle Baby — FBO ...8-12-23
Miracle Man — PAR. .. .8-31-19
Miracle Man, The (AT) —
PAR. .4-24-32
Miracle Makers — AE 1023
Miracle Man (AT-Polish) —
XX. .1038
Miracle of Life — PWB .... 1929
Miracle of Life — AMU 11-25-15
Miracle of Life — AE... 7-18-26
Miracle of Love — PAR 12-28-19
Miracle of Manhattan — SEZ
6-8-21
Miracle of Money — PAT 5-2-20
Miracle of St. Anthony
(S-SE) — VIU. .4-17-32
Miracle of Wolves — HIS
6-10-26
Miracle on Main Street (AT) —
COL. .1939
Miracle Woman (AT) —
COL. .8-2-31
Miracles (AT) — AM ... 10-23-34
Miracles For Sale (AT) — COL
8-11-39
Mirage — PDC 3-29-24
Mirages de Paris (AT) — AUT
12-29-33
Mirandy Smiles — PAR ...1018
Mirele Efros (AT- Yiddish) —
CRO. .11-1-39
Mirror — PMU 5-31-17
Misbehaving Ladies (AT) —
FN. .11-8-31
Mischief Maker — VIT
Mischief Maker — F . . . 11-30-16
Misfit Earl — G 11-10-19
Misfit Wife — M 7-18-20
Misleading Lady — G ..12-19-20
Misleading Lady — ES.. 1-27-16
Misleading Lady — M 1921
Misleading Lady (AT) —
PAR. .4-10-32
Misleading Widow — PAR
9-7-19
Mismates — FN 1926
Miss Adventure — F ...4-27-19
Miss Ambition — VIT . . 12-1-18
Miss Arizona — ARW ....1919
Miss Bluebeard — PAR . . 2-1-25
Miss Brewster's Millions — PAR
3-7-26
Miss Crusoe — WO 10-5-19
Miss Dulcie from Dixie — Vlf
3-23-19
Miss Fane's Baby is Stolen
(AT) — PAR. .1-20-34
Miss George Washington — PAR
11- 30-16
Miss Gingersnap — PAT... 1019
Miss Hobbs — REA 6-20-20
Miss Innocence — F 7-21-18
Miss Jackie of the Army — AMU
12- 20-17
Miss Jackie of the Navy —
MT. .12-14-16
Miss Lulu Bett — PAR 12-25-21
Miss Mischief Maker — RAL
1018
Miss Nobody — PAT
Miss Pacific Fleet (AT) —
WA. .12-7-35
Miss Paul Revere — CLR..1922
Miss Petticoats — BRA.. 7-27-16
Miss Pinkerton (AT) — FN
7- 9-32
Miss Robinson Crusoe — M
8- 9-17
Miss U. S. A. — F 1017
Missing — PAR 6-2-18
Missing Daughters — SEZ
7-6-24
Missing Daughters (AT) —
COL. .6-20-39
Missing Evidence (AT) — U
11-20-39
Missing Girls (AT) — CHE
10-7-36
Missing Guest (AT) — U. .9-9-38
Missing Husbands — M.. 6-21-22
Missing Link — WA 5-22-27
Missing Links — TRI. . .12-23-15
Missing Million — PAR.. 9-24-22
Missing Rembrandt (AT) —
FD. .3-27-32
Missing Witnesses (AT) —
WA . . 12-14-37
535
17,238 TITLES
Mississippi (AT) — PAR 4-2-35
Mississippi Gambler (AT) — U
11-3-29
Misstep, The (AT-German) —
XX. .1939
Mist in the Valley — HEP. 1924
Mistaken Identity — TRI. .1919
Mistaken Orders — RA....1926
Mr. Barnes of N. Y. — G..1922
Mr. Billings Spends His Dime —
PAR. .3-11-23
Mr. Bingle — PS 1922
Mr. Boggs Buys a Barrel (AT)
— GN. .1937
Mr. Boggs Steps Out (AT)
— GN. .1-31-38
Mr. Broadway (AT) — BRH
9-15-33
Mr. Chump (AT) — WA. 8-12-38
Mr. Cohen Takes a Walk (AT)
— WA. .2-13-36
Mr. Deeds Goes to Town (AT)
— COL. .3-27-36
Mr. Dodd Takes the Air (AT)
— WA. .7-29-37
Mr. Dolan of New York
Mr. Doodle Kicks Off (AT)
— RKO. .9-29-38
Mr. Editor is Crazy (AT-
Polish) — XX 1938
Mr. Fix-It — ART 4-25-18
Mr. Goode the Samaritan — FAT
5-25-10
Mr. Grex of Monte Carlo —
PAR. .12-16-15
Mr. Lemon of Orange (AT)
— F. .3-29-31
Mr. Logan, U. S. A. — F. .1918
Mr. Moto in Danger Island (AT)
— F. .3-29-39
Mr. Moto Takes a Chance
(AT) — F. .6-16-38
Mr. Moto Takes a Vacation
(AT) — F. .7-26-39
Mr. Moto's Gamble (AT) —
F. .4-11-38
Mr. Moto's Last Warning (AT)
— F. .1-31-39
Mr. Mulligan & Mr. Garrity —
WEI. .1929
Mr. Opp — BL 8-23-17
Mr. Pim Passes By — SEC. 1922
Mr. Potter of Texas — PS. 1922
Mr. Robinson Crusoe (AT) —
UA. .9-23-32
Mr. Skitch (AT) — F. . 12-23-33
Mr. Smith Goes to Washington
(AT) — COL. .10-6-39
Mr. Wong, Detective (AT)
— MOP. .10-3-38
Mr. Wong in Chinatown (AT) —
MOP. .7-19-39
Mr. Wu — M-G-M 6-22-27
Mr. Wu — STL 12-26-20
17,238 TITLES
Mrs. Black Is Back — PAR
Mrs. Balfame — MT 4-10-17
Mrs. Dane's Confession— FBO
1922
Mrs. Dane's Defense — PAR
1-10-18
Mrs. Erricker's Reputation —
HEP. .1924
Mrs. Letting well's Boots — SEZ
9-2-18
Mrs. Reynolds — WO 1018
Mrs. Slacker — PAR 3-28-18
Mrs. Temple's Telegram — PAR
6- 16-20
Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage
Patch ( AT ) — PAR . . 10-27-34
Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage
Patch — PAR 2-23-19
Mister Antonio (AT & S) — TIP
12-8-29
Mister Cinderella (AT) — M-G-M
7- 11-36
Mister Dynamite (AT) —
U. .5-25 35
Mister Forty-Four — M . . 9-21-16
Mister Hobo (AT) — GB..1935
Mister Hobo (AT) — GB. 2-8-36
Mistigri (AT-French) — PAR
1-20-33
Mistress of Shenstone — RC
3-20-21
Mistress of the World — PAR
3-12-22
Mit Dir Durch Dick Und
Duenn (AT) — BAU 11-27-34
Mixed Blood — RED 1-4-17
Mixed Faces — F 10-1-22
Mizici Svet (AT-Slovak) —
XX. .6-4-35
M'Liss — ART 5-2-18
M'liss (AT) — RKO 7-8-86
Mile, from Armentieres — M-G-M
10-28-28
Mile. Paulette — TRI. . .6-19-18
Mme. Sans Gene — PS 1922
Moana — PAR 2-21-26
Moby Dick (AT) — WA
8- 17-30
Mockery' — M-G-M 8-28-27
Model from Montmarte — PAR
10-21-28
Model Husband (AT-Ger-
mau)— XX 1938
Modern Cinderella — F .1-11-17
Modern Daughters — RA. 7-3-27
Modern Du Barry — U. .3-25-28
Modern Hero (AT) — WA
4-3-34
Modern Husbands — EXI. 6-1-19
Modern Life — U 9-8-18
Modern Love — U 1918
Modern Love (PT & S) — U
1929
Modern Marriage — SEZ. .4-8-23
Modern Matrimony — SEZ
11-18-23
Modern Monte Cristo — PAT
1-25-17
Modern Mothers — COL 8-19-28
Modern Musketeer — ART 1-3-18
Modern Salome — M 1020
Modern Thelma — F. .. .4-20-16
Modern Times (AT) — UA
2-7-36
Mohican's Daughter — AR
10-1-27
Mojave Kid — FBO 8-7-27
Molly and I — F 3-21-20
Molly and Me (PT & S) —
TIF. .4-7-29
Molly Entangled — PAR . . . 1917
Molly Go Get 'Em — AMU
1-17-18
Molly Make-Believe — PAR
4-20-16
Molly O — FN 12-4-21
Molly of the Follies — PAT
2-2-19
Mollycoddle — UA 6-20-20
Moment Before — PAR.. 5-11-16
Monastery (AT) — WO... 2-2-38
Mon Coeur Balance (AT) —
PAR. .2-8-33
Money Bill — VIT
Money Changers — PAT
10-31-20
Money Corral — ART. . .4-27-19
Money Isn't Everything — PAT
10-6-18
Money Mad — G 9-22-18
Money Madness — U 6-7-17
Money Magic — VIT 2-1-17
Money Maniac — PAT. . .7-24-21
Money Master — EDK. . .9-16-16
Money Means Nothing (AT) —
MOP. .5-15-34
Money. Money. Money — FN
1-22-23
Money Talks — M-G-M . . 6-16-26
Money Talks (AT) — SYN
8-12-33
Money to Burn — F 4-16-22
Money to Burn — LUM 11-28-26
Money to Burn (AT) — REP
1939
Monkey Business (AT) —
PAR. .9-27 31
M onkey. Talks — F 2-27-27
Monkey's Paw — SEZ 1923
Monkey's Paw (AT) — RKO
6-1-33
Monna Vanna — F 10-7-23
Monsieur Beaucaire — -PAR
8- 17-24
Monster — MG 2-22-26
Monster Walks (AT) —
MAP. .2-7-32
Monsters of the Deep — TPE
6-24-31
Montana Kid (AT) — MOP
9- 13-31
Montana Moon (AT) — MGM
4-13 30
Monte Carlo — MGM.. 3 28 26
Monte Carlo (AT) — PAR
8- 31-30
Monte Carlo Madness (AT) —
FD. .6-5-32
Monte Carlo Nights (AT) —
MOP. .4-26-34
Monte Criollo (AT-Spanish) —
XX. .3-16-37
Monte Cristo — F 3-19-22
Monlmaitre — PAR 7-6-24
Montmarlre Rose — EXP
6-26 2S»
Moon M»dDeas — RC ....8-1-20
Moon ol Israel — FBO. . .7-3-27
Moon's Our Home. The (AT) —
PAR. .4-6-38
Moonlight and Honeysuckle —
REA. .7-24-21
Moonlight and Pretzels
(AT) — U. .8-23-33
Moonlight Follies — U... 9-18-21
Moonlight Murder (AT) —
M-G-M. .3-19 36
Moonlight on the Prairle(AT)
— WA. .11-11-85
Moonlight Sonata (AT) —
MAZ. .4-26-38
Moonshine Trail — PAT 10-26-19
Moonshine Valley — F. . .3-20-22
Moonstone. The (AT) — MOP
8-7-34
Moral Code. The— ERb . 3-9-17
Moral Courage — PBW. . 6-24-17
Moral Deadline — WO... 2-16-10
Moral Fabric — TRI. .. .3-16-16
Moral Fibre — VIT 1831
Moral Law — F 3-21-18
Moral Sinner — PAR .... 4-27-24
Moral Suicide — GRA. . .3-28-18
Morals — PAD 1922
Morals for Men — TIF. 11-22-26
Morals for Women (AT) —
TIF. .12-22-31
Morals of Hilda — RED 12-21-16
Morals of Marcus. The (AT) —
GB. .1-14-36
Moran of the Lady Letty — PAR
2- 12-22
Moran of the Marines — PAR
10-21-28
Moran of the Mounted — RA
9- 19-26
More to Be Pitied — CBC
9-24-22
More Deadly Than the Male —
PAR. .12-14-19
More Excellent Way — VIT
3- 29-17
More Pay — Less Work — F
7-4-26
More Than a Secretary (AT) —
COL. .12-11-36
More Trouble — PAT 6-2-18
More Truth Than Poetry — M
11-1-17
Morena Clara (AT-Spanieh)
— XX. .1938
536
Morgane — FF 1929
Morgan's Last Raid — M-G-M
2-10-29
Morgan's Raiders — -BL. .2-21-18
Morgenrot (AT) — PRX
8-16-3.)
Morganson's Finish — TIF. 1920
Moritz Macht Sein Glueck
( AT-German ) — CAP
12-28-32
Mormon Maid — HWF. . 2-22-17
Morning- After (AT) — MAJ
8-22-34
Morocco (AT) — PAR. 11-16-30
Morok — HES 2-7-18
Mortal Clay — GHA 1922
Mortal Sin — M 3-15-17
Mortgaged Wife — U ...6-30-18
Mortmain — VIT 9-9-15
Moscow Laughs (AT-
Russian) — AM. .3-23-35
Moscow Nights (AT-
French) — LEN 5-9-38
Moscow Today — AM... 5-19-29
Most Dangerous Game (AT) —
RKO. .9-10-32
Most Immoral Lady (AT & S)
FN. .10-27-29
Most Precious Thing in Life
(AT) — COL. .11-13-34
Moth — SEL 10-11-17
Moth. The (AT) — MAC
3 9 34
Mother — FBO 3-13-27
Mother — HAM 1928
Mother — TCS
Mother and the Law — GRI
9-7-19
Mother and the Law — Super-
Art. . 11-1-18
Mother and Son (AT) —
MOP. .8-30-31
Mother and Sons (AT-Rus-
Bian) — AM 9-28-38
Mother Carey's Chickens
(AT) — RKO. .7-26-38
Mother Eternal — GRA. .4-24-21
Mother Heart — F 6-12-21
Mother. I Need You — CAS
Mother Knows Best (PT & S)
— F. .9-23-28
Mother Love and the Law — AY
1921
Mother Machree (S-SE) — F
1-22-28
Mother. 1905 (AT) — AM
6-2-34
Mother O' Mine — APR.. 6-5-21
Mother O' Mine — BL
Mother of His Children — F
4-11-20
Mother of Mine — -ZAK...1928
Mother's Boy (AT) — PAT
6-12-29
Mother's Cry (AT) — FN
12-7-30
Mother's Lullaby (AT-
Italian) — XX 1938
Mother's Millions (AT) — U
5-10-31
Mother's Ordeal — VAN. 5-10-17
Mother's Secret — F... 12-23-19
Mother's Secret — BL. . .4-26-18
Mother's Sin — VIT 2-7-18
Mothers of Men — REP. . 3-7-20
Mothers of Today (AT-
Yiddish) — APX. .3-14-39
Motherhood — STB 1928
Motherlove (AT-German) —
XX. .1938
Motion to Adjourn — ARW.1922
Motive for Revenge (AT) —
MAJ. .5-21-33
Motor Madness (AT) —
COL. .6-4-37
Moulders of Men — FBO. 4-3-27
Moulin Rouge (AT) — UA
1- 10-34
Moulin Rouge (S-SE) — WW
2- 10-29
Mountain Dew — TRI. . . 9-20-17
Mountain Eagle — LEE... 1926
Mountain Justice (AT) — D
5- 18-30
Mountain Justice (AT) —
WA. .5-15-37
Mountain Lovers — COQ...1929
Mountain Madness — SEZ..1921
Mountain Music (AT) —
PAR. .6-14-37
Mountain Rhythm (AT) — REP
6- 29-39
Mountain Woman — F .2-6-21
Mountains of Manhattan — LUM
6-26-27
Mounted Fury (AT) — WW
12-20-31
Mounted Stranger (AT) — U
3- 9-30
Mouthpiece, The (AT) —
WA. .4-24 32
Movie Crazy (AT) — PAR
8-12-32
Mupgsy — TRI 191S>
Mommy, The (AT) — U...1932
Mommy and the Humming
Bird — PAR 11-18-16
Mujeres De Hoy (AT-Spanish)
— XX. .12-8-36
Mujeres Sin Alma (AT-Spanish)
— XX. .12-15-36
Mummy's Boys (AT) — RKO
12-15-36
Murder — UFA 1928
Murder (AT) — BI 10-26-30
Murder at Dawn (AT) —
BIF. .2-28 32
Murder at Glen Athol (AT) —
CHE. .1935
Murder At Glen Athol (AT) —
INV. .2-28-36
Murder at Midnight (AT) —
TIF. .9-20-31
Murder at the Vanities (AT)
— PAR. .5-18-34
537
17,238 TITLES
Murder By An Aristocrat (AT)
— FN. .6-13-36
Murder by Television (AT) —
CAM. .1935
Murder by the Clock (AT) —
PAR. .7-19-31
Murder Goes to College (AT)
— PAR. .2-24-37
Murder in Greenwich Village
(AT) — COL. .11-3-37
Murder in the Clouds (AT) —
FN. . 12-26-34
Murder in the Fleet (AT) —
MGM. .6-1-35
Murder in the Museum (AT)
— PRG . . 6-27-34
Murder in the Private Car
(AT) — MGM. .7-10-34
Murder in the Red Barn (AT)
— OLM. .8-19-36
Murder in Trinidad (AT) — -
F. .5-16-34
Murder Man (AT) —
MGM. .7-9-35
Murder of Dr. Harrigan, The
(AT) — FN. .1-21-36
Murder on a Bridle Path (AT)
— RKO. .4-11-36
Murder on a Honeymoon
(AT) — RKO. .2-14-35
Murder on Diamond Row (ATI
UA. .11-15-37
Murder on the Blackboard
(AT) — RKO. .6-5 34
Murder on the Roof, The
(AT) — COL. .2-9-30
Murder on the Set (AT) —
GOB. .8-21-36
Murder Will Out (AT) — FN
4-20-30
Murder With Pictures (AT) —
PAR. .11-20-36
Murders in the Rue Morgue
(AT) — U. .2-14-32
Murders in the Zoo (AT) —
PAR. .4-1-33
Music for Madame (AT) —
RKO. .9-15-37
Music Goes 'Round. The (AT)
— COL. .2-24-36
Music in the Air (AT) — F
12-14 34
Music Is Magic (AT) —
F. .9-24-35
Music Master — F 1-23-27
Musica In Piazza (AT-Italian) —
NUO. .1936
Muss 'Em Up (AT) — RKO
1-21-36
Mussolini Speaks (S-SE) —
COL. .3-11-33
Must We Marry? — TPC 3-3-29
Mutiny — BL 3-16-17
Mutiny Ahead (AT) —
MAJ. .7-6-35
17,238 TITLES
Mutiny in the Big- House (AT)
— MOP. .10-11-39
Mutiny of the Elsinore — M
7-25-20
Mutiny on the Bounty (AT) —
MGM. .11-1-35
Mutiny on the BlaeUhawk
(AT) — TJ. .8-3-39
Mutiny on the Elsinore. The
(AT) — REG. .2-17-39
Mutter and Kind (AT) —
XX. .12-1-34
Mutterliebe — FFP ....2-22-31
Muzzle (AT-German) —
XX. .1938
My American Wile — PAR
1-7-23
My American Wife (AT) — PAR
7-21-36
My Best Girl — M
My Best Girl — UA .... 11-13-27
My Bill (AT) — WA 7-8-38
My Boy — FN 1-1-22
My Country First — UNA
5-18-16
My Candidate (AT-Span-
ish) — XX 1938
My Cousin — ART 12-1-18
My Dad — FBO 7-9-22
My Daughter is Different
( AT-Hungarian — DAN . .1938
My Dear Miss Aldrich (AT) —
MGM . . 10-13-37
My Four Years in Germany —
SR. .3-21-18
My Friend from India — PAT
5-13-28
My Friend the Devil — F..1922
My Girl Friend. Barbara
AT-German — UFA 1938
My Heart Is Calling (AT) —
GB. .1-26-35
My Home Town — RA....1928
My Husband's Other Wife —
PAT. .12-21-19
My Husband's Wives — F
12 28-24
My Lady Friends — FN .... 192::
My Lady Incog — PAR.. 1-27-16
My Lady of Whims — -ARW
1-17-26
My Lady's Dress — F. . . ,
My Lady's Garter — PAR
3-21-20
My Lady's Latch Key — Fls
3-2U 21
My Lady's Lips — SCH .7-26-25
My Lady's Past (PT & S) —
TIF. .8-25-29
My Lady's Slipper — -VIT
1-20-16
My Life Is at Stake (AT-
Gcrman) — UFA 1938
My Lips Betray (AT) — F
11- 4-33
My Little Boy — BL. . .12-13-17
My Little Sister — F.... 6-15-1 9
My Lucky Star (AT) —
F. .9-12-38
My Madonna — M ....11-11-15
My Man — VIT 2-17-24
My Man (PT & S) — WA
12- 3 28
My Man. Godfrey (AT) — U
6-16-36
My Marriaje (AT) — F 11-19-35
My Neighbor's Wife — DAV
5- 31 -25
My Official Wife — VIT
12-7-16
My Official Wifp — WA
10-17-26
My Old Dutch — D 11-18-16
My Old Dutch — U 1926
My Old Kentucky Home — AR
5- 7-22
My Old Kentucky Home
(AT) — MOP. .1-26-38
My Own Pal — F 3-21-26
My Own United States — FRO
1-24-18
My Pal the King (AT) — U
1932
My Partner — MT 3-23-16
My Past (AT)— WA. . .3-15-31
My Sin (AT) — PAR .... 9-6-31
My Son — FN 4-12-25
My Son is a Criminal (AT) —
COL. .3-21-39
My Son is Guilty (AT) — COL
1939
My Song for You (AT) —
GB. .5-28 35
My Two Loves (AT-Span-
ish) — PAR 1938
My Unmarried Wife — BL
12-20-17
My Valet — TRI 9-30-15
My Weakness (AT)— F
9-22-33
My Wife — MT
My Wife and I — WA ... 5-24-25
My Wife the Miss (AT) —
XX. .9-13-34
My Wife's Family (AT) —
POP. .3-13-32
My Wife's Relatives (AT) —
REP. .3-13-39
My Wild Irish Rose — VIT
6- 18-22
My Woman (AT) — PAR
10-17-33
Myrt and Marge (AT) — U
1-16-34
Mysteries of Life (S-SE) —
PWP. .1929
Mysteries of Myra — INT
6- 1-16
Mysteries of Myra — WTL
4-27-16
538
Mysteries of Nature — UFA
7- 27-30
Mysteries of Notre Dame —
DUW. .10-30 36
Mysterious Client — PAT 5-12-18
Mysterious Crossing (AT) —
U. .2-2-37
Mysterious Dr. Fu Manchu
(AT) — PAR. .7-28-29
Mysterious Island (PT & S) —
MGM. .12-22-29
Mysterious Lady — M-G-M
8- 12-28
Mysterious Miss Terry — PAR
8- 30-17
Mysterious Miss X. The (AT) —
REP. .1-23-39
Mysterious Mr. Browning —
ARW. . 1919
Mysterious Mr. Moto (AT)
— F. .8-26-38
Mysterious Mr. Tiller — BL
9- 20-17
Mysterious Mr. X (AT-German)
— XX. .1939
Mysterious Mrs. M. — BL
1- 25-17
Mysterious Rider (AT) — PAR
6- 1-33
Mysterious Rider — HOD
10-23-21
Mysterious Rider (AT) —
PAR. .9-21-38
Mysterious Rider — PAR 3-27-27
Mysterious Witness — FBO
7- 1-23
Mysterious Mr. Parkes (AT-
French) — PAR. .8-31-30
Mysterious Mr. Wong (AT) —
MOP. . 1-15-35
Mystery Brand — -RA 1927
Mystery Club — U 9-12-26
Mystery Girl — PAR 1918
Mystery House (AT) —
WA. .6-1-38
Mystery Liner (AT) — MOP
2- 28-34
Mystery Man, The (AT) —
MOP. .2-12-35
Mystery of Edwin Drood
(AT) — U. .3-20-35
Mystery of Life (AT) — U
7-5-31
Mystery of Lourdes — PHE 1928
Mystery of Mr. Wong (AT) —
MOP. .3-20-39
Mystery of Mr. X (AT) —
MGM. .2 24-34
Mystery of No. 47 — SEL
6-7-17
Mystery at the Villa Rose
(AT) — BI. .6-1-30
Mystery of the Hooded Horse-
men. The (AT) —
GN. .7-30-37
Mystery of the Wax Museum
(AT) — WA. .2-18-33
Mystery ol the While Koom
(AT) — . .3-29-39
Mystery of the Yellow Room —
RE A . .10-26-19
Mystery of Washington Square
— FID. .1920
Mystery Plane (AT) — MOP
2-27-39
Mystery Ranch (AT) — P 7-1-32
Mystery Ranch (AT) — STI
5-26-34
Mystery Rider — AI 1928
Mystery Road — PAR... 7 31-21
Mystery Train (AT) —
COT. .8-23 31
Mystery Valley — RA . . . 12-9-28
Mystery Woman (AT) —
P. . 1-8-35
Mystic — MG 9-6-26
Mystic Circle Murder (AT) —
ME. .10-13-39
Mystic Paces — TRI ....9-8-18
Mystic Hour — APO .... 5-24-17
Mystic Mirror — UFA . . . 10-7-28
Mystic Mountain, The (AT-
Prench) — LEN. .4-1-36
j\
Nacht-Bummler (AT-German)
— COL. .3-8-31
Nada Mas Que Una Mujer
(AT) — F. .11-27-34
Nagana (AT) — U 2-16-33
Nagymama ( AT Hungarian) —
XX. .12-31 35
Naked Hearts — BL 5-18-16
Naked Truth (S-SE) — PWP
1929
Name the Man — MG... 1-20-24
Name the Woman — COL
9-2-28
Name the Woman (AT)— COL
10-16-34
Nameless Men — TIP ...3-25-28
Namenheirat (AT-German) —
FAP. .1932
Namensheirat (AT) — FM
1-12-33
Nan of Music Mountain — PAR
1917
Nana — MOV 8-4-29
Nana (AT) — UA 2-2 34
Nanau, Sie Kennen Korff Noch
Night (AT-German) — UFA
1939
Nancy Comes Home — TRI
4-4-18
Nancy Drew and the Hidden
Staircase (AT) — WA. 11-2-39
Nancy Drew — Detective
(AT) — WA. .12-7-38
Nancy Drew, Reporter (AT) —
WA. .1939
Nancy Drew, Trouble Shooter
(AT) — WA. .9-18-39
Nancy from Nowhere — PAR
2-5-22
Nancy Steele la Missing (AT)
— P. .3-10-37
Nancy's Birthright — MT
6-25-16
Nanette of the Wilds — PAR
11-30-16
Manon (AT-German) —
UFA . . 1938
Nanook of the North — -PAT
6-18-22
Napoleon — M-G-M ....2-17-29
Napoleon and Josephine —
PBO. .6-25-24
Napoli Che Canta (AT-Ital-
ian) — CRE. .1-25-31
Nar Rosorna Sla-Ut (AT-
Swedish) — PAR. .2-15-31
Narayana — GAU 1921
Narrow Corner (AT) — WA
6-20-33
Narrow Escape — RAY.... 1926
Narrow Path — RED .... 8-31-16
Narrow Path — PAT 1918
Narrow Street — WA... 1-11-25
Narrow Trail — ART. .. 1-10-18
Naszuit Felaron (AT-
Hungarian) — XX. .2-16-37
Natalia Poltavka (AT-
Ukrainian) — KIO. .2-18-37
Nation Aflame (AT) —
TRS. .10 20-37
Nation's Peril — VIT
Natural Law — PRN . .4-15-17
Nature and Love — UFA. . 1928
Nature Girl — U 1910
Nature Man — U 11-4-15
Naughty — FD 1927
Naughty Baby (S-SE) —
FN. .1-20-29
Naughty But Nice — FN
6-26-27
Naughty But Nice (AT) — WA
6-29-39
Naughty Duchess — TIP
10-28-28
Naughty Flirt (AT) — FN
4-19-31
Naughty Marietta (AT) —
MGM. .2-20 35
Naughty Nannette — FBO
4-24-27
Naughty ! Naughty ! — PAR
4-11-18
Naulahka — PAT 2-14-18
Navigator — MG 9-7-24
Navy Blue and Gold (AT) —
MGM. .11-17-37
Navy Blues (AT) — MGM
1- 12-30
Navy Blues (AT) —
REP. .3-29-37
Navy Born (AT) — REP. 6-2-36
Navy Secrets (AT) — MOP
2- 15-39
Navy Spy (AT) — GN ..3-24-37
Nazar Stodolya (AT-Russian)
— AM. .8-18-37
Ne Sirj Edesanyam (AT-
Hungarian) — XX. .11-26-36
539
17 ,2 3 8 TITLES
Near Lady — U 12-2-23
Nearly a Kins — PAR.. 2-17-16
Nearly Married — GW . . . 12-6-17
Near the Rainbow's End (AT)
— TIF. .7-6-30
Near the Trail's End (AT) —
TIF. .1931
'Neath Arizona Skies (AT) —
MOP. .12-11-34
Neath Western Skies — SYN
12-15-29
Necessary Evil — FN. . .6-21-25
Neck and Neck (AT) — WW
11-8-31
Ned McCobb's Daughter —
(S-SE) — PAT. .11-4-28
Nedra — PAT 11-12-15
Ne'er Do Well — SEL. .2-17-10
Ne'er Do Well — PAR. . .6-6-23
Neglected Wives — WIS. 4-25-20
Neglected Women — FBO
7-27-24
Neighbor from Next Door
(AT-Polish) — XX 1938
Neighborhood House (AT) —
M-G-M. .5-19 36
Neighbors — WO 8-4-1 S
Neighbors Wives (AT) — ROY
9-20-33
Neighbors (AT-Yiddish) —
BES. .12-16-38
Nell Gwyn — PAR 1-31-26
Nell Gwyn (AT) — UA. 1-12-34
Nellie, the Beautiful Cloak
Model — MG 4-20-24
Nem Elhetek Muzsikaszo Nel-
kuel (AT Hungarian) — XX
2-24-36
Neptune's Daughter — U
Mero — P 5-28-22
Nervous Wreck — PDC . 10-24-26
Nest — EXP 10-16-27
Net — MT 4-6-16
Net— F 1-27-24
Nevada— PAR 8-21-27
Nevada (AT) — PAR. . .4-14-36
Nevada Buckaroo (AT) —
TIF. .11-29-31
Never Say Die — AE 9 28-24
Never Say Die (AT) — PAR
3-7-39
Never Say Quit — P 3-23-19
Never the Twain Shall Meet
— MG. .8-2-25
Never the Twain Shall Meet
(AT) — MGM. .6-7-31
Never Too Late (AT) —
REB. .11-27-35
Never Weaken — AE
New Adventures of Get Rich
Quick Wallingford (AT) —
MGM. .10-11-31
New Adventures of Tarzan
(AT) — BTZ. .6-21-36
17,238 TITLES
N'w Babylon — AM 12-8-29
New Brooms — PAR . . . 11-16-25
New Champion — COL . .4-4-20
New Commandment — FN
11-1-26
New Disciple — FED ..12-25-21
New Faces of 1937 (AT) —
RKO. .6 -29-37
New Frontier ( AT ) — ■
REP. .9 24-35
New Frontier (AT) — REP
9-7-39
New Gulliver. The (AT) —
AM. . 10-29-35
New Horizons ( AT-Russian)- —
AM. .5-19-39
New Klondike — PAR . .3-28-20
New Lives for Old — PAR
3-8-25
New Love for Old — -BL. . 2-7-18
New Moon — SEL ....6-18-19
New Moon (AT) — MGM
12-28-30
New Morals for Old (AT) —
MGM. .6-24-32
New Movietone Follies of 1930
(AT) — F. .6-29-30
New Orleans (PT & S) — TIF
8-11-29
New School Teacher — CCB.1924
New Teacher — F 8-13-22
New Toys — FN 3-1-25
New Year's Eve (S-SE) —
F. .4-14-29
New York — PAR 2-6-27
New York— PAT ....2-10-16
New York Idea — REA. 12-12-20
New York Luck — AMU
12-27-17
New York Nights (AT) — UA
2-2-30
New York Peacock — F. . 3-1-17
Newly Rich (AT) — PAR. 7-6-31
News Is Made at Night (AT) —
F. .7-17-39
News of the U.S.S.R. (AT-
Russian) — AM. .6-27-36
News Parade — F 6-3-28
Newsboy and the Lady. The
(AT-Spanish) — XX. .1939
Newsboys Home (AT) —
U. . 1938
Newsboys' Home (AT) — D
1-24-39
Next Corner — PAR. .. .3-30-24
Next Time I Marry (AT) —
RKO. .12-9-38
Next Time We Love (AT) — U
1-31-36
Nice People — PAR. .. .8-20-22
Nice Women (AT) — U. 2-21-32
Nick Carter, Master Detective
(AT) — MGM . .12-14-39
Nie Wleder Llebe (AT-
German) — UFA. . 11 7-32
Niedorajda (AT-Polish) —
STA. .1-17-38
Night and Day (AT) — GB
5- 27-33
Night After Night (AT) —
PAR. .10-29-32
Night Alarm (AT) — MAJ
12-11-34
Night Angel (AT) — PAR
6- 14-31
Night at the Opera, A (AT) —
MGM. .10-17-36
Night at the Ritz, A (AT) —
WA . . 6-16-35
Night Beat (AT) — ACT
12-27-31
Night Bird — U 10-7-28
Night Birds (AT) — BI. . 1-4-31
Night Bride — PDC 4-3-27
Night Cargo (AT) —
PEE. .1935
Night Cargo (AT) — MAC
1-7-36
Night Club — PAR 6-10-25
Night Club Lady. The (AT) —
COL. .8-27-32
Night Club Scandal (AT) —
PAR. .10-21-37
Night Court (AT) — MGM
6- 29-32
Night Cry — WA 4-18-26
Night Flight (AT) — MGM
10-4-33
Night Flyer — PAT . . . .3-26-28
Night Hawk — PDC 1924
Night Hawk (AT) —
REP. .9-26-38
Night Horsemen — F ..9-11-21
Night Is Young (AT) —
MGM. .1-12-36
Night Key (AT) — U ..4-21-37
Night Life — TIF ....11-27-27
Night Life in Hollywood —
ARW. .3-4-23
Night Life in New York —
PAR . . 8-2-25
Night Life in Reno (AT) —
ARC. .8-9-31
Night Life of the Gods (AT) —
U. .2-23-35
Night Mayor (AT) — COL
11-26-32
Night Message — U 3-2-24
Night Must Fall (AT) —
MGM. .4-22-37
Night Nurse (AT) — WA
7- 19-31
Night of June 13 (AT) —
PAR. .9-17-32
Night of Love — UA... 1-30-27
Night of Mystery — PAR
4-22-28
Night of Mystery (AT) —
PAR. .1937
Night of Nights. The (AT) —
PAR . . 1938
.540
Niclu i>f the Pines — ARW
1921
Night of Terror (AT) — COL
6-7-38
Night on the Danube (AT-
German) — XX 1938
Night Out — VIT 2-3-16
Night Owl — RA 1-30-27
Night Parade (AT 4 S) — RKO
11- 17-28
Night Control — FBO . .3 21-26
Night Ride (AT) — U.. 1-19-30
Night Rider (AT) — ARC
6-22-82
Night Riders — SEC ...4-30-22
Night Riders. The (AT) — REP
4-4-39
Night Rose — G
Night Ship — LUM 4-19-25
Night Spot (AT) — RKO. 3-31-38
Nights of Glory (AT-Span-
ish)— XX 1936
Night Waitress (AT) — RKO
12- 18-36
Night Watch (S-SE) — FN
10- 14-28
Night Work (AT) — PAT
11- 16-30
Night Work (AT)— PAR .9-21-39
Night Workers — ES ...5-31-17
Night World (AT) — U....1932
Nightingale (AT-Russian) — AM
11-8-36
Nightingale of Paris — CBC.1921
Nina. The Flower Girl — FAT
1-11-17
Nincsenek Veletlenek (AT-
Hungarian ) — HUN .9-29-39
Nine Days a Queen (AT) — GB
6-26-36
9 3-6 Seconds — STC ... 10-18-25
Nine O'clock Town — INC
8-4-18
Nine Points of the Law — FBO
192 2
Nine Seconds from Heaven —
RIA. .7-2-22
Nine-Tenths of the Law — ALA
4-26-18
Nineteen and Phyllis — FN
1-2-21
1914 The Last Days Before
the War (AT-German &
English) — CAP. .9-7-32
Ninety and Nine — VIT. 12-21-16
Ninety and Nine — VIT. 12-17-22
Ninotchka (AT) — MGM
10- 10-39
yth Guest (AT) — COL. .3-3-34
Niskavooren Naiset (AT-
Finnish ) — ENC 12-1-38
Nitwits. The (AT) —
RKO. .6-5-36
Nix on Dames (AT) — F
11- 24-29
No Babies Wanted — PLA
8-28-B8
No Children Wanted — HOR
8-11-18
No Control — PDC 6-1-27
No Defense — VIT ....1-29-22
No Defense (PT & 8) — WA
7-14-29
No Dejes la Puerta Abierta
(AT) — P. .11-13-23
No Funny Business (AT) —
PBI. .3-10 34
No Good Guy — INC ...4-27-16
No Greater Glory (AT) — COL
3-14-34
No Greater Love (AT) —
COL. .5-15-32
No Greater Love — SEL .1-6-16
No Gun Man — FBO 1924
No Limit (AT) — PAR. 1-18-31
No Living Witness (AT) —
MAP. .9-13-32
No Marriage Ties (AT) —
RKO . . 8-4-33
No Man of Her Own (AT) —
PAR. .12-31-32
No Man's Gold — -F 8-1-26
No Man's Land — M ... .7-21-18
No Man's Law — FBO . 11-22-25
No Man's Law — PAT. . .5-1-27
No Man's Woman — APH
2- 6-21
No Mataras (AT-Spanish) —
XX. .11-22-35
No More Ladies (AT) —
MGM. .6-12-35
No More Orchids (AT) —
COL. .12-31-32
No More Women — APH. 2-3-24
No More Women (AT) —
PAR. .3-3 34
No Mother to Guide Her — F
3- 2-24
No, No. Nanette (AT) —
FN. .1-12-30
No One Man (AT) — PAR
1-24-32
No Other Woman — F ..6-24-28
No Other Woman (AT) —
RKO. .1-13-33
No Place to Go — FN.. 12-25-27
No Place to Go (AT) — WA
11-29-39
No Ransom (AT) — LIB. 1-9-35
No Time to Marry (AT) —
COL. .2-5 38
No Trespassing — -HOD .4-23-22
No Woman Knows — U. .9-4-21
No Word of Love (AT-Ger-
man) — XX 1938
Noah'a Ark (PT & S) — WA
3-17-29
Nobody — FN 7-31-21
Nobody's Baby (AT) —
MGM. .2-2-37
Nobody's Bride — U ...3-25-23
Nobody's Fool — U . . . 10-23-21
Nobody's Fool (AT) — U. 6-5-36
Nobody's Girl — FED .... 1920
Nobody's Kid— RC ....7-17-21
Nobody's Money — PAR .2-4-23
Nobody's Widow — PDC
1-23-27
Nobody's Wife — U 3-7-18
Nobody's Wife (AT-Spanish)
— XX. .1938
Noc Listopadowa (AT) — PRX
5-1-33
Noches de Buenos Aires (AT-
Spanish) — XX. .12-11-35
Noches de Gloria (AT-Span-
lsh) — XX 4-28-38
Nocturno (AT-German) —
XX. .1938
Noise in Newboro — M.. 4-29-23
Noisy Neighbors (PT & S) —
PAT. .2-17-29
Nomads of the North — FN
10-3-20
Nomandie — SIN 6-21-31
Non-Stop Flight — FBO... 1926
Non-Stop New York (AT) —
GB. .10-7 37
None But the Brave — F. 8-5-28
None So Blind — ARW .. 2-25-23
Noose. The — FN 1-15-28
Norah O'Neale (AT) — DUW
10-26-34
North of Arizona (AT) —
COE. .1935
North of Hudson Bay — F
2-24-24
North of '63 — F 1917
North of 36 — PAR. ... 12-7-24
North of Nevada — FBO. 3-2-24
North of Nome (AT) — COL
10-28 36
North of the Rio Grande—
PAR. .5-21-22
North of Rio Grande (AT) —
PAR. .6-22-37
North of Shanghai (AT) —
COL. .1939
North of the Yukon (AT) —
COL. .1939
North Sea Patrol (AT) — ALL
1939
North Star — AE 2-7-26
North Wind (AT-Spanish) —
XX. .1939
North Wind's Malice — G
10-24-20
Northern Frontier (AT) —
AMB. .2-8-35
Nosferatu, ths Vampire — FGU
1929
Noszty Flu Esete Toth Mar-
ival (AT-Hungarian) —
DAN. .6-23 38
Not a Drum Was Heard — F
2-3-24
Not Against the Flesh (AT) —
GEP. .8-14-34
Not Built for Runnin" — STE
10-6-24
Not Damaged (AT) — F . 6-8-30
541
17,238 TITLES
Not Exactly Gentlemen (AT)
— F (reviewed as "Three
Rogues") 4-6-31
Not For Publication — FBO
7-10-27
Not Guilty — EQ 12-16-15
Not Guilty — FN 1-16-21
Not My Sister — INC 5-11-16
Not One to Spare — PDC
4-6-24
(Reviewed as "Which Shall
It Be")
Not Quite Decent (PT & S) —
F. .5-12-29
Not So Dumb (AT) — MGM
2-9 30
Not So Long Ago — PAR
8-9-26
Nothing But Lies — M.. 5-23-20
Nothing But the Truth — M
1-11-20
Nothing But the Truth (AT) —
PAR. .4-28-29
Nothing to Wear — COL... 1928
Nothing Sacred (AT) —
UA. .11-24-37
Notoriety — -WEB 10-8-22
Notorious Affair. A (AT) —
FN. .4-27-30
Notorious but Nice (AT)- —
CHE . . 8-23-33
Notorious Gallagher or His
Great Triumph — M... 6-1-16
Notorious Gentleman, A (AT)
— U. .2-16-35
Notorious Lady — FN .4-17-27
Notorious Miss Lisle — FN
8-32-20
Notorious Mrs. Sands — RC
1920
Notorious Sophie Lang (AT) —
PAR. .7-21 34
Now and Forever (AT) —
PAR. .10-13-34
Now I'll Tell (AT) — F. 5-28-34
Now or Never — -AE
Now or Never (AT) — A J
7-9-35
Now We're In the Air — PAR
12-17-27
Nth Commandment — -PAR
4-22-23
Nugget Nell — PAR 8-3-19
Nuisance. The (AT) —
MGM. .5-27-33
Number 17 — F 1921
Number 99 — HOD . . . .5-23-20
Numbered Men (AT) — FN
6-15-30
Numbered Woman (AT) —
MOP. .6-10 38
Nur Am Rhein (AT-Ger-
man)— FTP. .10-11-31
Nurse Edith Cavell (AT) —
RKO. .8-22 .30
17,238 TITLES
Nurse from Brooklyn (AT)
— U. .4-13-38
Nurse Marjorie — RE A . .3-28-20
Nut — UA 3-19-21
Nut Cracker — AE 4-11-26
Nut Farm. The (AT) —
MOP. .2-5-36
Nymph of the Foothills — VIT
9-8-18
Nymph of the Woods — VIT
1918
o
0. Henry Stories — VIT. 3-22-17
O. U. West — FBO 4-6-25
Oakdale Affair — WO.. 10-12-19
Oath — FN 4-17-21
Oathbound — F 7-30-22
Obeah (AT) — ARU 2-13-35
Obed the Wanderer (AT) —
PA A. .5-22 34
Oberst Redl (AT-German) —
CAP. .1932
Obcrwachtmeiater Schwenke
(AT-German) — XX. .5-7-30
Obey the Law (AT) —
COL. .3-11-33
Obey the Law — COL. ... 1-9-27
Obey Your Husband — AN
8-12-28
Object— Alimony — COL .3-3-29
Obligin' Buckaroo — PAT
10-2-27
Occasionally Yours — -RC
10-17-20
Ocean Waif — INT 11-16-16
Odessy of the North — PAR
1914
Of Human Bondage (AT) —
RKO . . 6 27-34
Of Human Hearts (AT) —
MGM. .2-8-38
Of Mice and Men (AT) — UA
12-27-39
Offenders — CLA 1922
Offshore Pirate — M 2-13-21
Office Girl (AT) — RKO. 3-13-32
Office Scandal (PT & S) —
PAT. .7-21-29
Office Wife (AT) — WA
9 28-30
Officer Jim— LBR 1926
Officer 666 — G 11-7-20
Officer 13 (AT) — FD.. 1-27-33
Officer O'Brien (AT) — PAT
3 2-30
Off the Highway — PDC
10-11-25
Off the Record (AT) — WA
2-23-39
Off to the Races (AT) —
F. .1-7-37
Oh, Baby — TJ 8-16-26
Oh. Boy — PAT 6-15-19
Oh. Doctor — U 11-23-24
Oh, Doctor! (AT) — U. 4 22-37
Oh. For A Man I (AT) —
F. .11-9-30
Oh. Jo — PAR 1921
Oh. Johnny! — G 1-19-19
Oh, Kay — FN 9-2-28
Oh. Lady, Lady — REA. 12-26-20
Oh, Mabel Behave — AY.. 1922
Oh. Mary Be Careful — PI
9-11-21
Oh. Sailor. Behave! (AT) —
WA. .2-15-31
Oh! These Times (AT-
Spanish) — XX 1938
Oh, What a Night — STE
12-12-26
Oh, What a Nurse — WA
3-7-26
Oh, Yeah! (AT) — PAT. 1-5-30
Oh. You Tony — F 9-21-24
Oh. You Women — PAR.. 1919
Oil and Romance — AY.... 1926
Oil for the Lamps of China
(AT) — WA. .4-30-35
Oil Raider (AT) — MAY. 11-1-34
Okay America (AT) — U..1932
Oklahoma Cyclone (AT) —
TIF. .9 14-30
Oklahoma Frontier (AT) — U
12-5-39
Oklahoma Jim (AT) — MOP
12-27-31
Oklahoma Kid — SYN.. 12-15 29
Oklahoma Kid. The (AT) —
WA. .3-15-39
Old Age Handicap — TRI
6-10-28
Old and New — AM . . . .5-4-30
Old Barn Dance (AT) —
REP. .1-10-38
Old Clothes — MG ....11-15-25
Old Code — AN 11-18-28
Old Corral, The (AT) —
REP. .5 11-37
Old Curiosity Shop (AT) —
ALL. .6-21-35
Old Dad — FN 1921
Old Dark House. The (AT) —
U. .1932
Old English (AT) — WA
8-24-30
Old Fashioned Boy — PAR
11-7-20
Old-Fashioned Way (AT) —
PAR. .7-14-34
Old Fashioned Young' Man —
FAT. .5-3-17
Old Folks at Home — FAT
10-12-16
Old Fool — PDC 12-23-23
Old Hartwell's Cub — TRI
5-19-18
Old Heidelberg — FAT .10-7-16
Old Home Week — PAR. 5-31-25
Old Homestead — PAR . . 12-23-16
Old Homestead — PAR.. 10-8-22
542'
Old Homestead. The (AT) —
LIB . . 10-5-35
Old Hutch (AT) — M-G-M
0-22-36
Old Ironsides — PAR . . 12-19-26
Old Lady 31 — M 4-3-20
Old Louisiana (AT) —
ORE. .3-12-37
Old Love for New — TRI.. 1918
Old Loves for New — FN
5-2-26
Old Maid, The (AT) — WA
8-1-39
Old Maid's Baby — PAT. .2-9-19
Old Man Rhythm (AT) —
RKO . . 8-2-35
Old Nest — G 7-3-21
Old Oaken Bucket — FBO
10-23-21
Old San Francisco— WA. 7-3-27
Old Shoes — HPI 1927
Old Soak — U 8-29-26
Old Swimmin' Hole — FN
2-20-21
Old Wives for New — ART
5-26-18
Old Wyoming Trail, The (AT)
— COL. .1937
Oldest Law — WO 6-2-18
Oliver Twist — PAR . . 12-21-16
Oliver Twist — FN . . . .11-5-22
Oliver Twist (AT) —
MOP. .2-25-33
Oliver Twist. Jr. — F. . .3-13-21
Olsen's Big Moment (AT) —
F. .1-9-34
Olympic Hero— ZAK 1928
O'Malley of the Mounted —
PAR. .2-13-21
O'Malley of the Mounted (AT)
— F. .3-25-36
O'Malley Rides Alone — SYN
1930
Omar the Tentmaker — FN
12-3-22
On Again Off Again (AT) —
RKO. .7-12-37
On Borrowed Time (AT) —
MGM. .6-28-39
On Dangerous Ground — BRA
I- 11-21
On Demande un Compagnon
(AT) — XX. .6-9-33
On Dress Parade (AT) — WA
II- 1-39
On His Own (AT-Russian) —
AM. .9-18-39
On Probation — STE ..12-14-24
On Probation (AT) —
PEE. .4-17-35
On Record — PAR 3-1-17
On Secret Service (AT) — BI
7-31-34
On Such a Night (AT) —
PAR. .8-16-37
On the Avenue (AT) —
F. .2-3-37
On the Bolder (AT) — ■
WA. .2-9-30
On the Divide — SYN 2-3-29
On the Go — ARC 4-5-23
On the »igh Card — -A It W. 1921
On the High Seas — PAR
10-8-22
On the Jump — F 10-0-18
On the Level — PAR ... 11-1-17
On the Level (AT) — F. 7-13-30
On the Quiet — PAR ... 8-18-18
On-the-Square Girl — PAT
8-23-17
On the Stroke of Three — FBO
12-14-24
On the Stroke of Twelve — RA
1- 15-28
On the Threshold — PDC . . . 1925
On the Trail — PS
On Thin Ice — WA 3-15-25
On Time — TRU 1924
On to Reno — PAT 8-20-28
On Trial — ES 0-21-17
On Trial (AT) — WA . .4-12-39
On Trial (AT) — WA.. 11-18-28
On With the Dance — PAR
2-5-20
On With the Show (PT) —
WA. .0-2-29
On Your Back (AT) — F
8-24-30
On Your Toes — U 1928
On Your Toes (AT) — WA
10-24-39
On Ze Boulevard — M-G-M
7-17-27
Once a Doctor (AT) —
FN. .2-27-37
Once a Gentleman (AT) —
WW. .7-13 30
Once a Lady (AT) — PAR
11-8-31
Once a Plumber — U... 9-19-21
Once a Sinner (AT) — F
1-18-31
3nce and Forever — TIF
10-23-27
Once in a Blue Moon (AT) —
PAR. . 193E
Once in a Blue Moon (AT) —
PAR. . 12-3-3C
Once in a Lifetime (AT) — U
1932
Once to Every Bachelor (AT)
— LIB. .8-23-34
Once to Every Man — FRO
2- 9-19
Once to Every Woman — U
10-3-20
Once to Every Woman (AT) —
COL. .3-24-34
Once Upon a Time — BOL
1-1-22
One A. M. — MT 8-3-1U
One Against Many — TRI..1919
One Arabian Night — FN
One Chance In a Million — ■
LUM. .5-1-27
One Clear Call — FN .... 6-25-22
One Day — MOS 2-24-16
One Dark Night (AT) — SAC
12-1-39
One Dollar Bid — HOD.... 1918
One-Eighth Apache — ARW.1922
One Embarrassing Night (AT)
— MGM. .9-7-30
One Exciting Adventure (AT)
— U. . 11-27-34
One Exciting Night — UA
10-29-22
One Frightened Night (AT) —
MAP. .4-26-35
One Glorious Day — PAR. 2-5-22
One Glorious Night — BAE.1925
One Glorious Scrap — U. 11-20-27
One Heavenly Night (AT) —
UA. .12-7-30
One Hour — RHF ....11-29-17
One Hour Before Dawn — PAT
7-18-20
One Hour Late (AT) —
PAR. .2-1-35
One Hour of Love — TIF
2-20-27
One Hour to Live (AT) — U
11- 8-39
One Hour With You (AT)
—PAR. .3-6-32
100 Men and a Girl (AT) —
U. .9-3-37
One Hysterical Night (AT) —
U. .1-5-30
One in a Million (AT) — INV
12- 1-34
One in a Million (AT) — F
12-22-36
One Increasing Purpose — F
1-16-27
One is Guilty (AT) — COL
5-3 34
One Law for Both — IV. 5-10-17
One Law for the Woman — VIT
1924
One Mad Kiss (AT) — F
7-27-30
One Man Dog — RKO. . .3-17-29
One Man Game — U 1-9-27
One Man in a Million — RC
1- 16-21
One Man Justice (AT) — -
COL. .1937
One Man Law (AT) — COL
2- 14-32
One Man Trail — F. . . .3-27-21
One Man's Journey (AT) —
RKO. .9-1-33
One Mile from Heaven (AT) —
F. .7-20-37
One Million Dollars — M. 12-2-15
One Million in Jewels — SEZ
2-4-23
One Minute to Play — FBO
9-19-26
543
17,238 TITLES
One Moment's Temptation—
SEC. .1922
One More American — PAR
3-7-18
One More River (AT) — U
8- 10-34
One More Spring- (AT)
F. .2-12-35
One New York Night (AT)
MGM. .5-4-85
One Night in May (AT-Ger-
man) — UFA 1938
One Night in Paris — AE..1922
One Night at Susie's (AT)
FN. .11-23-30
One Night in Rome — MG
9- 21-24
One Night of Love (AT)
COL. .7-6-34
One of Many — M 2-15-17
One of Our Girls — PAR.. 1914
One of the Bravest — LUM
11-22-25
One of the Finest — G. . 6-8-19
One Punch O'Day — RA 1926
One Rainy Afternoon (AT)
UA. .4-27-30
One Romantic Night (AT)
UA. .3-30-30
One Round Hogan — WA
10-16-27
One Shot Ross — TRI. . 10-11-17
One Splendid Hour — EXP
6- 9-29
One Stolen Night — VIT... 1923
One Stolen Night (PT & S)
WA. .5-26-29
One Sunday Afternoon (AT)
— PAR. .9-2-33
One-Thing-At-a-Time O'Day —
M. .6-29 19
One Third of a Nation (AT) —
PAR. .2-15-39
One Thousand Dollars — VIT
7- 7-18
$1,000 a Touchdown (AT) —
PAR. .9-28-39
One Touch of Nature — EDK
8-16-17
One Touch of Sin — F . . 2-1-17
One Way Passage (AT) —
WA. .8-23-32
One Way Street — FN.. 3-29-25
One Way Ticket (AT) —
COL. . 12 31-35
One Way Trail — SEZ 1920
One Way Trail (AT) —
COL. . 12-13-31
One Week of Life — G. . 5-25-19
One Week of Love — SEZ
11-12-22
One Wild Night (AT) —
F. .5-11-38
One Wild Week — REA . 8-28-21
17,238 TITLES
One Woman — SEL .12-22-18
Olio Woman Idea IS-SE) — F
0-16-29
One Woman to Another — PAH
9-25 27
One Wonderful Night — U
12-17-2:}
One Year Later (AT) —
ALL .11-10-33
One Year to Live — FN.. 3-8-25
Only a Shop Girl — CBC
12-24 22
Only Angels Have Wings (AT)
— COL. .5-15-39
Only 8 Honrs (ATI —
MGM . .1-3 35
Only For You (AT-Italian)
—XX. .1938
Only Koad — M 6-16-18
Only Saps Work (AT) — PAR
12-14-30
Only Son — PAR 1926
Only the Brave ( AT I — PAR
3-9-30
Only Thing — MG 11-29-25
Only 38 — PAR 6-17-23
Only Way — UA 3-21-26
Only Woman — FN ...10-26-24
Only Yesterday (AT) —
U. .11-10-33
Open All Night — PAR . 9-21-24
Open Door — RC 10 19-19
Open Places — ES 8-23-17
Open Range — PAR 1927
Open Your Eyes — WA. .7-6-19
Opened Shutters — IT 8-21-21
Opening Night — COL 1927
Opera Ball (AT-Uerman) —
PRX. .11 8-31
Operator 13 (AT) — MGM
6-2 34
Opernredoute ( AT-German) —
PRX. .1932
Oppenheim Family (AT-
Russian ) — AM . . 1939
Opportunity — M 7-14-18
Oppressed — ELI 7-21-29
Orage (AT-French) —
TRN. .12 13-3°
Orchids and Ermine — FN
3-27 27
Orchids to You (AT) —
F. .8-10 35
Ordeal — PAR 0-4-22
Ordeal of Elizabeth — VIT
5- 18-16
Ordeal of Rosetta — SEL
7-21-18
Orderly — PAT 1922
Orders is Orders (AT) — GB
6-4-34
Oidynanl Michorowski (AT-
Polish) — STA. .12-2-37
Oregon Trail.. The (AT) — REP
6- 16-36
Orient Express (AT) — F
2- 28-34
Oro y Plata (AT) — INE
7-26-34
Orphan — F 5-2-20
Orphan of the Sage — FBO
1-20-29
Orphan Sally — LBR ....1922
Orphans of the Storm — UA
1-8-22
Orphans of the Street
(AT) — REP. .12-9-38
o'Shaughnessy's Boy (AT) —
MGM. .10-1-35
Othello — EPI 2-25-23
Other Half — EXI 1919
Other Kind of Love — GOL
7-20-24
Other Man — VIT 2-7-18
Other Man's Wife — IND
6-16-19
Other Men's Daughters — F
7-7-18
Other Men's Daughters — AHR
12-30-23
Other Men's Shoes — PAT
1-18-20
Other Men's Wives — PAR
7- 6-19
Other Men's Women (AT) —
WA. .4-26-31
Other People's Money — MT
6- 25-16
Other Side — AR 1922
Other Side of the Door — MT
1-6-16
Other Tomorrow, The (AT) —
FN. .6-26-30
Other Woman — HOD . . .4-3-21
Other Woman — PAT 1918
Other Woman's Story — SCH
4-11-26
Other Women's Clothes — HOD
3- 19-22
Other Women's Husbands — WA
6-3-26
Our Betters (AT) —
RKO. .2-24-33
Our Better Selves; — PAT
7- 13-19
Our Blushing Brides (AT) —
MGM. .8-3-30
Our Dally Bread (AT) — UA
8- 8-34
Our Dancing Daughters —
M-G-M. .10-14-28
Our Hospitality — M ..11-18-23
Our Leading Citizen — PAR
6-18-22
Our Leading Citizen (AT) —
PAR. .8-11-39
Our Little Girl (AT) —
F. .6-7-36
Our Little Wife — 6 2-21-18
Our Modern Maidens —
M-G-M. .9-8-29
Our Mrs. McChesney — M
8- 26-18
544
Our Mutual Friend — FBO
12-4 2)
Our Navy — PKR 6-23-18
Our Neighbors, the Carters
(AT) — PAR. .11-3-39
Our Relations (AT) — M-G-M
7-14-36
Our Teddy — FN 1919
Out All Night (AT) — U
4-8-38
Out All Night — U 10-2-27
Out of a Clear Sky — PAR
9-29-18
Out of Dust — MCA 1-25-20
Out of Eternity — PS
Out of Luck — PAR. . .8-31-19
Out of Luck — U 8-6-23
Out of Singapore (AT) — ST
9-16-32
Out of Singapore (AT) — AST
1939
Out of the Chorus — REA
3-27-21
Out of the Darkness — PAR
9-16-16
Out of the Darkness — GAC
1921
Out of the Depths — PI.. 1921
Out of the Drifts — PAR.. 1916
Out of the Fog — M 2-9-19
Out of the House of Bondage —
LYC. .1921
Out of the Night — SHE
10- 23-18
Out of the Past 1928
Out of the Past — PEE. 11-13-27
Out of the Ruins — FN. 8-26-28
Out of the Silent North — U
6- 11-22
Out of the Shadow — PAR
1-26-19
Out of the Snow — SEZ
11- 14-20
Out of the Storm — G. .6-20-20
Out of the Storm — TIF
6-2-26
Out of the West — FBO. .1926
Out of the Wreck — PAR
3-15-17
Out West with the Hardys
(AT) — MGM . .12-12-38
Out With the Tide — PEE
7- 29-28
Out Yonder — SEZ 1919
11- 26-28
12- 10-22
.9-20-17
. .2-2-37
Outcast — FN
Outcast — PAR
Outcast — EMU ....
Outcast (AT) — PAR
Outcast Lady (AT) — MGM
11-3-34
Outcast Souls — STE. .. .2-6-28
Outcasts of Poker Flat — U
6-29-19
Outcasts of Poker Flats (AT)
— RKO. .3-16-37
Outer Gate. The (AT) —
MOP — See: Behind Prison Bare
Outing Chester Travelogues —
MT. .7-7-18
Outlaw Breaker — GOO . . . 1926
Outlaw Deputy. The (AT) —
PUE. .12-3-35
Outlaw Dog: — FBO 4-3-27
Outlaw Express — PAT 11-7-29
Outlaw Express (AT) —
D. .7-20-38
Outlaw Justice (AT) —
MAJ. .2 23-33
Outlaw's Daughter — U. . . .1926
Outlaws' Highway (AT) —
TRO. .11-3-34
Outlaws of Bed River — F
4-24-27
Outlaws of Sonora (AT) —
REP. .4-20-38
Outlaws of the Deep — PS ....
Outlaws of the Orient (AT) —
COL. .9-29-37
Outlaws of the Prairie
(AT) — COL. .2-2-38
Outlaws of the Range (AT) —
SPE. .4-8-36
Outlaws of the Sea — SEZ.1923
Outlawed — PI 1921
Outlawed — RKO 3-3-29
Outlawed Guns (AT) —
D. .10-1-36
Outpost of the Mounties (AT)
— COL. .11-28-39
Outside of Paradise (AT) —
REP. .2-11-38
Outside the Law — U 1-9-21
Outside the Law (AT) — U
8-31-30
Outside the Law (AT) —
COL. .10-26-38
Outside These Walls (AT) —
COL. .1939
Outside Woman — REA.. 3-20-21
Outsider — P 1-24-26
Outsider — M 11-22-17
Outsider (AT) — MGM 1931
Outsider. The (AT) —
MGM. .3-29-33
Outward Bound (AT) — WA
9-21-30
Outwitted — M 11-22-17
Outwitted — IND 1925
Oval Diamond — MT. ... 2-17-16
Over Night — WO ....12-16-16
Over Night (AT) — MUM.. 1934
Over the Border — PAR. 6-11-22
Over the Garden Wall — VIT
1919
Over the Goal (AT) —
WA. .10-20-37
Over the Hill — PAT. .. 11-29-17
Over the Hill — F 2-26-20
Over the Hill (AT) — F.ll-22-31
Over the Seven Seas (S-SE)
— XX. .6-24-33
Over the Top — VIT 4-4-18
Over the Wall (AT) —
WA. .3-30-38
Over the Wire — M 7-3-21
Over There— SEL 1919
Overall*— AMU 3-23-16
Overland Bound (AT) — PRS
11-23-29
Overland Express (AT) —
COL. .4-6-38
Overland Limited — LUM
7-26-25
Overland Mail (AT) — MOP
11-16-39
Overland Red — U 2-15-20
Overland Stage — FN. . . .2-6-27
Overland Stage Raiders
(AT) — REP. .9-28-38
Overland Telegraph — M-jG-M
3-24-29
Owner of the World (AT-
Italian) — XX 1938
P
Paa Solsidan (AT-Swedish) —
SCA. .8-31-36
Pace That Thrills — FN
10-18-25
Pacific Liner (AT) — RKO
1-6-39
Pack Up Tour Troubles
(AT) — MGM. .10-1-32
Pack Up Your Troubles (AT) —
F. .10-10-39
Paddy O'Day (AT) — F. 10-29-35
Paddy O'Hara — TRI 4-26-17
Paddy-the-Next-Best-Thing
APA. .1923
Paddy the Next Best Thing
(AT) — F. .8-25-33
Padlocked — PAR 8-8-26
Pagan (S-SE) — M-G-M.5-19-29
Pagan God — RC 8-17-19
Pagan Lady (AT) — COL
9-27-31
Pagan Love — HOD ..12-26-20
Pagan Passions — SEZ. . .6-4-24
Page Miss Glory (AT) —
WA. .7-8-36
Page Mystery — PBW 6-3-17
Pagliaeci (AT) — AUC. . .3-1-31
Paid (AT) — MGM 1-4-31
Paid Back — U 8-27-22
Paid in Advance — U. 11-16-19
Paid in Full — PAR 3-2-19
Paid to Dance (AT) —
COL. .12-11-37
Paid to Love — F 7-33-27
Paint and Powder — CHA
10-18-26
Painted Angel (AT) — FN
1- 6 30
Painted Desert (AT) —
PAT. .1-18-31
Painted Desert (AT) —
RKO. .9-16-38
Painted Doll — PAT ...10-4-17
Painted Faces (AT) — TIF
2- 2-30
Painted Flapper — CHA
10-19-24
Painted Lady — F 9-28-24
545
17,238 TITLES
Painted L,le — HMU . . . .4-12-17
Painted Lily — TRt . . . .6-30-18
Painted Lips — U 2-14-18
Painted Madonna — F ....1917
Painted People — FN . . . 2-3-24
Painted Ponies — U ....8-14-27
Painted Post — F 6-17-28
Painted Soul — MT ...12-30-15
Painted Trail — RA 1928
Painted Trail (AT) —
MOP. .3-15-38
Painted Veil (AT) — MGM
11-24 34
Painted Woman (AT) — F
9-16-32
Painted World — VIT .... 1919
Painter — MAN 8-2-17
Painting the Town — U. 6-26-27
Pair of Cupids — M 8-4-18
Pair of Silk Stockings — SEL
7-14-18
Pair of Sixes — ES 6-9-18
Pajamas — F 11-13-28
Pal O'Mine — CBC 6-11-24
Palace of Darkened Windows —
SEZ. .12-12-20
Palace of Honey — UFA.. 1928
Palace of Pleasure — F. . 1-17-26
Palerno (AT-Spanish) —
XX. .1938
Paliser Case — G 2-22-20
Palm Beach Girl — PAR. 7-4-26
Palm Springs (AT) — PAR
6-20-36
Palmy Days (AT) — UA. 9-27-31
Palooka (AT) — UA 2-1-34
Pals — TRU 1926
Pals First — FN 8-16-26
Pals First — M 10-6-18
Pals in Paradise — PDC
12-12-26
Pals in Peril — PAT 1928
Pals of the Prairies (S-SE) —
RKO. .7-28 29
Pals of the Prairie (AT) —
FD. .1936
Pals of the Range (AT) —
FD. .1935
Pals of the Saddle (AT) —
REP. .9-16-38
Pals of the West — CC....1922
Pals of the West (AT) —
FD. .1935
Pamir — AM 7-20-30
Pampered Youth — VIT. 2-15-25
Pan Redaktor Szaleje (AT-
Polish) — HOB. .193.9
Panama Flo (AT) — RKO
1- 24-32
Panama Lady (AT) — RKO
5-9-30
Panama Patrol (AT) — GN
2- 24-39
Panamint's Bad Man (AT)
— F. .11-10-38
17,238 TITLES
Pan Twardowski (AT-Polish)
— STN. . 10-8-37
Pandora's Box — MOV. .. 12-8-29
Panic on the Air (AT) — COL
4-23-36
Panthea — SEZ 1-11-17
Panther Woman — FN 1918
Pantoffelhelden (AT-German) —
XX. . 10-22-35
Pants — ES 9-20-17
Papacito Undo (AT-Spanish) —
XX. .11-29-39
Papanin Diary (AT- Rus-
sian)— AM 1938
Pappi (AT-German) —
GFS . . 1935
Pappi (AT-German) — XX
6- 18-36
Parachute Jumper (AT) —
WA. .1-27-33
Parade of the West (PT) — U
2-2-30
Paradise — FN 1926
Paradise — Ufa 11-10-29
Paradise Canyon (AT) —
MOP. .5-14-35
Paradise Express (AT) —
REP. .3-5-3?
Paradise for Three (AT) —
MGM. .1-30-38
Paradise for Two — PAR
1-30-27
Paradise Garden — M... 10-11-17
Paradise Island (AT) — TIF
7- 20-30
Paradise Isle (AT) —
MOP. .7-7-37
Paramount on Parade (AT) —
PAR. .4-20-30
Parasite — SCH 3-1-26
Pardon My French — G. . 1-1-22
Pardon My Gun (AT) — PAT
10-5-30
Pardon My Nerve — F . . 2-26-22
Pardon Our Nerve (AT) — F
1939
Pardon Us (AT) — MGM
8- 23-31
Parentage Message — HEN
6- 14-17
Parents on Trial (AT) — COL
9- 21-39
Paris — M-G-M 6-13-26
Paris (AT & S) — FN.. 11-17-29
Paris-Beguin (AT) —
PRX. .1-6-33
Paris Bound (AT) — PAT
7- 28-29
Paris Commune (AT-Russian)
— AM . . 6-14-37
Paris Green — PAR 4-25-20
Paris at Midnight — PDC
5-9-26
Paris Honeymoon (AT) — PAR
1-26-39
Paris In Spring (AT) —
PAR. .6 28-35
Parie Interlude (AT) — MGM
7- 28-34
Parish Priest — GAF ....1921
Parisian (AT) — CAP.. 8-23-31
Parisian Love — SCH. .. 8-16-25
Parisian Nights — FBO. .3-8-26
Parisian Romance. A (AT) —
AP. .10-14-32
Parisian Romance — F. . 1-20-16
Parisian Scandal — U. . 11-27-21
Parisian Tigress — M 1919
Park Avenue Logger (AT) —
RKO. .3-16-37
Parlami d'Amore Mariu (AT)
— XX. .10-22-34
Parlor, Bedroom and Bath — M
1920
Parlor. Bedroom and Bath
(AT) — MGM . .4-5-31
Parnell (AT) — MGM ...6-7-37
Parole! (AT) — U 6-9-36
Parole Girl (AT) — COL
4-10-33
Parole Racket (AT) —
COL, -3-11-37
Paroled from the Big House
(AT) — SYN. .7-29-38
Paroled — To Die (AT) —
REP. .1-11-38
Parson of Panamint — PAR
8- 17-16
Parted Curtains — WA 1922
Parting of the Trails — STN
1-5-30
Partners (AT) — RKO. .2-28-32
Partners Again — UA ..2-21-26
Partners in Crime — PAR
5-6-28
Partners in Crime (AT) —
PAR. .9-8-37
Partners of the Sunset — LUB
1922
Partners of Fate — F. . .2-20-21
Partners of the Night — G
3-7-20
Partners of the Plains (AT) —
PAR. .12-9-37
Partners of the Tide — HOD
3-20-21
Partners of the Trail (AT) —
MOP. .8-30-31
Partners Three — PAR . . . 1919
Part Time Wife (AT) — F
11-30-30
Party Girl (AT) — TIF. .1-5-30
Party Husband (AT) —
FN. .6-17-31
Party Wire (AT) — COL
6-17-36
Party's Over (AT) — COL
8-30-34
Pasquale — PAR 5-18-16
Passa L'Amore (AT) —
XX. .11-27-33
Passport Husband (AT) —
F. .7-26-38
546
Passaporto Rosso (AT-Itallan)
— NUO. .9-3-36
Passers By — PAT 6-20-20
Passerby — EQ 3-16-16
Passion Flower I AT I — MGM
12-21-30
Passion of Joan of Arc
(AT) — KRB. .9-9-33
Passing of the Third Floor
Back — FN. .5-2-18
Passing of the Third Floor
Back. The (AT) — GB..1936
Passing of the Third Floor
Back (AT) — GB. .4-30-36
Passing of Wolf MacLean —
ERM. .1924
Passing Thru — PAR .... 9-11-21
Passion— FN 10-10-20
Passion — TRI 3-1-17
Passion Flower — FN ..4-10-21
Passion Fruit — M ....1-30-21
Passion of Joan of Arc
AEP. .1929
Passion of St. Francis (S)
MON. .12-23-32
Passion Play — PAS 1928
Passion Song — EXP . . .3-17-29
Passion's Pathway — LBR
9- 21-24
Passion's Playground — FN
10- 3-20
Passionate Adventure — LBR
1926
Passionate Adventurer — SEZ
1924
Passionate Friends — CBC..1923
Passionate Journey — PAR. 1924
Passionate Pilgrim — PAR
1-9-21
Passionate Plumber, The (AT)
— MGM. .3-13-32
Passionate Quest — WA....1926
Passionate Youth — TRU
7- 1JS-25
Passport to Hell, A (AT) —
F. .8-25-32
Pasport to Paradise (AT) —
MAF. .7-15-32
Past of Mary Holmes (AT) —
RKO. .4-29-33
Pasteboard Crown — AE..1922
Pasteur (AT-French) — LEN
1-31-36
Pat O' the Ranch — RUL..1921
Pat O' the West Side 1926
Patchwork Girl of Oz — PAR . .
Patent Leather Kid — FN
8- 21-27
Path of Happiness — U. . 2-3-1 6
Path She Chose — U .... 5-9-20
Paths to Paradise — PAR
7-12-26
Patient in Room 18 (AT) —
WA. .2-11-38
Patria, Amore e Dovere (AT-
Italian) — MGM. .4-12-37
Patriot — INC 8-17-16
Patriot ( S-SE ) — PAR .. 8-26-28
Patrioten I AT-German ) —
UFA. .9-27-37
Patriotism — PAL 6-16-18
Patriots, The (AT) —
AM . . 9-2B-33
Patsy — TBU 1933
Patsy — M-G-M 4-29-28
Patsy— -F 1923
Patsy's Jim — PS 1921
Paul J. Rainey's African Hunt
— U. .1918
Paul Street Boys — FFS
7-21-29
Pauper Millionaire — PGO
2-4-23
Pawn of Fate — WO .... 3-2-16
Pawn of Fortune — PAT
Pawn Ticket 210 — F. . 1-28-23
Pawned — SEZ 1922
Pawns of Passion — WW
6-16-29
Paws of the Bear — TBI. 6-28-17
Pay as You Enter (S-SE) —
WA. .8-26-28
Pay Day — FN 4-9-22
Pay Day — M 6-2-18
Pay Me — U
Pay Off — ELB 1926
Pay Off (AT) — EKO. . 11-16 30
Pay-Off, The (AT) —
WA. .11-12-35
Payable on Demand — PHD. 1924
Payasadas de la Vida (AT-
Spanish) — XX. .3-19-35
Paying His Debt — TBI . . 6-2-18
Paying- the Limit — GEB
8-31-24
Paying the Piper — PAE
1-30-21
Paying the Price — COL. 6-12-27
Payment — INC 7-13-16
Pay men t Deferred ( AT ) —
MGM — 11-10-32
Payment Guaranteed — -PAT
1921
Peace of Eoaring Biver — G
8- 17-19
Peaceful Peters — ABW
10- 29-22
Peaceful Valley — FN . . 10-17-20
Peach O'Eeno (AT) — EKO
12-27-31
Peacock Alley — M 11-13-21
Peacock Alley (AT) — TIF
2-9-30
Peacock Fan — CHE 3-17-29
Peacock Feathers — U . . 8-23-25
Peak of Fate — BOG. . . .5-28-25
Peaks of Destiny — PAB..1928
Pearl of Love — LBB 1925
Pearl of Paradise — MT
11- 16-16
Pearl of the Antilles — TEE
9- 30-15
Pearl of the Army — PAT
11-30-16
Pearls of the Crown (AT-
French — LEN 4-13-38
Peasants (AT-Russian) —
AM . .9-5-35
Pecados de Amor (AT) —
XX. .4-25-34
Pechmarie (AT-German) —
F. .4-24-35
Peck's Bad Boy — FN .... 5-1-21
Peck's Bad Boy (AT) — F
8-31-34
Peck's Bad Boy with the
Circus (AT) — EKO. . .12-1-38
Peck's Bad Girl — G .... 9 22-1 8
Pecos Kid. The (AT) —
COE. . 1935
Peddler. The — USA .... 8-16-17
Peddler of Lies — U 1920
Peer Gynt — PAK 9-9-15
Peer Gynt (AT-German) —
UFA . . 1939
Peg O' My Heart — M . 12-17-23
Peg O' My Heart (AT) —
MGM . .5-20 33
Peg O' the Sesi — STE . . . 8-4-18
Peg Of Old Drury (AT) — PAB
4-14-36
Peg of the Pirates — F...1918
Pegeen— VIT 1920
Peggy — TBI 1-20-16
Peggy Does Her Darndest — M
2-23-19
Peggy Leads the Way — AMU
11-8-17
Peggy of the Secret Service —
DAV. .9-27-26
Peggy Puts It Over — VIT. 1921
Pell Street Mystery— BA . 1924
Pen Vulture — KBA 1919
Penal Code (AT) — FEE. 1-6-33
Penalty — G 11-21-20
Penguin Pool Murder, The
(AT) — EKO. . 12-2-32
Penitentes — FAT 12-9-15
Penitentiary (AT) — COL. 2-5-38
Pennies from Heaven (AT) —
COL. .11-16-36
Pennington's Choice — M
11-11-15
Penny of Hill Top Trail — FED
5-1-21
Penrod — FN 2-26-22
Penrod and His Twin Bro-
ther (AT) — WA 4-20-38
Penrod and Sam — FN. 6-17-23
Penrod and Sam (AT) —
FN. .9 27-31
Penrod and Sam (AT) —
WA. .3 17 37
Penrod's Double Trouble
(AT) — WA. .7-26-38
Pension Filoda. The (AT-
German) — XX. .1939
Pension Mimosas (AT-French)
— FEA. .5-7-36
Penthouse (AT) — MGM
9-9-33
Penthouse Party (AT) — LIB
1-29-36
547
17,238 TITLES
People of France, The (AT-
French) — COA. .12-15-37
People of Vistula (AT-
Polish) — XX 1938
People vs. John Doe — U
12-21-16
People vs. Nancy Preston —
PDC. .12-13-25
People Will Talk (AT) —
PAR. .6-7-35
People's Enemy, The (AT) —
RKO. .4-29-35
Pepo ( AT-Armenian-Russian) —
AM. .10-11-35
Pepper (AT) — F 8-8-36
Peppy Polly — PAR .... 4-13-1 9
Per Uomini Soli (AT-Italian) —
ESP. .4-26-39
Peranisketty Polly Ann — TRI
9-13-17
Perch of the Devil — U . . 1-23-27
Percy — PAT 4-5-25
Perfect Alibi — PHD 1924
Perfect Alibi (AT) —
RKO. .3-8-31
Perfect Clown — CHA .. 12-20-25
Perfect Clue, The (AT) —
MAJ. .3-13-35
Perfect Crime (PT & S) — FBO
6-17-28
Perfect Flapper — FN . . 6-29-24
Perfect Gentleman — PAT
1928
Perfect Gentleman, The (AT) —
MGM — 12-19-35
Perfect Lady — G 12-8-18
Perfect Lover — SEZ . .9-21-19
Perfect Sap — FN 1-16-27
Perfect Specimen, The (AT) —
FN. .9-28-37
Perfect 36 — G 1918
Perfect Woman — FN ...8-1-20
Perfect Understanding (AT) —
— UA. .2-24-33
Perfidia (AT-Spanish) — EKO
4-21-39
Perils of Divorce — WO. 6-8-16
Perils of Paris 1925
Perils of the Coast Guard — EA
1926
Periwinkle — AMU 6-21-17
Perjury — F 8-21-21
Pershing's Crusaders — FN. 1918
Personal Maid (AT) —
— PAE. .8-30-31
Personal Maid's Secret (AT) —
FN. .10-1-35
Personal Property (AT) —
MGM. .3-16-37
Personal Secretary (AT) —
U. .10-11-38
Personality (AT) — COL
2-23-30
17,238 TITLES
Personality Kid (AT) — WA
8-1-34
Persons in Hiding (AT) — PAR
1-24-39
Persuasive Peggy — MAT
11-22-17
Pest — 6 4-20-19
Petal on the Current — D
8- 3-19
Peter Ibbetson (AT) —
PAR. .10 31-35
Peter Pan — PAR 1-11-25
Peter the Great — PAR. 7-1-23
Peter the First (AT-Russian)
— AM. .12-31-37
Peter Vinogradof (AT-
Russian) — AM. .7-1-35
Petersburg Nights (AT) —
AM. .9-13-34
Petrified Forest. The (AT) —
WA. .1-21-36
Petterson and Bendel (AT) —
SCA. .2-24-34
Petticoat Fever (AT) — M-G-M
3-14-36
Petticoat Pilot — PAR.. 2-14-18
Petticoat Polities — HOD
8-26-18
Pettigrew's Girl — PAR. 3-16-19
Phantom — INC 6-22-16
Phantom. The (AT) — ARC
1931
Phantom Broadcast (AT) —
MOP. .4-4-33
Phantom Bullet — U ...6-13-26
Phantom Buster — PAT .8-21-27
Phantom Butler — SEZ
Phantom City — FN . . . 1-13-29
Phantom Express — GDG
12-6-25
Phantom Express (AT) —
MAJ. .9-21-32
Phantom Friend. The (AT) —
OLM. .4-20-35
Phantom Flyer — U 1928
Phantom Fortunes — VIT
9- 7-16
Phantom Gold (AT) —
COL. .11-21-38
Phantom Honeymoon — HAL
1919
Phantom Horseman — U .3-9-24
Phantom Husband — TRI
10-11-17
Phantom in the House (AT
& S) — COT. .10-20-29
Phantom Justice — FBO
1-13-24
Phantom Melody — U . . 1-25-20
Phantom of Crestwood. The
(AT) — RKO. .10-18-32
Phantom of Paris (AT) —
MQM. .11-15-81
Phantom of Sante Fe (AT) —
BTZ . . 1936
Phantom of the Forest — LUM
2-14-26
Phantom of the Opera — U
9- 13-25
Phantom of the Opera (PT) —
U. .2-16-30
Phantom of the Range — FBO
2-5-28
Phantom of the Turf — RA
6-6 28
Phantom President (AT) —
PAR. .9-23-32
Phantom Ranger (AT) —
MOP. .6-20-38
Phantom Rider — STN . . . 1929
Phantom Riders — U . . 1-31-18
Phantom Shadows — DAV .1925
Phantom Ship (AT) —
GDA. .2-15-37
Phantom Shot Gun — RAL.1917
Phantom Strikes. The (AT) —
MOP. .11-17-39
Phantom Thunderbolt (AT) —
WOW. .6-14-33
Phantom's Secret — U. . .6-17-17
Phantoms of the North — BIL
6-2-29
Phil-For-Short — WO ...6-8-19
Philip Holden-Waster — AMU
10-12-16
Phyllis of the Follies — U
12-30-28
Physician — TTF 6-23-29
Picture Brides (AT) — FD
4-24-34
Piccadilly (S-SE) — WW
7- 21-29
Piccadilly Jim — SE 2-8-20
Piccadilly Jim (AT) — M-G-M
8-6-36
Piccola Mia (AT-Italian)
CIL. .9 3-37
Piccolo Eroe (AT-Italian) —
XX. .7-6-37
Pick a Star (AT) —
MGM. .4-20-37
Pick Up (AT) — PAR.. 3-26-33
Picture Snatcher (AT) —
WA. .6-19-33
Pidgin Island — M 1-4-17
Pied Piper Malone — PAR
2-3-24
Pierpln, La Figlia Ritrovata
(AT-Italian) — XX. .4-1-36
Pigskin Parade (AT) — F
10- 20-36
Pilgrim — FN 11-19-22
Pilgrimage (AT) — F. . .7-17-33
Pilgrims of the Night — APR
8- 14-21
Pillagers — APR 1922
Pillars of Society — ES . 8-17-10
Pillory — PAT
Pinch Hitter — AE 2-21-26
Pinch Hitter — TRI 4-26-17
Pink Gods — PAR 10-1-22
548
Pink Tights — U 9-19-20
Pinto — G 2-1-20
Pinto Kid — FBO 1-1-28
Pioneer Scout — PAR 1928
Pioneer Trail (AT) —
COL. .9-15-38
Pioneer Trails — VIT ..10-21-23
Pioneers of the West — STN
1-19-30
Piper's Price — BL 1-11-17
Pipes of Pan — HEP 1924
Pirates of the Skies (AT) —
U. .1939
Pirates of the Sky — PAT
5-15-27
Piri Mintont Tud (AT) —
ARK. .1-28-33
Pitfalls of a Big City — F
4-13-19
Pity the Poor — SEZ
Place Beyond the Wind — RED
11-2-16
Place In the Sun — TRI. . .3 919
Place of Honeymoons — PI. 1920
Plain Jane— INC O-lt-16
Plainsman. The (AT) — PAR
11-24-36
Planter — MT 1917
Plastered In Paris (S-SE) — F
Hi-7-28
Plastic Age — SCH 10-4-25
Platinum Blonde (AT) —
COL. .11-1-31
Playboy of Paris (AT) —
PAR. .11-2-30
Play Girl — F 4-29-28
Play Girl (AT) — WA..S-20-32
Play House — FN 1921
Play in the Summer (AT-
German) — XX. .1939
Play Safe — PAT 1-23-27
Play Square — F 8-21-21
Playing Around (AT) — FN
3-30-30
Playing Dead — VIT . . 10-21-15
Playing Fair — F 1921
Playing it Wild — VIT. 4-29-23
Playing the Game — PAR
4 25-18
Playing with Fire — M. 4-27-1 6
Playing with Fire — U. 12-18-21
Playing with Souls — FN. 5-3-25
Plaything of an Emperor —
T.EV. .1922
Plaything of Broadway — KEA
3 20-21
Playthings — U 8-18-18
Playthings of Destiny — FN
1921
Playthings of Hollywood
(AT)— HOL. .4-3 2-31
Playthings of Passion —UNI
H 1-19
Please Get Married — M. 11-9-19
Please Help Emily — EMU
11-29-17
Plearor* (AT) —ARC . . . 3-6-32
Pleasure Before Business -COL
5-S 27
Pleasure Buyers — WA. .2-14-26
Pleasure Crazed (AT & S) —
P. .8-18-29
Pleasure Cruise (AT) —
P. .4-1-33
Pleasure Garden — AY. 10-31 26
Pleasure Mad — M . ...11-11-23
Pleasure Seekers — SEZ .1-9-21
Pleasures of the Rich — TIP
4-4 26
Plegaria Gaucha (AT-
Spanish) — HOB. .1939
Plomienne Serca (AT-Polish) —
KIP. .10-21-37
Plot Thickens, The (AT) —
RKO. .12-9-36
Plough and the Stars. The
(AT) — RKO. .12-20-36
Plow Girl — PAR 11-23-16
Plow Woman — BL 7-5-17
Plunderer — P 4-6-24
Pluneer — P 11-7-20
Plungrinc Hoofs — tf. ...4 14-29
Pocatello Kid (AT) — TIP
12-20 31
Podoroso Caballero (AT-
Spanish) — XX. .10-27-36
Poet and Tsar (AT-Rus-
•ian) — AM 0-1-38
Pofon (AT-Hungarian) —
XX. .1-20-37
Poll de Carotte (AT) —
AuT. .5-31-33
Point of View — SEZ . . 8-8 20
Pointed Heels (AT) — PAR
12-29-29
Pointing- Finger — U . . .12-7 19
Points West — U 1929
Poison — STD 0-28-24
Poison Pen — WO 1919
Poisoned Paradise — PRE
3- 2-24
Poker Paces — U 9-5-26
Pokhalo (AT-Hungarian) —
HUN. .5-13-38
Polenblut (AT-German) —
BAU. .11-19 35
Police— ES 0-1-16
Police Call (AT) — HOL. 8-23-33
Police Car 17 (AT) —
COL. .11-6-33
Police Court (AT) — MOP
4- 3-32
Police Patrol — LUM 9-13-25
Polish Dancer — LEV 1922
Politics ( AT ) — MGM . . . 8-2-31
Polly of the Circus — G. 9-20-17
Polly of the Circus (AT) —
MGM. .3-20-32
Polly of the Pollies — FN
3-5-22
Polly of the Movies — PD.1928
Polly of the Storm Country —
FN. .1920
Polly Put the Kettle On —
RED. .1-11-17
Polly Redhead— BL 3-1-17
Polly with a Past — M.12-12-20
Pollyanna — DA 1-25-20
Polo Joe (AT) — WA.. 8-24-36
Pompadour. The (AT-German)
— XX. .1939
Poncomania (AT) — LEW
12-14-39
Ponjola — FN 11-11-23
Pony Express — PAR . . . 9-20-26
Pony Express Rider — AY. 1926
Pool of Flame — RED. . 2-24-16
Poor Boob — PAR 3-30-19
Poor Dear Margaret Kirby —
SEZ. .4-10-21
Poor Girls — COL 1928
Poor Girl's Romance — FBO
1926
Poor Little Peppina — PAR
3-2-16
Poor Little Rich Girl — ART
3-8-17
Poor Little Rich Girl. The
(AT) — P. .6-0-36
Poor Men's Wives — PRE
2-4-23
Poor Millionaires — BEL,
0-22 30
Poor Nut — FN 7-10-27
Poor Plutocrats. The (AT-
German) — XX. .1939
Poor Relation — G 4-9-22
Poor Relations — RC ..10-26-19
Poor Rich (AT) — U 4-6-34
Poor Rich Man — M 1918
Poor Schmaltz — PAR ..9-9-15
Poor Simp — SEZ .... 10-17-20
Poppy — SEZ 0-14-17
Poppy (AT) — PAR 6-9-36
Poppy Girl's Husband — ART
3-30-19
Poppy Trail — SEZ
Popular Sin — PAR 1-2-27
Pori — UFA 6-15-30
Port of Doom — PAR... 1913
Port of Dreams — U 1929
Port of Hats (AT) — TIM
8-22-39
Port of Lost Dreams (AT) —
CHE. .3-2-35
Port of Missing Childien —
SUP .J 928
Port of Missing Girls — BRB
3-18-28
Port of Missing Girls (AT)
— MOP. .3-1-38
Port of Missing Men — PAR
1914
Port of Seven Seas (AT) —
MGM. .0-28-38
Port of Shadows (AT-
Prench) — FIA. .1939
Portia on Trial (AT) —
REP. .11-5-37
Ports of Call — F 1-11-25
Possessed (AT) — MGM
11-29-31
549
17,238 TITLES
Possession — PBO 11-0-21
Postal Inspector (AT) — U
9-1-36
Potash and Perlmutter — FN
9-16-23
Potemkln — AM 12-19-26
Pots-and-Pans Peggy — PAT
3-8-17
Potters — PAR 1-23-27
Pour Le Merite (AT-German) —
UFA. .1939
Poverty of Riches — G. 11-27-21
Powder My Back (S-SE) —
WA. .8-12-28
Powdersmoke Range (AT) —
RKO. .9-25-35
Power — PAT 9-16-28
Power — CBP 1921
Power (AT) — GB 10-6-34
Power and the Glory — WO
9-8-18
Power and the Glory (AT) —
P. .8-18-33
Power of a Lie — C .... 1-7-23
Power of Chance — U
Power of Darkness — AEP
11- 25-28
Power of Decision — M.. 4-12-17
Power of Evil — ACA.. 8-1 8-29
Power of Evil — BM ... 10-12-16
Power of Life (AT- Yiddish)
— LYN. .5-9-38
Power of Love — PER.... 1922
Power of Magic — BEL. . . .1928
Power of Silence — TD?
10 21-28
Power of the Press — COL
12-2-28
Power of the Weak — IND
7-11-26
Power Within — PAT .... 1922
Powers that Prey — AMU
3-21-18
Prairie King — U 7-3-27
Prairie Moon (AT) —
REP. .10-19-38
Prairie Mystery — TRU .... 1923
Prairie Pirate — PDC. . .11-15-26
Prairie Thunder (AT) —
WA . . 1937
Prairie Trails — P 12-26-20
Prairie Wife — MG 5-10-25
Praise Agent — WO 8-10-19
Precious Packet — PAT . 2-24-16
Prejudice — ARI 1922
Prenez Garde a la Peinture
(AT-Prench) — TAP. 8-19-35
Prep and Pep (S-SE) — F
12- 30-28
Prescott Kid. The (AT) — COL
10-17-36
Prescription for Romance
(AT) — U. .12-21-37
I 7 , 2 3 « TITLES
President — ELK iftao
I 'resident Vanishes (AT) —
PAR. .11-17-34
['resident's Mystery, The (AT)
— REP. .9-28-36
Prestige (AT) — RKO... 2-7-32
Pretender — tri 1918
Pretenders — M 8-31-10
Pretty Clothes — STE. . .11-6-27
Pretty Ladies — MG .... 7-26-25
Pretty Smooth — U 6-26-19
Preview Murder Mystery (AT)
— PAR. .3-21-36
Prey — V1T 10-10-20
Price — TE 10-14-16
Price for Polly — VIT. . 12-16-15
Price Mark — PAR ...11-11-17
a Good Time — JEW
11-22-17
a Party — AE. 10-12-24
Applause — TRI. 8-4-18
Fame — VIT. . .11-9-16
Fear — U 12-9-28
Happiness — TE . 3-2-16
Honor — COL. .4-17-27
Innocence — BUF . 1919
Malice — M .... 3-2-16
Pleasure — U. .6-31-25
Possession — PAR
2-20-21
Power — FAT. .2-24-16
Pride — PWO. . .7-5-17
Redemption — M
9-26-20
Silence — SU. . . .1-2-21
Silence — F. . . . 1-11-17
Silence — BL. .12-17-16
Success — COL. . .1926
ARW 1922
-SEZ. . .3-1-17
Price ol
Price of
Price of
Price of
Price of
Price of
Price of
Price of
Price of
Price of
Price of
Price of
Price of
Price of
Price of
Price of
Price of
Price of
Price of Youth-
Price She Paid
Price She Paid — COL 1924
Price Woman Pays — HAT
11-2-19
. . . .1-25-17
Devil — APO
3-8-17
Pride and the Man — AMU
8-9-17
Pride of BluegTass (AT) —
WA. .10-12-39
Pride of Jennico — PAR... 1914
Pride of New York — F. 1-10-18
Pride of Palomar — PAR
11-16-22
Pride of Pawnee — RKO
6-16-29
Pride of Sunshine Alley — BAR
10 12-24
Pride of the Clan — ART
1-11-17
Pride of the Force — RA
10-18-25
Pride of the Legion. The
(AT) — MAO. .10-18-32
Pride — TRI .
Pride and the
Prin
Primal
Primal
Pride of Die Marines (AT) —
COL. .4-28-36
Pride of the Navy (AT) —
REP. .1-24-39
Pride of the West (AT) —
PAR. .8-19-38
Donna's Husband — TE
6-16-16
Law — F 9-18-21
Lure — INC 6-11-16
Primanerliebe — NAT . . .4-1-28
Prlmeroea (AT-French) —
FRM. .1937
Call — F 1-26-17
Love — KLA . . 6-12-27
Lover — FN. .6-21-22
Woman — MT. . . 1918
Path — U 1925
Path (AT) —
HOL. .1-26-31
Path — ARW. 10-11-26
Ring — PAR. .5-17-17
Primitive
Primitive
Primitive
Primitive
Primrose
Primrose
Primrose
Primrose
Prince and Betty — PAT
12-14-1!)
Prince and the Ballet Dancer
(S-SE) — WW. .8-18-29
Prince and the Pauper — AR
11- 26-22
Prince and the Pauper — PAR
12-2-16
Prince and the Pauper (AT) —
WA. .4-8-37
Prince Chap — SEL 8-3-16
Prince Chap — PAR ...7-18-20
Prince in a Pawnshop — VIT
10-19-16
Prince of Avenue A — U. 1-11-20
Prince of Broadway — CHA
1926
Prince of Diamonds (AT) —
COL. .6-4-30
Prince of Headwaiters — FN
7-24-27
Prince of a King — SEZ
12- 30-23
Prince of Pep — FBO 1926
Prince of Pilsen — PDC. 4-18-26
Prince of the Plains — RA.1927
Prince of Tempters — FN
10- 24-26
Prince of Wales (AT) — GB
4- 24-34
Prince There Was — FP-L
11- 20-21
Princess and the Plumber
(AT) — F. .11-20-30
Princess Charming (AT) —
GB. .6-21-35
Princess Comes Across, The
(AT) — PAR. .5-12-36
Princess from Hoboken — TIF
5- 22-27
Princess Jones — VIT 1921
Princess of Broadway — PAT
3-6-27
Princess of New York — PAR
1921
550
PiincenB of Park How- -VIT
1917
Princess of Patches — KES
1-25-17
Princess of the Dark — INC
2-8-17
Princess O'Hara (AT) —
U. .4-12-35
Princess Romanoff — F....1916
Princess Virtue — BL.. 11-16-17
Printer's Devil — WA 1924
Prinzessin Turandot (AT-
German) — UFA. .1-16-35
Prison Break (AT) —
U. .7-13-38
Prison Farm (AT) —
PAR. .6-21 38
Prison Nurse (AT) —
REP. .3 4-38
Prison Shadows (AT) —
VIO. .7 18-3(1
Prison Train (AT) —
MBR. .10-26-38
Prison Without Bars (AT) —
UA. .2-16-39
Prison Without Walls — PAR
3- 22-17
Prisoner — U 3-18-23
Prisoner of Corbal (AT) —
UNA. .9-11-39
Prisoner of Shark Island, The
(AT) — F. .2-13-30
Prisoner of Zenda — MGM
4 30-22
Prisoner of Zenda, The (AT)
— UA . . 9-2-37
Prisoners (PT & S) — FN
8-18-29
Prisoners (AT-Russian) —
AM. .3-5-37
Prisoners of Love — G. . 1-23-20
Prisoners of the Pines — HOD
9-8-18
Prisoners of the Sea — AM
4- 21-29
Prisoners of the Storm — U
10-3-20
Private Affairs — PDC. 7-26-25
Private Detective 62 (AT) —
WA. .7-8-33
Private Detectives (AT) —
WA. .1939
Private Izzy Murphy — WA
11- 14-20
Private Jones (AT) — U
3-25-33
Private Life of Don Juan
(AT) — UA. .11-16-34
Private Life of Helen of Tro.v
— FN. .12-18-27
Private Life of Henry VIII
(AT) — UA. .9-21-3.S
Private Life of Louis XIV
(AT-German) — GFF. .1-9-36
Private Life of Mussolini
(AT-Italian) — XX 1938
Private Lives (AT) — MGM
12- 20-31
Private Lives of Elizabeth and
Essex (AT) — WA. .9-28-39
Private Number (AT) —
F. .6-12-3(1
Private Peat — PAR . . 11-17-18
Private Scandal — REA 1921
Private Scandal (AT) — HEA
11-1-31
Private Scandal (AT) — PAR
6-15-34
Private Worlds (AT) —
PAR. .3-9-35
Prizefighter and the Lady
(AT) — MGM. .11-4-33
Probation (AT) — CHE. 3-13-32
Probation Wife — SE... 3-16-19
Problem of Fatigue (AT) —
AM. .8-29-34
Prodigal (AT) — MGM .6-28-31
Prodigal Daughters — PAR
4-22-23
Prodigal Judge — VIT ...2-5-22
Prodigal Liar — EXI. .. 2-23-19
Prodigal Son — STL 5-20-23
Prodigal Son. The (AT) —
U. .1935
Prodigal Wife — SCR. . .12-8-18
Prodigals of Monte Carlo —
ZAK. .1928
Profanicion (AT) — INM. 2-1-34
Professional Soldier (AT) —
F. .12-27-36
Professional Sweetheart (AT)
— RKO. .5-27-33
Professor Beware (AT) —
PAR. .7-14-38
Professor Mamlock (AT-
Russian) — AM 11-11-38
Profiteer — PAT 6-22-19
Profiteers — ARW 1919
Prokurator (AT)— XX. 5-29-34
Promise — M 3-8-17
Proofs of Innocence — AR . 1922
Prophet's Paradise — SEZ . . 1922
Prosfygopoula (AT-Greek)
— XX. .10-12-38
Prosperity (AT) — MGM
11- 26-32
Protection (S-SE) — P 1929
Proud Flesh — MG ....4-19-25
Prowlers of the Night — U
12- 19-26
Prowlers of the Sea — TIF
8- 19-28
Proxies — PAR 4-17-21
Prudence on Broadway — TRI
9- 14-19
Prudence the Pirate — PAT
10-12-16
Prunella— PAR 5-26-19
Prussian Cur — F 8-25-1 8
Przysieglas ( AT-Polish ) —
CAP. .5-22-32
Public be Damned — PUB. 7-5-17
Public Cowboy No. KAT) —
REP. .10-2-37
Public Defender (AT) — RKO
7-12-31
Public Enemy (AT) — WA
4-26-31
Public Enemy's Wife (AT) —
WA . . 6-23-36
Public Hero Number One
(AT) — MGM . .6-16-35
Public Menace, The (AT) —
COL. .9-24-35
Public Opinion — PAR .8-24-16
Public Opinion (AT) —
CHE. .9-19 35
Public Stenographer (AT) —
MAC. .1-10-34
Public Wedding (AT) —
WA. .9-13-37
Publicity Madness — F. 12-17-27
Pudd'n Head Wilson — PAR
2-10-16
Pueblo Terror (AT) — COS
4-12-31
Pueblo's Secret — BIF 1930
Pugachev (AT-Russian) —
AM. .1938
Pulse of Life — BL 3-22-17
Punks Kommt Aus Amerika
(AT-German) — UFA. .6-22-37
Puppet Man — PS
Puppets — FN 7-26-26
Puppets of Fate — M 1921
Puppy Love — PAR. .. .3-16-19
Purchase Price (AT) — WA
7-16-32
Pure Grit — U 1923
Puritan, The (AT-French) —
LEN. .3-20-39
Puritan Passions — HOD. 9-9-23
Purity — AMU 7-13-16
Purple Cipher — VIT 1921
Purple Dawn — AY . . .4-15-23
Purple Highway — PAR
7-29-23
Purple Lady — M 6-29-16
Purple Lady — WO 1918
Purple Lily — WO 1918
Purple Vigilantes (AT) —
REP. .1-31-38
Purpur Und Waschblau (AT-
German) — CAP. .7-11-82
Pursued — ELB 1926
Pursued (AT) — F 10-23-34
Pursuit (AT) — MGM . . 10-2-35
Pursuing Vengeance — UNA
6-1-16
Pursuit of Happiness (AT) —
PAR. .10-26-34
Pursuit of the Phantom — PAR
1914
Pursuit of Polly — PAR. 8-25-18
Puss in Boots (AT) — PIC
1931
Pusztai Szel (AT-Hungari-
an)— DAN 1-13-38
Put 'em Up— U 1928
Put on the Spot (AT) —
PRI. .10-3-36
Put Up Your Hands — PAT
3-2-19
551
17,238 TITLES
Plittin' on the Ritz (AT) —
UA. .2-16-30
Putting It Over — PAR... 1919
Putting It Over — GLB...1922
Putting One Over — F. .6-29-19
Pygmalion (AT) —
MGM. .11-25-38
Q
Q Ships — ERA 9-30r28
Quack — SAS 1928
Quality of Faith — GAU. 5-4-16
Quality Street — M-G-M
11-13-27
Quality Street (AT) —
RKO. .3-10-37
Qnand Te Tues Tu (AT-
French) — PAR. .1932
Quando el Amor Rie (AT)
F. .10-18-33
Quando Te Suicidas (AT-
Spanish) — PAR. .1932
Quarantined Rivals — LUM
4- 10-27
Quarterback — PAR ..10-17-26
Quartorze Juillet (AT) —
PRX. .10 21-33
Que Hago Con La Criatura?
( AT-Spanisli) — XX. .3-19-36
Queen Christina (AT) —
MGM. .12-28-33
Queen Elizabeth — PAR ..1912
Queen High (AT) — PAR
Queen Margaret — PAT ...1915
Queen O' the Turf — FBO
5- 14-21
Queen of Diamonds — FBO
2-14-26
Queen of Hearts — F... 9-22-18
Queen of Scandal (AT) — UA
1930
Queen of Sheba — F 4-17-21
Queen of Sin — BLU 4-1-23
Queen of Spades — AY 1926
Queen of Spades — PAT
10-18 -17
Queen of the Chorus -AN
6-10-28
Queen of the Moulin Rouge —
AR. .8-20-22
Queen of the Night Clubs
(AT) — WA. . .3-24-29
Queen of the Sea — F. . 9-1-18
Queen Was in the Parlor —
XX. .1928
Queen X — MT 10-11-17
Queenie — F 10-2-21
Queniado — FBO 1924
Quest of Life — PAR ... 10-5-10
Question — EQW 2-24-16
Question— VIT 6-28-17
17,238 TITLES
Question of Honor — FN
3- 12-22
Quick Koenig der Clowns
(AT) — UFA. .12-11-33
Quick Millions (AT) — F
4- 19-31
Quick Millions (AT) — .9-22-39
Quick Money (AT) —
RKO . . 2-9-38
Quick Triggers — U.... 7-29-28
Quick Trigger Lee (AT) —
BIF. .1931
Quickening Flame — -WO
4-13-19
Quicker'n Lightnin' — ARC. 1926
Quicksand — PAR 1918
Quicksands — PAR 1928
Quicksands — SEZ 4-29-23
Quien Mato a Eva? (AT) —
XX. .12-27-34
Quiney Adams Sawyer — M
12-3-22
Quitter — COL 4-28-29
Quitter — M 8-10-16
Quitter, The (AT) — CHE
3-14-34
Quo Vadis — FBW ....8-28-21
Quo Vadis — FN 2-22-25
Quo Vadis — FN 1929
It
R. S. V. P. — FN. .. .12-18-21
Ra-MD— FAI 8-6 34
Rabbi's Power (AT) —
XX. .6-2-34
Race — PAR 4-13-16
Race for Life (S-SE) — WA
2- 5-28
Race Suicide — SR 2-10-16
Racetrack (AT) — WOW
3- 7-33
Racewild — ELB 9-26-26
Racing Blood — LUM .... 1926
Racing Blood (AT) —
CNN. .8-13-36
Racing Fool — RA . . . .9-25-27
Racing for Life — CBC. 8-10-24
Racing Hearts — FP-L .2-25-23
Racing Lady (AT) —
RKO. .1-22-37
Racing Luck — AE 1924
Racing Luck (AT) —
REP. .11-19-35
Racing Romance — RA .7-18-26
Racing Romeo — FBO .10-23-27
Racing Strain — G 1918
Racing Strain. The (AT) —
MHM . .12-16-32
Racing Through — AEP
11-11-28
Racing Youth (AT) — U. 6-1-32
Rack — WO 1-6-16
Racket — PAR 7-15-28
Racket Busters (AT) —
WA. .10-6-38
Racketeer. The (AT) — PAT
1-12-30
Racketeer Round-Up (AT) —
THO. .6-16-34
Racketeers in Exile (AT) —
COL. .4-16-37
Racketeers of the Range (AT)
— RKO. .6-14-39
Rackety Rax (AT) — F. 11-2-32
Radio Bar (AT-Spanish) —
PAR. .2-5-37
Radio City Revels (AT) —
RKO. .2-1-38
Radio Flyer — ARC 1924
Radio Mania — HOD 1923
Radio Parade of 1935 (AT) —
REL. .6-10-35
Radio Patrol (AT) — U...1932
Raffles — U 6-7-26
Raffles (AT) — UA 7-27-30
Raffles (AT) — UA 1939
Raffles. The Amateur Cracks-
man— HWF. .12-6-17
Rafter Romance (AT) — RKO
1-9-34
Rag Man — MG 3-8-25
Ragamuffin — PAR ....1-27-16
Rage of Paris; — U.... 9-25-21
Rage of Paris (AT) —
U. .6-14-38
Ragged Edge — G 6-17-23
Ragged Heiress — F 3-12-22
Ragged Princess — F... 10-19-16
Ragged Queen — BL 1917
Raggen-Det Ar Jag Det (AT-
Swedish) — SWP. .6-25-30
Rags to Riches — WA.. 10-1-22
Ragtime — FD 1928
Raider Emden — COL. .. 5-13-28
Raiders — CAN 1922
Raiders — TRI 3-9-18
Rail Rider — PBW 8-24-16
Railroaded — U 6-10-23
Railroaders — TRI 1919
Rain (AT) — UA 10-14-32
Rain or Shine (AT) — COL
8-10-30
Rainbow — SA 1-18-17
Rainbow — TIF 3-17-29
Rainbow — VIT 1022
Rainbow Girl — AMU. . .9-27-17
Rainbow Man (AT) — PAR
4-14-29
Rainbow on the River (AT) —
RKO. .12-5-36
Rainbow Over Broadway
(AT) — CHE. .12-27-33
Rainbow Princess — PAR
10-26-16
Rainbow Ranch (AT) —
MOP. .10-18-33
Rainbow Rangers — STE
8-24-24
Rainbow Riley — FN ...6-0-26
SS2
Rainbow Trail — F 6-7-tS
Rainbow Trail — F ....9-22-18
Rainbow Trail. The (AT) —
F. .1-31-32
Rainbow Valley (AT) —
MOP. .3-12-35
Rainbow's End (AT) —
FD. .7-17-36
Rainmaker — PAR ....5-30-26
Rainmakers, The (AT) —
RKO. .11-2-35
Rains Came. The (AT) — F
9-11-39
Rakaczi Indulo (AT) — DAN
11- 22-34
Rakoczi Indulo (AT-
Hungarian) — XX. .10-22-36
Ramblin' Galoot — AE .... 1926
Ramblin' Kid — U 10-14-23
Rambling Rangers — U. .3-13-27
Ramona — UA 5-20-28
Ramona — CLU 4-13-16
Ramona (AT) — F 9-16-36
Rampant Age (AT) — COT
1-19-30
Ramshackle House — PDC
12- 28-24
Randy Rides Alone (AT) —
MOP. .6-14-34
Range Blood — ARW 1924
Range Courage— U 8-7-27
Range Defenders (AT) —
REP. .7-9-37
Range Feud (AT) — COL
11-22-31
Range Law (AT) — TIF
11-1-31
Range Patrol — RUL ..9-10-22
Range Riders — RA 1928
Range Rustlers — BIF .... 1930
Range Terror — FBO 1925
Range War (AT) — PAR. 9-7-39
Rangeland — STE 1922
Ranger — KRA 1919
Ranger and the Law — CAP
1921
Ranger of the Big Pines —
VIT. .8-16-25
Ranger of the North — FBO
11-13-27
Rangers' Code (AT) —
MOP. .9-20-33
Ranger's Oath — PIZ 1928
Rangers Roundup (AT) —
SPE. .2-9-38
Rangers Step In. The (AT) —
COL. .1937
Rangle River (AT) — HOB
5-17-39
Rango — PAR 2-22-31
Ransom — COL 8-26-28
Ransom — EQ 1-27-16
Ranson's Folly — FN . . . 5-23-26
Rapid Fire Romance — RA.1926
Rapids — HOD 6-24-23
Rarin' To Go — ARC. . .7-20-24
Rascals (AT) — F 4-7-38
Rasputin — BRL 10-27-29
Rasputin — UNP 8-31-30
Rasputin (AT-French) — COC
10-27-30
Rasputin and the Empress
(AT) — MGM. .12-28-32
Rasputin The Black Monk —
PWO. .10-11-17
Rat — LEE 1926
Rat, The (AT) — RKO. .1-31-38
Rattler — USL 1-4-25
Raven — ES 11-25-16
Raven. The (AT) — U... 6-4-35
Rawhide — AE 1926
Rawhide (AT) — P 4-27-38
Rawhide Kid — U 12-25-27
Rawhide Mail (AT) — MAC
6-5-34
Razumov (AT-French) —
XX. .3-12-37
Re Burlone (AT-Italian) —
NUO. .1930
Re de Danari (AT-Italian) —
ESP. .12-28-39
Reaching for the Moon — ART
11-29-17
Reaching for the Moon (AT)
— UA. .1-4-31
Ready for Love (AT) — PAR
11-30-34
Ready Money — PAR 1914
Ready. Willing and Able (AT)
— WA. .3-10-37
Real Adventure — AE ..7-2-22
Real Folks — TRI 2-14-18
Real Glory. The (AT) — UA
9-15-39
Reapers — TE 4-0-16
Reason Why — SE 5-2-18
Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm —
(AT) — F. .7-9-32
Rebecca of Sunnybroolt Farm —
PAR. .1917
Rebecca of Sunnybrook
Farm (AT) — F 3-10-38
Rebel. The (AT) — U. .7-27-33
Rebellion (AT) —
CRE. .10-10-36
Rebellious Bride — F 3 23-19
Rebellious Daughters (AT)
— PRO. .9-28-38
Rebirth of Poland— POL. 1928
Rebound (AT) — PAT.. 8-30 31
Recaptured Love (AT) — WA
8-10-30
Received Payment — VIT
1-15-22
Reckless (AT) — MGM.. 4-17-35
Reckless Age — U 5-25-24
Reckless Chances — AE .1-22-22
Reckless Courage — ARC
5-3-25
Reckless Hour (AT) — FN
8-2-31
Reckless Lady — FN . . 1-31-26
Reckless Living (AT) — U
10-11-31
Reckless Living (AT) —
U. .3-13-38
Reckless Ranger (AT) —
COL. .1937
Reckless Roads (AT) —
MAJ. .7-30-35
Reckless Romance — PDC . 1924
Reckless Sex — GOL 1925
Reckless Wives — IND ....1921
Reckless Youth — SEZ .4-16-22
Reckoning. The (AT) — PEE
4-3-32
Reckoning Day — TRI. .10-27-18
Reclaimed — WD 6-9-18
Recoil — MO 7-0-24
Recoil — PAT 5-17-17
Recompense — WA ....4-20-25
Re-Creation of Brian Kent —
PRI. .3-8-26
Red Army Days (AT-
Russian) — AM. .10-22-36
Red Blood — RAT 1926
Red Blood and Blue — ROB
1926
Red Blood and Yellow — FCH
1918
Red Blood of Courage (AT) —
AMB. .6-4-35
Red Clay — U 4-17-27
Red Courage — U 10-2-21
Red Dance (S-SE) — F. .7-1-28
Red Dice — PDC 4-11-26
Red Dust (AT) — MGM .11-6-32
Red Foam— SEZ 1921
Red Fork Range (AT) — BIF
1931
Red Hair — PAR 4-1-28
Red Haired Alibi (AT) —
TOW. .10-15-32
Red-Haired Cupid — TRI... 1918
Red Headed Woman (AT) —
MGM 7-1-32
Red Hot Dollars — PAR.. 1-4-20
Red Hot Hoofs — FBO. 10-31-26
Red Hot Leather — U. . 11-14-20
Red Hot Papa — ARN. .6-23-26
Red Hot Romance — FN
11-13-21
Red Hot Rhythm (AT) — PAT
1929
Red Hot Speed (PT & S) —
U. .2-10-29
Red Hot Tires — WA. .10-25-26
Red Hot Tires (AT) —
FN. .3-2-35
Red Kimona — VTL ...2-14-26
Red Knights of Germany —
FGU. .1928
Red Lane — D 7-11-20
Red Lantern — M 5-4-19
Red Lights — G 9-16-23
Red Lights Ahead (AT) —
CHE. .9-29-37
Red Lily — MG 8-3-24
Red Lips — U 10-21-28
Red Love — DAV 7-12-26
Red Majesty — NOC ...6-12-28
553
17,238 TITLES
Red Mark — PAT 9-9-28
Red Mill — M-G-M . . . .2-20-27
Red Morning (AT) —
RKO. .4-10-36
Red Orchards (AT-Polish) —
XX. .1939
Red Peacock — PAR 4-9-22
Red Raiders — FN .... 10-2-27
Red Red Heart — BL 4-18-18
Red Rider — U 6-3-26
Red Riders of Canada — FBO
(Reviewed as "The Open
Trail") . .2-26-28
Red Rope, The (AT) —
MOP. .7-19-37
Red Rose (AT-Polish) —
XX. .1938
Red Roses — VIT 1923
Red Russia Revealed — F
7-16-23
Red Salute (AT) — UA. 9-12-36
Red Signals — STE 4-3-27
Red Sword — RKO ....4-21-29
Red Village. The (AT-
Russian) — AM. .6-3-36
Red Viper — TY 8-31-19
Red Wagon (AT) —
ALL. .6-7-35
Red Warning — U 12-9-23
Red. White and Blue Blood
M. .12-27-17
Red Widow — PAR 5-4-10
Red Wine (S-SE) — F 1929
Red Woman — W 2-1-17
Redeeming Love — PAR... 1917
Redeeming Sin (PT & S) —
WA. .2-24-29
Redeeming Sin — VIT. .. 1-26-25
Redemption — STG 6-21-17
Redemption (AT) — MGM
6-4-30
Redemption of Dave Darcey —
VIT. .6-16-16
Redemption of David Carson —
PAR
Redes (AT-Spanish) —
GAR. .4-27-37
Redhead (AT) — MOP. . 9-18-34
Redhead SEL 6-18-19
Redheads on Parade (AT) —
F. .9-7-36
Redheads Preferred — -TIF
1-30-27
Redskin ( S-SE ) — PAR . . 2-3-29
Reducing (AT) — MGM. 1-18-31
Reed Case — U 7-19-17
Referee — SEZ 1922
Reform Candidate — PAR
12-23-15
Reform Girl (AT) —
TOW. .3-4-33
Reform School (AT) — MIL
6-12-39
17,238 TITLES
Reformatory (AT) —
COL. .6-20 38
Refuge — FN 8-19-23
Regal Cavalcade (AT) —
ALL. .6-17-35
Regenerates — TRI 11-22-17
Regeneration — F 0-23-15
Regeneration ( AT-Spunish) —
HOB. .7-26-31
Reggie Mixes In — FAT. .6-1-16
Registered Nurse (AT) — FN
6-1-34
Regular Fellow — TRI 1919
Regular Fellow — PAR. 10-18-25
Regular Girl — SEL ... 1 1 -30-1 9
Regular Scout — FBO. . 11-21-26
Reifende Jugend (AT-
German) — XX. .1-6-36
Reilly of Rainbow Division —
AN. .1-27-29
Rejected Woman — MG. .4-27-24
Rejuvenation — SEZ 1923
Rejuvenation of Aunt Mary —
PDC. .8-7-27
Religious Racketeers (AT)
— ROY. .4-18-38
Rembrandt (AT) —
OA. . 11-21-30
Remember — COL 2-13-28
Remember? (AT) — MGM
12-20-39
Remember Last Night (AT) —
U. . 11-21-35
Remembrance — G 9-17-22
Remittance Woman — FBO
6- 13-23
Remodeling Her Husband —
PAR. .6-13-20
Remorseless Love — SEZ. 8-7-21
Remote Control (AT) — MGM
12-7-30
Rena, Rama Sanningen (AT-
Swedish) — SCA. .10-24-39
Rendezvous — G 1-6-24
Rendezvous (AT-Germau) — -
KAU. .5-1-32
Rendezvous (AT) —
MGM. .10-23-35
Rendezvous at Midnight (AT)
— U. .3-26-35
Rendezvous Im Wien (AT-
German)— SWI 2-21-38
Renegade Ranger (AT) —
RKO. .1938
Renegade Ranger, The (AT) —
RKO. .2-21-39
Renegade Trail (AT) — PAR
7- 25-39
Renegades (AT) — F. . . 11-9 30
Renegades of the West
(AT) — RKO. .3 29 33
Renfrew on the Great White
Trail (AT) — GN 1938
Renfrew uf the Koyal Mounted
(AT) — GN. .10-13-37
Reno — MG 1-13-24
Reno (AT) — WW 10-12-30
Reno (AT) — RKO .... 11-16-39
Reno Divorce — WA ...11-13 27
Rent Free — -PAR 1-21 -s!2
Reported Missing — SEZ
4-16-22
Reported Missing (AT) —
U. .9 1 37
Reputation — U 5-8-21
Reputation — MT 9-13-17
Rescue — U 10211
Rescue. The (S-SE) — UA
1-13-29
Rescue Squad (AT) —
EMP. .4-3-35
Rescuing Angel — PAR. ... 1919
Reserve for Ladies (AT) —
PAR. .6 22-32
Reserve Hat Ruh (AT-
German) — NER. .4-17-32
Restless Sex — PAR 6-13-20
Restless Souls — TRI. . . 1-19-19
Restless Souls — VIT 1922
Restless Wives — BR 1-6-24
Restless Youth — COL ... 1 -6-29
Respect by Proxy — PAT
2-1-20
Restitution — MEN ....5-26-18
Resurrection — PAR ....5-6-18
Resurrection — UA ....4-10-27
Resurrection (AT) — U. 1-25-31
Retaliation — GRB 1929
Retribution — RIA 6-18-22
Retribution — U 1928
Return of Boston Blackie —
FD. .9-18-27
Return of Casey Jones (AT)
— MOP. .6-30-33
Return of Chandu (AT) — PRI
10 9-34
Return of Draw Egan — INC
10- 5-16
Return of Dr. Fu Manchu
(reviewed as "New Ad-
ventures of Dr. Fu Manchu")
(AT) — PAR. .5-4-30
Return of Dr. X, The (AT) —
WA. .11-28-39
Return of Eve — ES. . .10-26-16
Return of Jimmy Valentine
(AT) — REP. .2-1-36
Return of Mary — M 1918
Return of Maxim. The (AT-
Russian) — AM. .11-3-37
Return of Nathan Becker
(AT) — WOK. .4-19-33
Return of Peter Grimm — F
11- 7-26
Return of Peter Grimm (AT)
— RKO. .7-18-35
Return of Sherlock Holmes
(AT & S) — PAR. .10-20-29
Return of Sophie Lang, The
(AT) — PAR. .6-18-36
554"
Return of the Cisco Kid, The
(AT) — F. .4-24-39
Return of the Frog, The (AT)
— SE. .10-11-39
Return of the Scarlet Pim-
pernel (AT) — UA 4-9-38
Upturn nf Tarzan — G... 0-6-20
Return of the Terror (AT ) —
FN. .7-11 34
Return to Life (AT-Span-
ish) — GAR 8-10-38
Reunion iatj — F. . . .1113 30
Reunion in Vienna (AT) —
MGM. .5-2-33
Revelation — AMU 4-6-16
Revelation — M 3-21-18
Revelation — MG 6-29-24
Revenge — M 1918
Revenge (S-SE) — UA 12-16-28
Revenge at Monte Carlo
(AT) — MAF. .4-26-33
Revenge of Tarzan — G...1921
Revenge Rider (AT) —
COL. .4-2-35
Revolt — BRA 9-28-16
Revolt in the Desert (S-SE) —
AM. .4-17-32
Revenge is Sweet (AT-Hun-
garian) — XX 1938
Reward of Faith — COQ
3- 33-29
Reward of Patience — PAR
9-21-16
Reward of the Faithless —
BL. .2-11-17
Revolt of the Zombies (AT) —
ACD. .6-5-36
Revolutionists (AT-Russian)
— AM. .12-29-36
Rhapsody of Love (AT-
Polish) — CAP. .1932
Rhodes (AT) — GB 2-21-36
Rhythm in the Clouds (AT) —
REP. .6-18-37
Rhythm on the Range (AT) —
PAR. .7-18-36
Rhythm of the Saddle (AT)
— REP. .11-8-38
Riachuelo (AT) — HOF 12-10-34
Rich Are Always With Us
(AT) — FN. .5-15-32
Rich But Honest — F... 5-15-27
Rich Girl, Poor Girl — U
1-30-21
Rich Man. Poor Man — PAR
6-2-18
Rich Man, Poor Girl (AT)
— MGM. .8-9-38
Rich Man's Darling — BL
4- 18-18
Rich Man's Folly (AT) —
PAR. .11-22-31
Rich Man's Plaything — F.1917
Rich Men's Sons — COL
7- 17-28
Rich Men's Wives — LIC
8- 27-22
Rich People (AT) — PAT
6-29-30
Richard the Brazen — VIT
8-9-17
Richard the Lion-Hearted —
APD. .10-28-23
Richest Girl — EMU 6-2-18
Richest Girl in the World (AT)
— RKO. .9-8-34
Richest Man in the World
(AT) — MGM . .1930
Richtofen — FGU 9-8-29
Richtofen — GLD 11-18-32
Riddle Gawne — ART. .. 8-18-18
Riddle Ranch (AT) —
BEU. .12-3-35
Riddle Woman — PAT 1921
Ride a Crooked Mile (AT)
— PAR. .12-7-38
Ride 'em Cowboy (AT) —
U. .10-8-36
Ride 'Em, Cowgirl (AT) —
GN. .1-19-39
Ride 'Em Hig-h — PAT. .9-25-27
Ride For Your Life — U
2- 24-24
Ride Him. Cowboy (AT) —
WA. .10-29-32
Rider of Death Valley (AT) —
U. .1932
Rider of the Kins Log — AE
5-22-21
Rider of the Law — U. .10-12-19
Rider of the Law (AT) —
STI. .10-19-35
Rider of the Plains (AT) —
SYN. .6-3-31
Riders of Black River (AT) —
COL. .9-28-39
Riders of Destiny (AT)
— MOP. .11-29-33
Riders of Rio (AT) — IML 1931
Riders of Mystery — IND
6-3-25
Riders of the Black Hills
(AT) — REP. .6-17-38
Riders of the Cactus (AT) —
BIF. .8-16-31
Riders of the Dark — M-G-M
8-12-28
Riders of the Dawn — HOD
6-9-20
Riders of the Dawn (AT) —
MOP. .8-17-37
Riders of the Desert (AT) —
WW. .6-22-32
Riders of the Frontier (AT) —
MOP. .1939
Riders of the Night — M
5-2-18
Riders of the North (AT) —
SYN. .4-5-31
Riders of the Purple Sage — F
3- 16-25
Riders of the Purple Sage
(AT) — F. .9-15-18
Riders of the Purple Sage (AT)
F. .9-27-31
Riders of the Range — TRU 1923
Riders of the Rockies (AT) —
GN. .8-30-37
Riders of the West — RA 1927
Riders of the Rio Grande (S)
— SYN. .1-26-30
Riders of the Whistling Skull
• (AT) — REP. . 6-3-37
Riders of Vengeance — CAP
1928
Riders of Vengeance — U
5-18-19
Riders Up — U 5-4-24
Ridgeway of Montana — U
6-4-24
Ridin' Comet — FBO 1925
Ridin' Fool (AT) — TIF 5-31-31
Ridin' for Justice (AT) —
COL. .1-10-32
Ridin' Gent — RA 1926
Ridin' Kid — BIF 1930
Ridin' Kid from Powder River
U. .10-19-24
Ridin' Law (AT) — BIF 6-1-30
Ridin' Luck — RA 1927
Ridin' Pretty — U 1925
Ridin' Romeo — F 6-5-21
Ridin' Rowdy— PAT. . .4-24-27
Ridin' Streak — FBO 1926
Ridin' the Lone Trail (AT) —
REP. .10-28-37
Ridin' the Wind — FBO 10-18-25
Ridin' Thunder — U.... 6-10-25
Ridin' Wild — WPX 4-23-22
Ridin' Wild — U 11-19-22
Riding Avenger. The (AT) —
DIV. .7-14-36
Riding Demon — U 8-4-29
Riding Double — ST 8-31-24
Riding for Fame — U 1928
Riding for Life — RA 1926
Riding on Air (AT) —
RKO . . 6 9-37
Riding Rascal — U 1926
Riding Renegade — FBO... 1928
Riding Rivals — ARC 1926
Riding Romance — AN.. 8-15-26
Riding Thru (AT) — STI
2- 24-34
Riding to Fame — ELB. . 7-10-27
Riding Tornado (AT) — COL
7-1-32
Riding Wild — AY 1926
Riding Wild (AT) —
COL. .1935
Riding With Death — F. 11-13-21
Riffraff (AT) — MGM. 12-24-35
Right and Duty (AT-Span-
ish) — XX 1938
Right Direction — PAR .... 1916
Right that Failed — M. 12-11-22
Right of the Strongest — SEZ
1924
Right of Way — M 2-1-20
Right of Way (AT) — FN
3- 29-31
Right Man — RA 1925
555
17,238 TITLES
Right to Love, The (AT) —
PAR. .12-21-30
Right to be Happy — BL
12-21-16
Right to Love — PAR.... 1920
Right to Happiness — U
8-24-19
Right to Lie — PAT. . . .12-7-19
Right to Live, The (AT) —
WA. .2-16-35
Right to Romance (AT) —
RKO. .11-22-33
Right Way — PS 11-13-21
Rights of Man — LUB. 10-28-15
Rigoletto — ROM 1922
Riley the Cop (S-SE) — F
12-9-28
Rimrock Jones— PAR. .1-31-18
Rink — MT 12-14-16
Ring and the Man — PAR
1914
Ring Around the Moon (AT) —
CHE. .1935
Ring Around the Moon (AT) —
CHE. .2-15-36
Ringer, The (AT) — FD 6-5-32
Ringtail Rhinoceros — VIT
Rinty of the Desert (S-SE)
WA. .1928
Rio (AT) — U 9-26-39
Rio Grande — PAT 4-15-20
Rio Grande (AT) — COL... 1938
Rio Grande Romance (AT) —
VIC. .1935
Rio Grande Romance (AT) —
VIO. .5-1-36
Rio Rattler (AT) — COE..1935
Rio Rita (AT & S) — RKO
10-13 29
Riot Squad (AT) —
MAF. .7-26-33
Rip Roarin' Roberts — ARC
1924
Rip Roaring Logan — PIZ 1928
Rip Roaring Riley (AT) —
PUR. .10-24-35
Rip Snorter — ARW 1924
Rip Tide — ARW 5 13-23
Riptide (AT) — MGM .. .3-31-34
Rip Van Winkle — HOD
10- 16-21
Rise of Jennie Cushing — ARC
11- 22-17
Rise of Susan — PWO
12- 14-16
Risky Business — PDC
9-26-26
Risky Business (AT) — U
3-29-39
Risky Business — U .... 11-28-20
Risky Road — BL 4-25-18
Ritt In Die Freiheit (AT-
German) — UFA. .5-11-37
Ritzy — PAR 6-26-27
17,238 TITLES
Rivals (S) — AM 4-10-33
River. The (PT & S) — F
12-30-28
River of Missing Men (AT) —
COL. .9-9 3?
River ol Romance (AT & S)
PAR. .8-4-29
River of Romance — M.. 8-17-16
River of Unrest (AT) —
GB. .8-18-37
River Pirate (S-SE) — P
9 23-28
River Woman (S-SE) — GOT
8-26-28
River's End — FN 2-22-20
River's End (AT) — WA
3-15-31
Road Agent — RA 1926
Road Back. The (AT) —
U. .6-18-37
Road Between — ERB. . .7-12-17
Road Called Straight — G..1910
Road Demon — P 2-20-21
Road Demon (AT) — P. .8-23-38
Road Gang (AT) — WA. 2-25-36
Road North. The (S-SE) —
AM. .1932
Road of Ambition — SEZ
2-20-21
Road Show (AT) — M-G-M 1929
Road through the Dark — SE
12-15-18
Road to Arcady — JW....1922
Road to Broadway — MPG
1926
Road to Divorce — U. .. .3-7-20
Road to France — W... 11-17-18
Road to Glory — F 3-21-26
Road to Glory. The (AT) —
F. .6-2-36
Road to Life (AT-Russian) —
AM. .1-31 32
Road to London — PAT. 6-12-21
Road to Love — PAR. .. 12-7-16
Road to Mandalay — M-G-M
7-11-26
Road to Paradise (AT) — FN
9- 28-30
Road to Reno (AT) — PAR
10-11-31
Road to Reno (AT) —
U. .8-31-38
Road to Romance — M-G-M
10- 16-27
Road to Ruin (AT)— TRG
2-21-34
Road to Singapore (AT) — WA
10- 4-31
Road to Yesterday — PDC
11- 15-25
Roadhouse — F 7-29-28
Roadhouse Murder (AT) —
RKO. .5-1-32
Roadhouse Nights (AT) — PAR
2-23-30
Roads to Destiny — G. .. .4-3-21
Roadside Impressario — PAR
6-28-17
Roamin' Wild (AT) —
REB. .4-29 36
Roaming Lady (AT) —
COL. .5-2-36
Roaring Twenties, The (AT) —
WA. .10-16-39
Roar of the Dragon (AT) —
RKO. .7-27-32
Roarin' Broncs — PAT. 12-11-27
Roarin' Bill Atwood — RA.1926
Roarin' Fires — ELB 1928
Roarin' Lead (AT) —
REP. .4-24-37
Roarin' Ranch (AT) — U
5-11-30
Roaring Adventure — U . . 2-8-25
Roarin' Guns (AT) —
PDR. .7-7-36
Roaring Rails — PDC .. 10-19-24
Roaring Rider — ARC 1926
Roaring Road — PAR. . .3-23-19
Roaring Roads (AT) —
MAC. .4-13-35
Roaring Timber (AT) —
COL. .8-21-37
Roaring Timber (AT) —
COL. .1-3-38
Robber Symphony. The (AT) —
FOT. .2-6-37
Robbers' Roost (AT) —
F. .3-18-33
Robe of Honor — HOD
Robert Koch. Der Bekaempfer
Des Todes (AT-German) —
UFA. .1939
Roberta (AT) — RKO. . .2-12-35
Robin Hood — UA 11-5-22
Robin Hood. Jr. — EC 1923
Robin Hood of El Dorado
(AT) — MGM . .3-13-36
Robes of Sin — RUL. .. 11-9-24
Robin Hood of El Dorado
(AT) — MGM . .1935
Robinson Crusoe — FB0...1928
Rockabye (AT) — RKO. 12-3-32
Rocking Moon — PDC. . .1-24-26
Rocky Mountain Mystery (AT)
— PAR. .3-29-35
Rocky Rhodes (AT) — U
11-13-34
Rodeo Mixup — ARW 1924
Roeda Dagen (AT-Swedlsh) —
STP. .5-29-32
Rogue of the Range (AT) —
SUM. .5-12-36
Rogue of the Rio Grande
(AT) — WW. .12-7-30
Rogue Song (AT) — MGM
2-2-30
Rogues and Romance — PAT
1-2-21
Rogues Romance — VIT 5-25-19
Rogues Tavern, The (AT) —
PUR. .0-4-36
556
Roll Along Cowboy (AT) —
F. .1937
Roll, WagonB, Roll (AT) —
MOP. .12-21-30
Rolled Stockings — PAR. 7-24-27
Rollin' Plains (AT) —
GN. .1938
Rollin' Westward (AT) —
MOP. .1939
Rolling Caravans (AT) —
COL. .1938
Rolling Home — U 5-20-26
Rolling Stones — PAR 1925
Rome Express (AT) —
U. .2-25-33
Roman Scandals (AT)
— UA. .12-14-33
Romance — UA 5-23-20
Romance (AT) — MGM. 8-24-30
Romance and Arabella — SE
2-2-19
Romance and Riches (AT) —
GN. .3-2-37
Romance and Rustlers — ARW
1024
Romance at the Danube (AT-
Hungarian) — DAN. .3-30-37
Romance in Budapest (AT) —
DUW. .5-11-34
Romance in Manhattan (AT) —
RKO. .11-21-34
Romance in the Dark (AT)
— PAR. .2-14-38
Romance in the Rain (AT) —
U— 9-8-34
Romance Land — F 2-11-23
Romance of a Million Dollars
— PRE. .10-24-26
Romance of a Rogue — QU.1928
Romance of Billy Goat Hill —
RED. .0-28-16
Romance of Happy Valley —
ART. .2-2-19
Romance of Hine Moa —
GAU. .1929
Romance of Tarzan — FN.. 1918
Romance of the Air — SRB
11-11-18
Romance of the Limberlost
(AT) — MOP. .6-10-38
Romance of the Redwoods —
ART. .5-17-17
Romance of the Redwoods (AT)
— COL. .5-17-39
Romance of the Rio Grande
(AT) — F. .11-10-29
Romance of the Rockies (AT)
— MOP. .1937
Romance of the Underworld
(S-SE) — F 1-13-29
Romance of the Underworld —
SHE. .7-21-18
Romance of the West (AT) —
CAP. .8-10-30
Romance on the Run (AT)
— REP. .6-12-38
Romance Promoters — VIT. 1021
Romance Ranch — F 0-20-24
Romance Rides the Range
(AT) — SPE. .9-22 30
Romance Tropical (AT) — LAT
10-16 34
Romantic Adventure — PAR
1920
Romantic Age — COL. . 11-13-27
Romantic Journey — PAT
12-21-26
Romantic Rogue — RA....1928
Romany Lass, A — HAR
4-20-19
Romany. Where Love Runs
Wild — SEZ
Romeo and Juliet — M 10-20-16
Romeo and Juliet — P 10-26-16
Romeo and Juliet (AT) —
MGM. .7-16 36
Romola — MG 12-7-24
Ronny ( AT-German ) UFA
4- 17-32
Roof Tree — P 12-25-21
Rookie Cop. The (AT) —
RKO. .1939
Rookie's Return — PAR. . 1-9-21
Rookies — M-G-M 6-1-27
Room and Board — REA 9-4-21
Room Service (AT) —
RKO. .9-14-38
Root ol Evil — TRI 1919
Rootin' Tootin' Rhythm (AT)
— REP. .6-1-37
Roped — U 1-12-19
Rosa de Francia (AT) —
P. .10-29-35
Rosalie (AT) — MGM .12-22-37
Rosario (AT-Spanish) —
XX. .4-21-36
Rosary — FN a-26-22
Rose Bowl (AT) —
PAR. .10-15-36
Rose De Xochimilco (AT-
Spanish) — XX. .1939
Rose Marie — MGM 2-19-28
Rose Marie (AT) —
MGM. .1-13-36
Rose O' Paradise — BRU
5- 19-18
Rose O' The Sea — FN
Rose of Granada — PAR... 1919
Rose of Kildare — LUM...1927
Rose of Nome — F 8-8-20
Rose of Paris — U 8-28-24
Rose of Washington Square
(AT) — F. .5-8-39
Rose of the Blood — P.. 1-17-18
Rose of the Bowery — ACI 1928
Rose of the Golden West — FN
10-2-27
Rose of the Rancho — PAR 1014
Rose of the Rancho (AT) —
PAR. .1035
Rose of the Rancho (AT) —
PAR. .1-4-36
Rose of the Rio Grande (AT)
— XX. .1931
Rose of the Rio Grande
(AT) — MOP. .3-20-38
Rose of Tralee (AT) —
DUB. .10-31-38
Rose of the River — PAR.. 1919
Rose of the South — VIT
12-7-16
Rose of the Tenements — FBO
12-19-26
Rose of the West — F. .7-20-19
Rose of the World — ART
1-17-18
Rose of the World — WA
11-15-25
Rosenmontag (AT-German) —
UFA. .3-29-31
Rosemary Climbs — PAT. . 1919
Rosemary, That's for Remem-
brance— M . . 12-23-15
Rosen aus dem Suden (AT-
German) — XX. .4-24-35
Roses of Picardy — EXP... 1928
Roses of Picardy (S-SE) —
FD. .1929
Roses of Picardy — EXP... 1930
Rosie O'Grady — APO. .. .2-8-17
Rosita — UA 9-0-23
Rote Orchideen (AT-German) —
UFA. .1939
Rothschild ( AT-French ) —
REG. .10-20-38
Rothapfel's First Unit Pro-
gramme— FCH. .1919
Round Up — PAR 9-12-20
Rogue and Riches — U... 1-4-20
Rouged Lips — M 9-0-23
Rough and Ready — F 1918
Rough and Ready — U 1927
Rough Diamond — F... 10-30-21
Rough Going — IND 1925
Rough Lover — U 8-21-18
Rough Neck — WO 1919
Rough Riders — PAR. . .3-20-27
Rough Riders' Round-Up (AT)
REP. .3-17-39
Rough Ridin* — APQ 4-6-24
Rough Ridin' Red — FBO
11-18-28
Rough Riding Rangers (AT) —
FD. .1935
Rough Riding Romance — F
8-3-19
Rough Romance (AT) — F
6- 22-30
Rough Shod — F 0-4-22
Rough Waters (AT) — WA
7- 27-30
Roughneck — F 12-7-24
Roulette — SEZ 1924
Rounding Up the Law — AY
1922
Round-Up Time in Texas (AT)
— REP. .4-22-37
Rovin' Tumbleweeds (AT) —
REP. .11-20-39
Rowdy — U 9-11-21
Royal American — RA.. 8-21-27
Royal Bed (AT) — RKO 2-1-31
Royal Box (AT-German) —
WA. .12-29-29
557
17,238 TITLES
Royal Democrat — TRI. . . . 1919
Royal Divorce (AT) — SE..1939
Royal Family of Broadway
(AT) — PAR. .12-28-30
Royal Pauper — EDK . . . 2-15-17
Royal Rider — FN 6-23-29
Royal Romance — F.... 5-24-17
Royal Romance (AT)— COL
4-27-30
Royal Scandal — MOV.. 9 29-29
Royal Waltz, The (AT-
German)— UFA. .4 11-36
Rubacuori (AT-Italian) — TRL
3-13 32
Rubber Heels — PAR. . .7-10-27
Rubber Tires — PDC .... 3-20-27
Rubicon — AM 9-27-31
Rugged Water — PAR .... 8-2-25
Ruggles of Red Gap— ES
3- 14-18
Ruggles of Red Gap — PAR
9-16-23
Ruggles of Red Gap (AT) —
PAR. .2-19-35
Ruler of the Road — PAT
4- 25-18
Rulers of the Sea (AT) — PAR
9-15-39
Ruling Passion — F 2-10-16
Ruling Passion — UA . . . 1-29-22
Ruling Passions — SCI. .9-29-18
Ruling Voice. The (AT) —
FN. .11-8-31
Rumba ( AT ) — PAR ... 2-23-35
Rummy — FAT 10-19-16
Runaround (AT) — RKO (re-
viewed as "Lovable and
Sweet". .6-21-31
Runaway — EMU 10-25-17
Runaway — PAR 5-9-26
Runaway Bride (AT) — RKO
5- 18-30
Runaway Express— U .. 8-22-26
Runaway Girls — COL. .10-28-28
Runaway Queen, The (AT) —
UA. .1-17-35
Runaway Romany — PAT
12-20-17
Runaways of St. Agail (AT-
French), See Boys' School
Running Wild — PAR . . . 6-26-27
Rupert of Hentzau — BL 3-16-16
Rupert of Hentzau — SEZ
7- 15-23
Ruse of the Ratler — AE..1922
Rush Hour — PAT 2-6-28
Russia — AEP 5-12-29
Russia Marches On —
WO. .2-18-38
Russia Today (S-SE) —
WEL. .10 21-33
Russian Cossack — BEH...1928
Russian Revolution — CP
8- 26-27
17,238 TITLES
Rustic Chivalry (AT-Span-
ish) — XX 1938
Rustle of Silk — PAR ... 5-13-23
Rustler's Paradise (AT) —
AJ. .5-7-35
Rustler's Ranch — U. . .7-18-26
Rustler's Roundup (AT)
— U. .9-16-33
Hustler's Valley (AT) —
PAR. ; 7-6-37
Rustling a Bride — PAR... 1919
Rustling: for Cupid — P. .5-2-26
Rusty Rides Alone (AT)
COL. .10-10 33
s
S. A. Mann Brand (AT) —
BAU. .5-29-34
S. O. S. Iceberg- (AT) — U
11-28-33
S. 0. S. Perils of the Sea
— COL. .2-14-26
S. O. S. Tidal Wave (AT) —
REP. .6-2-39
Saada — PGU 1928
Sable Cicada (AT-Chinese) —
MOD. .1-19-39
Sable Loreha — TRI . . . 10-28-15
Sabotage (AT) — REP. . 10-6-39
Sackcloth and Scarlet — PAR
5-3-25
Sacred and Profane Love —
PAR. .4-24-21
Sacred Flame — SCI 11-2-19
Sacred Flame (AT & S) — WA
11-24-29
Sacred Ruby — ARW 1921
Sacred Silence — F. ... 10-19-19
Sacrifice — PAR 6-10-17
Sacrifice of Honor (AT-
French) — IML 1938
Saddle Aces (AT) —
RES. .10-14-35
Saddle Buster. The (AT) —
RKO. .7-8-32
Saddle Cyclone — ARC 1926
Saddle Hawk — D 3-8-25
Saddle Jumpers 1927
Saddle Kingr — AN 10-20-29
Saddle Mates — PAT. ... 3-18-28
Sadie Goes to Heaven — EES
1917
Sadie Love — PAR 1919
Sadie McKee (AT) — MGM
5-12-34
Sadie Thompson — U A.. 2-12-28
Safe for Democracy — BLC
11- 24-18
Safe in Hell (AT) — FN
12- 20-31
Safety Curtain — SE 7-7-18
Safety in Numbers (AT) —
PAR . .6-8-30
Safety In Numbers (AT) —
F. .9-9-38
Safety Last — PAT 4-8-23
Saga of Death Valley (AT) —
REP. . 12-22-39
Sagario (AT) — XX. . . . 1-24-34
Sage Brush Hamlet — EXI 1919
Sage-Brush League — ROM 1919
Sagebrush Politics (PT) HPI
2- 16-30
Sagebrush Trail (AT) —
MOP. .12-8-33
Sagebrush Troubadour. The
(AT) — REP. .11-19-36
Sagebrusher — HOD 1-4-20
Sage Hen — PAT 1-16-21
Sahara — HOD 1919
Said O'Reilly to MacNab (AT)
— GB. .1937
Sailing Along (AT) —
GB. .3-23-38
Sailor Be Good (AT) —
RKO. .3-1-33
Sailor Izzy Murphy — WA
10-30-27
Sailor-Made Man — AE 11-27-21
Sailor's Holiday (AT & S) —
PAT. .10-27-29
Sailor's Luck (AT) — F. 3-17-33
Sailor's Sweetheart — WA
10- 9-27
Sailor's Wives — FN 1-22-28
Saint, Devil and Woman —
PAT. .10-19-26
Saint in London. The (AT) —
RKO . .7-19-39
Saint in New York, The
(AT) — RKO. .5-4-38
Saint Elmo — F 1923
St. Genoveffa (AT-Italian) —
KIT. .1935
St. Louis Blues (AT) — PAR
1-27-39
St. Louis Kid (AT) — WA
11- 1-34
St. Louis Woman (AT) —
SHP. .1-3-35
Saint Strikes Back. The (AT) —
RKO. .3-1-39
Saint's Adventure — ES. 5-17-17
Sainted Devil — PAR. .. 11-30-24
Saintly Sinner BL. .2-22-17
Saints and Sinners — PAR
7-13-16
Sajenko the Soviet — UFA
3- 10-29
Sal of Singapore (PT & S) —
PAT. .1-6-29
Salamander — MOS ...12-23-15
Saleslady — PAR 3-30-16
Saleslady (AT) — MOP.. 1-21-38
Sally — FN 3-22-25
Sally (AT) — FN 12-29-29
Sally. Irene and Mary — MG
12-13-25
Sally. Irene and Mary (AT)
— F. .2-28-38
558
Sally lu a Hurry— VIT
4 19-17
Sally in Our Alley — BRA
7-20-16
Sally in Our Alley — COL
11-6-27
Sally of the Sawdust — DA
8-9-25
Sally of the Scandals — FBO
6-10-28
Sally of the South Seas — HER
1928
Sally of the Subway (AT) —
MAF. .1-24-32
Sally's Shoulders — FBO
12-23-28
Salome — WIE 1023
Salome — APA 1-7-23
Salome — F 10-13-18
Salome of the Tenements —
PAR. .3-8-25
Salomy Jane — PAR 9-9-23
Salon Dora Green (AT-
German) — CAS. .8-10-37
Salt of the Earth — EDP
12-20-17
Salute (AT & 9) — F. . 10-6-29
Salvage — RC 5-22-21
Salvation Hunters — DA . . 2-8-25
Salvation Jane — FBO 1927
Salvation Joan — VIT. . .4-13-16
Salvation Nell — WO. . . 10-28-16
Salvation Nell — FN 7-3-21
Salvation Nell (AT) — TIF
7-6-31
Samarang (S-SE) — DA. 6-18-33
Samson — D
Samvetsomma Adolf (AT-
Swedish) — XX. .3-15-37
San Francisco (AT) —
MGM. .6-26-36
San Francisco Nights —
GOT. .12-25 27
San Quentin (AT) — FN .8-6-37
Sand — PAR 6-27-20
Sanders of the River (AT) —
DA. .6-26-35
Sandflow (AT) — D 2-1-37
Sandra — FN 1-4-25
Sands of Sacrifice — AMD
10-4-17
Sandy — F 4-11-26
Sandy — PAR 6-30-17
Sandy Burke of the D-Bar-U
— G. .1919
Sangen Till Henne (AT-
Swedish) — XX. .2-26-35
Sans Famille (AT-French) —
DUW. .6-7-35
Santa (AT-Spanish) — LST
1932
Santa Fe Stampede (AT) —
REP. .12-8 38
Santa Fe Trail. The (AT)
PAR. .10-19 30
Sap — WA 1920
Sap. The (PT & 9) — WA 1929
Sap from Syracuse. The
(AT) — PAR. .7-27 30
Saphead — M 2-27-21
Sapho — PAR 3-15-17
Sara Lar Sip Folkvett (AT-Swed-
ish) — SCA 2-18-38
Sarah and Son (AT) — PAR
3-16-30
Saratoga (AT) — MGM. 7-19-37
Sarga Csiko ( AT-Hungarian) —
DAN . . 2-6-37
Sarson in Kairo (AT) —
UFA. .12-29-33
Satan and the Woman — EXP
2-12-28
Satan in Sables — WA . 10-25-25
Satan Junior — M 3-9-19
Satan Met a Lady (AT) —
WA. .7-23 36
Satan Sanderson — M 1915
Satan Town — PAT 8-15-26
Satin Girl — AHR 12-9-23
Satin Woman — LUM. . .7-24-27
Saturday Night — PAR.. 1-29-22
Saturday Nigrht Kid (AT & S)
PAR. .11-17-29
Saturday's Children (PT & S)
— FN. .5-5-29
Saturday's Heroes (AT) —
RKO. .10-18-37
Saturday's Millions (AT) —
U. .10-14-3.!
Sauce for the Goose — SEZ
8-25-18
Savage — FN 6-13-26
Savage — BL 1917
Savage Girl. The (AT) —
FRE. .1-6 33
Savage Gold (S-SE) —
AUT. .5-23-33
Savage Woman — SE .... 8-11-18
Savages of the Sea — BAR 1925
Save a Little For Sixty — SEZ
Saved by Radio — RUL. . 9-3-22
Sav.ng- the Family Name —
BL. .8-31-16
Sawdust — U 6-24-23
Sawdust Doll — PAT .... 3-30-19
Sawdust Paradise (S-SE) —
PAR. .9 2-28
Sawdust Trail — U ....7-13-24
Say It Ag-ain — PAR... 6 13-26
Say It in French (AT) —
PAR. .11-25-38
Say It With Diamonds — FD
6-12-27
Say It With Sables — COL
8-12-28
Say It With Songs (AT & S)
— WA. .8-11-29
Sayl Young Fellow — ART
6-23 18
Scales of Justice — PAR.. 1914
Scampolo — Girl of the Streets
(AT-German) — KIT. .1935
Scandal — SE 11-8-17
Scandal — AM 11-3-29
Scandal (PT & S) — D
4-28-29
Scandal for Sale (AT) — U
4-10-32
Scandal in Paris — FEL...1929
Scandal Mongers — U 1918
Scandal Proof — F 7-14-25
Scandal Sheet (AT) — PAR
2-8-31
Scandal Sheet (AT) — COL
1939
Scandal Street — ARW . 1 0-25-25
Scandal Street (AT) —
PAR. .2-5-38
Scandalous Tonsrues — \E.1922
Scandals of Paris (AT) —
REG. .12-31-35
Scar — WO 4-6-19
"Scar" Hanan — FBO 1925
Scarab Ring — VIT ....5-29-21
Scaramouche — ME ...10-14-23
Scareheads (AT) — CAP
10-25-31
Scarface (AT) — UA... 4-17-32
Scarlet and Gold — DAV...1925
Scarlet Band (AT) — BIF
8-3-32
Scarlet Car — D 1-28-23
Scarlet Car — BL 12-6 17
Scarlet Crystal — RED.. 2-11-17
Scarlet Daredevil — WW
7-14-29
Scarlet
Dawn (AT) —
•WA
11-5-32
Scarlet
Days — PAR. .
.11-23-19
Scarlet
Dove — TIF. .
. .6-17-28
Scarlet
Drop — BL. . . .
. . .5-2-18
Scarlet
Empress (AT)
— PAR
9-15-34
Scarlet
Honeymoon —
F. . .1925
Scarlet
Lady — COL. .
. .8-19-28
Scarlet
Letter — F ....
. .2-22-17
Scarlet
Letter — MGM .
. .8-15-26
Scarlet
Letter — SEZ
1917
Scarlet
Lily — FN
. .7-15-23
Scarlet
Oath — PWO . .
.10-19-16
Scarlet
Pages (AT) —
-FN
12-7-30
Scarlet
Pimpernel — F .
. . . .1917
Scarlet
Pimpernel (AT) —
UA
. .1-26-35
Scarlet
Road — EDK. .
. .2-24-16
Scarlet
Road — F ....
6 23-18
Scarlet
River (AT) —
RKO
. . 5-24-33
Scarlet
Runner — VIT .
. .9-14-16
Scarlet
Saint — FN . . .
.11-15-25
Scarlet Seas (S-SE) — FN
12-30-28
Scarlet Shadow — U.... 2-23-19
Scarlet Trail — 9R 12-29-18
Scarlet Week-End. A (AT) —
MHM. .9-23-32
Scarlet West — FN 9-27-25
Scarlet Woman — M 6-8-16
Scars of Hate — IND 1924
Scars of Jealousy — FN
3-11-23
Schabernack (AT-German) —
UNG. .8-25-37
559
17,238 TITLES
Schen Blichen (AT-German) —
PRX. .1932
Schloss Hubertus (AT-
German) — UFA. .2-12-35
Sclilussakkord (AT-German)
— UFA. .9-9-36
Schoen 1st Es Verliebt Zu Sein
(AT-German) — XX. .4-8-36
Schoen 1st Manoeverzeit (AT-
German) — WOD. .8-20-32
School Days — WA 12-4-21
School for Girls (AT) — LIB
10-16-34
School for Husbands — PAR
1917
School for Husbands (AT) —
HOB . . 1-23-39
School for Wives— VIT 4-5-25
Schubert's Fruehlingstraum
(AT-German) — CAP. .6-24-32
Schuss Im Morgengrauen (AT)
— UFA. .10-2-34
Schwarzer Jaeger Johanna
(AT-German) — XX. .4-2-35
Schwarzwaldmaedel (AT-
German) — XX. .10-17-36
Scipione L'Africano (AT-
Italian) — ESP. .9-29-39
Scorcher — RA 1927
Scrapper — U 1-22-22
Scoffer — FN 1921
Scotland Yard (AT) — F
10-19-30
Scotland Yard Commands (AT)
— GN. .2-16-37
Scotland Yard Mystery (AT)
— BI. .10-6-34
Scotland Yard Mystery (AT) —
ALL. .6-4-35
Scoundrel. The (AT) —
PAR. .4-30 35
Scrambled Wives — FN.. 5-29-21
Scrap Iron — FN 6-6-21
Scrappin' Kid— U 1 1-29-25
Scratch My Back — G... 6-13-20
Scream in the Night — SEZ
10- 26-19
Scrooge — PAR 12-19-20
Scrooge (AT) — PAR. .11-30-35
Scuttlers — F 1921
Sea Bat. The (AT) — MGM
8-10-30
Sea Beast — WA 1-24-26
Sea Devils (AT) — JOH. .3-8 31
Sea Devils (AT) —
RKO. .2-11-37
Sea Fever — MOV 11-3-29
Sea Flower — U 12-29-18
Sea Fury (PT) — ROP 1929
Sea Ghost (AT) — PEE
11- 29-31
Sea God (AT) — PAR ... 9-7-30
Sea Hawk — FN 6-8-24
Sea Horses — PAR 3-7-26
17,238 TITLES
Sea Legs (AT) — PAR . . 1 1-9-30
Sea Lion — FN 1-8-22
Sea Master — AMU 11-1-17
Sea Racketeers (AT) —
REP. .8-20-37
Sea Panther — TRI 3 21-18
Sea Raiders — SEC 1923
Sea Ride — VIT 5-30-20
Sea Spoilers (AT) —
U. .10-24-36
Sea Tiger — FN 4-24-27
Sea Waif — WO 1918
Sea Wolf — PAR 5-23-20
Sea Wolf — INC 11-29-25
Sea Wolf. The (AT) — F
8-31-30
Seal of Silence — VIT. . .6-2-18
Sealed Envelope — D 1919
Sealed Hearts — SEZ 1919
Sealed Lips — COL. . . . 10-18-25
Sealed Lips — CP 4-29-28
Sealed Lips — EQ 12-23-15
Sealed Valley — M 1915
Search for Beauty (AT) — PAR
2-10-34
Seas Beneath (AT) — F 2-1-31
Season Love — SFI 1928
Second Bureau (AT-French) —
XX. .2-19-30
Second Bureau (AT) — FIA.1939
Second Choice (AT) — WA
1-12-30
Second Fiddle — HOD. .. 1-14-23
Second Fiddle (AT) — F. . 7-3-39
Second Hand Love — F...1923
Second Hand Rose — U. . 5-7-22
Second Honeymoon (AT) —
COT. .1-11-31
Second Honeymoon (AT) —
F. .11-11-37
Second In Command — M . . 1915
Second Floor Mystery (AT) —
WA . . 5-4-30
Second Hand Wife (AT) —
F. .1-14-33
Second Mrs. Tanqueray — VIT. .
Second Wife (AT) — RKO
2-9-30
Second Wife (AT) —
RKO. .8-14-36
Second Youth — MG 4-20-24
Secret Agent (AT) —
ALL. .6-5-35
Secret Agent (AT) —
OB. .6-13-36
Secret Bride (AT) — WA
2-2-35
Secret Call (AT) — PAR 7-12-31
Secret Code — TRI 9-8-18
Secret Game — PR 12-0-17
Secret Garden — PAR ... 1-10-19
Secret Gift — U 9-5-20
Secret Hour — PAR 3-18-28
Secret Love — BL 2-10-16
Secret Man — U 1017
Secret Menace (AT) — IML
12-13-31
Secret Marriage — TRI
Secret of Black Mountain —
RAL. .1917
Secret of Dr. Kildare (AT) —
MGM. .11-28-39
Secret of Eve — M 3-8-17
Secret of Madame Blanche
(AT) — MGM. .2-4-33
Secret of Stamboul (AT) —
HOB. .1939
Secrets of the Blue Room
(AT) — U. .9-13-33
Secret of the Chateau (AT) —
U. .1-8-35
Secret of the Hills — VIT. 1921
Secret of the Storm Country
— SE. .11-22-17
Secret of the Swamp — BL
7-20-16
Secret Orders — FBO. .. .4-11-20
Secret Patrol (AT) —
COL. .0-3-30
Secret Service — PAR ... 6-29-19
Secret Service (AT) — RICO
12-13-31
Secret Service of the Air (AT)
— WA. .3-6-39
Secret Sin — PAR 10-28-15
Secret Sinners (AT) —
MAF. .12-13 33
Secret Six (AT) — MGM 5-3-31
Secret Spring — PAR 1926
Secret Strings — M ....11-17-18
Secret Studio — F 0-20-27
Secret Valley (AT) —
F. . 12-28-36
Secret Witness (AT) — COL
12-20-31
Secrets — FN 3-30-24
Secrets (AT) — UA 3-10-33
Secrets of a Nurse (AT) —
D. .11-21-38
Secrets of a Secretary (AT)
PAR. .7-19 31
Secrets of a Soul — UFA. 1928
Secrets of an Actress (AT)
— WA. .10-11-38
Secrets of Chinatown (AT) —
NOF. .2-20-35
Secrets of Hollywood (AT) —
SCO. .8-30-33
Secrets of Nature — UFA 1929
Secrets of Paris — MAU
10-29-22
Secrets of the French Police
(AT) — RKO. .12-10-32
Secrets of the Night — U
12-14-24
Secrets of the Orient (S) —
UFA. .1-10-32
Secrets of the Range — CAP
1928
Secrets of Wu Sin (AT) —
CHE. .2-3-33
560
See America Thirst (AT) — U
11-23 30
See My Lawyer — RC... 0-6-21
See You in Jail — FN. . .4-17-27
See You Later — PIZ 1928
Seed (AT) — U 5-17-31
Seeds of Freedom — AM. 9-15-29
Seeds of Vengeance — SE
11-14-20
Seeln' Believing — M 1922
Seeing Hungary (S-SE) —
DAN. 9-10-35
Seeing It Through — RC
2-16-20
Seekers — RED 7-0-16
Segitseg Orokoltem (AT-
Hungarian) — DAN. .12-30-37
Sein Liebeslied (AT-German)
— ASS. .11-22-31
Seln Scheidungsgrund (AT-
German) — UFA. .2-21-32
Self Defense (AT) —
MOP. .2-17-33
Self Made Failure — FN. 6-22-24
Self-Made Man — F 7-2-22
Self Made Wife — U 7-8-23
Self Starter — RA 1926
Selfish Woman — PAR .7-20-10
Selfish Yates — ART ...5-12-18
Sell "Em Cowboy — ARW
5-17-25
Senkyrka v Divoke Krasy (AT-
Czechoslovakian ) — HOB .1939
Senor Americano (AT) — U
1-12-30
Senor Daredevil — FN ...0-1-20
Senora Casada Necesita
Marido (AT-Spanish) —
F. .2-12-35
Senorita — PAR 5-15-27
Sensation Hunters (AT) — MOP
1-3-34
Sensation Seekers — U. . .1-10-27
Sensational Divorce — AGF.1929
Sentimental Lady — EDK
11-11-15
Sentimental Tommy — PAR
4-3-21
Sequoia (AT) — MGM. 12-22-34
Serenade — PAR 12-25-27
Serenade — FN 9-11-21
Sergeant Madden (AT) —
MGM. .3-22-39
Sergeant Murphy (AT) —
WA. .2-2-38
Serpent — F 2-10-10
Serpente A Sonagli (AT-Italian)
— NUO. .1930
Serpent's Tooth — AMU. . 0-7-17
Servant In the House — FBO
8 22-20
Servant Question — SE. .0-27-20
Servants' Entrance (AT) — F
0-20-34
Service de Luxe (AT) —
U. .10-18-38
Service for Ladies — PAR
8-21-27
Service Star — G 7-14-18
Serving Two Masters — LBR
1022
Set Free — U 12-8-18
Set Free — U 3-20-27
Set Up — U 3-7-20
Seven Brave Men (AT-Russian)
AM. .0-18-30
Seven Chances — MG ..3-22-25
Seven Days — PDC 0-0-25
Seven Days' Leave (AT) —
PAR. .1-20 30
Seven Faces (AT) — F. 11-17-29
Seven Footprints to Satan
(S-SE) — FN. .4-14-20
Seven Keys to Baldpate — PAR
11-8-25
Seven Keys to Baldpate — ART
0-13-17
Seven Keys to Baldpate (AT) —
RKO. .12-22-20
Seven Keys to Baldpate (AT) —
RKO. .11-30-35
8even Sinners — WA ..12-13-25
Seven Sinners (AT) —
GB. .7 31-30
Seven Sisters (AT-Chinese)
— XX. .1038
Seven Swans — PAR . . . 1-3-18
Seven Years Bad Luck — RC
6-1-21
Seventeen — PAR 1016
Seventh Bandit — PAT .3-28-26
Seventh Day — FN 3-10-22
Seventh Heaven — F ...6-29-27
Seventh Heaven (AT) —
F. .3-18-37
Seventh Person — F
70 Minutes of Variety Show
(AT-Italian) — XX 1038
70,000 Witnesses (AT) — PAR
9-3-32
Sex — HOD 3-21-20
Sex Lure — IV 11-0-10
Sex Madness (S-SE) —
PWP. .1029
Sez O'Reilly to MacNab
(AT) — GB. .2-19-38
Shi the Octopus (AT) —
WA. .12-28-37
Shackled — HOD 6-9-18
Shackles of Fear — FLE...1925
Shackles of Gold — F... 5-14-22
Shackles of Truth — AMU
6-14-17
Shackleton — FFS 1928
Shadow — FOR 1921
Shadow. The (AT) —
GOB. .6-27-36
Shadow. The (AT) —
COL. .12-22-37
Shadow Between (AT) —
POP. .3-20-32
Shadow Laughs (AT) —
INV. .3-27-33
Shadow of Doubt — EQ. 4-13-16
Shadow of Doubt (AT) —
MGM. .2-16-35
Shadow of Her Past — PAT
8-3-16
Shadow of Lightning Ridge —
AY. .0-11-21
Shadow of Rosalie Byrnes — SE
6-16-20
Shadow of Silk Lennox (AT) —
COE. .1935
Shadow of the Law — AE
3-7-26
Shadow of the Law (AT) —
PAR. .6-8-30
Shadow of the Mosque — USF
11- 22-25
Shadow of the Past — VIT. . . .
Shadow of Tragedy — ARB. 1928
Shadow on the Wall — LUM
2-7-25
Shadow Ranch (AT) — COL
9-28-30
Shadow Strikes, The (AT) —
GN. .7-9-37
Shadows — G 2-16-19
Shadows — LIC 11-6-22
Shadows and Sunshine — PAT
11-0-16
Shadows of a Great City — M
1916
Shadows of Conscience — RUL
10-10-21
Shadows of Fear — FN. 11-18-28
Shadows of Lightning Ridge —
PS
Shadows of Paris — PAR
2-24-24
Shadows of Sing Sing (AT) —
COL. .2-14-34
Shadows of Suspicion — M
2-0-19
Shadows of the East — F
2-3-24
Shadows of the Night — HER
2-10-29
Shadows of the Night — M-G-M
1928
Shadows of the North — U
8-19-23
Shadows of the Orient (AT) —
MOP. .10-13-37
Shadows of the Sea — SEZ
1-1-22
Shadows of the West — NAT
1921
Shadows Over Shanghai
(AT) — GN. .9-16 38
Shady Lady (PT & S) — PAT
12- 23-28
Shakedown (AT) —
COL. .8-18-36
Shakedown, The (PT & S) —
U. .4 14-29
Shall We Dance (AT) —
RKO. .4-30-37
Shall We Forgive Her? —
PWO. .10-18-17
Sham — PAR 6-29-21
Shame (AT) — AM 3-15-33
Shame — NOB 11-2P-17
561
17,238 TITLES
Shame — F 8-7-21
Shameful Behavior — PRE
12-6-26
Shamrock and the Rose — CHA
7- 10-27
Shamrock Handicap — F. .6-2-26
Shams of Society — RC. . 8-7-21
Shanghai ( AT ) — PAR . . 7-20-35
Shanghai Bound — PAR
11-20-27
Shanghai Document — AM
8- 18-29
Shanghai Express (AT) —
PAR. .2-21-32
Shanghai Lady (AT) — U
11-17-29
Shanghai Madness (AT) —
F. .9-23-33
Shanghai Rose — RA . ..5-12-39
Shanghaied — FBO 8-21-27
Shanghaied Love (AT) — COL
9-6-31
Shannons of Broadway (AT&
S) — U. .1929
Shark — F 1-11-20
Shark Master — U 8-28-21
Shark Monroe — ART ...7-7-18
Sharp Shooters — F . . . 1-29-28
Sharpshooters (AT) —
F. .12-7-38
Shattered — KUR 11-20-21
Shattered — FGU 1928
Shattered Dreams — U 12-11-21
Shattered Idols — AR ...3-6-22
Shattered Reputations — CAP
0-30-88
She — F 6-17-17
She — LBR 1926
She (AT) — RKO 7-8-36
She and the Three (AT-Ger-
man) — XX 1938
She Asked for It (AT) —
PAR. .8-30-37
She Couldn't Help It — REA
2-27-21
She Couldn't Say No (AT) —
WA. .2-16-30
She Couldn't Take It (AT) —
COL. .10-8-85
She Devil — F 1018
She-Devil Island (AT) —
GN. .8-29-86
She Done Him Wrong (AT) —
PAR. .2-10-33
She Gets Her Man (AT) —
U. .8-5-35
She Goes to War (PT A S) —
UA. .6-9-29
She Got What She Wanted
(AT) — TIF. .11-9-30
She Had to Choose (AT) —
MAJ. .9-18 34
She Had to Eat (AT) —
F. .7-23-37
17,238 TITLES
She Had to Say Yes
(AT) — FN. .7-28-33
She Hired a Husband — U.1918
She Learned About Sailors
(AT) — P. .7-28-34
She Loved a Fireman (AT)
— WA. .1-26-38
She Loves and Lies — SEZ
1- 11-20
She Loves Me Not (AT) —
PAR. .7-19 34
She Made Her Bed (AT) —
PAR. .4-27-34
She Married a Cop (AT) —
REP. .6-27-39
She Married an Artist
(AT) — COL. .3-1-38
She Married Her Boss (AT) —
COL. .9-27-35
She Shall Have Music (AT) —
DML. .11-29-37
She Tiger — P 1920
She Wanted a Millionaire
(AT) — P. .2-14-32
She Was a Lady (AT) — F
8-22-34
She Wolves — P 5-3-25
She's Dangerous (AT) —
U. .1-19-37
She's Everywhere — U
She's Got Everything (AT)
— RKO. .1-14-38
She's My Baby — STE. .6-12-27
She's My Weakness (AT) —
RKO. .6-22-30
Sne's No Lady (AT) —
PAR. .1937
Sheep Trial — AY 1926
Sheer Luck (AT) — BIP..1931
Sheik — PAR 11-13-21
Sheik Steps Out, The (AT) —
KEP. .9-6-37
Sheik's Wife — VIT. ... 3-12-22
Shell "43" — INC 8-24-16
Shell Game — M 3-21-18
Sheltered Daughters — REA
5-22-21
Shepherd King: — P. .. .12-16-23
Shepherd of the Hills — PN
2- 25-28
Shepherd of the Hills — WRI
8-31-19
Shepherd of the Seven Hills
(S-SE) — PAH. .8-8-33
Sheriff of Hope Eternal — ARW
1921
Sheriff of Sun Dog — ARW. 1923
Sheriff's Girl — RA 1926
Sheriff's Secret (AT) — COS
6-14-31
Sheriff's Son — PAR 4-6-19
Sherlock Brown — M . . . 6-4-22
Sherlock Holmes — ES .5-18-16
Sherlock Holmes (AT) — F
11-12-32
Sherlock Holmes — G . .6-14-22
Sherlock Holmes' Fatal Hour
(AT) — FD. .7-12-31
Sherlock. Jr. — MG 5-11-24
Sherry — PAT 5-30-20
Shield of Honor — D... 12-25-27
Shielding Shadow — PAT
9-7-16
Shifting Sands — TRI. .. 8-11-18
Shifting Sands — HOD. . 10-14-23
Shine Girl — PAT 8-10-16
Shine On Harvest Moon
(AT) — REP. .12-15-38
Shining Adventure — AST.. 1925
Shining Hour, The (AT) —
MGM. .11-28-38
Ship Cafe (AT) — PAR. 11-9-35
Ship Comes In — PAT... 7-1-28
Ship From Shanghai (AT) —
MGM. .4-27-30
Ship of Doom — TRI .11-29-17
Ship of Souls — AE 1-24-26
Ship of Wanted Men (AT) —
— SEP. .9-9-33
Shipmates (AT) — MGM
6- 24-31
Shipmates Forever (AT) —
FN. .10-17-35
Ships of Hate (AT) — MOP
7- 26-31
Ships of the Night — RA. 3-3-29
Shipwrecked — PDC ....6-6-26
Shipwrecked Among Cannibals
— U . . 7-4-20
Shipyard Sally (AT) — P.. 1939
Shir Hashirim (AT-
Yiddish) — GOB. .10-14-35
Shiraz — GLO 3-31-29
Shirley Kaye — SE 12-13-17
Shirley of the Circus — P
11-12-21
Shock (AT) — MOP. . . .7-24-34
Shock — U 6-10-23
Shock Punch — PAR. . .5-17-25
Shocking Night — U 1-16-21
Shod with Fire — F... 2-22-20
Shoes — BL 6-15-16
Shoes that Danced — TRI
2-28-18
Shors (AT-Russian)— AM
11-22-39
Shot in the Dark, A (AT) —
CHE . . 5-23-35
Shotgun Pass (AT) — COL. 1931
Shoot the Works (AT) — PAR
7-7-34
Shootin' for Love — U. . 7-1-23
Shootin' Irons — PAR. . 12-25-27
Shooting of Dan McGrew
— MG. .3-30-24
Shooting Stars — LEE ..5-6-28
Shooting Straight (AT) —
RKO. .7-27-30
Shop Angel (AT) — TOW. 3-6-32
Shop Girl — VIT 7-6-16
Shopworn ( AT ) — COL .. 4-3-32
Shopworn Angel (PT & S) —
PAR. .1-6-29
562
Shopworn Angel. The (AT)
— MGM. .6-29-38
Shore Acres — M 3-28-20
Shore Leave — FN 9-27-25
Short Skirts — D 7-10-21
Shot Gun Pass (AT) — COL
3-13-32
Should a Baby Die? — HAS
2-24-16
Should a Doctor Tell (AT) —
REG. .8-23-31
Should a Girl Marry? (PT & S)
RA. .9-15-29
Should a Girl Marry? (AT) —
MOP. .7-19-39
Should a Husband Forgive? — F
1919
Should a Mother Tell? — F.1915
Should a Wife Forgive? — EQ
12-23-15
Should a Wife Work? — JW
2-6-22
Should Husbands Work? (AT) —
REP. .7-25-39
Should Ladies Behave? (AT) —
MGM. .12-6-33
Should Women Tell? — M.1919
Shoulder Arms — FN.. 10-30-18
Show — M-G-M 3-20-27
Show Boat (PT & S) — D
5-5-29
Showboat (AT) — U.... 4-30-36
Show-Down — BL 8-16-17
Showdown — PAR 3-11-28
Show Folks (PT & S) — PAT
12-16-28
Show Girl — FN 9-30-28
Show Girl (S-SE) — RA
2-13-27
Show Girl in Hollywood (AT)
— FN . . 6-4-30
Show Goes On (AT) —
GB. .8-19-38
Show of Shows (AT) — WA
11-24-29
Show-Off (AT) — MGM. 3-17-34
Show-Off — PAR 8-29-26
Show People (S-SE) — MGM
11-18-28
Show Them No Mercy (AT) —
F. .12-7-35
Shriek in the Night (AT) —
ALL .7-22-33
Shriek of Araby — APA. 6-17-23
Shrine of Happiness — PAT
2-24-16
Shuttle.. SEZ 3-15-18
Shylock of Wall St.. — KIN
1922
Si L'Empereur Savait Ca
( AT-French ) — M GM . 3-8-31
Siberia — F 4-18-26
Siberian Patrol (AT-
Russiain) — AM. .5-16-32
Sick Abed — PAR 6-27-20
Side Show of Life — PAR
7-27-24
Sideshow — COL 2-17-29
Side Show (AT) — WA.. 9-20-31
Side Street (AT & S) — P
9-15-29
Side Streets (AT) — FN. 8-14-34
Sidewalks of New York (AT)
— MGM. 11-15-31
Sieben Ohrf eigen ( AT-Ger-
man) — UFA 2-17-38
Siege — U 7-14-26
Siegfried — Ufa 8-30-26
Sign Invisible — EDG ...3-7-18
Sign of Four (AT) — WW
7- 22-32
Sim of the Cactus — U. . 1-4-25
Sign of the Claw — LUM
8- 22-26
Sign of the Cross — PAR. . 1914
Sign of the Cros. The (AT) —
PAR. .12-2-32
Sign of the Jack O'Lantern —
HOD
Sign of the Poppy — BL
12-17-16
Sign of the Rose — AR. 3-12-22
Sign of the Spade — AMU
7-6-16
Sign of the Door — FN. 7-24-21
Signal Tower — U 5-25-24
Signet of Sheba — PAT. . . .1916
Signora Paradise (AT-Italian)
— XX . . 7-23-37
Silas Marner — MT ....2-17-16
Silas Marner — AE . . . .12-11-21
Silence — PDC 6-30-26
Silence (AT) — PAR ..8-16-31
Silence of Martha — FAT
3-16-16
Silence Sellers — M 10-4-17
Silencio Sublime (AT- Spanish)
— XX. .1-20-3'
Silent Accuser — MG ..11-9-24
Silent Avenger — HPI . . 8-21-27
Silent Barrier — HOD ...8-1-20
Silent Barriers (AT) —
GB. .3-26-37
Silent Battle — BL 7-13-16
Silent Call — FN 11-20-21
Silent Code (AT) — FD...1935
Silent Command — F ....9-9-23
Silent Enemy — PAR . . . 5-18-30
Silent Hero — RA 8-21-27
Silent Lady — U 1917
Silent Lie — F 6-28-17
Silent Lover — FN . . . 11-21-26
Silent Man — ART .... 12-6-17
Silent Master — SEZ ...5-31-17
Silent Men (AT) — COL. 11-8-33
Silent Mystery — HWF .12-1-18
Silent Partner — PAR . .5-10-17
Silent Partner — PAR . . 8-26-2.3
Silent Pal — GOT 1925
Silent Power — LUM . . 12-19-26
Silent Rider — TRI 1927
Silent Rider — U 1-30-27
Silent Sacrifice — SE 1917
Silent Sanderson — PDC
6-21-26
Silent Sentinel — CHE ..7-21-29
Silent Shelby — AY 1922
Silent Stranger — FBO . .4-20-24
Silent Strength — VIT ....1917
Silent Trail — SY 3-24-29
Silent Valley (AT) — COE.1935
Silent Voice — M 9-23-15
Silent Vow — VIT 4-9-22
Silent Years — FBO ...11-27-21
Silent Watcher — FN ..10-5-24
Silent Witness (AT) — F. 2-7-32
Silent Woman — M 9-8-18
Silk Express (AT) — WA
6-23-33
Silk Hat Kid (AT)— F. .7-9-35
Silk Husbands and Calico Wives
EQU. .1920
Silk Hosiery — PAR . . . .2-13-21
Silk Legs — F 1-1-28
Silk Lined Burglar — U.. 3-16-19
Silk Stocking Sal — FBO
12-28-24
Silk Stockings — U 8-21-27
Silken Shackles — WA ..5-30-26
Silkless Banknote — SEZ... 1920
Silks and Saddles — U . . 12-2-28
Silks and Saddles (AT) —
TRC. .4-13-38
Silks and Satins — PAR
6-15-16
Silly Billies (AT) —
RKO. .4-4-36
Silver Car — VIT 0-5-21
Silver Comes Thru — FBO
5-29-27
Silver Cord (AT) —
RKO. .5-5-33
Silver Dollar (AT) — FN
11-5-32
Silver Fingers — CAP ..4-25-26
Silver Girl — -PAT 1919
Silver Horde — G 5-16-20
Silver Horde, The (AT) —
RKO. .10-26-30
Silver King — GLO 9-8-29
Silver King — PAR 1-19-19
Silver Lining — M 2-20-21
Silver Lining. The (AT) —
UA. .1-17-32
Silver on the Sage (AT) —
PAR. .2-15-39
Silver Slave — WA .... 12-11-27
Silver Streak (AT) — RKO
11-12-34
Silver Treasure — F 1926
Silver Valley — F 10-2-27
Silver Wings — F 5-21-21
Simba — WID 2-12-28
Simon the Jester — PDC
11-22-25
Simple Sis — WA 6-12-27
Simple Souls — PAT ...5-16-20
Simple Tailor (AT) — AM
2-24-34
Sin — F 10-7-15
Sin Cargo — TIF 1-9-27
Sin Flood — G 9-4-21
Sin Ship (AT) — RKO... 4-5-31
563
17,238 TITLES
Sin of Madelon Claudet (AT) —
MGM. .11-1-31
Sin of Martha Queed — AE.1922
Sin of Nora Moran (AT) —
MA J. .12-14-33
Sin of the World — UNI
3- 30-19
Sin Takes a Holiday (AT) —
PAT. .11-23-30
Sin That Was His — SEZ
12-12-20
Sin Town — PAT 1929
Sin Sister (S-SE)-F. .3-24-29
Sin Woman — BAK ....4-26-17
Sin Ye Do — INC 12-7-16
Sinews of Steel — LUM . 6-12-27
Sing and Be Happy (AT) —
F. .6-22-37
Sing and Like It (AT) — RKO
4- 14-34
Sing, Baby. Sing (AT) —
F. .8-4-36
Sing, Cowboy. Sing (AT) —
GN. .1937
Sing Me a Love Song (AT) —
FN. . 12-29-36
Sing Sing Nights (AT) — MOP
11-27-34
Sing. Sinner. Sing (AT) —
MAJ. .8-12-33
Sing While You're Able (AT)
— MEL. .3-24-37
Sing You Sinners (AT) —
PAR. .8-9-38
Singapore Mutiny — FBO
10-7-28
Singed— F 7-24-27
Singed Wings — PAR. .. 12-3-22
Singer Jim McKee — PAR
3-30-24
Singing Blacksmith (AT-
Yiddish) — NES 11-14-38
Singing Cowboy, The (AT) — ■
REP. .5-13-36
Singing Fool (PT & S) — WA
9 23-28
Singing Kid. The (AT) —
FN. .3 13-36
Singing Marine (AT) —
WA. .7-1-37
Singing River — F ....7-24-21
Singing Vagabond (AT) —
REP. .12-11-35
Singing Vagabond, The (AT) —
REP. .7-23-36
Single Code — HMD 4-26-17
Single-Handed Sanders (AT) —
MOP. .4-17-32
Single Handed — U 1923
Single Man — M G M . . 1-20-29
Single Sin (AT) — TIF. 2-15-31
Single Standard — M-G-M
8-4-29
Single Track — VIT . . . 12-4-21
17,238 TITLES
Single Wives — FN 8-3-24
Sinister Hands (AT) — KET
6-6-32
Sinister Trunk (AT-Span-
ish) — XX 1938
Sink or Swim — F 1020
Sinking: of the Lusitania — U. .
Sinner or Saint — BB 1023
Sinner Take All (AT) —
MGM. .12-12-36
Sinners' Holiday (AT) — WA
10-12-30
Sinnere — REA 3-21-20
Sinners in Heaven — PAR
9-14-24
Sinners in Love — FBO . 10-7-28
Sinners in Silk — MG. . .8-24-24
Sinners in the Sun (AT) —
PAR. .6-16-32
Sinners' Parade — COL.. 11-11-28
Sinners In Paradise (AT) —
U. .5-9-38
Sins of Ambition — IV. 12-27-17
Sins of Men — F 6-18-16
Sins of Man (AT) —
F. .6-12-36
Sins of Rosanne — PAR
10- 17-20
Sins of St. Anthony — PAR.
1920
Sins of Society — BRA. 12-9-16
Sins of the Children — PI
Sins of the Children (AT) —
MGM. .7-27-30
Shis of the Fathers — PAR
2-3-29
Sins of the Mothers — VIT. . . .
Sins of the Parents — F
12-14-16
Sin's Pay Day (AT) — MAF
3-13-32
Sioux Blood — M-G-M. .8-18-29
Sir Arne's Treasure — GHA
12-11-21
Sir Lumberjack — FBO .4-25-26
Siren — COL 3-11-28
Siren — PAT
Siren Call — PAR 9-17-22
Siren of Seville — PDC. 11-30-24
Siren of the Tropics
— XX. .1928
Siren's Song- — F 5-4-19
Sirens of the Sea — U. . 9-20-17
Siroco (AT-Arabian) — CF
11- 29-31
Sis Hopkins — G 3-9-19
Sister Against Sister — F..1923
Sister of Six — FAT. . 10-12-16
Sister to Judas (AT) —
MAF. .1-18-33
Sister to Salome — F... 7-11-20
Sisters ( AT ) — COL .... 6-29-30
Sisters — AR 4-9-22
Sisters of Eve — RA 1928
Sisters. The (AT) —
WA. .10-10-38
Sisters Dnder the Skin (AT) —
COL. .6-8-34
Sit Tight (AT) — WA. . 2-22-31
Sitting' Bull at the Spirit Lake
Massacre — SU 1026
Sitting on the Moon (AT) —
REP. .9-11-36
Sitting Pretty (AT) —
PAR. .11-22-33
Six and One-Half by Eleven —
FGU. .1928
Six Best Cellars — PAR.. 3-14-20
Six Cylinder Love (AT) — F
6-17-31
6 Day Bike Rider (AT) —
FN. .11-2-34
Six Days — G 9-23-23
Six Feet Four — PAT. .8-31-19
Six Fifty — D 9-23-23
Six-Gun Rhythm (AT) — GN
2-17-39
Six Hours to Live (AT) — F
10-18-32
Six of a Kind (AT) — PAR
1- 24-34
Six-Shooter Andy — F. . .3-28-18
Six Shootin' Romance — O
2- 14-26
Six Shootin' Sheriff (AT) —
GN. .7-7-38
6,000 Enemies (AT) — MGM
6-12-39
Sixteen Fathoms Deep (AT) —
MOP. .1-19-34
Sixteenth Wife — VIT . . 6-17-17
Sixth Commandment — AE
0-29-24
Sixth Form Girl (AT-German)
— XX. .1939
Sixty Cents an Hour — PAR
6-20-23
Sixty Glorious Tears (AT)
— RKO. .11-17-38
65. 66 Och Jag (AT-Swedish)
— SCA . . 9-3-37
Skandal Um Eva (AT-German)
— FOF. .4-26-31
Skargards-Flirt (AT-Swedish)
— XX. .4-9-36
Skedaddle Gold — PAT. .7-31-27
Ski Battalion (AT-Russian)
— AM. .3-17-38
Ski Chase (AT-German) —
WO. .4-9-38
Skicha Hem N: 7 (AT-
Swedish) — SCA. .5-11-39
Skid Proof — F 8-12-23
Skin Deep — FN 10-8-22
Skin Deep (AT & S) — WA
10-6-29
Skin Game — PS
Skin Game (AT) — BI. . 6-21-31
Skinner Steps Out (AT) — U
12-8-29
Skinner's Baby — ES . . . 8-2-17
564
Skinner's Big Idea — FBO
3-18-28
Skinner's Bubble — ES .6-10-17
Skinner's Dress Spit — ES
2-8-17
Skinner's Dress Suit — TJ
12-20-25
Skinning Skinners — RAD.. 1021
Skippy (AT) — PAR ...4-5-31
Skirts — F 1021
Skirts — M-G-M 8-10-28
Skull and Crown (AT) —
REL. .12-17-35
Sky Bride (AT) — PAR. 4-24-32
Sky Devils (AT) — UA. . 1-24-32
Sky Eye — LES 1-11-20
Sky Giant (AT) — RKO. .7-19-38
Sky Hawk (AT) — F. .12-16-29
Sky High — F 12-18-21
Sky High Corral — U 1026
Sky High Saunders — U. 0-18-27
Sky Skidder — D 2-17-29
Sky Parade, The (AT) —
PAR. .4-1-36
Sky Patrol (AT) — MOP
9-21-39
Sky Pilot — FN 4-24-21
Sky Pirates — AY 2-6-27
Sky Raider — AE 1026
Sky Raiders (AT) — COL
6-31-31
Sky Rider — CHE 1928
Sky Spider (AT) — ACT
8-23-31
Sky's the Limit — AY 1926
Sky bound (AT) — PUR
11-12-36
Skyscraper Souls (AT) —
MGM. .8-5-32
Skyflre — IND 1920
Skyline (AT) — F 10-11-31
Skyrocket — AE 1026
Skyscraper — PAT 4-16-28
Skyway (AT) — MOP. . 10-18-33
Skywayman — F 9-5-20
Slacker — M 8-23-17
Slalom — WO 12-17-36
Slam. Bang Jim — PAT
4-18-20
Slander — F 4-13-10
Slander House (AT) —
PRO. .10-4-38
Slander the Woman — FN
6-3-23
Slanderers — U 1024
Slave — F 6-28-17
Slave Market — PAR 1-4-17
Slave of Desire — G 12-16-23
Slave of Fashion — MG. . 8-9-25
Slave of Vanity — RC. . 11-28-20
Slave Ship (AT) — F ..6-17-37
Slaver — AN 11-20-27
Slaves of Beauty — F... 0-20-27
Slaves of Pride — VIT. . 3 -18-20
Sleep of Cyma Roget — PI . 1920
Sleep Walker — PAR. . .4-10-22
Sleepers East (AT) — F
4-24-34
Sleeping Fires — PAR . .4-10-17
Sleeping Lion — U 0-1-10
Sleeping Memory — M . . 10-25-17
Sleeping- Partners (AT) — BI
12-14-30
Sleepless Nights (AT) —
REM. .7-22-3?
Slide. Kelly, Slide — M-G-M
4-10-2'
Slight Case of Murder. A
(AT) — WA. .2-8-3J
Slightly Honorable (AT) —
UA. .1939
Slightly Married (AT) —
CHE. .12-28-32
Slightly Scarlet (AT) — PAR
3-2-30
Slightly Used — WA 9-18-27
Slim (AT) — WA 6-11-37
Slim Fingers — U 4-7-29
Slim Princess — 6 7-4-20
Slim Shoulders — HOD. .0-25-22
Slingshot Kid — FBO 1927
Slipper Episode (AT-French)
— FRM. .5-20-38
Slippery Magee — FN... 0-24-23
Sloth — TRI 2-15-17
Sluby Dlanski (AT-Polish) —
PRI. .2-20-35
Slums of Berlin — IMP. 2-20-27
Slums of Tokyo — MOV
7-20-30
Small Bachelor — U. . . . 10-9-27
Small Town Boy (AT) —
ON. .10-12-37
Small Town Folks — PS
Small Town Girl — F... 6-31-17
Small Town Girl (AT) —
MGM. .4-2-30
Small Town Guy — ES. 12-13-17
Small Town Idol — APR
2-20-21
Small Town Sinners — FFS
1028
Smart Blonde (AT) —
WA. .11-21-30
Smart Girl (AT) — PAR
7- 27-35
Smart Money (AT) — WA
0-21-31
Smart Set — M-G-M 3-18-28
Smart Sex — U 3-27-21
Smart Woman (AT) — RKO
10-11-31
Smartest Girl in Town (AT) —
RKO. .11-10-36
Smarty (AT) — WA 4-12-34
Smashing the Money Ring (AT)
— WA. .11-20-39
Smashing the Rackets (AT)
— RKO. .8 11-38
Smashing the Spy Ring
(AT) — COL. .1038
Smashing the Spy Ring (AT) —
COL. .1-19-39
Smashing Through — BL . 0-9-18
Smile, Brother. Smile — FN
8- 21-27
Smiles — F 1919
Smiles and Tears of Naples —
ARB. .1928
Smiles Are Trumps — F. 2-5-22
Smilin' at Trouble — FBO. 1920
Smilin' Guns — U 3-31-29
Smilin' Jim — ENR 1922
Smilin" Terror- — U 0-30-20
Smilin' Through — FN. . .3-5-22
Smilin' Through (AT) —
MGM. .10-15-32
Smiling All the Way — SCW
11-21-20
Smiling Along (AT) — F. 3-1-39
Smiling Billy — RA 1928
Smiling Lieutenant (AT) —
PAR. .6-24-31
Smiling Irish Eyes (AT & S) —
FN. .7-28-29
Smolte Bellew — FD 2-3-29
Smoke Eaters — RA 1-30-27
Smoke Lightning (AT) —
F. .5-12-33
Smokey Smith (AT) —
STI. .7-30-35
Smoking Guns (AT) — U
7-20-34
Smoky (AT) — F 12-23-33
Smoky Trail (AT) — MEP
3-1-39
Smooth as Satin — FBO
6-28-26
Smoldering Embers — PAT
2-16-20
Smouldering Fires — U. . 12-7-24
Smudge — FN 1922
Smuggled Cargo (AT) — REP
8-23-39
Smugglers — PAR 8-24-16
Snail — KRA
Snap Judgment — AMU
11-29-17
Snares of Paris — F... 11-30-19
Snarl — TRI 5-3-17
Snarl of Hate — BIS 3-6-27
Sneak — F 6-8-19
Sniper (AT-Russian) — AM
8-27-32
Snitching Hour — CC 1922
Snob — MG 11-2-24
5nob — REA 1921
Snob Buster — RA 1925
Snow Bride — PAR 6-17-23
Snowbird — M 5-11-16
Snow Blind — G 5-29-21
Snowbound — TIF 8-14-27
Snowdrift — F 6-27-23
Snowed Under (AT) —
FN. .3-13-36
Snowshoe Trail — FBO. .0-17-22
Snow White — EDU. . .11-23-16
Snow White — PAR 1-4-17
Snow White and the Seven
Dwarfs (AT) —
RKO. .12-27-37
So Big— FN 1-11-25
So Big (AT) — WA 6-1-32
565
17,238 TITLES
So Ein Maedel Vergist Man
Nicht (AT-German) —
XX. .9-30-35
S Long Letty — RC 11-14-20
So Long Letty (AT) — WA
2-9-30
So Red the Rose (AT) —
PAR. .11-9-35
So This is Africa (AT) —
COL. .4-22-33
So This is Arizona? — SMI
4-23-22
So This Is Arizona (AT) —
BIF. .1931
So This Is College? (AT & S)
— M-G-M. .11-10-29
So This Is London (AT) — F
6-25-30
So This Is Love? — COL
4-22-28
So This Is Marriage? — .1-4-25
So This Is Paris? — WA
8-15-26
So's Tour Old Man — PAR
11-7-26
Soak the Rich (AT) — PAR
1935
Soak the Rich (AT) —
PAR. .2-6-36
Soap Girl — VIT 6-10-18
Sob Sister (AT) — F. . 10-4-31
Sobre Las Olas (AT) —
XX. .3-21-34
Social Ambition — G ...5-12-18
Social Briars — AMU . . . 0-2-18
Social Buccaneer — BL . 10-5-10
Social Celebrity — PAR
4-25-20
Social Code— M 9-23-23
Social Error (AT) — COE.1935
Social Highboy — WA ..7-11-10
Social Highwayman — PWO
4-20-16
Social Hypocrites — M .4-25-18
Social Leper — PBW ..3-61-17
Social Lion (AT) — PAR
6-16-30
Social Quicksands — M .6-23-18
Social Register (AT) — COL
8-18-34
Social Secretary — FAT .9-7-16
Society Bad Man — SBZ
Society Doctor (AT) —
MGM . . 1935
Society Exile — PAR ..8-24-19
Society Fever (AT) —
CHE. .10-30-36
Society for Sate — TRI. 4-25-18
Society Girl (AT) — F. .6-11-32
Society Lawyer (AT) — MGM
4-3-39
Society Scandal — PAR .3-16-24
Society Secrets — U 2-20-21
Society Sensation — U ..10-6-18
17,238 TITLES
Society Smugglers (AT) — TJ
3-6-39
Society Snobs — SEZ ..3-20-21
Society's Driftwood — U...1917
Soda Water Cowboy — PAT
9-25-27
Soder Om Landsvagen (AT-
Swedish) — SCA . .3-15-37
Soderkakar (AT-Swedish) —
SCA. .12-22-30
Soft Boiled — F 7-22-23
Soft Cushions — PAR . . . 8-28-27
Soft Living — F 3-4-28
Soft Shoes — PDC 1925
Soil — AM 10-19-30
Soil is Thirsty, The (AT-
Russian) — AM. .5-8-32
Soiled — GOL 3-8-25
Soir de Reveillon (AT-
French) — PAR . . 1-22-35
Sol Over Denmark (AT-Danish)
— SCA. .4-19-37
Sold — PAR
Sold at Auction — PAT. 1-25-17
Sold for Marriage — FAT. 4-6-10
Soldaten-Kameraden (AT-
German) — XX. . 10 5-36
Soldier and the Lady (AT) —
RKO (reviewed as "Michael
Strogoff") 2-19-37
Soldier's Bride (AT-Finnish) —
SAZ. .12-21-39
Soldier's Oath — F 12-30-15
Soldiers and Women (AT) —
COL. .5-18-30
Soldiers of Chance — VIT
9-6-17
Soldiers of Fortune — HOD
11-16-19
Soldiers of Fortune — REA.1924
Soldiers of the Storm (AT) —
COL. .5-18-33
Soldiers Plaything (AT) — WA
5- 3-31
Solitaire Man (AT) —
MGM . . 9-23-33
Solitary Sin — SOL 6-29-19
Solomon in Society — SEZ
12 31-22
Sombras De Gloria (AT-
Spanish) — WW. .2-16-30
Some Blondes Are Dangerous
(AT) — U. .11-5-37
Some Boy — F 7-12-17
Some Bride — M 6-15-19
Some Liar — PAT 5-11-19
Some Like It Hot (AT) —
PAR. .5-9-89
Some Mother's Boy — RA
6- 9-29
Some Pun'kms — CHA. 10-18-25
Some Wild Oats — PWP..1929
Somebody's Mother — RA
4-25-26
Someone in the House — M
11- 7-20
Someone Must Pay — GRA
9-28-19
Someone to Love — PAR
12- 9-28
Something Always Happens —
PAR. .5-27-28
Something Different — RE A
I- 30 21
Something to Do — PAR. 3-16-19
Something to Sing About (AT)
— GN. .8-31-37
Something to Think About —
PAR. .10-24-20
Somewhere in America — M
8-2-17
Somewhere in France — KAN
3-16-16
Somewhere in France — INC
II- 9-16
Somewhere in France — PAR . .
Somewhere in Georgia — SUB
6-7-17
Somewhere in Sonora — FN
4-3-27
Somewhere in Sonora (AT) —
WA. .6-7 33
Some Wild Oats — CUM
7-27-19
Somme — ERA 12-2-28
Son Comes Home. A (AT) —
PAR. .8-8-36
Son Daughter (AT) — MGM
12-31-32
Son of a Gun — FCH....1926
Son of a Sailor (AT) —
FN. .12-1-33
Son of Erin — PAR. ... 11-2-14
Son of Frankenstein (AT) — U
1- 31-39
Son of India (AT) — MGM
7-26-31
Son of His Father — PAR
10-25-17
Son of His Father — PAR
10-11-25
Son of Kong (AT) —
RKO. . 12-30 33
Son of Mongolia (AT-
Mongolian) — AM. .11-24-30
Son of Oklahoma (AT) —
WW. .10-26-32
Son of the Border (AT) —
RKO . . 8 2-33
Son of the Desert — SEZ.. 1922
Son of the Gods (AT) — FN
2- 2-30
Son of the Golden West — FBO
9-30-28
Son of the Hills — VIT. 6-28-17
Son of the Immortals — BL
5-11-16
Son of the Land — AM . . 5-31-31
Son of the Plains (AT) — SYN
7-5-31
Son of the Sahara/ — FN. .6-1-24
Son of the Sheik — UA. .8-1-26
566
Son of the Wolf — FBO. 6-18-22
Son of Wallingford — VIT
10- 16-21
Song and Dance Man — PAR
2-7-26
Song and Dance Man, The
(AT) — F. .3-12-36
Song O' My Heart (AT) — F
3-16-30
Song of China — MCL.. 5-26-36
Song of Hate — F 9-16-15
Song of Happiness (AT-
Russian) — AM. .4-10-35
Song of Kentucky (AT) — F
12-29-29
Song of Life (AT) —
TOB. .3-17-33
Song of Life — FN 2-19-22
Song of Love — FN. . . .1-13-24
Song of Love (AT) — COL
11- 17-29
Song of Songs (AT) —
PAR . . 7-22 33
Song of Songs — ART. . 2-21-1 8
Song of the Buckaroo (AT) —
MOP. .1-12-39
Song of the Caballero (AT) —
D. .7-13-30
Song of the City (AT) —
MGM. .5-7-37
Song of the Eagle (AT) —
PAR . . 4-27-33
Song of the Flame (AT) — FN
4-27-30
Song of the Gringo (AT) —
GN. . 11-10-36
Song of the Homeland (AT-
German) — XX. .1939
Song of the Saddle (AT) —
FN. .4-29-36
Song of the Soul — VIT. 3-14-18
Song of the Soul — G. . 10-17-20
Song of the Streets (AT-French)
— MAB. .9-14-39
Song of the Trail (AT) —
AMB. .3 27-36
Song of the Wage Slave — M
10-14-15
Song of the West (AT) — WA
3-2-30
Song You Gave Me (AT) —
COL. .1934
Songs and Bullets (AT) —
SPE . . 5-20-38
Sonia — FDC 1928
Sonny — FN 6-4-22
Sonny Boy (PT & S) — WA
3-17-29
Sonora Kid — FBO 3-6-27
Sons O' Guns (ATj —
WA. .4-29-36
Song of Freedom (AT) —
TRC . .7-15-38
Sons of Satan — TJ
Sons of Steel (AT) —
CHE. .4-13-35
Song of the Buckaroo (AT)
— MOP. . 1938
Sons of the Desert (AT) —
MGM. .1-6-34
Sons of the Legion (AT) —
PAR. .9-14-38
Sons of the Saddle (AT) — U
8-3-30
Sooky (AT)— PAR. . .12-27-31
Sooner or Later — SEL. 3-21-20
Sophie Lang: Goes West (AT)
— PAR . . 1937
Sophomore. The (AT & S) —
PAT. .7-28-29
Sor Juana Ines De La Cruz
( AT-Spanish ) — XX . 6-9-36
Sorority House (AT) — RKO
4-24-39
Son-ell and Son — DA.. 11-27-27
Sorrell and Son (AT) — DA
5 29-34
Sorrows of Happiness — LDB
3-2-16
Sorrows of Love — INC. 6-1-16
Sorrows of Satan — PAR
11-14-20
Sotto La Croce Del Sud (AT-
Italian) — ESP. .4-14-39
Soul Adrift — PAT
Soul and Body — PEA 1922
Soul Enslaved — D 2-3-16
Soul Fir<i — FN 5-10-25
Soul for Sale — D 6-26-18
Soul Harvest — SAN ...4-15-23
Soul in Pawn — AMD. . .9-13-17
Soul in Trust — TRI. . .3-28-18
Soul Market — M 3-9-16
Soul Master — VIT 6-31-17
Soul Mates — AMD 5-18-16
Soul Mates — M-G-M . . . 1-10-26
Soul of a Child — PAT
Soul of a Magdalene — M..1917
Soul of a Woman — APH..1922
Soul of Broadway — F. 10-21-15
Soul of Buddah — F 5-19-18
Soul of France — PAR. 10-20-29
Soul of Kura San — PAR
11-9-16
Soul of Man — PS 1922
Soul of Mexico (S-SE) —
XX . . 2-7-32
Soul of Satan — F 1917
Soul of the Gaucho (AT-
Spanish) — PHY. .1930
Soul of the Beast — M.. 4-22-23
Soul of the Slums (AT) —
ACT. .11-29-31
Soul of Youth — REA. .8-22-20
Soul Without Windows — WO
16-6-18
Soul's Awakening — HEP
8-31-24
Soul's Cycle — HMD 2-17-16
Souls Adrift — PWO 9-6-17
Souls Aflame — FD 1928
Souls at Sea (AT) —
PAR. .8-10-37
Souls for Sables — TIF. .8-30-25
Souls for Sale — G 4-1-23
Souls in Bondage — LDB
2-3-16
Souls Triumphant — FAT
5-24-17
Soup to Nuts (AT) — F
9-7-30
Source — PAR 8-18-18
Sous La Lune du Maroc
(AT) — PRX. .1-28-33
South of Arizona (AT) —
COL. .10-4-38
South of Northern Lights — STE
1921
South of Panama — CHE.. 1929
South of Santa Fe (AT) —
WW. .1932
South of Sonora (AT) — INL
12-14-30
South of Suva — PAR. . .6-25-22
South of the Border (AT) —
REP. .12-11-39
South of the Rio Grande
(AT) — COL. .5-8-32
South Riding (AT) —
DA. .6-29-38
South Sea Bubble — WW.. 1928
South Sea Love — FBO. 2-12-28
South Sea Love — F 1923
South Sea Rose (AT) — F
12-8-29
South Seas — TPE 5-25-30
South Seas Adventures
(S-SE) — PRI. .4 3-32
Southern Justice — BL. . 5-26-17
Southern Maid (AT) — -
ALL. .193(5
Southern Pride — MT 1917
Southward Hoi (AT) — REP
8-28-39
Soviet Border (AT-Russian) —
AM. .3-2-39
Soviet Close-Dps (AT) — AM
8-1-34
Soviet Journey (S-SE) —
AM . . 8-10-35
Soviet News — AM 4-13-36
Soviet Russia Through the
Eyes of an American (S-SE)
— IMP. .9-30-36
Soviet Russia Today (S-SE) —
AM. .3-6-35
Soviets Greet New Turkey (AT)
— AM . . 9-5-34
Soviets on Parade (AT) —
KIT. .3-4-33
Sowers — PAR 3-30-16
Sowers and Reapers — M
5-24-17
Sowing the Wind — FN.. 1-16-20
Spain in Flames — AM ..2-11-37
Spangles — D 10-31-26
Spaniard — PAR 6-28-25
Spanish Cape Mystery. The
(AT) — REP. .10-9-35
Spanish Dancer — PAR . 10-14-23
Spanish Earth (AT) —
COB. .8-27-37
Spanish Jade — PAR. .. .7-16-22
567
17,238 TITLES
Spark Divine — VIT 6-16-19
Sparrows — DA 9-26-26
Spartakida — AM 1929
Spawn of the Desert — ARW
1923
Spawn of the North (AT) —
PAR. .9-9-38
Speak Easily (AT) — MGM
8-20-32
Speakeasy (AT & S) — F
3-17-29
Special Agent (AT) —
WA. .9-19-35
Special Delivery — PAR. .6-1-27
Special Inspector (AT) — SYN
11-1-39
Special Investigator (AT) —
RKO. .4-27-36
Speckled Band. The (AT) —
FD. .11-8-31
Speed (AT) — MGM .... 4-29-36
Speed — BAE 4-26-26
Speed Classic — EXP ...8-19-28
Speed Cop — RA 2-13-27
Speed Crazed — RA . . . 11-14-26
Speed Demon (AT)— COL
1-7-33
Speed Demon — BAR . .9-13-25
Speed Devils (AT) —
HOB. .6-21-35
Speed Girl — PAR 11-20-21
Speed King — GOL . . . .2-11-23
Speed Limit — LDM 1926
Speed Mad — COL 11-8-25
Speed Madness (AT) — MER
10-6-32
Speed Maniac — F ....9-28-19
Speed Reporter. The (AT) —
REB. .5-15-36
Speed Spook — EC 9-7-24
Speed to Burn (AT) —
F. .6-7-38
Speed to Spare (AT) —
COL. .6-14-37
Speed Wild — FBO 5-10-25
Speed Wings (AT) — COL
3-27-34
Speeding Hoofs — RA 1927
Speeding Thru — ELB ....1926
Speeding Venus — PDC. 11-7-26
Speedway — M-G-M ....9-22-29
Speedy — PAR 4-15-28
Speedy Meade — G 1919
Speedy Smith — RA 8-28-27
Speedy Spurs — ARC 1926
Spell of the Yukon — M . 5-25-16
Spellbinder, The (AT) —
RKO . . 9-7-39
Spellbound — HOR 5-4-16
Spender — PAT 10-7-15
Spender — M 1-6-19
Spenders — HOD 1-9-21
Spendthrift (AT) —
PAR. .7-23-36
17,238 TITLES
Sphinx. The (AT) —
MOP. .8-16-33
Sphinx — U 2-3-16
Spider — PAR 2-10-16
Spider (AT) — F 8-16-31
Spider and the Fly — P.. 6-1-16
Spider and the Rose — PRI
3-26-23
Spider Webs — LEE 1926
Spiel Auf De Tenne (AT-
German) — UFA. .11-3-37
Spiel Mit Dem Feuer (AT) —
UFA. .11-27-34
Spieler. The (PT & S) — PAT
1-20-29
Spies — M-G-M 3-10-29
Spindle of Life — BUT. 9-27-17
Spirit of Culver (AT) — U
3-1-39
Spirit of Good — F 7-11-20
Spirit of Notre Dame (AT) —
U. .9-27-31
Spirit of Romance — PAR
3-29-17
Spirit of '17 — PAR 1-31-18
Spirit of the U. S. A. — FBO
6-25-24
Spirit of the West (AT) —
AP. .6-22-32
Spirit of Youth — TIF. .3-10-29
Spirit of Youth (AT) —
GN. .12-30-37
Spite Bride — SE 1919
Spite Marriage — M-G-M
3-31-29
Spitfire — AE 6-22-24
Spitfire — PAR 1924
Spitfire ( AT ) — RKO . . . 2-23-34
Spitfire of Seville — U . . 7-20-19
Splendid Crime — PAR 12-20-26
Splendid Hazard — FN .9-20-20
Splendid Lie — ARW 1922
Splendid Road — FN ..12-13-26
Splendid Romance — PAR .1918
Splendid Sin — F 9-7-19
Splendid Sinner — G ...4-18-18
Splendor ( AT ) — UA .. 11-19-35
Splitting the Breeze — FBO. 1927
Spoilers — G 7-1-23
Spoilers ( AT) — PAR ... 9-21-30
Spoilers of the Range (AT) —
U. .6-7-39
Spoilers of the West — M-G-M
1927
Spook Ranch — U 4-26-26
Sport Parade, The (AT) — RKO
12-17-32
Sporting Age — COL ..6-27-28
Sporting Blood — F ...8-17-16
Sporting Blood (AT) — MGM
8-16-31
Sporting Chance — TRU .7-6-25
Sporting Chance — PAT 6-22-19
Sporting Chance — PAR 7-20-19
Sporting Chance (AT) —
PEE. .10-26-31
Sporting Duchess — VIT. 3-7-20
Sporting Goods — PAR .2-19-28
Sporting Life — HWF ..9-22-18
Sporting Life — U 0-27-25
Sporting Lover — FN . . 6-27-26
Sporting Venus — MG ..6-17-25
Sporting Youth — U ...1-27-24
Sportszerelem (AT-Hungari-
an) — HUN 2-18-38
Spotlight — PAR 12-4-27
Spotlight Sadie — G ....4-20-10
Spotted Lily — BL ....10-4-17
Spreading Dawn — G . . . 11-1-17
Spreading Evil — KEA
Spring Fever — M-G-M . 10-23-27
Spring Is Here (AT) — FN
7-20-30
. Spring Madness (AT) —
MGM. .11-16-38
Spring Tonic (AT) — F. 6-27-35
Springtime for Henry (AT) —
F. .8-22-34
Springtime in the Rockies
(AT) — REP. .11-23-37
Spurs (AT) — U 8-31-30
Spuds — PAT 4-10-27
Spurs and Saddles — U 1028
Spurs of Sybil — PWO.. 3-14-18
Spy — F 10-11-17
Spy (AT) — F 3-22-31
Spy of Mme Pompadour — GLO
0-16-29
Spy Ring. The (AT) —
U. .1-19-38
Spy 77 (AT) — FD 2-11-36
Squadron of Huiv (AT) —
COL. .6-28-38
Squall. The (AT & S) — FN
6-12-29
Squandered Lives — STL
12-19-20
Square Crooks — F ....4-1-28
Square Deal — PBW 2-16-17
Square Deal — AMU ...6-16-18
Square Deal Man — INC. 3-15-17
Square Deal Sanderson — ART
6-22-J 9
Square Deceiver — M . . 12-15-17
Square Shooter — F .... 6-8-20
Square Shooter (AT) — COL
3-2-35
Square Shoulders (PT & S) —
PAT. .6-30-29
Squaw Man — PAR 1-12-19
Squaw Man (AT) — MGM
9-20-31
Squaw Man's Son — PAR. 8-2-17
Squealer ( AT ) — COL . . . 9-14-30
Squire Phin — PS 1922
Stablemates (AT) —
MGM. .10-3-38
Stage Door (AT) — RKO. 9-13-37
Stage Kisses — COL 1-8-28
Stage Madness — F 1-16-27
Stage Mother (AT) —
MGM. .9-30-33
568
Stage Romance — F ....2-12-22
Stage Struck — FAT. ... 2-22-17
Stage Struck — PAR ..11-22-25
Stage Struck (AT) —
FN. .8-11-36
Stagecoach (AT) — UA. .2-15-39
Stagecoach Days (AT) —
COL. .1938
Stain In the Blood — MT
4-27-16
Stainless Barrier — TRI
10-25-17
Stairs of Sand — PAR.. 0-23-29
Stamboul Quest (AT) — MGM
7-7-34
Stampede — KRA 1921
Stampede — PRO 4-27-30
Stampede (AT) — COL. 11-27-30
Stand and Deliver — PAT
4-8-28
Stand-In (AT) — UA ...10-5-37
Stand Up and Cheer (AT) —
F. .4-20-34
Stand Up and Fight (AT) —
MGM. .1-4-39
Standchutze Bruggler (AT-
German) — UFA. .3-22-37
Stanley and Livingstone (AT) —
F. .8-7-39
Stardust — FN 2-12-22
Star Dust Trail — F 3-8-25
Star for a Night (AT) —
F. .8-14-36
Star Is Born. A (AT) —
UA. .4-23-37
Star of Midnight (AT) —
RKO. .4-11-35
Star Packer (AT) — MOP
7- 3-34
Star Reporter — ARW 1922
Star Rover — M 11-14-20
Star Witness (AT) — WA
8- 2-31
Stark Love — PAR 3-0-27
Stark Mad (AT & S) — WA
1929
Starlight Over Texas (AT)
— MOP. .9-20-38
Starlight's Revenge — RA..1026
Star Maker. The (AT) — PAR
8-23-39
Star Reporter (AT) — MOP
1939
Stars Over Arizona (AT) —
MOP. .10-2-37
Stars Over Broadway (AT) —
WA. .11-5-35
Start Cheering (AT) —
COL. .2-1-38
Starvation — FBW 1-18-20
State Fair (AT) — F... 1-27-33
State Police (AT) —
U. .4-7-38
State Street Sadie (PT & S) —
WA. .9-9-28
State Trooper (AT) —
COL. .3-27-33
State's Attorney (AT) —
RKO. .5-8-32
Station Content — TRI. .8-16-18
Station Master — AM . . . .7-8-28
Stay Home — M 1022
Steadfast Heart — G . . . 12-30-23
Steady Company (AT) — TJ
1032
Stealers — RC 0-26-20
Steamboat Bill Jr. — UA
5-20-28
Steamboat 'Round the Bend
(AT) — P. .7-25-35
Steel Highway (AT) — WA
1030
Steel King — WO 11-30-10
Steel of the Royal Mounted —
VIT. .6-28-25
Steel Preferred — PDC. . .1-3-26
Steelheart — VIT 0-18-21
Stella Dallas — UA. ... 11-22-25
Stella Dallas (AT) —
UA. .7-27-37
Stella Maris — ART .... 1-31-18
Stella Maris — U 2-21-26
Step Lively. Jeeves! (AT) —
P. .4-5-37
Step On It — U 5-14-22
Stephen Steps Out — PAR
11-25-23
Steppin' Out — COL 1026
Stepping Alive — PBO 1924
Stepping Along — FN. . 12-10-26
Stepping Past — P 5-20-23
Stepping High (PT & S) —
FBO. .1028
Stepping Out — PAR. .. .10-5-19
Stepping Out (AT)— MGM
5-24-31
Stepping Sisters (AT) — F
1- 10-32
Stepping Stone — TRI. .. .4-6-16
Stick to Tour Story — RA. .1926
Still Alarm — U 1-10-26
Still Alarm — SEL 8-25-18
Still Waters — PAR . . 11-11-15
Stimme des Blutes (AT-
German) — AMT 1-6-38
Sting of the Scorpion — ARW..
Stingaree (AT) — RKO. .5-12-34
Stitch in Time — VIT. .4-27-19
Stocks and Blondes — PBO
8-19-28
Stoker. The (AT) — AP
7-16-32
Stolen Bride — FN 8-21-27
Stolen Harmony (AT) —
PAR. .4-20-35
Stolen Heaven (AT) — PAR
2- 15-31
Stolen Heaven (AT) —
PAR. .4-25-38
Stolen Holiday (AT) —
WA. .12-22-36
Stolen Honor — P 1-17-18
Stolen Hours — PWO . . 1-10-18
Stolen Kiss — REA .... 8-14-20
Stolen Kisses (PT & S) — WA
5-5-29
Stolen Life (AT) — PAR
4-25-30
Stolen Love — RKO 1-6-20
Stolen Magic — TRI ...10-7-15
Stolen Moments — PI 1921
Stolen Orders — BRA ...6-9-18
Stolen Paradise — PWO .6-21-17
Stolen Pleasure — COL ..2-6-27
Stolen Ranch — U 1926
Stolen Secrets — U ....3-16-24
Stolen Sweets (AT) — CHE
8-7-34
Stolen Treaty — VIT
Stolen Triumph — M 1916
Stone of Silver Creek (AT) —
U. .4-6-35
Stool Pigeon — COL. . . . 11-4-28
Stop Flirting — PDC ...6-21-25
Stop. Look and Listen — PAT
1-10-26
Stop, Look and Love (AT) —
P. .9-11-39
Stop That Man — SEZ....1927
Stop That Man — U. .. .4-29-28
Stop Thief — G 8-22-20
Stork Club (AT-German) —
XX. .1038
Storm — PAR 8-14-16
Storm — U 6-25-22
Storm at Daybreak (AT) —
MGM. .7-22-33
Storm Breaker — U 9-20-25
Storm. The (AT) — U. . 8-24-30
Storm. The (AT) — U. . . 11-7-38
Storm Daughter — U. .. .3-23-24
Storm Girl — AN 1922
Storm in a Teacup (AT) —
UA. .11-18-37
Storm Over Asia — AM.. 9-7-30
Storm Over Bengal (AT) —
REP. .11-17-38
Storm Over the Andes (AT)
U. .9-25-35
Storm Over Zakopane (AT-
Polish) — CAP. .1932
Storms in May (AT-Ger-
man)— UFA 1938
Stormy (AT) — U 10-7-35
Stormy Knight — BL. .. .9-13-17
Stormy Seas — AE 8-19-23
Stormy Trails (AT) —
GN. .12-23-36
Stormy Waters — TTF .8-26-28
Stormswept — FBO ....2-18-23
Story of a Cheat (AT-
Prench) — GAL 10-12-38
Story of Alexander Graham
Bell. The (AT) — F. .4-3-39
Story of Louis Pasteur (AT) —
WA. .11-23-35
Story of Peter the Cat (AT-
German) — XX 1038
Story of Temple Drake (AT) —
PAR. .5-6-33
Story of Vernon and Irene Castle.
The (AT) — RKO. .3-31-30
569
17,238 TITLES
Story Without a Name — PAR
10-26-24
Stosstrupp (AT) — BAU. 2-6-36
Stowaway (AT) — U 1932
Stowaway (AT) — F... 12-16-36
Straight from Paris — EQU.1921
Straight from the Heart (AT) —
U. .3-22-35
Straight from the Shoulder — P
7-3-21
Straight from the Shoulder
(AT) — PAR. .8-14-36
Straight is the Way — PAR
2-27-21
Straight Is the Way (AT) —
MGM. .8-29-34
Straight. Place and Show
(AT) — P. .9-29-38
Straight Road — PAR ....1914
Straight Shootin'— U . . . 8-7-27
Straight Shooting — U .... 1924
Straight Way — F 10-5-16
Straightaway (AT) — COL
1- 16-34
Stranded — FAT 7-13-16
Stranded — STE 8-28-27
Stranded (AT) — WA... 6-21-36
Stranded in Arcady — PAT. 1917
Stranded in Paris — PAR
12-26-26
Strange Adventure (AT) —
MOP. .2-8-33
Strange Boarder — G 1920
Strange Borders (AT) —
GB. .9-2-38
Strange Cargo (AT & S) — PAT
2- 24-29
Strange Case of Clara Deane
(AT) — PAR. .5-8-32
Strange Case of Capt. Ramper
— FN. .6-10-28
Strange Case of District Attor-
ney M. — UMP. .3-23-30
Strange Case of Dr. Meade
(AT) — COL. .1038
Strange Faces (AT) — U...1938
Strange Idols — F 6-4-22
Strange Interlude (AT) —
MGM. .7-8-32
Strange Justice (AT) —
RKO. .10-21-32
Strange Love of Molly Louvain
(AT) — FN. .5-8-32
Strange People (AT) —
CHE. .6-17-33
Strange Wives (AT) — U. 2-1-35
Strange Woman — F . . . 0-29-18
Stranger — PAR 2-10-24
Stranger from Arizona
(AT) — COL. .9-22-38
Stranger from Somewhere — BL
11-16-16
Straneer From Texas, The (AT)
— COL. .12-18-39
17,238 TITLES
Stranger from the North — SEZ
2- 10-24
Strangers in Sudentenland
AT-German ) — XX 1938
Stranger in Town (AT) —
WA . . 7-9-32
Stranger Than Fiction — FN
12-11-21
Stranger's Banquet — G. . 1-7-23
Stranger's Return (AT) —
MGM . .7-29-33
Strangers All (AT) —
RKO. .4-1-36
Strangers in Love (AT) —
PAR. .3-6-32
Strangers May Kiss (AT) —
MGM. .4-12-31
Strangers of the Evening (AT)
— TIF. .5-8-32
Strangers of the Night — M
9-9-23
Strangers on a Honeymoon
(AT) — GB. .3-12-37
Strangling Threads — HEP
8-17-24
Strauss' Great Waltz (AT) —
TOM . . 4-9-35
Strauss, the Waltz King —
FFS. .7-28-29
Strawberry Roan (AT) —
U. .12-6-33
Streak of Luck — ARC... 1926
Stream of Life — PLY.... 1919
Streamline Express (AT) —
MAP. .8-31-35
Street — FFS 1928
Street Angel — F 4-15-28
Street Called Straight — G
3- 14-20
Street Girl (AT) — RKO.7-21-29
Street of Chance (AT) — PAR
2-2-30
Street of Forgotten Men — PAR
8-2-25
Street of Illusion — COL
11- 11-28
Street of Missing Men (AT) —
REP. .4-25-39
Street of Seven Stars — DIE
5-26-18
Street of Sin — PAR 6-3-28
Street of Sorrow — SOA. 7-17-27
Street of Tears — RA 1924
Street of Women (AT) —
WA. .5-29 32
Street Scene (AT) — UA
8-30-31
Streets of Algiers — Ufa. 6-10-28
Streets of Illusion — PAT
8-16-17
Streets of New York — AY
12- 10-22
Streets of New York (AT) —
MOP. .4-10-39
Streets of Shanghai — TIF
2- 26-28
Strength of Donald McKensie —
AMU. .8-10-16
Strength of the Pines — F
3-5-22
Strength of the Weak — BL
3- 23-16
Strich Durch Die Redlining
(AT) — UFA. .1934
Strictly Business (AT) —
POP. .4-10-32
Strictly Confidential — G.
10 12-19
Strictly Dishonorable (AT) —
U. .11-15-31
Strictly Dynamite (AT) — RKO
7-5-34
Strictly Modern (AT) — FN
5 4 30
Strictly Personal (AT) —
PAR. .3-18-33
Strictly Unconventional (AT)
MGM. .7-20-30
Strife Eternal — MT. . . . 12-2-15
Strike Me Pink (AT) —
UA. .1-14-36
String Beans — PAR ... 12-15-18
Stripped for a Million — KRA
9-7-19
Striving for Fortune — EXP
1926
Stroke of Midnight — M . 6-4-22
Strong Boy (S-SE) — F. .4-7-29
Strong Man — FN 9-12-26
Strong Way — WO 1-24-18
Stronger Love — PAR .... 8-3-16
Stronger Passion — LBR...1922
Stronger than Death — M
1-18-20
Stronger Than Desire (AT) —
MGM. .7-6-39
Stronger Than Love (AT-
German) — XX. .1939
Stronger Vow — G 5-4-19
Stronger Will — EXP ... 4-15-28
Strongest — F 2-8-20
Struggle — W 1920
Struggle. The (AT) — UA
12-13 31
Struggle Everlasting — RSR
12-20-17
Struggle for Life (AT) —
FOY. .6-19-35
Struggle on the Matterhorn
AT-German) — XX 1938
Student Prince — M-G-M . 10-2-27
Student Sein (AT-German)
PRX. .5-3-31
Student Sein Wenn Die Veil-
Student Tour (AT) — MGM
10-13-34
Students' Romance. The (AT)
— ALL. .10-14-36
Studio Girl — SEL 1-31-18
Studio Murder Mystery (AT) —
PAR. .6-16-29
570
Study in Scarlet (AT) —
WOW. .6-2(i-.):i
Stuetzen Der Gesellschaft
(AT-German) — UFA. .11-10-36
Stunt Pilot (AT) — MOP. 7-6-39
Su Ultima Cancion (AT) —
CIX. .3-30-34
Submarine — COL 9-2-28
Submarine D-l (AT) —
WA. .11-18-37
Submarine Eye — WIM.. 6-21-17
Submarine Patrol (AT) —
F. .11-1-38
Submarine Pirate — TRI
11-25-15
Substitute Wife — ARW
10-18-25
Subway Express (AT) — COL
3-29-31
Subway Sadie — FN .... 9-19-26
Success — M 2-25-23
Success at Any Price (AT) —
RKO . . 5-3-34
Successful Adventure — M
7-21-18
Successful Calamity. A (AT) —
WA. .8-24-32
Successful Failure — TRI
8-2-17
Successful Failure— TRI
1-12-19
Successful Failure (AT) — MOP
10-2-34
Such a Little Pirate — PAR
10- 13-18
Such a Little Queen — PAR
7-10-21
Such Men Are Dangerous
(AT) — F. .3-9-30
Such Women Are Dangerous
(AT) — F. .6-9-34
Sucker Money (AT) —
KET. .3-1-33
Sudden Bill Dorn (AT) —
U. .1-6-38
Sudden Gentleman — TRI
11- 29-17
Sudden Jim — TRI 7-19-17
Sudden Money (AT) — PAR.193P
Sudden Riches — WO... 5-11-16
Suds — UA 7-4-20
Sue of the South — U 1919
Sued For Libel (AT) — RKO
1939
Sueno De Amor (AT-Spanish)
—XX. .1-13-36
Suez (AT) — F 10-17-38
Suicide Fleet (AT) — PAT
11-29-31
Sultana — PAT 11-23-16
Summer Bachelors — F. 12-26-26
Summer Girl — WO . . . . 8-l'-16
Sun Never Sets. The (AT) —
.6-12-39
Sunbeam — M 12-14-1 S
Sun Over Sweden (AT-Swed-
ish) — SCA 4-13-38
Sun-Up — MG 8-23-25
Sun Dog Trail — ARW .... 1923
Sundown — FN 13-7-24
Sundown on the Prairie (AT) —
MOP. .1939
Sundown Rider (AT) —
COL. .6-9-33
Sundown Saunders (AT) —
SUM. .4-13-36
Sundown Slim — U 9-26-20
Sundown Trail — U 9-21-19
Sundown Trail (AT) — PAT
10-18-31
Sundown Trail (AT) —
FD. .1935
Sunken Rocks— BR 1923
Sunlight's Last Raid — VIT
10-4-17
Sunny (AT) — FN .... 12-28-30
Sunny Jane — BM 4-5-17
Sunnyside — FN 6-22-19
Sunnyside Up — PDC ...7-18-26
Sunny Side Up (AT & S) — F
10-6-20
Sunny Skies (AT) — TIF
6-18-30
Sunny Youth (S-SE) —
AM. .8-20-36
Sunrise — F 10-2-27
Sunrise Trail (AT) — TIF
3-29-31
Sunset Derby — FN .... 6-19-27
Sunset Jones — PAT ...4-24-21
Sunset Legion — PAR ..5-27-28
Sunset of Power (AT) —
U. .1935
Sunset of Power (AT) —
U. .1-22-36
Sunset Pass (AT) —
PAR. .10-28-33
Sunset Pass — PAR ....3-24-29
Sunset Princess — ARW . . . 1919
Sunset Range (AT) — FD
5-10-35
Sunset Sprague — F ...9-26-20
Sunset Trail — PAR .... 10-4-17
Sunset Trail — U 9-21-24
Sunset Trail (AT) — TIF
1-17-32
Sunset Trail (AT) —
PAR. .10-26-38
Sunshine Alley — G ...11-15-17
Sunshine and Gold — PAT
4-26-17
Sunshine Dad — FAT. .. .3-30-16
Sunshine Harbor — AFF . . 1922
Sunshine Nan — PAR . .4-11-18
Sunshine of Paradise Alley —
CHA. .1-16-27
Sunshine Trail — FN ..8-26-23
Super Sex — AR 12-3-22
Super Sleuth (AT) —
RKO. .7-13-37
Super Speed — RA 1926
Superman — WH 1920
Supernatural (AT) —
PAR. .4-22-33
Superspeed (AT) — COL
12-2-36
Superstition— LBR 1922
Supreme Passion — FIL. .3-6-21
Supreme Passion — AE. . . . 1923
Supreme Sacrifice — PRW
3-16-16
Supreme Temptation — VIT
3-23-16
Supreme Test — COU .. 12-23-23
Supreme Test — U 1921
Sure Fire — U 10-30-21
Sure-Fire Flint — MAS
10-29-22
Surging Seas — STD ...4-20-24
Surrender — U 10-16-27
Surrender (AT) — F...1 1-29-31
Surrender of the German
Fleet— U
Survival — UNP 1-26-30
Susan Lennox, Her Rise and
Fall (AT) — MGM. .10-18-31
Susan Rocks the Boat — FAT
6-1-16
Susan's Gentleman — BL
3-15-17
Susana Tiene un Secreto (AT-
Spanish) — XX. .6-7-35
Susannah of the Mounties (AT)
— F. .6-27-39
Susanne Im Bade (AT-German>
— CAS. .9-21-37
Susanne Macht Ordnung (AT-
German ) — FTP 10-11-31
Susie Snowflakes — PAR
6-29-16
Suspect — VIT 5-25-16
Suspense — FIL 1919
Suspense (AT) — BI 11-9-30
Suspicion — HOF 12-1-18
Suspicious Wives — SR.... 1922
Suzanna — APA 4-1-23
Sutter's Gold (AT) —
U. .3-28-31)
Sutyi a Szerencsegyerk (AT-
Hungarian) — HUN ...2-1-38
Suzy (AT) — MGM 7-14-36
Svengali (AT) — WA 5-3-31
Swan — PAR 3-15-25
Swat the Spy — F 11-17-18
Swamp — FBO 10-30-21
Swanee River (AT) — WW
2-8 31
Swanee River (AT) — .12-26-39
Sweden hielms (AT-Swedish) —
XX. .9-10-36
Sweden. 1929-1930 — MAT
1-18-31
Sweden, Land of the Vikings
(AT) — BOY. .1-6-34
Sweepings (AT) — RKO. 3-22-33
Sweepstakes (AT) — RKO
6-28-31
Sweepstakes Annie (AT) —
LIB. .1-30-36
Sweepstakes Winner (AT) —
WA. .9-21-39
Sweet Adeline — CHA .... 1-3-26
Sweet Adeline (AT) —
WA. .1-6-30
571
17 ,2 3 8 TITLES
Sweet Alyssum— SET. . . 12-2-15
Sweed Daddies — FN ...7-18-26
Sweet Kitty Bellaire — PAR
5-25-16
Sweet Kitty Bellairs (AT) —
WA. .9-7-30
Sweet Lavender — REA
10-10 20
Sweet Mamma (AT) — FN
7-13 30
Sweet Music (AT) —
WA. .2-20-36
Sweet Rosie O'Grady — COL
9-26-26
Sweet Sixteen — RA ...9-16 28
Sweet Surrender (AT) —
U. .12 14-36
Sweet Szivert (AT-Hungari-
an)— XX 1938
Sweetheart of Sigma Chi (AT>
— MOP. .10-26-33
Sweetheart of the Doomed —
TRI. .4-19-17
Sweetheart of the Navy (AT)
— GN. .6-18-37
Sweethearts (AT) —
MGM. .12-19-38
Sweethearts and Wives (ATI —
FN. .6-29-30
Sweethearts on Parade (AT) —
COL. .9-28-30
Sweetie (AT & S) — PAR
10-27-29
Swell Head — COL 11-6-27
Swell Head (AT) — COL. 6-4-35
Swellhead (AT)— TIF. .6-15-30
Swift Shadow— FBO. .11-27-27
Swifty (AT)— FD 1-28 36
Swim. Girl, Swim — PAR
9-11-27
Swing High (AT)— PAT
5-4 30
Swing High, Swing Low (AT)
— PAR. .3-15-37
Swing It, Professor (AT) —
CNN. .11-13-37
Swing It. Sailor (AT) —
GN. ,ll;8-87
Swing, Sister, Swing (AT)
— U. .12-13-38
Swing That Cheer (AT) —
U. .11-14-38
Swing Time (AT) —
RKO. .8-26-36
Swing Your Lady (AT) —
WA. .1-10 38
Swiss Miss (AT) —
MGM. .5-10-38
Sword of Valor — GOL. 5-18-24
Sworda and the Woman —
FBO. .6-29-24
Sworn Enemy (AT) —
MGM. .7-7-36
17,238 TITLES
Sylvia of the Secret Service —
PAT. .11-16-1?
Sylvia on a Spree — M .... 1918
Sylvia Scarlett (AT) —
RKO. .12-12-35
Symphony in Two Flats (AT)
— WW. .1931
Symphony of Living- (AT) —
CHE. .6-22-35
Symphony of Six Million
(AT) — RKO. .4-10-32
Syncopating Sue — FN. . 11-7-26
Syncopation (AT) — RKO
3-24-29
Synthetic Sin — FN ....1-13-29
Szegeny Gozdagok (AT-
Hungarian) — DAN. 12-21-39
Szent Peter Esernyoeje (AT-
Hungarian) — XX. .1-9-36
Szenzacio (AT-Hungarian) —
XX. .3-6-37
Szerelmi Almok (AT-
Szerelembol Nosultem (AT-
Hungarian) — DAN ...2-9-38
Hungarian) — XX. .1-7-37
Szivet Szivert (AT-Hungarian)
— DAN. .1-23-39
Szpieg (AT) — MAJ 3-6-34
I
Table Top Ranch — ST.11-12-22
Tables Turned — M 1915
Tabu — PAR 3-22-31
Tail Spin (AT) — F.... 2-15-39
Tailor-Made Man — UA
10-22-22
Tailor Made Man, A (AT) —
MGM. .4-26-31
Tainted Money — PFT. .. .4-5-22
Tajemnica Oskarzonej (AT-
Polish) — XX. .5-4-37
Take a Chance (AT) —
PAR. .11-25-33
Take It From Me — U
10-10-26
Take Me Home — PAR
10-28-28
Take the Heir — BIF. . . .1-26-30
Take the Stand (AT) — LIB
9-5-34
Taking a Chance — F. . 1-13-29
Taking Chances — GOL. . . . 1922
Taking the Count — SEZ..1920
Taku (AT) — DAW 9-18-39
Tale of Two Cities — F. 3-15-17
Tale of Two Cities, A (AT) —
MGM. .11-30-35
Tale of Two Worlds — G
3-20-21
Talent Scout (AT) —
WA. .8-21-37
Tales of Budapest (AT-Hun-
garian)— XX 1938
Tales of a Thousand and One
Nights — DAV. .1926
Talk of Hollywood (AT) —
WW. .3-2-30
Talk of the Devil (AT) —
GB. .5-18-37
Talk of the Town — U.. 9-22-1 8
Talker — FN 5-17-25
Taming of the Shrew (AT) —
UA. .12-8-29
Taming of the Shrew
(AT) — INV. .6 6-33
Taming of the West. The (AT)
— COL. .10-12-39
Taming of the Wild (AT) —
VIC. .1935
Taming the West — U 3-1-25
Tangled Destinies (AT) —
MAF. .10-19-32
Tangled Fates — PWO . .5-18-16
Tangled Fortunes (AT) —
BIF. .1932
Tangled Hearts — BL . .4-13-16
Tangled Herds — ARC .... 1926
Tangled Lives — F 5-3-17
Tangled Lives — VIT ...6-30-18
Tangled Threads — EXI . . 6-8-19
Tangled Trail — ST 1922
Tango (AT) — CHE 1935
Tango ( VT) — INV 2-14-36
Tango-Bar (AT-Spanish) —
PAR. .7-9-35
Tango Cavalier — ARW....1923
Tanned Legs (AT & S) —
RKO. .12-8-29
Tannenberg (AT) — XX. .4-6-34
Tansy — BR 1923
Tante Gusti Kommandiers (AT)
— XX. .5-7-34
Tanzmusik ( AT-German 1 —
LEN. .5-25 36
Tar Heel Warrior — TRI
10-11-17
Tarantula — VIT 8-17-16
Taras Bulba — ARA 1928
Taras Triasylo (AT) —
XX. .3-15-33
Target — U
Tarnish — FN 9-21-24
Tarnished Angel (AT) —
RKO. .10-26-38
Tarnished Lady (AT) — PAR
4-19-31
Tarnished Reputations — PAT
6-7-20
Tartuffe. the Hypocrite — UFA
7-31-27
Tarzan and His Mate (AT) —
MGM. .4-16-34
Tarzan and the Green God-
dess (AT) — PRI 6-3-38
Tarzan and the Golden Lion
— FBO. .3-20-27
Tarzan Escapes (AT) —
MGM. .10-27-36
Tarzan Finds a Son I (AT) —
MGM. .6-7-39
572
Tarzan of the Apes — FN
2- 14-18
Tarzan. The Ape Man (AT) —
MGM. .3-27-32
Tarzan the Fearless (AT) —
PRI. .8-12-33
Tarzan's Revenge (AT) —
F. .1-13-38
Taste of Life — U 1919
Tatra's Zauber (AT) —
PRX. .2-20-33
Tattlers — F 3-28-20
Tausend Fuer Eine Nacht (AT)
— XX. .2-14-34
Tavern Knight — ST ...1-30-21
Taxi — TRI 1919
Taxi (AT) — WA 1-10-32
Taxi Driver — M-G-M ..3-13-27
Taxi Mystery — STE .... 5-9-26
Taxi. Taxi — U 2-6-27
Taxi Thirteen (PT & S) —
FBO. .1-13-29
Te Csak Pipalj Ladanyi
(AT-Hungarian) — HUN
6-8-38
Te Quiero con Locura (AT-
Spanish) — F. .11-5-35
Tea for Three; — M-G-M . 11-6-27
Tea with a Kick — AE . . 9-2-23
Tearin' Into Trouble — PAT
3- 13 27
Tearin' Loose — ARC . .7-14-25
Tearing Through — FBO.. 5-3-25
Tears and Smiles — PAT
9-27-17
Teaser — U 5-24-25
Teeth — F 1924
Teeth of the Tiger — PAR
10-26-19
Teilnehmer Antwortet Nicht
(AT-German) — CAP. .12-1-32
Telegraph Trail (AT) —
WA. .3-29-33
Telephone Girl — PAR . . 5-29-27
Telephone Operator (AT) —
MOP. .1937
Telephone Operator (AT) —
MOP. .2-14-di-
Television Spy (AT) — PAR
10-13-39
Tell It to Sweeney — PAR
11-6-27
Tell It to the Marines — F
11-9-18
Tell it to the Marines — MGM
1-23-27
Tell No Tales (AT) — MGM
5- 15-39
Telling the World — MGM
7-22-28
Tell-Tale Heart (AT) — DUW
6- 21-34
Tell-Tale Step — EDK. . .5-31-17
Temperamental Wife — FN
9-28-19
Tempered Steel — PET . . . 6-5-18
Tempest — UA 6-27-28
Tempest (AT-German) —
UFA. .3-20-32
Tempest and Sunshine — HAT
1010
Temple of Dusk — EXI...1018
Temple of Venus — F. . 11-4-23
Temple Tower (AT) — F
6-11-30
Tempo Massimo (AT-
Italian)— XX. .3-14-36
Temporary Marriage — PRI
4-29-23
Temporary Sheriff — RA...1926
Temporary Sheriff — RA...1028
Temptation — CBC 5-27-23
Temptation — PAR ...12-30-15
Temptation (AT) — COL
6-20 30
Temptation and the Man
RED. .7-6-16
Temptation Makes the
Thief (AT-German) — XX
1938
Temptation of a Shop Girl —
FD. .12-11-27
Temptress — MGM 10-17-26
Ten After Ten — ARC 1924
Ten Cents a Dance (AT) —
COL. .3-8-31
10-Ciu Z Pawiaka (S-9E) —
PFC. .4-24-32
Ten Commandments — PAR . . .
11-23-33
Ten Day That Shook the
World — AM. .11-18-28
Ten Dollar Raise — APR
6-15-21
$10 Raise (AT) — F 5-4-35
Ten Modern Commandments —
PAR. .7-17-27
Ten Nights in a Bar Room —
ARW. . 1-8-22
Ten Nights In a Barroom
(AT) — ROA. .3-1-31
Ten of Diamonds — TRI...1917
Tender Enemy. The (AT-
French) — WO 4-0-38
Tender Hour — FN 5-22-27
Tenderfoot — VIT 12-6-17
Tenderloin (PT !c S) — WA
3-17-28
Tenderfoot. The (AT) — FN
6-22-32
Tennessee's Pardner — PAR
2-10-16
Tentacles of the North — RA
2-0-27
Tenth Avenue — PAT 9-2-28
Tenth Avenue Kid (AT) —
REP. .8-29-38
Tenth Case — WO 1917
Tenth Man, The (AT) —
GB. .11-17-37
Tenth Woman — WA ...10-6-24
Tents of Allah — AE 4-1-23
Terra Madre (AT-Itallan) —
TRL — 11-1-31
Terror — F 6-23-20
Terroi- — RED 2-15-17
Terror — D 1926
Terror (AT) — WA 8-19-28
Terror Abroad (AT) —
PAR. .7-3-33
Terror by Night (AT) —
FMA. .1931
Terror Island — PAR 6-2-20
Terror Mountain — FBO
10-21-28
Terror of Bar X — FBO... 1927
Terror of the Plains (AT) —
STI. .1934
Terror of Tiny Town (AT)
— COL. .7-10-38
Terror Trail (AT) — U.. 2-11-33
Tess of the D'Ubervilles —
MG. .7-27-24
Tess of the D'Ubervilles —
PAR. .1924
Tess of the Storm Country
(AT) — F. .11-19-32
Tess of the Storm Country —
UA. .11-19-22
Tessie — ARW 9-27-25
Test — PAT 1022
Test of Donald Norton — CHA
6-27-26
Test of Honor — PAR.. 4-13-19
Test Pilot (AT) —
MGM. .4-16-38
Testimony — ST 3-6-21
Testing Block — PAR. .12-12-20
Testing of Mildred Vane —
M. .1018
Tevya (AT-Yiddish) — REK
12-28-39
Tex Rides with the Boy Scouts
(AT) — GN. .11-2-37
Tex Takes a Holiday (AT) —
FD. .12-7-32
Texan — F 1921.
Texan, The (AT) — PAR
4-27-30
Texans, The (AT) —
PAR. .7-29-38
Texas Bad Man, The (AT) —
U. .1932
Texas Buddies (AT) — WW
10-19-32
Texas Bearcat — FBO . . 5-10-25
Texas Cyclone (AT) — COL
7-8-32
Texas Flash — AI 1928
Texas Gun-Fighter (AT) —
TIF. .2-14-32
Texas Jack (AT) — COE..1935
Texas Pioneer (AT) — MOP
6-18-32
Texas Rambler (AT) —
SPE. .5-7-35
Texas Ranger (AT) — COL
6-10-31
Texas Rangers, The (AT) —
PAR. .8-22-36
Texas Stampede (AT) — COL
1939
Texas Steer — FN ....11-20-27
573
17,238 TITLES
Texas Tommy — STN ..8-11-29
Texas Tornado — FBO 1928
Texas Tornado (AT) — FD
2-28-34
Texas Trail — PDC 8-2-25
Texas Trail (AT) —
PAR. .10-12-37
Thais — G 1-3-18
Thank You — F 10-25-25
Thank You, Jeeves (AT) —
F. .9-17-36
Thank You Madame (AT-
German) — BRF. .6-3-37
Thank You, Mr. Moto (AT) —
F. .11-26-37
Thanks a Million (AT) —
F. .10-25-35
Thanks for Everything
(AT) — F. .12-9-38
Thanks for the Buggy Ride —
U. .1-29-28
Thanks for the Memory
(AT) — PAR. .11-8-38
That Certain Age (AT) —
U. .10-4-38
That Certain Thing — COL. 1928
That Certain Woman (AT) —
WA. .8-20-37
That Devil "Bateese" — U
9-1-18
That Devil Quemado — FBO
4-26-25
That French Lady — F . . . 8-3-24
That Girl from Paris (AT) —
RKO. .12-15-36
That Girl Montana — PAT. 1921
That I May Live (AT) —
F. .5-11-37
That Man Jack — FBO.. 7-19-26
That Man's Here Again (AT)
— WA. .5-11-37
That Model from Paris — TIF
10- 17-26
That Murder in Berlin — BIG
3-24-29
That Old Gang of Mine —
KER. .1-10-26
That Royale Girl — PAR
1-17-26
That Something — HEM ..1921
That Sort — ES 6-16-16
That They May Live (AT-
French) — MAB. .11-10-39
That Wild West — GOL
11- 23-24
That Woman — SEZ 1923
That's Good — M 1919
That's Gratitude (AT) — COL
10-27-34
That's My Baby — PAR.4-18-26
That's My Boy (AT) —
COL. .11-19-32
That's My Daddy — U. .2-19-28
That's My Story (AT) —
U. .1937
17,238 TITLES
That's My Story (AT) —
U. .2-5-38
That's Right — You're Wrong
(AT) — RKO. .11-20-39
Theaterbesueh (AT-German) —
BAU. .1935
Theaternaechte Von Berlin
(AT-German) — TOB. .1-10-32
Theft of the Mona Lisa (AT) —
RKO. .1932
Their Big Moment (AT) —
RKO . . 9-6-34
Their Compact — M ...9-27-17
Their Hour — TIF 4-15-28
Their Mad Moment (AT) —
F. .9-27-31
Their Mutual Child— PAT. 1921
Their Own Desire (AT) —
MGM . . 1-26-30
Thelma — FBO 11-26-22
Then Came the Woman — ACI
11-14-26
Then I'll Come Back to Tou —
FWO. .4-6-16
Theodor Koerner (AT) —
XX. .5-10-35
Theodora — G 10-23-21
Theodora Goes Wild (AT) —
COL. .11-5-36
There are No Villains — M
8-21-21
There Goes My Girl (AT) —
RKO. .5-29-37
There Goes My Heart (AT)
— UA . . 8-27-38
There Goes the Bride (AT) —
GB. .3-1-33
There Goes the Groom (AT) —
RKO. .10-12-37
There He Goes — PIZ 1928
There You Are — MGM .... 1926
There's Always a Woman
(AT) — COL. .3-19-38
There's Alway Tomorrow
(AT) — U. .11-10 34
There's Million In It — FBO
6- 15-24
There's That Woman Again
(AT) — COL. .12-13-38
These Glamour Girls (AT) —
MGM . . 8-22-39
These Thirty Years (AT) —
BON. .5-24-34
These Three (AT) —
UA. .2-25-36
They All Come Out (AT) —
MGM. .8-4-39
They Asked For It (AT) — U
7- 12-39
They Call It Sin (AT) — FN
10-22-32
They Gave Him a Gun (AT) —
MGM. .5-17-37
They Had fo See Paris (AT) —
F. .10-13-29
They Just Had to Get Married
(AT) — U. .2-10-33
They Learned About Women
(AT) — MGM . .7-6-30
They Like 'Em Rough — M
5-28-22
They Made Her A Spy (AT) —
RKO. .3-30-39
They Made Me A Criminal (AT)
— WA. .1-18-39
They Met in a Taxi (AT) —
COL. .9-9-36
They Never Come Back
(AT) — ARC. .5-1-32
They Shall Have Music (AT) —
UA. .7-14-39
They Shall Pay — AE. . 8-21-21
They Wanted to Marry (AT)
RKO. .2-3-37
They Were Five (AT-French)
— LEN. .6-8-38
They Won't Forget (AT) —
WA. .6-14-37
They're Off — AY 5-21-22
Thief— F 12-5-20
Thief in Paradise — FN. 1-11-25
Thief in the Dark — F. . 5-20-28
Thief of Bagdad — UA . .3-23-24
Thieves — F 11-2-19
Thievv-s' Gold— BUT. . .3-28-18
Thin Ice — VIT 5-18-19
Thin Ice (AT) — F 8 24-37
Thin Man, The (AT) — MGM
6-23-34
Things Men Do— SCL 1921
Things to Come (AT) —
UA . . 4-20-36
Things We Love — PAR. 4-4-18
Think Fast. Mr. Moto (AT) —
F. .4-6-37
Thinker — GAU 1921
Third Alarm — FBO . . . 1-14-23
Third Alarm. The (AT) —
TIF. . 11-16-30
Third Degree — VIT ....5-11-19
Third Degree — WA 1-6-27
Third Generation — RC .1-25-20
Third Kiss — PAR 8-24-19
Third Woman — RC 3-21-20
Thirteen, The (AT-Russian) —
AM . . 6-24-37
13 Hours by Air (AT) —
PAR . . 4-30-36
Thirteen Men and A Girl
(AT) — UFA. .8-16-31
Thirteen Washington Square
U. .2-5-2S
Thirteen Women (AT) — ■
RKO. .10-15-32
Thirteenth Chair (AT & S) —
' MGM . . 1929
Thirteenth Chair — PAT. 8-24-19
Thirteenth Chair, The (AT) —
MGM. .5-3 37
Thirteenth Commandment —
PAR. .3-15-20
Thirteenth Guest (AT) —
MOP. .8-9-32
574
Thirteenth Hour — MGM
12-11-27
Thirteenth Juror — U . . . 12-4-27
Thirteenth Man. The (AT) —
MOP. .8-3-37
Thirtieth Piece of Silver —
PAT. .1920
30 Below Zero — F 1926
Thirty a Week — G .... 11-17-18
Thirty Day Princess (AT) —
PAR. .5-12-34
Thirty Days — PAR .... 12-17-22
Thirty Thousand Dollars —
HOD. .2-22-20
Thirty Years Between — AY
1921
36 Hours to Kill (AT) —
F. .8-13 36
39 East — REA 9 19-20
39 Steps, The (AT) —
GB. .9-14 35
This Day and Age (AT) —
PAR. .8-16 33
This Freedom — F 12-9-23
This Hero Stuff — PAT.. 7-27-19
This is America (S-SE) —
BEK. .6-23 3.3
This is Heaven (PT & S) —
UA. .3-31-29
This Is My Affair (AT) —
F. .5-18 37
This is the Land (AT-
Hebrew)— XX. .7-11-36
This is the Life — F 1917
This is the Life (AT) —
F. .9-4-35
This is the Night (AT) —
PAR. .4-17-32
This Mad World (AT) — MGM
7-13-30
This Man is Mine (AT) —
RKO. .3-8 34
This Man is News (AT) —
PAR. .7-26-39
This Marriage Business
(AT)— RKO. .6-7-38
This Modern Age (AT) —
MGM. .9-6-31
This Reckless Age (AT) —
PAR. .1-10-32
This Side of Heaven (AT) —
MGM — 1-31-34
This Sporting Age (AT) —
COL. .10 1-32
This Thing Called Love (AT) —
PAT. .12-15-29
This Way Please (AT) —
PAR. .9-15-37
This Woman — F 12-9-23
This Woman — WA . . . .11-2-24
This Woman Is Mine (AT) —
PAR. .9-10-35
This'll Make You Whistle
(AT) — CMA. .10-0-38
Thistle and the Rose — BRC
1922
Thorns and Orange Blossoms
— LIC. .11-26-22
Thorobred — CC 1922
Thoroughbred — AMU ..1-20-10
Thoroughbred — INC . . . 8-24-16
Thoroughbred — TRU . . . 9-6-26
Thoroughbred. The (AT) — TIF
8- 31-30
Thoroughbreds Don't Cry (AT)
— MGM. .11-24-37
Those High Grey Walls (AT) —
COL. .10-20-39
Those Three French Girls
(AT) — MGM. .10-12-30
Those We Love (AT) — WW
9- 13-32
Those Who Dance — FN. 6-15-24
Those Who Dance (AT) —
WA. .7-13-30
Those Who Judge — BAE
1-11-25
Those Who Pay — INC. .2-28-18
Those Who Toil — LUB
Those Without Sin — PAR
3-8-17
Thou Art the Man — PAR
6-6-20
Thou Art the Man — VIT
12-23-15
Thou Shalt Not — F 1919
Thou Shalt Not Covet — SEL
2-3-16
Thou Shalt Not Kill (AT) —
REP. .1939
Thou Shalt Not Love — GRA
1922
Thou Shalt Not Steal — F.1917
fhou Shalt Not Steal — UFA
1- 13-29
Thoughtless Women — PI
11-21-14
Thoughtless Women — PI
11- 21-21
$1,000 a Minute (AT) —
REP. .10-22-35
Thousand Dollar Husband —
PAR. .6-1-16
Thousand to One — APR
12- 26-20
Threads ol Fate — M 2-1-17
Three Ages — M 9-2-23
Three Bad Men — F ...10-17-26
Three Black Eyes — TRI
9-14-19
Three Blind Mice (AT) —
F. .6-18-38
Three Buckaroos — AR .7-23-22
Three Cheers for Love (AT) —
PAR. .6-27-36
Three Comrades (AT) —
MGM. .5-24-38
Three Comrades & One In-
vention— AM. .11-4-28
Three-Cornered Moon (AT) —
PAR . . 8-8-33
Three Days to Live — GER
1924
Three Faces East — PDC
2- 21-26
Three Faces East (AT)
Three Girls Lost (AT)-
Three
Three
Three
Three
Three
:S(i5 N
Three
Three
Three
Three
Three
Three
Three
Three
Three
Three
Three
Three
Three
Three
Three
Three
Three
Three
Three
Three
Three
Three
Three
Three
Three
Three
Three
Three
Three
Three
Three
Three
Three
Three
-WA
9-7-30
F
5-3-31
Godfathers — BL .6-8-16
Godfathers, The (AT) —
MGM. .3-7-36
Gold Coins — F 7-4-20
Green Eyes — WO
4-20-19
Hours — FN 3-27-27
ights in Hollywood (AT)
— F. .11-6-34
in Exile — TRU 1925
Jumps Ahead — F. 5-13-23
Keys — BAE 1925
Kids and a Queen (AT)
— U. .10-17-36
Legionnaires, The (AT)
— GEF . . 3-20-37
Live Ghosts — PAR
1-8-22
Live Ghosts (AT) —
UA. .10-6-29
Live Ghosts (AT) —
MGM. .12-30 35
Loves — MOV ...9-15-29
Loves — ASS ....5-24-31
Loves Has Nancy
(AT) . .9-6-38
Married Men (AT) —
PAR. .9-25-36
Men and a Girl — PAR
4-6-19
Men on a Horse (AT) —
FN. .11-13-36
Mesquiteers, The (AT) —
REP. .10-2-30
Miles Out — AE... 1-6-24
Miles Up — U 5-22-27
Mounted Men — U
11-24-18
Musketeers — UA . 9-4-21
Musketeers, The
RKO.
Musketeers, The
F.
Must-Get-Theres — UA
9-10-22
O'clock in the Morning
— BR. .3-2-24
of a Kind (AT) —
INV. .6-24-36
of Many — INC. .12-7-16
on a Honeymoon (AT)
— F. .5-7-34
on a Match (AT) —
FN. .10-29-32
on a Week-End (AT)
— GB. .6-1-38
on the Trail (AT) —
PAR. .4-14-30
Outcasts — SYN 1929
Pals — DAV 11-15-25
Passions — UA ..5-12-29
Ring Marriage — FN
8-26-28
Sevens — VIT 1921
575
(AT) —
.10-7-36
(AT) —
.2-20-39
17,238 TITLES
Three Sinners — PAR . .4-29-28
Three Sisters (AT) — F. 7-20-30
Three Smart Girls (AT) —
U. .1-20-37
Three Smart Girls Grow Up
(AT) — U. .3-20-39
Three Sons (AT) — RKO
10-20-39
Three Songs About Lenin
(AT) — AM. .11-3-34
Three Texas Steers (AT)
REP. .6-19 39
Three Thieves (S) —
AM. .10-31-33
Three Waltzes (AT-French) —
VED. .5-11-39
Three Wax Men — VIK....1929
Three Week Ends — PAR.. 1928
Three Weeks — MG .... 4-6-24
Three Weeks in Paris — WA
6-20-26
Three Who Loved (AT) — RKO
6-21-31
Three Who Paid — F. . 12-24-22
Three Who Were Doomed —
MAL. .1928
Three Wise Crooks — FBO
10-11-26
Three Wise Fools — G. .7-15-23
Three Wise Girls (AT) —
COL. .2-7-32
Three Wise Guys, The (AT) —
MGM. .5-23-36
Three Women — WA . . 10-19-24
Three Women (AT-Russian) —
AM. .2-12-36
Three Word Brand — PAR
16-2-21
Three X Gordon — HOD ..1918
Three's a Crowd — FN. .8-28-27
Thrill Chaser — AI 1928
Thrill Chaser — U .... 11-25-23
Thrill Hunter (AT) —
COL. .10-4-33
Thrill Hunter — COL ....1926
Thrill of a Lifetime (AT) —
PAR. .11-10-37
Thrill of Youth (AT) — INV
10-29-32
Thrill Seeker — SUP . . 1-22-28
Throne of the Gods (S-SE) —
IML. .12-22-33
Through a Glass Window —
PAR. .1922
Through Eyes of Men — RAD
3-28-20
Through the Back Door — UA
5-22-21
Through the Breakers — GOT
10-7-28
Through the Centuries (S-SE)
— BE. .12-4-33
Through the Dark — MG
1-20-24
17,238 TITLES
Through the Flames — GOL
6-17-23
Through the Storm — AE
8- 27-22
Through the Toils — WO. 6-8-19
Through the Wall — VIT
9- 28-16
Through the Wrong Door —
G. .7-27-19
Through Thick and Thin —
LUM . . 1920
Through Three Reigns — HEP
1022
Throw ol the Dice — HPI. 1-12-30
Throwback, The (AT) —
U. .10-26-36
Throwing Lead — PIZ 1928
Thrown to the Lions — U
4-6-16
Thru Darkest Africa. — EUS
4-3-27
Thru Different Eyes (AT &
S) — P. .4-14-29
Thru the Breakers — GOT. 1928
Thru the Skylight — PS
Thumbs Down — STE. . .7-17-27
Thunder — M-G-M 7-14-29
Thunder Afloat (AT) — MGM
9-19-39
Thunder at the Goal (AT-
German) — UFA 1938
Thunder Below (AT) — PAR
6-18-32
Thunder in the City (AT) —
COL. .4-27-37
Thunder in the Desert (AT)
— REP. .6-18-38
Thunder in the East (AT) —
UA. .11-21-34
Thunder in the Night (AT) —
F. .9-17-36
Thunder Island — U 6-19-21
Thunder Mountain — F
10-18-25
Thunder Mountain (AT) —
F. .9-14-35
Thunder Over Mexico
(S-SE) — PRI. .9-20-33
Thunder Over Texas (AT) —
— BEA. .10-18-34
Thunder Riders — U . . . 8-19-28
Thunder Trail (AT) —
PAR. .11-22-37
Thunderbolt — FN 11-23-19
Thunderbolt (AT & S) — PAR
6-30-29
Thunderbolt's Tracks — RA.1927
Thunderbolts of Fate — HOD
4-6-19
Thunderclap — F 8-14-21
Thundergate — FN 1-20-24
Thundergod — AN 1-13-29
Thundering- Dawn — U . . 9-30-23
Thundering Herd (AT) — PAR
3- 31-34
Thundering Herd — PAR .3-1-26
Thundering Hoofs — AY
10- 16-22
Thundering Hoofs — FBO
11- 16-24
Thundering- Speed — CHE .1926
Thundering Thompson — AN
10-27-2y
Thundering Through — ARC
1920
Thundering West. The (AT) —
COL. .1939
Thunderstorm (AT) — AM
10-2-34
Thy Name is Woman — MG
2-24-24
Ticket of Leave Man — PAT. . .
Ticket to a Crime (AT) — BEA
12- 20-34
Ticket to Paradise (AT) —
REP. .6-26 36
Tidal Wave — ST 2-27-21
Tide of Empire — MGM. 3-24-29
Tides of Barnegat — PAR
4- 19-17
Tides of Fate — WO 1917
Tides of Passion — VIT. 4-26-25
Tie That Binds — WA 1923
Tierra, Amor y Dolor (AT-
Spanish) — XX. .8-14-36
Tiger-Lily — PAT 7-20-19
Tiger Love — PAR 6-22-24
Tiger Man — ART 4-25-18
Tiger Murder Case (AT-Ger-
man) — UFA. .9-28-30
Tiger of Eschnafuer (AT-
Gorman) — XX 1938
Tiger of the Sea — SHI. . . .1919
Tiger Rose — WA 12-9-23
Tiger Rose (AT & S) — WA
12-29-29
Tiger Shark (AT ) — FN
8-23-32
Tiger Thompson — PDC .8-24-24
Tiger True — U 1-23-21
Tiger Woman — F 3-1-17
Tiger's Claw — PAR 3-25-23
Tiger's Coat — HOD 11-7-20
Tigers' Cub — F 10-3-20
'Til We Meet Again (AT) —
PAR. .4-4-30
(Reviewed as "Forgotten
Faces")
Till I Come Back to You —
ART — 9-1-18
Till We Meet Again — AE
10-29-22
Tillers of the Soil — STF..1923
Tillio — PAR 2-12-22
TUlie and Gus (AT) —
PAR. .11-11-33
Tillle the Toller — MGM. 6-19-27
Tillie Wake» Up — PWO.1-26-17
Tillie's Punctured Romance —
PAR. .1928
S76
Timber Stampede (AT) — RKO
1039
Timber Terrors (AT) —
FD. .1935
Timber War (AT) — AMB.1935
Timber War (AT) —
AMB. .3-3-36
Timber Wolf — F 10-11-26
Timberesque (AT) —
SYN . . 7-8-37
Time in the Sun (AT) — SET
10-19-39
Time Locks and Diamonds —
TRI. .7-12-17
Time Out for Murder (AT) —
F. .10-10-38
Time Out for Romance (AT)
— F. .2-10-37
Time, the Comedian — MO
12-20-26
Time, the Place and the Girl
(AT & S) — WA. .7-14-29
Time to Love — PAR . . . 6-26-27
Times Have Changed — F
9-23-23
Times Square (PT & S) —
GOT. .6-23-29
Times Square Lady (AT) —
M-G-M. .3-1-35
Times Square Playboy (AT) —
WA. .5-1-36
Timid Terror — FBO 1927
Timothy's Quest — AR. .9-24-22
Timothy's Quest (AT) —
PAR. .2-28-36
Tin Gods — PAR 10-3-26
Tin Hats — M-G-M 12-5-26
Tin Pan Alley — F 12-28-19
Tingel Tangel (AT-German) —
NER. .3-20-32
Tinsel — WO 7-14-18
Tip Oft— U 6-0-29
Tip Off (AT) — PAT. . .11-1-31
Tip-Off Girls (AT) — PAR
3-19-38
Tip Toes — PAR 6-19-27
Tipped Off — PGO 1923
Tired Business Man — TIF. 1927
Titans of the Deep (AT) —
GN. .11-14-38
Tisztelet A Kovetelnek (AT-
Hungarian) — HUN. .6-22-37
Tjocka Slatken (AT-Swedish) —
XX. .6-23-35
Tkies Khaf (AT- Yiddish) —
FCA. .9-28-38
To a Finish — F 8-21-21
To Beat the Band (AT) —
RKO. .11-23-35
To Have and To Hold — PAR
11-12-22
To Have and To Hold — PAR
3-9-16
To Hell with the Kaiser — M
7-7-18
To Him that Hath — WO
8-29-18
To Honor and Obey — T. 8-9-17
To LhM (AT-Italian) — XX 1938
To Mary. With Love (AT) —
P. .7-21-36
To Neznate Hadimrsku (AT-
Czechoslovakian ) — HOB . 1939
To Please One Woman — PAR
1-2-21
To the Death — M 8-30-17
To the Highest Bidder — VIT
7-21-18
To the Ladies — PAR ... 12-2-23
To the Last Man (AT) —
PAR. .10-26-33
To the Last Man — FPL . 9-2-23
To the Victor (AT) — GB
2-10-38
Toast of Death — MT. . . . 9-9-15
Toast of New York, The (AT)
— RKO . .7-13-37
Toby's Bow — G 12-28-19
Tod Uber Shanghai (AT) —
XX — 12-19-33
Toda Una Vida (AT) —
PAR. .10-28-33
Today — TOD 8-9-17
Today (AT) — MAJ ...10-26-30
Today We Live (AT) —
M-G-M. .4-15-33
Todd of the Times — PAT
1-26-19
Todo Un Hombre (AT-
Spanish) — XX. .1-7-36
Together — U 10-13-18
Together We Live (AT) —
COL. .1935
Toilers, The (S-SE) — TIP
10- 14-28
Toilers of the Sea — SEZ..1923
Tokio Siren — U 6-13-20
Tol'able David — FN ... 11-20-21
Tol'able David (AT) — COL
11- 16-30
Tokaji Rhapszodia (AT-
Hungarian) — HUN .11-11-38
Told at Twilight — PAT. 3-16-17
Told in the Hills — PAR. 8-10-19
Toll Gate — PAR 1920
Toll of the Desert (AT) —
STI. .10-4-35
Toll of the Sea — M.... 12-3-22
Tom Brown of Culver (AT) —
U. .1932
Tom Mix in Arabia — P. 11-5-22
Tom Sawyer — -PAR ..12-13-17
Tom Sawyer (AT) — PAR
11- 23-30
Tom Sawyer, Detective (AT)
— PAR. .1938
Tom's Little Star — U
Tomboy — P 1921
Tomboy — CHA 12-28-24
Tombstone Canyon (AT) —
WOW. .7-3-33
Tombstone Terror (AT) —
COE. . 1935
Tommy Atkins — WW . .4-21-29
Tomorrow and Tomorrow
(AT) — PAR. .1-31-32
Tomorrow at Seven (AT) —
RKO. .7-12-33
Tomorrow's Love — PAR
1-11-25
Tomorrow's Youth (AT) —
MOP. .2-5-35
Tong Man — RC 12-14-19
Tongues of Flame — U....1924
Tongues of Flame — PAR
12- 21-24
Tongues of Men— PAR . 1-27-16
Tongues of Scandal — STE
1-16-27
Tonight At Twelve (AT & S)
U. .9-29-29
Tonight is Ours (AT) —
PAR. .1-21-33
Tonight or Never (AT) —
UA. .12-20-31
Tonio, Son of the Sierras —
DAV. .12-20-25
Tonto Kid (AT) — FD 1935
Tony America — TRI . . . 10-6-18
Tony Runs Wild — F .... 5-9-26
Too Busy to Work (AT) — F
12-3-32
Too Busy to Work (AT) — F
12-11-39
Too Fat to Fight — G. . .12-8-18
Too Hot to Handle (AT) —
MGM. .9-14-38
Too Many Cooks (AT) — RKO
7-19-31
Too Many Crooks — PAR. 7-3-27
Too Many Crooks — VIT. 6-8-19
Too Many Kisses — PAR.3-15-25
Too Many Millions — PAR
Too Many Parents (AT) —
PAR. .3-10-36
Too Many Wives (AT) —
RKO. .4-7-37
Too Much Beef (AT) —
GN. .6-6-36
Too Much Business — VIT
4-9-22
Too Much Harmony (AT)
PAR. .9-23-33
Too Much Johnson — PAR
2-22-20
Too Much Married — APH
2-12-22
Too Much Money — FN. 1-24-26
Too Much Speed — PAR . 6-19-21
Too Much Wife — PAR .... 1922
Too Much Youth — GER .3-8-25
Too Tough to Kill (AT) —
COL. .12-20-35
Too Wise Wives — PAR . 5-22-21
Too Young to Marry (AT) —
WA. .6-10-31
Top Hat (AT) — RKO.. 8-16-35
Top of New York — PAR
6-25-22
Top O' the Morning —
U. .9 3-22
Top of the World — PAR. 3-1-25
Top Sergeant Mulligan — AN
1928
Top Speed (AT) — FN.. 8-31-30
Topa Topa (AT) — PEN 3-18-38
Topaze (AT) — RKO ...2-10-33
Topaze (AT-French) —
PAR. .2-20-35
Topper (AT) — MGM ..7-12-37
Topper Takes A Trip (AT) —
UA. .1-5-39
Toprini Nasz ( AT-Hungarian ) —
DAN. .11-17-39
Top.sy and Eva — UA... 8-21-27
Torch Singer (AT) —
PAR. .10-7-33
Torchy Blane in Chinatown (AT)
— WA. .2-6-39
Torchy Blane in Panama
(AT) — WA 4-20-38
Torchy Gets Her Man (AT)
— WA. .10-17-38
Torchy Plays With Dynamite
(AT) — WA. .9-25-39
Torchy Runs for Mayor (AT) —
WA. .1939
Torment — FN 4-27-24
Tormento (AT-Italian) —
VAL. .7-20-32
Tornado — U li-9-24
Torpedoed (AT) — FIA. 9-28-39
Torrent — U 1-21-21
Torrent — GOL 11-9-24
Torrent — M-G-M 1926
Torture Ship (AT) — PRP
11-22-39
Tortured Heart — F ....8-10-16
Tortured Silence — PAT
10- 11-17
Toton — TRI 1919
T'Other Dear Charmer — WO
9-15-18
Touchdown (AT) — PAR
11- 16-31
577
17,238 TITLES
Touchdown, Army (AT)
PAR. .10-19-38
Tough Guy — FBO 5-2-26
Tough Guy (AT) —
M-G-M. . 1935
Tough Guy (AT) —
MGM. .3-14-36
Tough Kid (AT) — MOP. . 1938
Tough Kid (AT) — MOP. .1-4-39
Tough to Handle (AT) —
CNN. .5-25-37
Toute Sa Vie (AT-Freneh) —
PAR.. 6-21-31
Tovanch (AT) — WA ..12-4-37
Tovarishi (AT-Russian) —
^ AM.. 5-31-35
Tower of Jewels — VIT.. 1-11-20
Tower of Lies — MG. .. 10-11-25
Tower of London (AT) — U
11- 21-39
Town Scandal — U 4-8-23
Town That Forgot God — P
12- 10 20
Toy Wife (AT) — MGM.. 6-6-38
Toys of Fate — M 5-9-18
Tracked — FBO 11-18-28
Tracked by the Police — WA
6-22-27
Tracked in the Snow Country —
WA. .7-26-25
Tracked to Earth — U... 2-19-22
Tracks — AE 6-11-22
Tracy Rides (AT) — STI. 5-5-34
Tracy the Outlaw — ARP..1928
Trade Winds (AT) — UA
12-28-38
Trader Horn (AT) — M-G-M
1-25-31
Tradition — SON 7-10-21
Traitor, The (AT-Spanish) —
XX 1938
Traffic Cop — FBO 2-28-26
Traffic Cop — MT 4-6-10
Traffic in Hearts — CBC. 6-29-24
Traffic in Souls — U
Tragedy of Youth — TIF
3-25-28
Trail Beyond (AT) — MOP
9-15-34
Trail Drive (AT) — U... 1-3-34
Trail Dust — RA 1924
Trail Dust (AT) —
PAR. .12-19-36
Trail of Courage — FBO... 1928
Trail of Hate — DIL. .. .5-21-22
Trail of "98 — M-G-M ... 3-25-28
Trail of the Axe — AR.. 10-1-22
Trail of the Cigarette — ARW
1920
Trail of the Horse Thieves —
RKO. .2-3-29
Trail of the Law — APF
2-3-24
Trail of the Law — PS .... 1922
Trail of the Lonesome Pine —
PAR. .2-24-16
Trail of the Lonesome Pine —
PAR. .3-25-23
Trail of the Lonesome Pine
(AT) — PAR. .2-20-36
Trail of the Shadow — -M.7-12-17
Trail of Vengeance (AT) —
REP. .1937
Trail Rider — F 3-1-25
Trail Riders — RA 8-25-29
Trail to Yesterday — M.. 5-12-18
Trail's End — SMI 1922
Trail's End (AT) —
BEU. .8-22-35
Trailin' — P 12-4-21
Trailin" Back — RA 9-9-28
Trailin' Trouble (AT) —
GN. .1937
17,238 TITLES
Trailin' West (AT) —
FN. .10-17-36
Trailing African Wild Ani-
mals— M. .5-6-23
Trailing North (AT)
— MOP. .5-17-33
Trailing the Killer (AT) — WW
12-2-32
Trailing Trouble (AT) — U
3-30-30
Trails of Danger (AT) — BIP
1930
Trails of the Golden West
(AT) — COS. .2-15-31
Trails of the Wild (AT) —
AMB. .11-29-35
Traitor — PAR 1924
Traitor. The (AT) —
PUR. .11-6-36
Tramp. Tramp. Tramp — FN
6-6-26
Transatlantic (AT) — F .7-26-31
Transatlantic Merry-Go-Round
(AT) — UA. .11-1-34
Trans-Atlantic Tunnel (AT) —
GB. .10-22-35
Transcontinental Limited —
CHA. .3-7-26
Transgression — VIT
Transgression (AT) — RKO
6-7-31
Transient Lady (AT) —
U. .3-9-35
Transport of Fire — AM. 3-22-31
Trap — U 6-7-22
Trap — PWO 6-2-18
Trap — U 8-24-19
Trapeze (AT-German) — PRX
5-8-32
Trapped (AT) — COL ....1937
Trapped by G-Men (AT) —
COL. .1937
Trapped by G-Men (AT) —
COL (reviewed as "River of
Missing Men") 9-9-37
Trapped By Television (AT) —
COL. .6-16-36
Trapped in the Sky (AT) —
COL. .2-16-39
Tras La Reja (AT-Spanish) —
XX. .1-12-37
Traum von Scheonbrunn
(AT) — XX. .6-3-33
Traumulus (AT-German) —
XX. .9-22-36
Travelin' On — PAR . . .3-19-22
Traveling Husbands (AT) —
RKO. .6-21-31
Traveling Saleslady (AT) —
FN. .3-28-35
Traveling Salesman — PAR
5-1-21
Traveling Salesman — PAR
12-21-16
Tre Anni Senza Donne (AT-
Italian) — CIL. .6-3-37
Treachery on the High Seas
(AT) — FIA. .9-28-39
Treachery Rides the Range
(AT) — WA. .5-29-36
Treason (AT) — COL 5-4-33
Treason — BL 5-10-17
Treason — MT 10-26-18
Treason Trial In Moscow
( AT-Russian ) — AM .3-8-31
Treasure — FGU 12-1-29
Treasure Island — F ...1-24-18
Treasure Island — PAR .4-18-20
Treasure Island (AT) — M-G-M
8-8-34
Treasure of the Sea — M. 5-2-18
Treat 'Em Rouph — F. .12-16-18
Tradowata (AT-Polish) —
XX. .1-2-37
Tree of Knowledge — PAR
I- 18-20
Trembling Hour — U ..10-19-19
Trenck (AT) — XX 4-10-34
Trenta Sccondi Di Amore (AT-
Italian) — NUO. .4-8-37
Trent's Last Case — F. . . .6-2-29
Tres Amores (AT) — XX
II- 7-34
Trespasser (AT) — UA. 11-17-29
Trial Marriage — STB ....1928
Trial Marriage — COL ..4-28-29
Trial of Donald Westof —
UFA. .2-26-28
Trial of Mary Dugan (AT &
S) — M-G-M. .3-31-29
Trial of Vivienne Ware
(AT) — F. .5-1-32
Trials of Treachery — CAP. 1928
Tribu (AT-Spanish) —
XX. .6-12-35
Trick for Trick (AT) —
F. .6-10-33
Trick of Fate — EXI. .. 2-23-19
Trick of Hearts — U 1928
Tricked — PS 1921
Tricks — DAV 8-16-25
Triflers — U 1-11-20
Triflers — SCH 12-21-24
Trifling With Honor — U.6-13-23
Trifling Women — M . . . 10-8-22
Trigger Fingers — FBO
11-30-24
Trigger Pals (AT) — CN. 1-16-39
Trigger Smith (AT) — MOP. 1939
Trigger Tricks (AT) — U. 6-8-30
Trigger Trio, The (AT) —
REP. .10-22-37
Trilby — EQW 9-9-13
Trilby — FN 7-29-23
Trimmed — U 7-2-22
Trimmed in Scarlet — U. .4-1-23
Trip to Chinatown — F. .6-20-26
Trip to Marsi — TOW. . . .5-30-20
Trip to Paradise — M... 8-21-21
Trip To Paris. A (AT) — F
6-15-38
Triple Action — U 11-8-25
Triple Clue — ARW
Triumph — PAR 4-27-24
Triumph — U 1924
Triumph of Sherlock Holmes,
The (AT) — OLY.. 5-28-35
Triumph of the Rat — LEE. 1927
Triumph of the Scarlet Pim-
pernel— See Scarlet Daredevil
Triumph of the Weak— VIT
6-12-18
Triumph of Venus — VIC
f 3-14-18
Trixle from Broadway — PAT
6-8-19
Troika — FIM 4-26-31
Troop Train — FCH 1919
Trooper O'Neil — F 7-16-22
Troopers Three (AT)— TIF
2-23-30
Troopship (AT) — UA ..4-27-38
Tropen Nachte (AT-German) —
PAR. .6-31-31
Tropic Fury (AT) — U.. 9-18-39
Tropic Holiday (AT) — PAR
1938
Tropical Love — AE 1922
Tropical Madness — FBO
1-13-29
Tropical Nights — TIF .... 1928
Trotte Teodor (AT-Swedish) —
FD. .1-17-32
Trouble — FN 5-28-22
Trouble Ahead (AT) —
TIM. .9-23-36
Trouble at Juennemann's
( AT-German ) — UFA 1938
Trouble at Midnisht (AT) —
U. .2-24-38
578
Trouble Buster — PAR 10-18-17
Trouble Busters (AT) — MAJ
8-30-33
Trouble For Two (AT) —
MGM. .6-1 36
Trouble in Morocco (AT) —
COL. .3-9-37
Trouble in Paradise (AT) —
PAR. .11-10-32
Trouble in Sundown (AT) —
RKO. .1939
Trouble in Texas (AT) —
GN. .3-11-37
Trouble Maker — P igis
Trouble Shooter — P 1924
Trouble With Wives — PAR
8-16-25
Troubles of a Bride — F. 12-14-24
Trouper — U 7-23-22
Trouping with Ellen — PDC.1924
Truant Husband — HOD
10-10-20
Truant Soul — ES 1-25-17
Truckee — PAR
True as Steel — MG. .. .6-22-24
True Blue — F 6-2-18
True Confession (AT) —
PAR. .11-22-37
True Heart Susie — ART. 6-8-19
True Heaven — F 2-17-29
True Nobility — AMU ...3-6-16
True North YOU 10-18-25
True to the Navy (AT) —
PAR. .6-25-30
Trufflers — ES 5-31-17
Trumpet Blows (AT) — PAR
4-14-34
Trumpet Island — VIT .10-17-20
Trumpin' Trouble — ARC. 1926
Trunk Mystery — PAT.. 6-12-27
Trust Your Wife — FN 1921
Trusted Outlaw, The (AT) —
REP. .5-4-37
Truth — G 8-29-20
Truth About Africa (S-SE)
— ALW. .4-19-33
Truth About Wives — BB
4-22-23
Truth About Youth (AT) —
FN. .12-14-30
Truthful Liar — PAR . .4-23-22
Truthful Sex — COL 1-2-27
Truxa (AT-German) —
AMT. .8-7-37
Truxten King — F 2-4-23
Tsar to Lenin — LEN . .3-16-37
Tu Hijo (AT) — XX. . .12-18-34
Tu seras Duchesse (AT-
French) — PAR. .6-15-32
Tugboat Annie (AT) —
M-G-M . .8-12-33
Tugboat Princess (AT) —
COL. .12-16-36
Tucker's Top Hand — ST.. 1924
Tulane vs. Southern Cali-
fornia (AT) — WA.. 1-24-32
Tumbleweeds — UA ...12-27-25
Tumbleweeds (S-SE: Revival) —
AST. .5-9-39
Tumbling River — F ...8-21-27
Tumbling Tumbleweeds (AT) —
REP. .9-5-35
Tundra (AT) — BTZ . . . 8-25-36
Turandot (AT-German) — -
UFA. .1935
Turkish Delight — PDC....1928
Turksib — AM 6-1-30
Turmoil — U 6-1-24
Turn Back the Clock (AT) —
M-G-M. .8-23 33
Turn Back the Hours — GOT
3-18-28
Turn of a Card — HOD
1-31-18
Turn of the Road — VIT
11-18-16
Turn Oft the Moon (AT) —
PAR. .5-4-37
Turn to the Right — M . 1-29-27
Turning- the Tables — PAR
11-9-19
'Twas Ever Thus — PAR
9- 30-15
Twelve Crowded Hours (AT) —
RKO. .3-1-39
Twelve Miles Out — M-G-M
7-31-27
Twelve Ten — SEL . . . 12-28-19
Twentieth Century (AT) —
COL. .5-4-34
$20 a Week (AT) — AJ. 1-22-35
20 Million Sweethearts (AT) —
FN. .4-5-34
Twenty-One — PAT 4-8-18
Twenty-One — FN 11-25-23
24 Hours (AT) — PAR. 10-4-31
Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Sea — U. . 1-11-16
20,000 Men a Year (AT) — F
11-1-39
20.000 Years in Sing Sing
(AT) — FN. .1-11-33
Twenty-Three and a Half
Hour's Leave — PAR.. 11-2-19
23 y2 Hours' Leave (AT) —
GN. .3-2-37
Twice Born Woman — SON
7-3-21
Twilight — SHE 3-2-19
Twin Beds — FN 11-7-20
Twin Beds (AT & S) — FN
7-21-29
Twin Husbands (AT) — CHE
5- 9-34
Twin Kiddies — PAT ...1-11-17
Twin Pawns — PAT 1919
Twin Six O'Brien — AY... 1926
Twin Triangle — EQ ...5-18-16
Twin Triggers — ARC .... 1926
Twins of Sufferings Creek — F
6-20-20
Twinkle Toes — FN 1-2-27
Twisted Triggers — AE .9-26-26
Two Against the World
(AT) — WA. .8-20-32
Two Against the World (AT)
— FN. .7-11-36
Two Alone (AT) — RKO. 4-7-34
Two Arabian Knights — UA
10- 30-27
Two Bit Seats — ES ... 11-15-17
Two Brides — PAR 1919
Two Bright Boys (AT) — U
9-28-39
Two Brothers— UFA . . 8-26-28
Two Cadets (AT-Spanish) —
XX . . 1938
Two Can Play — AE. .. .3-21-26
Two Days — AM 1929
Two Edged Sword — V1T
3-30-16
Two-Fisted Gentleman (AT)
— COL. .8-25-36
Two Fisted Jefferson — ARW
1922
Two Fisted Jones — U. . 11-22-25
Two Fisted Justice (AT) —
MOP. .1931
Two Fisted Law (AT) —
COL. .8-30-32
Two Fisted Sheriff — ARW. 1925
Two-Fisted Sheriff (AT) —
COL. .9-15-37
Two Fisted Tenderfoot — 1ND
1924
Two Flaming Youths — PAR
1-8-28
Two for Tonight (AT) —
PAR. .8-31-35
Two-Gun Justice (AT) — MOP
6- 11-38
Two-Gun Law (AT) —
COL. .9-1-37
Two Girls Wanted — F. .9-18-27
Two-Gun Betty — HOD 1918
Two Gun Caballero (AT)
IML. .12-13-31
Two Gun Man — FBO. . .8-16-26
Two Gun Man (AT) — TIF
6-7-31
Two Gun O'Brien — EXH..1928
Two Gun of the Tumble-
weeds — PAT. .7-10-27
Two Heads on a Pillow (AT)
— LIB. .10-3-34
Two Hearts in Waltz Time
(AT-German) — MOV. .9-14-30
Two in a Crowd (AT) —
U. .8-8-36
Two in Revolt (AT) —
RKO . .3-19-36
Two in the Dark (AT) —
RKO. . 1-18-36
Two Kinds of Love — U. 12-26-20
Two Kinds of Women (AT) —
PAR. .1-17-32
Two Kinds of Women — FBO
2-5-22
Two Lovers— UA 4-1-28
Two Men and a Maid (PT) —
TIF. .8-4-29
Two Men and a Woman — IV
2-22-17
Two Men of Sandy Bar — U
1917
Two Minutes to Go — FN
10- 30-21
Two Minutes to Play (AT) —
VIC. .10-16-37
Two Moons — F 1-2-21
Two of Us. The (AT) —
GB. .1937
Two Orphans — F 9-16-15
Two Outlaws — U 10-28-28
Two Seconds (AT) — FN
5-22-32
Two Shall Be Born — VIT
2-8-25
Two Sinners (AT) —
REP. .9-14-35
Two Sisters — RA 7-7-29
Two Sisters (AT-Yiddish) —
FCA. .12-27-38
Two Thoroughbreds (AT) —
RKO. .1939
Two Weeks — FN 2-1-20
Two Weeks Off (PT & S) —
FN. .4-28-29
Two Weeks With Pay — REA
1921
Two Who Dared (AT) —
GN. .7-12-37
Two Wise Maids (AT) —
REP. .2-2-37
Two Women — VIT 1919
Two Worlds (AT) — BI
11- 23-30
Two-Fisted (AT) — PAR. 10-4-35
Two-Fisted Justice (AT) —
MOP. .2-14-32
Two's Company (AT) — TIM
12- 28-39
Typhoon Treasure (AT) —
COM. .6-29-39
Tyrant Fear — PAR ....4-25-18
Tyrant of Red Gulch — FBO
12-16-28
Typhoon — PAR 1914
u
U-Boat 9 (S-SE) — BER
1-27-29
U. of S. California vs. Notre
Dame (AT) — WW.. 1-24-32
U 35 — CBR 1920
U 35 (AT) — TPE 1931
U. P. Trail — HOD 11-7-20
U-67 (AT) — AST 1939
U. S. S. R. — 1937 (AT-
Russian) — AM. .8-7-37
17,238 TITLES
U-Boat 29 (AT) — COL. 10-11-39
Ubangi — PIZ 5-31-31
Ulan I Dziewdzyna (AT) —
XX. .10-10-33
Urn Freiheit und Liebe (AT-
German) — CAO 2-9-38
Un Carnet de Bal (AT-
French) — AFE 3-31-38
Un Homber Peligroso (AT-
Spanish) — CRI. .10-17-35
Uu Soir De Rafle (AT-
French) — PRX. .10-18-31
Una Commedia Fra 1 Pazzi
(AT-Italian) — CIL. .7-12-37
Una Mujer En Venta (AT) —
REB. .1936
Una Vida Por Otra (AT)
— LST. .2-17-33
Una Semana de Felicidad (AT-
Spanish — XX. .6-19-36
Unashamed (AT) — MGM
7-16-32
Unashamed (AT) — CIG 5-20-38
Unattainable — BL 8-24-16
Unbeliever — EDK 2-28-18
Unbroken Promise — TRI
7-13-19
Uncertain Lady (AT) — U
4-20-34
Uncharted Channels — RC
6-13-20
Uncharted Seas — M . . .4-17-21
Unchastened Woman — CHA
12-26-25
Unchastened Woman — RIA
6-2-18
Uncivilized (AT) —
BOX. .11-18-37
Unclaimed Goods — PAR
6- 2-18
Uncle Sam of Freedom Ridge —
LEM. .10-3-20
Uncle Tom's Cabin — PAR
7- 7-18
Uncle Tom's Cabin — U 11-13-27
Unconquered — PAR . . . 6-24-17
Unconquered — AY ....11-6-22
Unconquered Bandit (AT) —
STI. .1-18-35
Unconquered Woman — LBR
1922
Und Es Leuchtet Die Piszta
(AT) — UFA. .2-1-34
Und Wer Kuesst Mich? (AT-
German) — GFS. .1-28-35
Under A Texas Moon (AT) —
WA. .4-6-30
Under Cover — PAR ...7-27-16
Under Cover Man (AT) —
PAR. .12-3-32
Under Cover of Night (AT) —
MGM. .1-4-37
Under Crimson Skies — -U 6-6-20
Under Eighteen (AT) —
WA. .1-3-32
Under False Colors — PAT 1917
Under Falsk Flagg (AT-
Swedish) — SCA. .1-22-37
Under Fire — ELF 1924
Under Four Flags— WO .. 1919
Under Handicap — M . . . 9-20-17
Under Montana Skies (AT) —
TIF. .11-2-30
Under Northern Lights — -U
7-25-20
Under Oath — SEZ 1922
Under Pressure (AT) — F 2-2-35
Under Secret Orders (AT)
— PRG. .12-6-33
Under Southern Skies — U
9-16-16
Under Suspicion — U. . 11-23-10
579
17,238 TITLES
Under Suspicion — M 1918
Under Suspicion (AT) — F
12-28-30
Under Suspicion (AT) —
CO. .11-22-37
Under Texas Skies (AT) —
SYN. .2-1-31
Under the Big: Top (AT) —
MOP. .9-15-38
Under the Black Eagle —
MOM. .7-29-28
Under the Greenwood — ART
12-15-18
Under the Greenwood Tree —
BI. .12-14-30
Under the Lash — PAR 10-23-21
Under the Pampas Moon (AT)
— P. .6-1-35
Under the Red Robe — G
11-18-23
Under the Red Robe (AT) —
P. .6-1-37
Under the Rouge — AE . 7-19-25
Under The Roofs of Paris (AT-
French) — 42-28-30
Under the Tonto Rim (AT) —
PAR. .7-19-33
Under the Tonto Rim — PAR
1928
Under the Top — ART.. 1-12-19
Under the Yoke — F... 6-23-18
Under Two Flags — F. . . .8-3-16
Under Two Flag's — U.. 10-1-22
Under Two Flags (AT) —
F. .4-28-36
Under Western Skies — AYC
1921
Under Western Skies — U
3-7-26
Under Western Stars (AT) —
REP. .4-14-38
Under Your Spell (AT) —
F. . 11-4-36
Undercover Agent (AT) — -
MOP. .1939
Undercover Doctor (AT) —
PAR. .6-5-39
Undercurrent — SE .... 12-7-19
Underground — GLO ...3-10-29
Under-Pup, The (AT) — U
8-25-39
Understanding Heart — -MGM
6- 15-27
Understudy — RAL 1922
Understudy — PBO 7-2-22
Undertow — AMU 11-2-16
Undertow (AT) — U 8-30-31
Undertow (AT) — U 3-2-30
Underworld — PAR .... 8-28-27
Underworld Terror (AT) —
UPC. .7-18-36
Undine — BL 2-17-16
Undressed — STE 8-19-28
Undying Flame — PAR.. 5-31-17
Une Etoile Disparait (AT-
French) — PAR. .2-12-35
Une Soiree a la Comedio
Francaise (AT-French) —
FRM. .1937
Uneasy Money — ES 2-7-18
Uneasy Money — F. ... 12-16-28
Uneasy Payments — FBO
2-6-27
Unexpected Father. The
(AT) — U. .4-10 32
Unexpected Father (AT) — \J
7- 17^39
Unexpected Places — M. 10-15-18
Unfair Sex — AE 8-15-26
Unfaithful — TRI 1918
Unfaithful (AT) — PAR. 3-1-31
Unfaithful Wife — F... 12-16-15
Unfinished Symphony (AT) —
GB. .1-12 35
Unfoldment — AE 1922
Unforseen — EMU 11-1-17
Unfortunate Sex — GER
10- 31-20
Ungdom Av I Dag (AT-
Swedish) — PAR. .6-24-36
Ungkarlspappan ( AT-Swedish )
XX. .1-6-36
Unguarded Girls — PWP 9-8-29
Unguarded Hour — FN 11-29-25
Unguarded Hour. The (AT-
MGM. .4-1-36
Unguarded Women — PAR
6-29-24
Unholy Garden (AT) — UA
9-20-3 1
Unholy Love (AT) — HOL
8- 26-32
Unholy Night (AT & S) . .
MGM. .10-20-29
Unholy Three — MG 8-9-25
Unholy Three (AT) — MGM
7-6-30
Uninvited Guest — MG.. 2-24-24
Union Depot (AT) — FN
1-17-32
Union Pacific (AT3 — PAR
4-28-39
United States Smith — GOT
6-10-28
Unknown — GOL 1921
Unknown — MGM 6-26-27
Unknown — PAR 12-16-15
Unknown 274 — F .... 12-27-17
Unknown Blonde (AT) — MAJ
4-19 34
Unknown Cavalier — FN
11- 14-26
Unknown Heroes (AT-Pol-
ish) — CAP. .1932
Unknown Lover — VIT....1925
Unknown Man (AT) —
COL. .6-21-35
Unknown Purple — TRU
12-2-23
Unknown Quantity — VIT
4-6-19
Unknown Ranger. The (AT)
— COL. .1936
Unknown Rider — AI 1929
Unknown Soldier Speaks (AT)
— LIN . . 5-26-34
Unknown Treasures — STE
9- 26-26
Unknown Valley (AT) —
COL. .8-18-33
Unknown Wife — U. .. .3-20-21
Unmarried (AT) — PAR. 5-25-39
Unmarried Wives — GOT
12-7-24
Unmasked (AT) — ARC
8-25-29
Unnamed Woman — ARW
10 25-25
Unpardonable Sin — WO
3-16-16
Unpardonable Sin — GAR
3-23-19
Unprotected — PAR 1916
Unseeing Eyes — G. ... 10-28-23
Unseen Forces— FN 1920
Unseen Witness — ARW
Unseen Hands — AE 9-7-24
Unsere Fahne Flattert Uns
Voran (AT) — UFA.. 7-10 34
Untamable — U 8-26-23
Untamed— TRI 9-1-18
Untamed (AT & S) — MGM
1929
Untamed — F 8-29-20
Untamed Justice — -BIL. 1-27-20
Untamed Lady — PAR. .3-21-26
Untamed Youth — FBO... 1924
Until They Get Me — TRI
12- 27-17
Unto the End— TRI 1919
Unto Those Who Sin — SEL
3-8-16
Unveiling Hand — WO... 3-2-19
Unwelcome Children — MGR
10-21-28
Unwelcome Mother — P. .9-7-16
Unwelcome Mrs. Hatch — PAR
1914
Unwelcome Stranger (AT) —
COL. .4 6-35
Unwilling Hero — G. . . .7-17-21
Unwritten Code — WO... 5-4-19
Unwritten Law — CAL. . 1-20-16
Unwritten Law— COL. 10-25-25
Unwritten Law. The (AT) —
MAJ. .11-26-32
Up and At "Em 1922
Up and Going — F 3-26-22
Up For Murder (AT) — U
5- 31-31
Up in Mabel's Room — PDC
6- 13-2C
Up in Mary's Attic — FA
8-1-20
Up in the Air About Mary —
AE. .1922
Up or Down — TRI .... 11-1-17
Up Pops the Devil (AT) — PAR
5- 17-31
Up Romance Road — MT
6- 30-18
Up the Congo — WW... 1-26-30
Up the Ladder — U 1-25-25
Up the River (AT) — F
10- 12-30
Up the River (AT) — F 11-11-38
Up the Road with Sallie —
SEZ. .4-25-18
Upheaval — M 9-14-16
Upland Rider — FN 7-8-28
Uplifters — M 6-29-19
Upper Crust — AMU 7-5-17
Upper Underworld (AT) — FN
1931
Upper World (AT)— WA
5- 25-34
Upside Down — TRI 6-15-19
Upstage — MGM 11-21-26
Upstairs — G 8-31-19
Upstairs and Down — SEZ
6- 15-19
Upstart — M 2-10-16
Upstream — F 2-6-27
Uptown New York (AT) —
WW. .12-10-32
Urilany Szobat Keres (AT-
Hungarian) — DAN.. 3-22-38
Usurper — VIT 4-20-19
Utah Kid (AT) — TIF
11- 23-30
Utah Trail (AT)— GN 1938
Vaaran Pojke (AT-Swedish) —
XX. .10-12-36
Vacation from Love (AT) —
MGM. .11-14-38
Vagabond Cub — RKO. . .3-3-29
Vagabond King (AT) — PAR
2 23-30
Vagabond Lady (AT) —
MGM. .4-1-35
Vagabond Lover (AT & S) —
RKO. .12-1-29
-F. . .11-30-19
Vagabond
Vagabond
Luck-
of Prance
-PAT
1-12-19
Vagabond Prince — INC
9-28-16
Vagabond Trail — F 3-9-24
Valencia — MGM 1-2-27
Valentine Girl — PAR ... 5-10-17
Valiant, The (AT & S) — F
5-19-29
Valiant is the Word for Carrie
(AT) — PAR. .9-22-36
580
Valiants of Virginia; — SEL
6-29-16
Valley of Bravery— FBO . . 1926
Valley of Doubt — SEZ...1920
Valley of Hate — RUL. .6-29-24
Valley of Hell — MGM . 10-21-28
Valley of Hell— MGM . . 8-7-27
Valley of Hunted Men — PAT
2- 19-28
Valley of Lost Souls — IND
10-14-23
Valley of Silent Men — PAR
9-3-22
Valley of the Giants — FN
12-17-27
Valley of the Giants — PAR
9- 14-19
Valley of the Giants (AT) —
WA. .9-12-38
Valley of the Missing: — F.1922
Valley of the Moon — PAR 1914
Valley of the Wolf — APD 1923
Valley of Tomorrow — PAT
1-18-20
Valley of Wanted Meni (AT) —
CNN. .10-22-35
Vamp — PAR 7-21-18
Vamping Venus — FN.. 11-11-28
Vampire — M 1920
Vampire — UNI 1928
Vampire a) la Mode — F...1928
Vampire Bat (AT) —
MAJ. .1-10-33
Vampires of Warsaw — LEO
1928
Vanessa, Her Love Story
(AT) — MGM. .2-19-35
Vanina — FFS 1928
Vanishing American — PAR
10- 5-25
Vanishing Frontier (AT) —
PAR. .9-17-32
Vanishing Hoofs — ARC... 1926
Vanishing Maid — ARW...1921
Vanishing Men (AT) — MOP
1932
Vanishing Pioneer — PAR
8-12-28
Vanishing Riders. The (AT) —
SPE. .7-2-35
Vanishing World, The (AT) —
KIT. .1935
Vanity — PDC 6-26-27
Vanity — M 1-11-17
Vanity Fair — G 5-13-23
Vanity Fair — EDK .... 10-14-15
Vanity Fair (AT) — HOL
5-8-32
Vanity Pool — U 1918
Vanity Street (AT) — COL
10-18-32
Vanity's Price — FBO .. 10-12-24
Variety — PAR 6-27-26
Varju A Toronyoran (AT-
Hungarian ) — HUN . 11-29-39
Varmint — PAR 9-13-17
Varmlanders, The (AT-
Swedish) — STP. .11-23-32
Varsity (PT & S) — PAR
11- 4-28
Varsity Show (AT) —
WA. .8-16-37
Vasember ( AT-Hungarian) —
XX. . 12-10-35
Veil of Happiness — ELK
12-23-23
Veiled Adventure — SEL
5-11-19
Veiled Marriage — HAL
3- 14-20
Veiled Woman — F 1929
Veiled Woman — HOD.. 6-11-22
Velvet Hand — U 10-6-18
Velvet Paw — PBW .... 8-31-16
Vendetta — HOW 12-25-21
Vengeance — WO 5-26-18
Vengeance (AT) — COL. .3-9-30
Vengeance is Mine — EMU
1-27-16
Vengeance is Mine — -PAT
12-6-17
Vengeance of Durand — VIT
12-14-19
Vengeance of the Deep — SEZ
4-22-23
Vengeance Trail — AY. . 9-11-21
Venus — UA 10-20-29
Venus in the East — PAR
1-26-19
Venus Makes Trouble (AT) —
COL. .5-18-37
Venus Model- — G 6-23-18
Venus of the South Seas — SR
1924
Venus of Venice — FN . . . 5-8-27
Vera the Medium — GOR
1- 4-17
Verdict. The — GOL ....7-12-26
Verdun, Vision of History —
HIM. .1928
Vermillion Pencil — FBO
3-19-22
Verraeter (AT-German) —
UFA. .2-5-37
Versprich Mir Nichts (AT-
German) — AMT. .11-18-37
Versuchen Sie Meine Schwester
(AT-German) — TOB. .6-21-31
Verwehte Spuren (AT-German)
— UFA . . 1939
Very Confidential — F. . 12-17-27
Very Good Young Man — PAR
1919
Very Honorable Guy. A (AT)
— FN. .5-18-34
Very Idea (AT & S) — RKO
10-6-29
Very Idea — M 2-22-20
Very Truly Yours — F. . 5-28-22
Vi Som Gar Kaksvagen (AT)
— SCA. .10-10-33
Vi Tva (AT-Swedish) — PAR
2- 8-31
Vi Tvaa (AT-Swedish) — SCA
12-15-39
Via Pony Express (AT) —
MAJ. .5-4-33
Via Wireless — PAT ...9-23-16
Vicar of Wakefield— PAT
3- 8-17
Vice of Fools— VIT. .11-14-20
Vice Squad (AT)— PAR
6-7-31
Vickey Van — PAR. .. .3-23-19
Victim — F 1-18-17
Victim — CBC 1921
Victims of Persecution (AT)
POB. .6-17-33
Victor — U 7-22-23
Victoria Cross — PAR. . 12-14-16
Victoria the Great (AT) —
RKO. .9-17-37
Victory — PAR 12-7-19
Victory of Conscience — PAR
8-31-16
Victory of Virtue — EXD
12-2-15
Vidas Rotas (AT-Spanish) —
XX. .8-6-35
Vienna Burgtheater (AT-
German) — EUR. .11-1-37
Vienna Prater (AT-German)
— XX. . 1938
Viennese Nights (AT) — WA
11-30-30
Vigilantes — ARW
Viking — MGM 12-2-28
Viking (AT) — WIO .... 6-21-31
Viktor und Viktoria (AT-
German) — XX. .1-30-35
Viktoria und Ihr Husar (AT-
German) — KIT. .1935
Village Blacksmith — F
11-12-22
17,238 TITLES
Village of Sin — AM .... 6-26-29
Village Scandal — TRI. . 11-8-15
Village Sleuth — PAR. . .9-19-20
Village Tale (AT) — RKO
6-15-35
Violet from Potsdam Square
(AT-German) — XX. .1939
Violette Imperial — FFS... 1928
Virgin — GOL 10-26-24
Virgin Lips — COL 9-16-28
Virgin of Stamboul — U 2-29-20
Virgin Paradise — F 8-7-21
Virgins of Bali (AT) — PRI
9-23-32
Virgin's Sacrifice — VIT. . . 1922
Virginia Courtship — PAR
1- 29-22
Virginia Judge. The (AT) —
PAR. .9-17-35
Virginian — PAR 1923
Virginian — PRE 11-18-23
Virginian (AT & S) — PAR
1929
Virtue (AT) — COL ... 10-26-32
Virtue's Revolt — ST
Virtuous Husband (AT) — U
5- 10-31
Virtuous Liars — VIT. .4-13-24
/irtuous Men— SL 4-13-19
Virtuous Model — PAT. 9-28-19
/irtuous Sin (AT) — PAR
10-20-30
Virtuous Sinners — PI.. 5-18-19
Virtuous Thief— PAR. .9-21-19
Virtuous Vamp — FN.. 11-30-19
Virtuous Wives — FN 1-3-19
Vita Di Bon Bosco (AT-Italian)
— NUO. .1936
Vital Question — VIT 4-6-16
Vittoria (AT-Italian) —
NUO. .1936
Viva, Villa! (AT) — MGM
4-12-34
Vivacious Lady (AT) — RKO
6-5-38
Vive La France — PAR. 9-29-18
Vivette — PAR 6-2-18
Vixen — F 12-7-16
Vogues of 1938 (AT) —
UA. .8-7-37
Voice from the Minaret — FN
2- 11-23
Voice in the Dark — G. . 6-12-21
Voice in the Fog — PAR.. 1915
Voice in the Night (AT) —
COL. .4-24-34
Voice of Bugle Ann. The
(AT) — MGM . .2-6-30
Voice of Conscience — -M . . 1917
Voice of Destiny — PAT
6- 16-18
Voice of the City (AT & S) —
MGM. .5-12-29
Voice of the Desert (AT-
Polish) — CAP. .1932
Voice of the Storm — RKO 1929
Voice Within (PT) — TIF 1929
Voices — KRA 10-3-20
Voices of the City— G. . 8-20-22
Volcano — PAR 6-6-26
Volcano — PAT 8-17-19
Volga Boatman — PDC. 5-23-26
Volga Boatman. The (AT-
French) — HOB 4-20-38
Volga Volga (S) —
KIT. .12-19-33
Voltaire (AT) — WA. . .7-28-33
Volunteer— WO 1917
Vortex — GLO 1928
Vortex — TRI 1918
Vultures of Society — VLS
2-10-16
581
17,238 TITLES
w
"W" Plan (AT) — RKO 2-15-31
Wager — M n-23-16
Wages for Wives — F. . 11-22-25
Wages of Conscience — HM
1927
Wages of Virtue — PAR
11-30-24
Wagon Master (PT & S) —
U. . 10-6-2!)
Wagon Show — FN 5-6-28
Wagon Tracks — PAR. .8-17-19
Wagon Trail (AT) — AJ. 4-9-35
Wagon Wheels (AT) — PAR
10-5-34
Waifs — TRI 4-6-16
Waifs — PAT 7-28-18
Wajan — TOF 1938
Waikiki Wedding (AT) —
PAR. .3-23 37
Waiter from the Ritz — PAR
1926
Waiting Soul — M 3-28-17
Wake Up and Dream (AT) —
U. .10-11-34
Wake Up and Live (AT) —
F. .4-10-37
Wakefield Case — WO ..4-10-21
Waking Up the Town — UA
4-12-25
Waldwinter (AT-German) —
UFA. .11-16-36
Walk Offs — M 1920
Walking Back — PAT. .. 6-17-28
Walking Dead. The (AT) —
WA. .3-2-36
Walking Down Broadway
(AT) — F. .1932
Walking Down Broadway
(AT) — F 2-4-38
Walking on Air (AT) —
RKO. .8-17-36
Wall Between — M 4-6-16
Wall Flower — G 7-2-22
Walls of Jericho — F
Wall Street (AT) — COL
12-1-29
Wall Street Cowboy (AT) —
REP. .9-7-39
Wall St. Mystery —
ARW. .1920
Wall Street Tragedy — MT
8- 17-16
Wall St. Whizz — FBO. 10-25-25
Wallaby Jim of the Islands
(AT) — GN. .10-12-37
Walls of Gold (AT) — F
10-21-33
Wallflowers — FBO ....3-25-28
Wallop. The — U 5-8-21
Walloping Kid — AY 1926
Walloping Wallace — ARC. 1924
Waltz Dream — MGM 8-1-26
Waltz Time (AT) — GB
9- 29-33
Waltz Time in Vienna (AT)
— UFA. .11-20-34
Walzerkonig (S-SE) — NER
1932
Wanderer — PAR 8-30-25
Wanderer of the Wasteland —
PAR. .7-13-24
Wanderer of the Wasteland
(AT) — PAR. .10-11-35
Wanderer of the West — RA
1927
Wandering Bird (AT-Spanish)
— XX. .1938
Wandering Daughters — FN
7-1-23
Wandering Fires — ARW
10- 11-25
Wandering Footsteps — GBG
11- 15-25
Wandering Girls — COL
2-27-27
Wandering Husbands — PDC
6-8-24
Wandering Jew (AT)
— JFA. .10-21-33
Wandering Jew, The (AT) —
OLM. .1-12-35
Waning Sex — MGM . . . .9-26-20
Wanted — A Brother — RAL 1918
Wanted a Coward — STE..1927
Wanted a Home — BL. .9-21-10
Wanted A Husband — PAR
12- 21-19
Wanted — A Mother — PWO
4-4-18
Wanted at Headquarters — U
10-10-20
Wanted by the Police (AT) —
MOP. .9-27-38
Wanted for Murder — RSR
12-22-18
Wanted: Jane Turner (AT) — ■
RKO. .11-30-36
Wanted Men (AT) —
HOB. .7-8 36
Wanters — FN 1923
War and the Woman — PAT
9-13-17
War Brides- -SEZ 11-16-16
War Bride's Secret — F
10-12-16
War Correspondent (AT) —
COL. .8-13-32
War Horse — F 2-13-27
War is a Racket — (AT) —
EUK. .12-10-34
War Nurse (AT) — MGM
10-26-30
War of the Range (AT) —
FRE. .11-22-33
War of the Tongs — RED
2-15-17
War Paint — MGM 1926
War's End (AT) — XX.. 6-18-34
Ware Case — FN 3-17-29
Ware Case. The (AT) — F
7-31-39
Warfare of the Flesh — FBW
4-26-17
Warming Up — PAR 7-22-28
Warning — COL 1-8-28
Warning — EQ 12-16-15
Warning Shadows — FGU..1928
Warning Signal — ELB. .9-19-26
Warrens of Virginia — F . . 1924
Warrior — ITA 7-26-17
Warrior Gap — DAV 1925
Warrior's Husband (AT)
— F. .5-12-33
Was Bin Ich ohne Dich?
(AT-German) — GFS. .12-16-35
Was He Guilty? — PIZ 1928
Was It Bigamy — ST. . .9-27-25
Washington Masquerade
(AT) — MGM. .7-22-32
Washington Merry-Go-Around
(AT) — COL. .9-29-32
Wasp — PWO 4-11-18
Wasted Lives — SEC 1923
Wasted Love — AP 1-5-30
Wasted Years — HMO. . .6-22-16
Watch Him Step — GOL. .5-7-22
Watch Your Step — G. . 5-21-22
Watch Your Wife — U. . .3-7-26
Watching Eyes — ARW 1922
Water Gypsies (AT) — SDC
11-7-32
Water Hole — PAR 9-9-28
Water Lily — TRI 1919
Water, Water Everywhere— Q
2-8-20
Waterfront — FN 9-23-28
Waterfront (AT) — WA. 7-25-39
Waterfront Lady (AT) —
REP. .9-21-35
Waterfront Wolves — GER
3-16-24
Waterloo — GLO 1929
Waterloo Bridge (AT) — U
8- 16-31
Wax Model — PAR 2-8-17
Way Back Home (AT) —
RKO. .1-17-32
Way Down East — UA.. 9-12-20
Way Down East (Reissue) —
GGR. .3 15 31
Way Down East (AT) —
F. .10-31-35
Way Down South (AT) —
RKO. .7-25-39
Way For A Sailor (AT) —
MGM. .12-14-30
Way Men Love — AHR 11-4-23
Way of a Girl — MG. . .4-5-25
Way of a Maid — SEZ. 11-13-21
Way of a Man — PAT. 11-18-23
Way of a Man — LBR 1922
Way of a Man With a Maid —
PAR. .1-5-19
Way of a Woman — SE.. 8-3-19
Way of All Flesh — PAR. 7-3-27
Way of All Men (AT) — FN
9- 21-30
Way of the Strong — COL
8-12-28
Way of the Strong — M...1919
Way ot the Transgressor — IND
1924
Way of the West (AT) —
FD. .1935
Way of the World— RED
6-29-16
Way Out — PWO 4-11-18
Way Out West (AT) — MGM
8-17-30
Way Out West (AT) —
MGM. .12-19-36
Way to Love (AT) —
PAR. . 11-11-33
Way Women Love — LYR
2-13-21
Wayward (AT) — PAR. 2-14-32
We Americans — U 3-25-28
We Are from the K & K
Infantry Regiment (AT-
German) — XX 1938
We Are from Kronstadt (AT-
Russian) — AM. .5-2-36
We Are Not Alone (AT) —
WA. .11-9-39
We Can't Have Everything —
ART. .7-7-18
We Have Our Moments (AT)
— U. .3-24-37
We Live Again — UA-
9-24-34
We Moderns — FN. .. .12-13-26
We Should Worry — F. . 6-30-18
We Went to College (AT) —
MGM. .6-23-36
We Who Are About to Die
(AT) — RKO. .10-23-36
Weaker Vessel — U 6-8-19
Weakness of Man — BRA
7- 13-16
Weakness of Strength — M
8- 24-16
Wealth — PAR 7-10-21
Weary River (PT & S) — FN
1-27-29
Weaver of Dreams — M 2-2S-18
Weavers — XX 10-13-29
Weavers of Life — FBW
11-22-17
Web of Chance — F. . . 12-21-19
Web ofi Deceit — PAT 1-4-20
Web of Desire — PBW . . . 3-1-17
Web of Fate — PEE 1927
582
Web of the Law — SEZ . . . 1923
Wedding Bells — FN 8-21-21
Wedding- Bills — PAR 7-3-27
Wedding March — PAR 10-24-28
Wedding Night, The (AT) —
UA. .2-19-35
Wedding- of Palo, The (AT-
Eskimo)— XX. .3-5-37
Wedding- Present (AT) —
PAR. .9-24-36
Wedding- Rings (AT) — FN
5- 11-30
Wedding Song — PDC .. 12-17-25
Wedlock — HOD 7-14-18
Wednesday's Child (AT) —
RKO. .11-13-34
Wee Willie Winkie (AT) —
F. .6-28-37
WeekEnd— PAT 1920
Week-End Husbands — EQU
2-10-24
Week-End Im Paradise (AT-
German)— CAP. .10-26-32
Week-End Marriage (AT) —
FN. .6-5-32
Week-End Millionaire (AT) —
GB. .4-6-37
Week -End Wives — WW . . 7-7-29
Week Ends Only (AT) — F
6- 18-32
Weiberregiment (AT-German)
— UFA. .9-14-30
Weisse Sklaven (AT-German)
— AMT . . 8-19-37
Welcome Children — NF . . . 1922
Welcome Danger (AT & S) —
PAR. .1929
Welcome Home— PAR. .5-24-25
Welcome Home (AT) —
F. .8-27-35
Welcome Stranger — PDC
10-19-24
Welcome to Our City — PS
1922
Wells Fargo (AT) —
PAR. .12-7-37
Welsh Singer — MT 7-24-16
Wenn am Sonntagabend die
Dorfmusik Spielt (AT-
German)— XX. .12-10-35
Wenn Der Halm Kraeht (AT-
German)— EUP. .11-16-36
Wenn Die Liebe Mode Macht
(AT) — XX. .10-30-33
Wenn Die Soldaten (AT-
German) — SCN. .11-2-32
Wenn Die Musik Nich Waer
(AT-German) — XX. .4-12-37
Wenn Du Eine Schwieger-
mutter Hast (AT-German)
— CAO. .1938
Wenn Frauen Schweigen (AT-
German) — UFA. .9-24-37
Wenn Wir Alle Engel Waeren
(AT-German) — CAS. .10-21-37
Wer Nimmt Die Liebe Ernst?
(AT-German) — XX. .2-11-36
We're All Gamblers — PAR
10- 23-27
We're Going to be Rich (AT)
— F. .7-7-38
We're in the Legion Now (AT)
— GN. .1937
We're In the Money (AT) —
WA. .8-22-35
We're In the Navy Now — PAR
11- 14-26
We're Not Dressing (AT) —
PAR. .4-26 34
We're on the Jury (AT) —
RKO. .1-18-37
We're Only Human (AT) —
RKO. .1-18-36
We're Rich Again (AT) —
RKO. .8-11-34
Werewolf of London (AT) —
U. .5-10-35
West Is West — U 11-28-20
West of Broadway — PDC. 1926
West of Broadway (AT) —
MGM. .1-31-32
West of Cheyenne (AT) — SYN
3- 1-31
West of Cheyenne (AT) — COL
9-2-38
West of Chicago — F
West of Mojave — AY .... 1926
West of Nevada (AT) —
COO. .7-21-36
West of Rainbow's End (AT)
— MOP. .1938
West of Santa Fe — SYN
6-30-29
West of Santa Fe (AT) — COL
1938
West of Santa Fe (AT) — COL
1-6-39
West of Shanghai (AT) —
WA. .11-1-37
West of Singapore (AT) —
MOP. .4-1-33
West of the Divide (AT) —
MOP. .1-13-34
West of the Law — RA...1926
West of the Law (AT) —
FD. .1935
West of the Pecos — ST... 1922
West of the Pecos (AT) —
RKO. .12-29-34
West of the Rainbow's End —
RA. .9-19-20
West of the Rio Grande — LUB
1921
West of the Water Tower —
PAR. .1-6-24
West of Zanzibar — M-G-M
1-6-29
West Point — M-G-M .... 1-8-28
West Point of the Air (AT) —
MGM. .2-25-35
West vs. East — SAN 1922
Westbound Limited — FBO
4- 22-23
Westbound Limited (AT) —
U. .1937
Westbound Mail (AT) —
COL. .1937
Westbound Stage ( AT ) — M OP
1939
Western Blood — F 1918
Western Caravans (AT) — COL
7-17-39
Western Code (AT) —
COL. .1-12-33
Western Courage — RA.. 9-11-27
Western Courage (AT) —
COL. .1935
Western Demon, A — WSR
1922
Western Fate — ARW 1924
Western Firebrands — AY
11-13-21
Western Frontier (AT) —
COL. .10-30-35
Western Gold (AT) — F .9-7-37
Western Hearts — APH ..6-12-21
Western Honor — SYN.. 5-11-30
Western Jamboree (AT) —
REP. .12-21-38
Western Justice — ARW... 1923
Western Justice (AT) —
COE. .1935
Western Limited (AT) —
MOP. .10-12-32
Western Luck — F 6-16-24
Western Pluck — U 1926
Western Rover — U 1927
Western Speed — F 5-7-22
Western Trails — CHE 1926
Western Vengeance — IND
8-3-24
Western Wallop — U.... 10-5-24
583 .
17,238 TITLES
Western Whirlwind — U . 1-30-27
Western Yesterdays — ARW 1924
Westerner. The (AT) —
COL. .1935
Westerners — HOD ....8-10-19
Westland Case, The (AT) —
U. .9-28-37
Westward Bound (AT) — SYN
I- 25-31
Westward Ho (AT) —
REP. .7-30-35
Westward Passage (AT) —
RKO. .6-5-32
Wet Gold — G 7-31-21
Wet Paint — PAR 5-23-26
Wet Parade (AT) — MGM
4-24-32
Wharf Angel (AT) — PAR
4-21-34
Wharf Rat — FAT 12-14-16
What a Life (AT) — PAR
9- 19-39
What a Man! (AT) — WW
3-30-30
What a Night — PAR .. 12-30-28
What a Widow 1 (AT) — UA
10- 5-30
What a Wife Learned — FN
1-28-23
What Am I Bid — U 4-6-19
What Becomes of the
Children — FIL. .1919
What Children Will Do — HAL
1920
What Do Men Want — FBO
II- 20-21
What Every Girl Should Know
— WA. .3-20-27
What Every Woman Knows —
PAR. .3-6-21
What Every Woman Knows
(AT) — MGM . .10-5-34
What Every Woman Learns —
PAR. .10-26-19
What Every Woman Wants —
EXI. .4-20-19
What Fools Men — FN. 10-11-25
What Fools Men Are — AR
12-3-22
What Happened in 22 — FWO
6-24-16
What Happened to Father? —
VIT. .12 9-15
What Happened to Father? —
WA. .6-26-27
What Happened to Jones? —
PAR. .8-15-20
What Happened to Jones? — U
12-13-25
What Happened to Rosa? — G
4-17-21
What Love Can Do — RED
6-1-16
What Love Forgives — WO
1-12-19
What Love Will Do — F. 9-11-21
What Men Want (AT) — U
8-24-30
What Money Can't Buy — PAR
What I No Beer? (AT) —
MGM. .2-11-33
What No Man Knows — EQU
12-25-21
What Price Beauty? — PAT
1-22-28
What Price Crime (AT) —
BE. .5-28-35
What Price Decency (AT)
— MAJ. .3-2-33
What Price Glory — F . 11-28-26
What Price Hollywood (AT) —
RKO. .6-22-32
17,238 TITLES
What Price Innocence (AT)
— COL. .6-24 33
What Price Love? — AN
10-23-27
What Price Vengeance (AT) —
RIA. .4-2-37
What Shall I Do? — PDC
6-29-24
What Shall We Do with Him?
— WO. .1919
What Three Men Wanted —
IND. .4-27-24
What Will People Say? — M
1- 6-16
What Wives Want — U. . 5-6-23
What Women Love — FN
8-15-20
What Women Want — PI. . 1920
What Women Will Do — AE
2- 13-21
What Would You Do? — P
1-25-20
What's a Wife Worth? — EC
4-17-21
What's His Name? — PAR
What's Worth While? — PAR
1921
What's Wrong- with Women?
— EQU. .8-13-22
What's Your Hurry? — PAR
8- 22-20
What's Your Husband Doing?
— PAR. .2-8-20
What's Your Racket (AT) —
May. .3-6-34
What's Your Reputation
Worth? — VIT 1921
Whatever the Cost — HOD
10-6-18
Whatever She Wants — F
12-11-21
Wheel — F 8-30-25
Wheel of Chance — FN. .7-8-28
Wheel of Destiny — RA. . 1-8-28
Wheel of Life (AT & S) —
PAR. .6-30-29
Wheels of Destiny (AT) — U
3- 28-34
Wheels of the Law — MT
9- 28-16
Wheels of the Pioneers — DEN
1923
When a Dog Loves — FBO 1927
When a Feller Needs a Friend
(AT) — MGM. .5-15-32
When a Girl Loves — U...1924
When a Girl Loves — AE. 6-1-24
When a Man Loves — VIT
1- 18-20
When a Man Loves — WA
2- 6-27
When a Man's a Man — FN
2- 10-24
When A Man's A Man (AT) —
F. .2-23-35
When a Man Rides Alone — ■
PAT. . 12-29-18
When a Man Rides Alone
(AT) — FRE. .2-1-33
When a Man Sees Red (AT)
— U. .11-24-34
When a Man Sees Red — F
1917
When a Woman Loves — M
1915
When a Woman Sins — F
9-15-18
When a Woman Strikes — FCH
1919
When Arizona Won — KRA 1919
When Baby Forgot — PAT
6-7-17
When Boys Leave Home —
WW. .1928
When Danger Calls — LUM
11-6-27
When Danger Smiles — VIT
1922
When Dawn Came — PS
12-26-20
When Do We Eat? — PAR
11-4-18
When Doctors Disagree — G
1919
When Dreams Come True — RA
5- 12-29
When Duty Calls — UFA 1-6-29
When Fate Divides — F 5-25-19
When False Tongues Speak — F
10-4-17
When Fleet Meets Fleet — HM
3- 18-28
When G-Men Step In (AT) —
COL. .3-17-38
When Honor Calls — PAT
When Husbands Deceive — AE
8- 27-22
When Husbands Flirt — COL
12-26-25
When Knighthood Was in
Flower — PAR 9-17-22
When Knights Were Bold —
GHA. .1922
When Ladies Meet (AT)
— MGM. .6-24-33
When London Sleeps — WA
12-19 26
When Love Comes — FBO
12-10-22
When Love Is King — EDK
2-17-16
When Love Is Young — ARI
1922
When Love Is Young (AT) —
U. .4-19-37
When Men Are Tempted — VIT
1-3-18
hen Men Desire — F. . .3-9-19
hen Moscow Laughs — AM
9- 22-29
When My Ship Comes In —
FCH. . 1919
When Odds Are Even — F
11-25 23
When Quackel Did Hyde — AY
1921
When Romance Rides — G
4- 16-22
When Seconds Count — RA
6- 12-27
When Strangers Marry (AT)
— COL. .5-25-33
When Strangers Meet (AT)
— LIB. .10 9-34
When the Clouds Roll By — UA
1-4-20
When the Husband Travels (AT-
Greek) — LAF. .11-29 39
When the Law Rides — -FBO
1928
When the Wife's Away — COL
1926
When Thief Meets Thief (AT)
— U. .6-15-37
When Tomorrow Comes (AT) —
U. .8-17-39
When True Love Dawns — WO
8-2-17
When We Were Twenty-One —
PAT. .1-9-21
When Were You Born? (AT)
— WA. .6-9-38
When You're in Love (AT) — -
COL. .2-18-37
When's Your Birthday? (AT)
— RKO. .2-16-37
Where Are My Children? — U
4-20-16
Where Bonds Are Loosed —
WAL. .8-3-10
Where East Is East — M-G-M
6- 2-29
Where Is My Father? — EXD
10- 12-16
Where Is My Husband? — PI
1021
Where Is My Wandering Bov
Tonight? — EQU 2-5-22
Where Is This West? — U 1923
Where Lights Are Low — RC
7- 3-21
Where Love Leads — F. 9-21-16
Where Men Are Men — VIT
9-18-21
Where North Holds Sway —
RA. .1927
Where Sinners Meet (AT) —
RKO. .4-19-34
Where the Buffalo Roam
(AT) — MOP 10-27-38
Where the North Begins — WA
9-2-23
Where the Pavement Ends — M
3 11-23
Where the Trail Divides — -PAR
1914
Where the West Begins — PAT
3-16-19
Where the West Begins — BIS
7- 3-27
Where the West Begins (AT)
— MOP. .1938
Where There's a Will (AT) — ■
GB. .1937
Where Trails Divide (AT) —
MOP. . 10-18-37
Where Was I? — U 8-30-25
Which Woman — U 6-16-18
While Fire Raged — PAT
While Justice Waits — F
11- 26-22
While London Sleeps (AT) —
IDE. .7-18-36
While New York Sleeps — P
8- 1-20
While New York Sleeps (AT) —
F. .1939
While Paris Sleeps (AT) — P
6-13-32
While Paris Sleeps — HOD
1-21-23
While Satan Sleeps — PAR
7-2-22
While the City Sleeps — M-G-M
10-28-28
While the Devil Laughs — F
1921
While the Patient Slept (AT)
—FN. .3-2-35
While the Pot Boils — EDU
3-25-23
Whims of Society — WO.. 1018
Whip — PAM 4-26-17
Whip — FN 0 23-28
Whip. The (AT-Spanish) — XX
1939
Whip Woman — FN .... 2-12-28
Whipping Boss — MOP 12-16-23
Whipsaw (AT)- — MGM . . . 1935
Whipsaw (AT) —
MGM. .1-25 36
Whirl of Life — COV ... 12-2-15
Whirl of Youth — WW. .3-31-29
Whirlpool — SE 7-7-18
Whirlpool (AT) — COL.. 5-5-34
Whirlpool of Destiny — RED
8-31-16
Whirlpool, The (AT) —
COL. .7-29-33
Whirlpool of Desire (AT-
French) — XX. .11-29-39
584
Whirlpool of Youth — PAR
7-3-27
Whirlwind Horseman (AT) —
GN. .1938
Whirlwind Ranger — ARW.1924
Whisper Market — VIT. 8-29-20
Whispered Name — U... 1-13-24
Whispering: Canyon— STE
6-27-26
Whispering: Chorus — ART
3- 28-18
Whispering Devils — EQU .1921
Whispering: Enemies (AT) —
COL. .1-4-39
Whispering: Sage — F. . .4-10-27
Whispering Shadows — WO
1921
Whispering Smith — PDC
4- 25-26
Whispering Smith — MT. . 6-8-16
Whispering Smith Speaks (AT)
— F. .12-17-35
Whispering Winds (PT) — TIP
1929
Whispering Wires — P 1926
Whispering Women — CC..1922
Whispers — SE 7-4-20
Whistle — PAR 4-3-21
Whistlin' Dan (AT) — TIP
3-13-32
Whistling in the Dark (AT)
— MGM . . 1-28-33
Whistling Jim — AY 8-2-25
White and Unmarried — PAR
6-12-21
White Angel. The (AT) —
FN. .6-2-36
White Banners (AT) — WA
6-1-38
White Black Sheep — FN
12-5-26
White Bondage (AT) —
WA. .8-27-37
White Cargo (AT) — BI.3-2-30
White Circle — PAR .... 8-29-20
White Cockatoo (AT) —
WA. .1-12-35
White Desert— MG 7-12-25
White Devil (PT) — UFA. 1930
White Devil (AT) — TPE
8- 30-31
White Dove — RC 1920
White Eagle (AT) — COL
9- 24-32
White Face (AT) —
HEL. .11-22-33
White Fang — FBO 4-26-25
White Fang (AT) — F... 7-9-36
White Flannels — WA.... 4-3-27
White Flower — PAR. .. .3-4-23
White Gods (AT) —
TRK. .3-20-37
White Gold — PDC 3-6-27
White Hand — PS 1922
White Hands — FBO 1922
White Heat (AT) — PIN
6-16-34
White Heather — HWF. . 5-11-19
White Hell— BAT 1922
White Hell of Pitz Palu — U
4-27-30
White Hunter (AT) —
F. . 11-28-36
White Legion. The (AT) —
GN. .10-17-36
White Lie — HOD 9-1-18
White Lies — F 6-6-20
White Lies (AT) — COL
12-27-34
White Majesty (AT-German) —
XX 1939
White Man — SCH 11-16-24
White Man's Chance — PAT
8-17-19
White Man's Law — PAR
5-2-18
White Masks — SMI 1922
White Mice — AE 3-7-26
White Moll — F 7-18-20
White Monkey — FN... 7-14-25
White Moth — FN 6-15-24
White Oak — PAR 11-6-21
White Outlaw — EXH 1928
White Outlaw — U 6-21-25
White Panther — GOL . . 1-27-24
White Pants Willie — FN.. 1927
White Parade (AT) — F
10- 22-34
White Pearl — PAR. .. 10-14-15
White Pebbles — PAT. .. 8-21-27
White Raven — MET. .. 1-25-17
White Renegade (AT) —
ARC. .1931
White Rider — MAV. ... 8-22-20
White Rider — PEE 1921
White Rose — UA 6-10-23
White Scar — U
White Shadow — SEZ 1924
White Shadows of the South
Seas — M-G-M 8-6-28
White Sheep — AE .... 11-30-24
White Sheik — WW. ... 12-15-29
White Shoulders — FN. 11-26-22
White Shoulders (AT) — RKO
5-17-31
White Sin — FBO 2-17-24
White Sister — M 9-9-23
White Sister (AT)
— MGM. .3-20-33
White Thunder — FBO.... 1925
White Tiger — U 11-18-23
White-Washed Walls — HRM
3-9-19
White Woman (AT) —
PAR. .11-18-33
White Youth — U 12-19-20
White Zombie (AT)— UA
7-29-32
Whither Thou Goest? — SAM
7-26-17
Who Am I? — SEZ 7-10-21
Who Are My Parents? — P
(reviewed as A Little Child
Shall Lead Them) ... 9-10-22
Who Cares? — SE 1-19-19
Who Goes There? — VIT
12-6-17
Who Killed Gail Preston?
(AT) — COL 5-11-38
Who Killed Walton? — TRI
4- 25-18
Who Knows? — BET. ... 12-6-17
Who Loves Him Best? — MT
1918
Who Shall Take My Life? —
FIL. .1918
Who Threw the Brick — SEZ...
Who Was the Other Man? — U
1917
Who Will Marry Me? — U
1-26-19
Who's To Blame? — TRI
5- 19-18
Who's Your Brother? — CUT
11- 26-19
Who's Your Neighbor? — MAU
6- 21-17
Who's Your Servant?- — RC
3-14-20
Whole Town's Talking — U
9-12-26
Whole Town's Talking. The
(AT) — COL. .2-16-35
Whom the Gods Destroy — VIT
12- 14-16
Whom the Gods Destroy — FN
1919
Whom the Gods Destroy (AT)
COL. .7-13-34
Whoopee (AT) — UA. . . 10-5-30
Why America Will Win — F
9-29-18
17,238 TITLES
Why Announce Your Marriage?
SEZ. .1-22-22
Why Be Good? — FN. . . .5-12-29
Why Bring That Up? (AT &
S)— PAR. .10-13-29
Why Change Your Wife? —
PAR. .5-2-20
Why Cry at Parting (AT-
German) — FBI. .2-16-30
Why Do Men Marry — UNA
9-17-22
Why Germany Must Pay — M
1-19-19
Why Get Married — AE . . 6-1-24
Why Girls Go Back Home —
WA. .6-6-26
Why Girls Go Wrong — ROA
1-6-29
Why Girls Leave Home — WA
9-4-21
Why I Would Not Marry — F
11-24-18
Why Leave Home? (AT) — F
9-22-29
Why Leave Your Husband? —
EQA. .1921
Why Men Forget — FBO
I- 29-21
Why Men Leave Home — FN
5-25-24
Why Not? (AT-Italian) —
PAR. .9-28-30
Why Sailors Go Wrong — F
4-15-28
Why Saps Leave Home (AT) —
POP. .3-20-32
Why Smith Left Home— PAR
II- 2-19
Why Trust Your Husband? — F
1-30-21
Why Women Re-Marry — APH
11-25-23
Why Worry ? — PAT .... 9-9-23
Wicked (AT) — F 9-20-31
Wicked Darling — U ....2-2-19
Wicked Woman, A (AT) —
MGM. .12-8-34
Wickedness Preferred — M-G-M
9- 23-28
Wide Open — SU 1-23-27
Wide Open (AT) — WA. 3-30-30
Wide Open Faces (AT) — COL
4-18-38
Wide Open Town — SEZ. 2-26-22
Widecombe Fair — WW.. 11-3-29
Widow by Proxy — PAR
10- 5-19
Widow From Chicago (AT) —
FN. .12-21-30
Widow From Monte Carlo. The
(AT) — WA. . 12-9-3P
Widow in Scarlet (AT) —
MAF. .7-20-32
Widow's Might — PAR... 2-7-18
Wie Man Maenner Fesselt
(AT) — XX. .6-22-34
Wie Sag Ich Meinem Mann
( AT — UFA . . 1 -24-34
Wien, Du Stadt Der Lieder
(AT-German) — PRX. .3-22-31
Wiener Blut (AT) —
XX. .11-17-33
Wife Against Wife — FN.. 1922
Wife By Proxy — M 1-18-17
Wife, Doctor and Nurse (AT)
— P. .9-8-37
Wife He Bought — BL. . 2-14-18
Wife, Husband and Friend (AT)
— F. .2-27-39
Wife in Name Only — SEZ. 1024
Wife No. 2 — P 8-16-17
585
17,238 TITLES
Wife on Trial — BU 8-9-17
Wife or Country — TRI...1918
Wife of the Centaur — MG
I- 11-25
Wife of Country — TRI...1919
Wife of General Ling: (AT)
— GB. .1-31-38
Wife Only in Name (AT-
Polish) — XX 1938
Wife Savers — PAR 1-22-28
Wife Trap — PAR 1922
Wife vs. Secretary (AT) —
MGM. .2-19 38
Wife With a Past — U
Wife Who Wasn't Wanted —
WA. .9-13-25
Wife's Awakening- — RC
8-28-21
Wife's Relations — COL .4-1-28
Wife's Romance — M ...9-30-23
Wife's Sacrifice — F 3-30-16
Wild and Wooly — ART . . 7-5-17
Wild and Woolly (AT) —
F. .7-19-37
Wild Animal Life — PAR
Wild Beauty — U 9-26-27
Wild Bill Hickok — PAR
II- 25-23
Wild Blood— U 3-3-29
Wild Born — RA 1928
Wild Boys of the Road
(AT) — FN. .9-22-33
Wild Brian Kent (AT) —
RKO. .10-22-36
Wild Bull's Lair — FBO.. 8-2-25
Wild Cargo (AT) — RKO
3-24-34
Wild Company (AT) — F
7-20-30
Wild Geese — TIF 12-17-27
Wild Girl (AT)— F. . .11-23-32
Wild Girl — SE 11-8-17
Wild Girl— TRU 1925
Wild Girl of the Sierras — FAT
6-15-16
Wild Gold (AT) — F. . .7-24-34
Wild Goose Chase — TRI . . 1919
Wild Goose — PAR 6-16-21
Wild Heart of Africa — PAP
6-2-29
Wild Honey— SHE . . . 12-22-18
Wild Honey — U 3-5-22
Wild Horse (AT) — HOF
8-2-31
Wild Horse Canyon (AT) —
MOP. .1-3-39
Wild Horse Mesa (AT) —
PAR. .1-6-33
Wild Horse Mesa — PAR
8-16-25
Wild Horse Rodeo (AT) —
REP. .2-19-38
Wild Horse Stampede — U
8-15-26
Wild Horse Trail (AT) —
MOP. .1938
Wild Innocence (AT) —
GAF. .11-17-37
Wild Innocence (AT) — XX 1938
Wild Justice — UA 8-2-25
Wild Life — TRI 8-25-18
Wild Men of Kalihari — TPE
11-23-30
Wild Money (AT) —
PAR. .6-22-37
Wild Mustang- (AT) — <
WIB. .10-22-35
Wild Night — U 1920
Wild Oats— EDK 1-27-16
Wild Oats Lane — PDC. 4-1 1-26
Wild Oranges — MG 3-9-24
Wild Orchids — M-G-M . .4-7-29
Wild Party — U 10-7-23
Wild Party (AT & S) — PAR
4-7-29
Wild Primrose — VIT ..8-11-18
Wild Strain — VIT 1918
Wild Sumac — TRI 1917
Wild to Go — FBO ....5-23-26
Wild West Romance — F
6 10-28
Wild West Show — U. . .4-22-28
Wild West Whoopee (AT) —
COS. .3-8-31
Wild. Wild Susan — PAR
8-16-25
Wild Winship's Widow — TRI
6-31-17
Wild Women — TRI 3-7-18
Wild Women of Borneo
(S-SE) — FD. .4-24-32
Wild Youth — PAR 3-28-18
Wildcat — AY 1926
Wildcat — IND 1924
Wildcat — BM 5-3-17
Wildcat Jordan — GOL
10-29-22
Wildcat of Paris — U 1918
Wildcat Trooper (AT) —
AMB. .7-14-36
Wildcatter. The (AT) —
U. .6-14-37
Wilderness Mail (AT) —
AMB. .3-9-35
Wilderness Trail — F ...7-13-19
Wilderness Woman — FN
4-18-26
Wildfire — VIT 7-14-25
Wildflower — PAR 1914
Wildness of Youth — GRA
8-27-22
Wilful Youth — PEE 4-1-28
Will He Conquer Dempsey? —
SEZ. .1923
William Tell — PAR 1914
William Tell — SUS 5-24-25
William Tell (AT-German) —
GFS. .10-1-35
Williamson Submarine Pictures
— U. .1913
Willow Tree — M 1-11-20
Wilson or the Kaiser — M . .1918
Win, Lose or Draw — ARC. 1926
Win That Girl — F 12-11-27
Winchester Woman — VIT
11-16-19
Wind — M-G-M 11-11-28
Winding- Stair — F ....10-18-25
Winding- Trail — M ....1-24-18
Winding- Trail — KRA 1921
Windjammer — RA 1926
Windjammer (AT) —
RKO. .7-3-37
Window Opposite — TV ...1919
Winds of Chance — FN.. 8-30-25
Winds of the Pampas — HM
1928
Winds of the Wasteland (AT)
— REP. .7-11-36
Wine — U 9-14-24
Wine Girl — BL 4-4-18
Wine, Women and Horses (AT)
— WA. .10-1-37
Wine, Women and Song
(AT) — CHA. .12-16-33
Wine of Youth — MG. . .7-13-24
Wing- Toy— F 2-13-21
Winged Horseman — U . . 6-2-29
Winged Idol — TRI ...11-25-15
Winged Mystery — U 1917
Wings — PAR 8-21-27
Wings in the Dark (AT) —
PAR. .2-2-35
Wings of Adventure (AT) —
TIF. .8-10-30
Wings of Love — F
Wings of Pride — JA 1921
Wings of the Morning — F
12-7-19
586
Wings of the Morning (AT) —
F. .2-2-37
Wings of the Navy (AT) — WA
I- 19-39
Wings of the Storm — F
11-28-26
Wings of Youth — F ..6-10-25
Wings Over Africa (AT) —
ME. .8-7-39
Wings Over Ethiopia (S-SE) —
PAR. .10-14 35
Wings Over Honolulu (AT) —
U. .6-24-37
Winner. The — RA 1926
Winner Take All — F.. 10-19-24
Winner Takes All — U. .7-21-18
Winner Takes All (AT) —
WA. .6-18-32
Winner Take All (AT) — F
4-12-39
Winners of the Wilderness —
M-G-M. .4-3-27
Winning Girl — PAR 3-9-19
Winning Grandma — PAT
8-11-18
Winning His Wile — U
Winning Oar — EXP ...7-24-27
Winning of Barbara Worth —
UA. .12-12-26
Winning of Beatrice —
M. .5-26-18
Winning of Sally Temple — PAR
2-22-17
Winning the Futurity — CHA
1926
Winning Stroke — F ...10-5-19
Winning Ticket, The (AT) —
MGM. .2-9-35
Winning Wallop — LDM
II- 21-26
Winning with Wits — F. 1-15-22
Winter Carnival (AT) — UA
7-20-39
Winter Storms (AT-German)
— UFA. .1938
Winternachstraum (AT-
German) — XX. .12-30-35
Winterset (AT) —
RKO. .11-17-36
Wise Girl (AT) —
RKO. .12-23-37
Wise Girls (AT) — MGM
3- 23-30
Wise Fool — PAR 6-5-21
Wise Guy — FN 5-30-26
Wise Husbands — PI 1921
Wise Kid — U 2-26-22
Wise Son — MAX 1924
Wise Virgin — PDC 1924
Wise Wife — PAT 10-30-27
Wiser Sex, The (AT) —
PAR. .3-13-32
Wishing Ring Man — VIT
3-2-19
Wit Wins — HM 1919
Witch — F 3-9-16
Witching Hour — PAR ..3-6-21
Witching Hour — FRO .11-30-16
Witching Hour (AT) — PAR
4- 28-34
Witchcraft— PAR 10-26-16
Witchcraft Through the Ages —
MAL. .6-9-29
Witch Woman — PWO ..4-25-17
Witch Woman — MAL .4-14-29
With Byrd at the South Pole —
PAR. .6-22-30
With Car and Camera Around
the World— WAN. .12-22-29
With Hoops of Steel — HOD
6-12-18
With Love and Kisses (AT) —
MEL. .12-7-36
With This Ring — SCH . . 9-13-25
With Neatness and Dispatch —
M. .1918
With Williamson Under the Sea
(AT)— PRI. .11-26-32
Within the Cup — HOD .3-21-18
Within the Law — VIT. . 5-17-17
Within the Law — FN. . .5-6-23
Within the Law (AT) —
MGM . .4-12-39
Within the Week (AT) —
FD. .1935
Without Benefit ot Clergy —
PAT. .6-26-21
Without Children (AT) —
FD. .1935
Without Compromise — F
11-12-22
Without Fear — F 4-23-22
Without Honor (AT) —
ARC. .1-10-32
Without Honor — TRI .12-20-17
Without Limit — M . . . .2-20-21
Without Mercy — PDC .10-11-25
Without Orders (AT) —
RKO. .9-25-36
Without Regret (AT) —
PAR. .9-13-35
Witness Chair, The (AT) —
RKO. .4-17-36
Witness for the Defense — PAR
9-28-19
Witness Vanishes, The (AT) —
U. .10-27-39
Wits vs. Fits — HAL. .. .6-6-20
Wives at Auction — TRS..1926
Wives and Other Wives — PAT
12-8-18
Wives Beware (AT) —
REN. .5-2-33
Wives Never Know (AT) —
PAR. .9-9-36
Wives of Men — PI 9-1-18
Wives of the Prophet — LBR
1926
Wives Under Suspicion (AT)
— U. .6-7-38
Wizard — F 12-11-27
Wizard of Oz — CHA . .4-19-25
Wizard of Oz, The (AT) —
MGM. .8-10-39
Wizard of the Saddle— FBO
12-11-28
Wolf Blood — LBR 1925
Wolf — VIT 8-10-19
Wolf and His Mate — BU
12-6-17
Wolf Call (AT)— MOP. 5-23-39
Wolf Hunters — RA ...9-19-26
Wolf Lowry — TRI 6-7-17
Wolf of Debt — U 9-30-15
Wolf Law — U 10-22-22
Wolf Man — F 3-16-24
Wolf Pack — SR 1922
Wolf Woman — INC ...8-31-16
Wolf Fangs — F 12-11-27
Wolf of Wall Street (AT & S)
— PAR. .2-3-29
Wolf Riders (AT) — COE..1935
Wolf Song (PT & S) — PAR
3-3-29
Wolf's Clothing — WA ..1-23-27
Wolf's Fangs — PS 1922
Wolf's Trail— U 11-27-27
Wolverine — APH 1921
Wolves of the City — U
2-17-29
Wolves of the Air — STE
2-6-27
Wolves of the Border — TRI
5-12-18
Wolves of the Desert — RA
1926
Wolves of the Night — F
7-27-19
Wolves of the North — U
5-15-21
Wolves of the Rail — ART
1-17-18
Wolves of the Sea (AT) —
GUA. .2-4-38
Wolves of the Street — ARW
1920
Wolves of the Underworld
(AT) — REG. .12-10-35
Woman — HWF 11-3-18
Woman Above Reproach — AY
1920
Woman Accused (AT) —
PAR. .3-11-33
Woman Alone, A — PBW
1- 4-17
Woman and the Beast — GRA
12-13-17
Woman and the Law — F
3- 28-18
Woman and the Puppet — G
4- 11-20
Woman Against the World —
TIF. .3-25-28
Woman Against the World
(AT) — COL 5-11-38
Woman Against Woman (AT)
— MGM. .6-18-38
Woman Alone, The (AT) —
GB. .1-9-37
Woman and the Law — BRI
1928
Woman and Wife — SE.. 1-17-18
Woman Beneath — PWO
10- 25-17
Woman Between (AT) — RKO
6-21-31
Woman Between Friends — VIT
2-28-18
Woman Breed — FBO 1922
Woman Chases Man (AT) —
UA. .4-27-37
Woman Commands, A (AT) —
RKO. .1-31-32
Woman Condemned (AT) —
MAC. .4-20-34
Woman Conquers — FN
2- 25-23
Woman Decides, A (AT) —
POP. .9-29-32
Woman Disputed — UA
11- 11-28
Woman Doctor (AT) — REP
I- 31-39
Woman from Hell — F.. 7-28-29
Woman from Monte Carlo
(AT) — FN. .1-3-32
Woman from Moscow — PAR
11-11-28
Woman Game — SE ....3-14-20
Woman Gives — FN 4-18-20
Woman God Changed — PAR
6-5-21
Woman God Forgot — ART
II- 8-17
Woman God Sent — SE. .7-18-20
Woman Hunter — WA . .7-19-25
Woman He Chose — MIC
11-23-19
Woman He Loved — AR
9-10-22
Woman He Loved — SEZ..1923
Woman He Married — FN
4-16-22
Woman in Bondage (AT) —
AUT. .11-19-32
Woman in Command — (AT)
GB. .5-29-34
Woman in 47 — EQ 2-17-16
Woman in Red (AT) —
FN. .3-23-35
Woman in the Dark (AT) '
RKO. .12-4-34
Woman is the Judge (AT) —
COL. .10-3-30
Woman Hungry (AT) — FN
3-22-31
Woman I Love — RKO .... 19*9
Woman I Love, The (AT) —
RKO. .4-16-37
Woman I Stole (AT) —
COL. .6-30-33
Woman in Chains — AMG..1923
Woman in Distress (AT) —
COL. .1-19-37
17,238 TITLES
Woman in His House — FN
8-15-20
Woman in Politics — MT.
1-20-16
Woman in Room 13 — G
4-11-20
Woman in Room 13 (AT) —
F. .6-22-32
Woman in the Case — PAR
8-10-16
Woman in the Night — WW
3-17-29
Woman in the Suitcase — PAR
1-18-20
Woman in White — -PAT
6- 28-17
Woman in White — WW
7- 21-29
Woman Michael Married — EXI
7-27-19
Woman Next Door — EDK
9-9-16
Women in Prison (AT) — COL
3-2-38
Women of All Nations (AT) —
F. .5-31-31
Woman of Affairs — MGM
1-27-29
Woman of Bronze — M.. 4-1-23
Woman of Experience (AT) —
PAT. .7-12-31
Woman of Impulse — PAR
9-22-18
Woman of Lies — WO.. 11-2-19
Woman of Mystery — AY.. 1921
Woman of No Importance —
SEZ. .6-11-22
Woman of Pleasure — PAT
9- 14-19
Woman of Paris — UA. . 10-7-23
Woman of Redemption — WO
6-30-18
Woman of the World — PAR
12-27-25
Woman on the Index — G
3- 30-19
Woman on the Jury — FN
5- 25-24
Woman on Trial — PAR
10- 2-27
Woman Pays — M 1915
Woman Proof — PAR ..11-4-23
Woman Pursued (AT) — RKO
1931
Woman Racket (AT) — MGM
4- 13-30
Woman Rebels .A (AT) —
RKO. .10-28-36
Woman Tempted — AY .2-26-28
Woman the German Shot — PLC
11- 2-18
Woman There Was — F. . 6-8-19
Woman Thou Gavest Me — PAR
6- 15-19
Woman to Woman — SEZ
1-20-24
Woman to Woman (AT & S) —
TIF. .11-17-29
Woman Trap (AT & S) — PAR
9-1-29
Woman Trap (AT)— PAR . 1935
Woman Trap (AT) —
PAR. .3-6-36
Woman Unafraid (AT) — GOS
3-27-34
Woman Under Cover — U
9-14-19
Woman Under Oath — TRB
6-22-19
Woman Untamed — SR
10-31-20
Woman, Wake Up — AE..1922
Woman Wanted (AT) —
MGM. .8-10-35
587
17,238 TITLES
Woman Who Believed — -ARC
1922
Woman Who Came Back — AE
8- 13-22
Woman Who Dared — CAL
7- 20-10
Woman Who Dared (AT) —
IML. .9-6-34
Woman Who Did Not Care — -
LUM. .8-21-2?
Woman Who Fooled Herself —
AE. .11-12-22
Woman Who Gave — P
10- 20-18
Woman Who Sinned — FBO
3 9-24
Woman Who Walked Alone —
PAR. .0-11-22
Woman Who Was Forgotten
(PT) — STB. .1-26-30
Woman Wise — F 3-11-28
Woman Wise (AT) — F .1-16-3'
Woman With Four Faces — PAR
6-24 23
Woman Without a Heart — PAT
Woman. Woman — F 1919
Woman's Awakening — FAT
3-29-17
Woman's Business — -JA .8-1-20
Woman's Experience — BBF
9- 29 18
Woman's Faith — U ....8-9-26
Woman's Fight — PAT .8-31-10
Woman's Fool — U 8-4-18
Woman's Heart — STE .9-28-20
Woman's Honor — F ...0-15-10
Woman's Law — PEE .11-13-27
Woman's Law — PAT . .3-30-10
Woman's Man — ARW .0-13-20
Woman's Man. A (AT) — MOP
Woman's Paradise (AT-German)
— XX. .1939
1-19-34
Woman's Past — F 12 9-15
Woman's Place — FN .10-23-21
Woman's Power — WO . .3-2-10
Woman's Resurrection — F . 1915
Woman's Secret — APA . . 1924
Woman's Side — FN ....4-9-22
Woman's Triumph — PAR .1914
Woman's Wares — TIF
11- 13-27
Woman's Way — BRA . . 8-10-1 0
Woman's Way — COL ....1927
Woman's Weapon — PAR
Woman's Woman — UA .10-9-22
Woman's Woman — SR ...1922
Woman's World (S) —
AM. .1-28-33
Womanhandled — PAR . 1-10-20
Womanhood — VIT 4-5-17
Womanpower — F 9-26-25
Women, The (AT) — MGM
8- 29-39
Women and Gold — GOT
1-18-24
Women Are Like That (AT)
— WA. .4-13-38
Women Are Trouble (AT) —
MGM . .6-13-30
Women Everywhere (AT) — F
6-1-30
Women First — COL ..12-14-24
Women in His Life (AT) —
MGM. .12-9-33
Women in the Wind (AT) —
WA. .4-21-39
Women Go On Forever (AT) —
TIF. .8-16 31
Women Love Once (AT) —
PAR. .6-28-31
Women Love Diamonds —
M-G-M. .4-17-27
Women Men Forget — UNI
3-14-20
Women Men Love — BRD
1- 23-21
Women Men Marry — GEO
10- 29-22
Women Men Marry (AT) —
HEA. .4-19-31
Women Men Marry. The (ATI
— MGM. .1937
Women Must Dress (AT) —
MOP. .1-22-35
Women of Glamour (AT) —
COL. .3-9-37
Women of Niskaniori (AT-
Finnish) — XX 1938
Women They Talk About (PT
& S) — WA.. 10-21-28
Women Who Dare — EXP
5- 13-28
Women Who Give — MG
3-16-24
Women Who Wait — (See "For-
bidden Love")
Women Without Men — FFS
1928
Women Won't Tell (AT) —
CHE. .1-13 33
Women's Law — PEE .... 1928
Won in the Clouds — U....1928
Wonder Bar (AT) — FN
2- 17-34
Wonder Man — RC 6-6-20
Wonder of Woman (AT) —
MGM. .9-22-29
Wonder of Women (PT & S) —
M-G-M. .7-28-29
Wonderful Adventure — F
9- 30-15
Wonderful Chance — SEZ
10- 3-20
Wonderful Lies of Nina Petrova
— UFA. .6-8-30
Wonderful Thin? — FN
11- 31-21
Wonderful Wife — U ...4-23-22
Wonders of the Sea — WIM
10-29 22
Wood Nymph — FAT ...1-13-16
Wooden Shoes — TRI ... 8-30-17
Wooing of Princess Pat — VIT
2-21-18
Words and Music — F ....1919
Words and Music (AT) — F
1929
Working Girls (AT) —
PAR. .1931
Working- Man (AT) —
WA. .4-12-33
World Accuses. The (AT) —
CHE. .3-21-35
World Aflame — PAT ...8-3-19
World Against Him — PBW
12- 21-16
World and His Wife — PAR
7- 18-20
World and Its Women — G
9-21-19
World and the Flesh (AT) —
PAR. .5-8-32
World and the Woman — PAT
11- 2-16
World Apart — PAR 1917
World at Her Feet — PAR
8- 21-27
World Changes (AT) —
FN. .10-28-33
World for Sale — PAR 1918
World Gone Mad (AT) —
MAJ. .4-15-3.3
World in Revolt (AT) — MET
6-9-34
World of Folly — F 6-13-20
World Moves On (AT) — F
6- 30-34
World to Live In — SE . . 2-23-19
World's a Stage — PRI .1-28-23
World's Applause — PAR
2- 4-23
World's Champion — PAR
3- 5-22
World's Great Snare — PAR
7- 6-16
World's in Love. The (AT-
German) — VIE. .6-11-37
Worldly Goods — PAR .11-9-24
Worldly Goods (AT) — COT
8- 3-30
Worldly Madonna — EQU
7-16-2"?
Worlds Apart — SEZ ...2-27-21
Worst of Friends — TRI
1- 13 10
Worst Woman in Paris?
(AT) — F. .11-25-33
Would You Believe It? (AT) —
BIF. .1930
Would You Forgive? — F
4-18-20
Wrath — TRI 3-8-17
Wrath of the Sea — KEM..1929
Wreck — COL 3-20-27
Wreck — VIT 1917
Wreck of the Hesperus — PAT
12-4-27
Wreckage — BAE 8-30-25
Wrecker. The (AT) —
COL. .8-5-33
Wrecker — TIF 8-18-29
Wright Idea — FN 8-26-28
Writing on the Wall — -VLS
2- 10-16
Wrong Door — BL 3-2-16
Wrong Mr. Wright — U. 2-27-27
Wrong Road. The (AT) —
REP. .9-23-37
Wrong Woman — GRA . . . 1921
Wrongdoers — -AST 1925
Wuthering Heights (AT) —
UA. .3-28-39
Wyoming — M-G-M 8-6-28
Wyoming Outlaw (AT) — REP
7-13-39
Wyoming Whirlwind (AT) —
CAP. .10-12-32
Wyoming Wildcat — FBO.. 1925
X
X Marks the Spot (AT) —
TIF. .12-13-31
Yank at Oxord, A (AT) —
MGM. .1-27-38
Yankee Clipper — PDC ..5-8-27
Yankee Consul — AE ..2-24-24
Yankee Don (AT) — CAP
6-17-31
Yankee Doodle in Berlin — LES
4-13-19
Yankee Doodle. Jr. — BUN
3-19 22
Yankee Girl — PAR ...10-28-15
Yankee Go-Getter — ARW .1921
Yankee Madness— FBO .4-6-24
Yankee Pluck — PBW ..5-24-17
Yankee Princess — VIT .4-13-19
Yankee Senor — F 1-31-26
Yankee Speed — SU .... 7-20-24
Yankee Way — F 1917
Yanko Muzykant (AT) —
ZBY. .3-13 33
Yaqui — BL 3-30-16
Years of the Locust — PAR
11-23-16
Yellowback — RKO 5-12-29
Yellow Back — U 11-7-26
Yellow Cargo (AT) —
PAF. .6-6-36
Yellow Contraband — PAT
10-14-28
588
Yellow Cruise (AT) —
FRM . . 10-30-36
Yellow Dog — U 10-24-18
Yellow Dust (AT) —
RKO. .2-25-36
Yellow Fingers — F 4-4-26
Yellow Jack (AT) — MGM
5-18-38
Yellow Lily — FN 5-27-28
Yellow Mask, The (AT) — BI
12-7-30
Yellow Men and Gold — G
6-11-22
Yellow Pass — AM 5-3-31
Yellow Passport — WO .2-24-16
Yellow Pawn — PAR ..11-30-16
Yellow Stain — F 5-14-22
Yellow Streak — RA 1927
Yellow Streak — M 12-9-15
Yellow Ticket — AM ..12-16-28
Yellow Ticket (AT) — F
11-1-31
Yellow Tickets — PAT 1918
Yellow Typhoon — FN .5-16-20
Yellowstone (AT) — U.. 9-19-36
Yes. My Darling- Daughter (AT)
— WA. .2-15-39
Yes or No — FN 7-11-20
Yesterday's Wife — CBC . . . 1923
Yiddish King- Lear (AT-
Yiddish) — RIE. .11-5-35
Yiddle With His Fiddle (AT-
Yiddish) — SPI. .1-4-37
Yodelin' Kid from Pine Ridge
(AT) — REP. .10-16-37
Yoke of Gold — RED. .8-17-16
Yolande — MG 2-24-24
Yorck (AT-German) —
UFA. .10-29-32
Yosemite Trail — F 9-17-22
You and I — RAF 3-6-21
You and Me (AT) — PAR
6-3-38
You Are Guilty — MAS. 3-25-23
You Are in Danger — BLA
12-2-23
You Belong- to Me (AT) —
PAR. .9-13-34
You Can't Beat Love (AT) —
RKO. .6-28-37
You Can't Beat the Law — RA
4-1-28
You Can't Believe Everything —
TRI. .6-23-18
You Can't Buy Everything
(AT) — MGM. .2-3-34
You Can't Buy Luck (AT) —
RKO. .5-17-37
You Can't Cheat An Honest
Man (AT) — U. .2-20-39
You Can't Fool Your Wife —
PAR. .4-29-23
You Can't Get Away With It —
F. .1923
You Can't Get Away With
Murder (AT) — WA. .3-29-39
You Can't Have Everything
(AT) — F. .7-28-37
You Can't Take It With You
(AT) — COL 8-26-38
You Find It Everywhere —
HOW. .3-20-21
You Made Me Love You (AT)
— MAJ. .5-31-34
You May Be Next (AT) —
COL. .2-25-36
You Never Can Tell — REA
10-10-20
You Never Know — VIT...1922
You Never Know Women —
PAR. .8-1-26
You Never Know Your Luck —
HOD. .1919
You Never Saw Such a Girl —
PAR. .3-9-19
You Only Live Once (AT) —
UA. .1-27-37
You Said a Mouthful (AT) —
FN. .11-18-32
You Will Be My Husband
(AT-Hung-arian) — XX ..1938
You'd Be Surprised — PAR
10- 3-26
Young America (AT) — F
5-8-32
Young And Beautiful (AT) —
MAP. .8-30-34
Young April — PDC ...10-17-26
Young As You Feel (AT) —
F. .8-9-31
Young Blood (AT) —
MOP. .1-18-33
Young Bride (AT) — RKO
4- 17-32
Young Desire (AT) — U. 7-6-30
Young Diana — PAR ...7-30-22
Young Dr. Kildare (AT) —
MGM. .10-12-38
Young Donovan's Kid (AT) —
RKO. .5-24-31
Young Dynamite (AT) — -
CNN. .12-15-37
Young Eagles (AT) — PAR
3-23-30
Young Forest (AT-Polish) —
XX. .12-3-35
Young Fugitives (AT) — U
6-30-38
Young Ideas — U 7-6-24
Young in Heart, The (AT) —
UA. .11-4-38
Young Man of Manhattan (AT)
— PAR. .4-20-30
Young Mr. Lincoln (AT) —
F. .6-2-39
Young Mrs. Winthrop — PAR
3-28-20
Young Mother Hubbard — ES
11- 1-17
Young Nowheres (AT & S) —
FN. .10-6-29
Young Pushkin (AT-Russian)
— AM. .12-17-37
Young Rajah — PAR ..11-12-22
Young Sinners (AT) — F
5- 10-31
Young Whirlwind — FBO
10-21-28
Young Woodley (AT) — BI
9-28-30
Younger Generation (PT & S)
COL. .3-17-29
Your Astray — LEE ....7-1-28
Your Best Friend — WA . 3-26-22
Your Daughter and Mine — CBP
1921
Your Friend and Mine — M
1919
Your Friend and Mine — M
3-18-23
Your Uncle Dudley (AT) —
F. .11-4-35
Your Wife and Mine — EXP
1927
Your Wife and Mine — SR
4-6-19
You're a Sweetheart (AT) —
U. .12-14-37
You're Fired — PAR ...6-22-19
You're in the Army Now (AT)
— GB. .3-1-37
You're Only Young Once (AT)
— MGM. .1937
You're Only Young Once
(AT) — MGM 2-21-38
You're Telling Me (AT) —
PAR. .4-7-34
Yours for the Asking (AT) —
PAR. .8-20-36
Yours to Command — FBO . 1927
Youth — PWO 8-9-17
Youth (AT-German) — XX. 1939
Youth and Adventure — FBO
1925
Youth Astray — GLO 1928
Youth for Sale — BR.. 10-19-24
Youth in Revolt (AT-French) —
COL. .5-24-39
17,238 TITLES
Youth Must Have Love — F
9-10-22
Youth of Fortune— U. . .6-4-16
Youth of Maxim (AT-
Russian) — AM. .4-20-35
Youth of Russia (AT) —
XX. .11-12-34
Youth on Parole (AT) —
REP. .10-7-37
Youth Takes a Fling (AT) —
U. .9-27-38
Youth to Youth — M.. 10-29-22
Youth's Desire — FOR .... 1921
Youth's Endearing Charm —
AMU. .8-31-16
Youth's Gamble — RA .7-26-25
Youthful Cheaters — HOD
5-27-23
Youthful Ecstasy— -UFA .1928
Youthful Folly — SE ...4-3-20
Yukon Flight (AT) — MOP.1939
Yvonne from Paris — PAT.7-6-19
z
Zabawka (AT-Polish) — HOB
1939
Zamboanga — FIP 7-13-37
Zander the Great — MG. 5-10-25
Zandunga (AT-Spanish) — XX
1938
Zappatore (S-SE) — NAP. 4-3-32
Zaza — PAR 10-7-16
Zaza (AT) — PAR 1-4-39
Zaza — PAR 9-23-23
Zein Weib's Lubovnick (AT-
Yiddish) — HAP. .10-4-31
Zenobia (AT) — -UA ...3-14-39
Zero Hour — WO 1918
Zero Hour (AT)— REP . 5-24-39
Ziegeunerbaron (AT-German) —
UFA. .9-16-35
Ziel In Den Wolken (AT-
German) — UFA. .1939
Zigeunerblut (AT-German) —
XX. .4-10-35
Zirkus Leben (AT-German)
FAF. .12-28-32
Zivatar a Pusztan (AT-
Hungarian) — DAN. .4-27-37
Zlata Katerina (AT-German) —
UFA. .1935
Zollenstein — RAL 1917
Zongar — MCF 1-24-18
Zoo in Budapest (AT) —
F. .4-12-33
Zopfenstreich am Rhein
(AT) — WHI. .2-8-33
Zsivany Becsuelet (AT-
Hungarian) — XX. .10-31-35
Zu Neuen Ufern (AT-German)
— UFA . . 2-4-3£
Zu Strassburg Auf Der Schanz
(AT-German) — XX. .2-17-3C
Zwei Gute Kameraden
(AT) — XX. .12-5-3E
Zwei Herzen Und Ein Schlag
(AT-German) — UFA. .9-10-35;
Zwei Iin Sonnenschein (AT-
German) — CAS. .8-27-37
Zwei Krawatten (AT-
German) — CAP. .1-17-32
Zwei Lustige Abenteurer
(AT-German) — UFA .1-6-38
Zwei Menschen (AT-German)
— CAP. .12-27-31
Zweimal Zwei im Himmel-
bett (AT-German) —
UFA. .2-9-38
Zwischen Himmel und Erde
(AT-German) — BAU. .1-22-35
Zwischen Zwei Herzen (AT-
German ) — XX . . 1 -29-3R
589
EXCLUSIVE THEATRE
COVERAGE
COAST TO COAST
COMPLETE EDITORIAL
PRODUCTION AND DISTRIBUTION
SERVICE FOR
ADVERTISING
AGENCIES
Production under supervision o{
H. G. CHRISTENSEN of
WFST COAST SOUND STUDIOS, INC.
BLACK & WHITE
CINECOLOR — TECHNICOLOR
USED BY
CAMEL
CHEVROLET
EVEREADY
FEEN-A-MINT
FORD
WESTLNGHi
Distributors ol
Commercial Film
with More Than
8.000 Theatres
Under ConJrad
30 ROCKEFELLER PLAZA • NEW YORK CITY
A. E. FAIR. President
Distributors In
NEW YORK - CLEVELAND - MINNEAPOLIS - KANSAS CITY - NEW ORLEANS - DALLAS
591
CINEMA SALES, INC.
JACK GALLAGHER, EXECUTIVE PRODUCER
Producers of
Commercial Motion Pictures
for Both Theatres and Private Distribution
Producing at
1041 North Formosa Hollywood, Calif.
Granite 5111
592
NON-THEATRICAL
Personnel and 1939 activities of companies associated
with Sponsored, Commercial, Advertising
and Industrial motion pictures.
Action Film Co., Inc.
2901 Prairie Ave., Chicago, 111.
CALumet 2475
Producer, organized in 1917, operating in the
Midwest.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced :
Institutional Films
One, 35 mm., sound, color
Five, 35 mm., sound, black and white
Four, 16 mm., sound, color
One. 16 mm., silent, color
Sales-Dealer Instruction Films
Two, 35 mm., sound, black and white
Sponsored Films
Three, 35 mm., sound, black and white
Short Length Ad Films
185. 35 mm., sound, black and white
Slide Films
Three, 35 mm., sound, black and white
PERSONNEL
President B. G. Phillips
Vice-President J. J. Phillips
Photographer Fred Hafferkamp
Sound C. P. Meek
Laboratory Supt Stanley Polinski
Artist Manfred Polly
Title Supt Irving Harding
Alexander Film Company
Alexander Film Bldg., Colorado Springs, Colo.
Main 4200
Producer and distributor, organized January,
1919, operating internationally.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced and Distributed:
Short Length Ad Films
1.000, 35 mm., sound, color
3.000, 35 mm., sound, black and white
PERSONNEL
President J. Don Alexander
Vice-President D. M. Alexander
Secretary -Treasurer John White
V-P in chg. of Sales M. J. Mclnaney
American Film Corp.
6227 N. Broadway, Chicago, 111.
ROgers Park 3202
Producer and distributor, organized in 1936,
operating internationally.
Andlauer Film Co.
Ozark Bldg., Kansas City, Mo.
Victor 4658
Producer and distributor, organized in 1918,
operating nationally.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced and Distributed:
Institutional Films
Three, 35 mm., sound, black and white
Five, 35 mm., silent, black and white
Two, 16 mm., sound, black and white
Five, 16 mm., silent, black and white
Short Length Ad Films
10, 35 mm., sound, black and white
10, 16 mm., silent, black and white
Slide Films
Seven, 35 mm., sound, black and white
10, 16 mm., silent, black and white
PERSONNEL
President W. A. Andlauer
Vice-President Arka Andlauer
Secretary-Treasurer Dorothy Logan
Chief of Staff William Logan
Associated Screen iVews, Ltd.
5271 Western Ave., Montreal, Canada
Dexter 1186
100 Adelaide St., W., Toronto, Canada
Waverly 4671
Producer and distributor, organized in 1921.
operating in Canada and Newfoundland.
PERSONNEL
Managing Director B. E. Norrish
Secretary-Treasurer T. S. Morrisey
Sales Manager W. J. Singleton
Toronto Manager F. E. O'Byrne
Mgr. 16 mm. Division S. S. Tait
Production Supervisor Gordon Sparling
Technical Supervisor M. Metzger
Art Department Mgr H. Peberdy
Still Department Mgr H. R. Bassett
Atlantic Screen Service
1024 Forbes St., Pittsburgh, Pa.
GRant 2230
Producer, organized in 1925, operating in the
East.
PERSONNEL
Managing Director Leora F. Stanton
Promotion N. Ralph Stantley
Camera Technician Frank J. Pushwa
Assistant Technician Wilbur Legge
Art B. W. Holland, Lou Kwadrat
Secretary Freda Brog
Atlas Educational Film Co.
1111 South Blvd., Oak Park, 111.
AUStin 8620
Producer, organized in 1913, operating nation-
ally.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced:
Institutional Films
Two, 35 mm., sound, color
12, 35 mm., sound black and white
One, 35 mm., silent, color
Three, 35 mm., silent, black and white
Five. 16 mm., sound, color
Four, 16 mm., sound, black and white
One. 16 mm., silent, black and white
Sales-Dealer Instruction Films
Five, 35 mm., sound, black and white
Sponsored Films
One, 35 mm., sound, color
Short Length Ad Films
Two, 35 mm., sound, color
10, 35 mm., sound, black and white
Slide Films
Five, 35 mm., sound, color
20, 35 mm., sound, black and white
One, 35 mm., silent, color
10, 35 mm., silent, black and white
593
SPONSORED PICTU RES
Distributed By
Reg. U. S. Pat. Off.
In all Exchange Cities are selected for:
1. AUDIENCE APPEAL
2. ENTERTAINMENT VALUE
3. PROFITABLE TIE-UPS
Smart Exhibitors Build Box Office with Modern's
Free Sponsored Pictures
Current Releases
1. THE MIDDLETON FAMILY AT THE
NEW YORK WORLD'S FAIR
(All Technicolor)
2. YOUR TOWN
3. 5 GRAND AND A GIRL
4. THREE MAGIC WORDS
5. HERE'S TO HEALTH
6. YOURS TRULY, ED GRAHAM
MODERN TALKING PICTURE SERVICE, INC.
9 ROCKEFELLER PLAZA, NEW YORK, N. Y.
Circle 6-0910
Or Your Exchange City
594
PERSONNEL
President-General Manager I. R. Rehm
Production Manager A. B. Rehm
Chief Sound Engineer C. W. Wickeraeyer
Camera Dept. Head Harry Peterson
Story Editor John G. Curtis
Still Dept. Head L. A. Henning
.Audio Pictures, Ltd.
358 Adelaide St., E., Toronto, Ont.
Waverly
Producer and distributor, operating in Canada.
PERSONNEL
President Arthur Gottlieb
Manager J. M. Alexander
Sales Manager J. J. Burns
Audio Productions, Inc.
35-11 35th Ave.. Long Island City, N. Y.
RAvenswood 8-8300
Producer, organized in 1933, operating nation-
ally.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced :
Institutional Films
1, 35 mm., sound, color
6, 35 mm., sound, black and white
2, 16 mm., sound, color
6. 16 mm., sound, black and white
Sales-Dealer Instruction Films
1, 35 mm., sound, color
4, 35 mm., sound, black and white
I, 16 mm., sound, color
4. 16 mm., sound, black and white
Sponsored Films
4. 35 mm., sound, black and white
4, 16 mm., sound, black and white
Instructional Films
26, 35 mm., sound, black and white
26, 16 mm., sound, black and white
PERSONNEL
President Frank K. Speidell
Vice-President A. J. Wilson
Secretary Treasurer E. G. Wagner
Asst. Seey.-Treas P. J. Mooney
General Manager R. R. Snody
Production Manager H. Roessle
Sound Dir. -Studio Mgr R. 0. Strock
Dir. Medical Division S. S. Feuerman
Auerbach Educational
Productions
2001 California St., San Francisco, Calif.
Filmore 4960
Producer, organized in 1910, operating in the
West.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced:
Sponsored Films
Seven, 35 mm., sound, color
Five, 16 mm., sound, color
PERSONNEL
Director Irvomg Auerbach
Collaborator Myrtle Auerbach
Blache Screen Service
292 Turk St., San Francisco, Calif.
ORdway 0272
Producer, organized in 1922, operating nation-
ally.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced:
Sales-Dealer Instruction Films
II, 35 mm., sound, black and white
Sponsored Films
284, 35 mm., sound, black and white
Short Length Ad Films
863, 35 mm., sound, black and white
PERSONNEL
President-General Manager Maurice Blache
Sales Director William F. Thomas
Camera Dept. Head Verne Rucker
Field Manager E. C. MacGlashan
Laboratory Dept. Head Albert Perry
Art Director L. A. Sawyer
Miniature Dept. Head Charles A. Moyer
Chief Sound Engineer Robert O'Neil
Dialogue Editor Charles F. Concannon
Still Dept. Head Zan Stark
NON-THEATRICAL
Al O. Bondy
630 Ninth Ave., New York, N. Y.
Circle 6-67 I I
Distributor, operating nationally.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Distributed:
Institutional Films
Six, 36 mm., sound, black and white
Produced by General Electric, Schenectady.
N. Y.
PERSONNEL
Distribution Manager Albert O. Bondy
Booking Manager Martha R. Albert
Bray Pictures Corp.
729 Seventh Ave., New York, N. Y.
BRyant 9-6911
Producer and distributor, organized in 1919,
operating in the U. S. and Canada.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced and Distributed:
Institutional Films
12. 35 mm., sound, black and white
12, 35 mm., silent, black and white
12, 16 mm., silent, black and white
Sales-Dealer Instruction Films
One, 35 mm., sound, black and white
Sponsored Films
Three. 35 mm., sound, black and white
Two, 16 mm., silent, black and white
Slide Films
Seven, 35 mm., sound, black and white
PERSONNEL
President J. R. Bray
Vice-President P. A. Bray
Treasurer M. Bray
Mgr. Educational Distribution S. Zeisler
Mgr. Industrial Distribution P. A. Bray
Brobuch, Inc.
15 E. Bethune St., Detroit, Mich.
Madison 5860
Producer, organized, July, 1937. operating in
the Middle West and East.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced:
Sales-Dealer Instruction Films
One, 16 mm., sound, black and white
One. 16mm., sound, color
Slide Films
121, 35 mm., sound, black and white
One. 35 mm., silent, color
One, 35 mm., sound, color
11, 35 mm., silent, black and white
PERSONNEL
President George Broach
Vice-President William Alley
Business Films, Inc.
7315 Olive St. Rd., St. Louis, Mo.
Cabany 0044
Producer, organized January, 1937, operating
in the Middle West.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced:
Institutional Films
Three. 36 mm., sound, black and white
One, 35 mm., silent, black and white
Sponsored Films
Three, 35 mm., sound, black and white
Slide Films
One, 35 mm., sound, color
One, 35 mm., silent, color
Nine, 35 mm., silent, black and white
PERSONNEL
President Robert R. Laughlin
Vice-President Irvin A. Eckman
Secretary-Treasurer Howard R. Duermann
595
MOGULL'S, INC
8-16 mm. MOTION PICTURE EQUIPMENT
TRADES ACCEPTED
EXPORT SALES
Mogull-Duplex — America's Finest 16mm SOF
15-30 watt output • 750-1000 watt illumination • 12" speaker
26 improved features. Guaranteed Two Years. Reg. $410.
Special to Theatrical $
and Institutional Trade
289
50
Direct S.O.F. Agents for:
Bell & Howell, Ampro, Victor, DeVry, Holmes, Universal
Time Payments Arranged
ENORMOUS
More than 5,000 on hand!
CHOICE
RENTAL
16mm Silent Subjects
8000
LIRRARY
More than 3,000 on hand!
FILMS
16 mm SOUND-ON-FILM
Special Rates to Schools, Churches and Roadshows
MOGULL'S, INC.
68 WEST 48th STREET, NEW YORK CITY
Opposite Radio City
596
Canadian Government
Motion Picture Bureau
John S Sussex Sts., Ottawa, Canada
Telephone 2-831 I
Producer and distributor, organized in 191S.
operating internationally.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced and Distributed:
Inspirational Films
28. .'15 and 16 mm., sound black and white
140. 35 and lti mm., silent black and white
PERSONNEL
Director (Chief Executive) . .F. C. Badgley. If. C.
Exec. Asst. in dig. of Distribution. .A. McK. Shaw
Production Supervisor J. Booth Scott
Chief, M. P. Div. and Lab. Super W. S. Cartel-
Chief, lti mm. Section S. H. Hollebone
Chief, Still Division E. M. Finn
Film Library and Shipping: W. E. Sarrazin
Accounts Miss G. W. Shaw
Caravel Films, inc.
730 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y.
Circle 7-6113
Producer and distributor, organized in 1923,
operating- nationally.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced :
Institutional Films
Eight, 35 and 16 mm., color and black and
white
Sales-Dealer Instruction Films
16, 35 mm., color and black and white
Educational Films
Five. 35 and 16 mm., color and black and white
Short Length Ad Films
Three, 35 and 16 mm., color and black and
white
Slide Films
18, 16 mm., color and black and white
Produced at Caravel Studios, 132 Prospect St.,
Hempstead. N. Y.
PERSONNEL
President Robert C. McKean
Treasurer David I. Pincus
Secretary Joseph Rothman
Cast If Films, Inc.
30 Rockefeller Plaza, New York, N. Y.
Circle 6-8210
Producer and distributor, organized in 1919.
operating nationally.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced and Distributed:
Institutional Films
Two. 16 mm., sound, color
22. 16 mm., sound, black and white
Two. 16 mm., silent, color
12. 16 mm., silent, black and white
Sales-Dealer Instruction Films
Two, 16 mm., sound, color
Eight, 16 mm., sound, black and white
Eight, 16 mm., silent, black and white
PERSONNEL
President Eugene W. Castle
Treasurer Harry J. Spiess
Director Don Hancock
Technical Director Charles Charlton
Chief Cameraman John A. Lepanne
Western Representative Walter A. Rivers
Mid-West Representative Edward Mayer
Office Manager Murray Goodman
A. V. Cauger Service, inc.
Winner Rd. & Hedges, Independence, Mo.
Independence 1920
Distributor, organized in 1933, operating in
the Central West.
PERSONNEL
President A. V. Cauger
V-P & Secretary N. M. Cauger
Sales Manager Gus E. Christian
ft ON-THEATRICAL
Central Film Service
6 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, III.
CENtral 7692
Producer of talking film slides, organized in
1929, operating nationally.
Owner p. E. Olleman
Chicago Film Laboratorg,
Inc.
18 W. Walton St., Chicago, III.
WHItehall 6971
Producer, organized in 1927.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced:
Institutional Films
Five. 35 and 16 mm., sound, black and white
Sales-Dealer Instruction Films
Three, 35 and 16 mm., sound, black and white
Sponsored Films
14, 35 and 16 mm., sound, black and white
Three. 35 and 16 mm., silent, color
One. 35 and 16 mm., silent, black and white
Short Length Ad Films
Two. 35 and 16 mm., sound, black and white
Slide Films
10, 35 and 16 mm., sound, black and white
PERSONNEL
President A. G. Dunlap
Vice-President I. R. Ridgway
Sales Manager Frank Balkin
Director L. A. DeMenna
Production Manager V. I. Lindberg
Recording Engineer D. W. Scott
Cameramen H. F. Siemon, Verne Blakely
Laboratory Technician Harold Kinzle
Electrician Lawrence Gianneschi
Still Photography Carl W. Tillou
Frank Church Films
6117 Grove St., Oakland, Calif.
HUmbolt 7311
Producer and distributor, organized in 1929.
operating in the West.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced :
Institutional Films
Three. 35 mm., sound, black and white
One. 35 mm., silent, black and white
Three, 16 mm., sound, black and white
Three, 16 mm., silent, color
Two. 16 mm., silent, black and white
Sales-Dealer Instruction Films
Two, 16 mm., sound, black and white
Two, 16 mm., silent, black and white
Sponsored Films
Three, 35 mm., silent, black and white
Short Length Ad Films
Eight. 35 mm., silent, black and white
PERSONNEL
Producer Frank R. Church
Laboratory Technician Ray Bainbridge
Asst. Lab. Technician Edward Wamser
Secretary Nancy Thole
Cinecraft Studios, Inc.
1181 St. Catherine St.. W., Montreal, Canada
LAncaster 8092
Producer and distributor, organized in 1926.
operating in Canada.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced and Distributed:
Institutional Films
15, 35 mm., sound, black and white
60. 16 mm., sound, black and white
Short Length Ad Films
15. 16 mm., silent, color
PERSONNEL
President-General Manager Jean Arsin
Laboratory Superintendent F. Alexander
Sales Manager Henri Leroux
Sound Engineer Alphonse Cloutier
Operator Pierre Harwood
Script Writer Isobel MacCaw
597
WITH DISCRIMINATING EXHIBITORS
Now, Approximately 10,000 in Number
Screen
-Ad*
• 1st in Quality
• 1st in Audience Approval
• 1st in Revenue
ALEXANDER FILM COMPANY
COLORADO SPRINGS, COLORADO
New York Office • 630 Ninth Avenue • N. Y. C.
AUDIO
PRODUCTIONS
INCORPORATED
35-11 35th AVENUE
LONG ISLAND CITY, N. Y.
PRODUCERS OF THEATRICAL
INDUSTRIAL AND N0N THEATRICAL
SOUND MOTION PICTURES
Complete modern equipment and experienced
personnel for animation and trick photography
Western Electric
MIIMHH'HOX
RECORDING
598
Cinema Sales, Inc.
1041 N. Formosa Ave., Hollywood, Calif.
GKanite 5111
Producer, operating' in the West.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced :
Sales-Dealer Instruction Films
2, 36 mm., sound, black and white
2, 16 mm., sound, black and white
Distributed by Stewart-Warner Corp., Chicago,
111.
PERSONNEL
Executive Producer Jack Gallagher
Story Editor John Thomas Neville
Film Editor Guy V. Thayer, Jr.
Cameraman Harry Jackson
Comptroller Ernest L. Riley
King Cole's Sound Service,
Inc.
203 E. 26th St., New York, N. Y.
LExington 2-9850
Distributor, organized in 1930, operating in
New York, New Jersey and Connecticut.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Distributed:
Religious Films
6, 35 mm., sound, black and white
4, 16 mm., sound, black and white
Sales-Dealer Instruction Films
6, 35 mm., sound, black and white
6, 16 mm., sound, black and white
Sponsored Films
1, 35 mm., sound, color
5, 35 mm., sound, black and white
1, 16 mm., sound, color
14, 16 mm., sound, black and white
Slide Films
10, 35 mm., sound, black and white
PERSONNEL
President George H. Cole
Sponsored Films Dept Pauline Wolff
Theatrical Booking Dept Marie Bride
General Sales A. G. Berg
Religious Films Dept E. A. Bendell
Chief of Operations Edward Diller
Sound Technician Charles Suchanek
New Haven Manager Frank Adcock
Newark Manager George Wood
Albany Manager Leo R. Dratfield
Exploitation Martin T. Hughes
BRANCHES
Newark, N. J 24 Commerce St.
New Haven, Conn Hotel Bishop
Albany, N. Y 180 Delaware Ave.
Commonwealth Pictures
Corp.
729 Seventh Ave., New York, N. Y.
BRyant 9-4370
Distributor of 16 mm. versions of theatrical
films, organized in 1937, operating nationally.
PERSONNEL
President H. Threlkeld-Edwards
Vice-President Samuel Goldstein
Treasurer M. D. Sikawitt
Secretary Jerome Hyams
Courier Productions, Inc.
2 W. 45th St., New York, N. Y.
VAnderbilt 6-05C0
Producer, organized in 1937, operating nation-
ally.
Craftsman Motion Picture
Co.
1 E. 42nd St., New York, N. Y.
MUrray Hill 2-1759
Producer, organized in 1931 (succeeding com-
pany started in 1912), operating nationally.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced:
Institutional Films
Two, 35 mm., sound, black and white
Two, 35 mm., silent, black and white
NON-THEATRICAL
One, 16 mm., sound, black and white and black
and white
PERSONNEL
President-Treasurer I. Sy Seidman
Manager Henry Mann
Secretary R. Demast
CresswelVs Photo Service
915 Grand Ave., Kansas City, Mo.
HArrison 2180
Producer, organized in 1927, operating in the
Middle West.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced:
Institutional Films
One, 35 mm., silent, black and white
Sales-Dealer Instruction Films
Two, 16 mm., silent, black and white
Sponsored Films
Seven, 16 mm., silent, black and white
PERSONNEL
Owner Norris B. Cresswell
Chief Cameraman Paul D. Nelson
De Frenes & Co.
1909 Buttonwood St., Philadelphia, Pa.
Stevenson 1909
General Motors Bids.. New York, N. Y.
Producer and distributor, organized in 1916,
operating in the U. S. and Canada.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced and Distributed:
Institutional Films
Three, 35 mm., sound, color
Six, 35 mm., suodn, black and white
Sales-Dealer Instruction Films
Seven, 35 mm., sound, black and white
Sponsored Films
Three, 35 mm., sound, color
Nine, 35 mm., sound, black and white
Short Length Ad Films
Three, 35 mm., sound, black and white
Slide Films
Five, 35 mm., sound, color
Eight, 35 mm., sound, black and white
PERSONNEL
President Joseph De Frenes
Vice-President H. L. Roberts
Joseph Dephoure Studio
739 Boylston St., Boston, Mass.
Commonwealth 1737
Producer, organized in 1934, operating in New
England.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced :
Institutional Films
Three, 16 mm., silent, color
Sales-Dealer Instruction Films
One, 16 mm., silent, color
Sponsored Films
One, 16 mm., silent, color
Short Length Ad Films
One, 16 mm., silent, black and white
De Vry Corp.
1111 Armitage Ave., Chicago, 111.
LINcoln 5200
Producer and distributor, organized in 1913,
operating internationally.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced and Distributed:
Educational Films
97, 35 mm., sound, black and white*
Three, 16 mm., sound, color
•Distributed in 16 mm.
PERSONNEL
Production Manager-Script
Writer Herbert C. Hoagland
Chief Sound Engineer Otto Nemeth
Educational Director Carl E. Bates
Editor and Cameraman Paul Blomauist
599
NON-THEATRICAL
Sound Technician Carleton Worfolk
Assistant Editor Fred Rotunna
Sound Engineer John Black
Distribution Supervisor Gordon Hale
Laboratory Technician Daniel Tronalone
Assistant Laboratory Technician .... Alfred Steis
Narration Writer M . G. McPherson
Narrator Bob Elson
Bowling and Rrownell
6625 Komaine St., Hollywood, Calif.
GRanite 3111
Producers, organized June 30. 1931, operating
nationally.
Partners Pat Dowling. H. H. Brownell
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced:
Institutional Films
One, 35 mm., sound, color
Three, 35 mm., sound, black and white
Three, 16 mm., sound, black and white
Slide Films
Two, 35 mm., sound, color
Duhem Motion Picture
Manufacturing Co.
135 Hayes St., San Francisco, Calif.
HEmlock 1225
Producer and distributor, organized in 1870
(as a photo studio), operating on the West
Coast.
Manager R. A. Duhem
Edited Pictures Sgstem, Inc.
330 W. 42nd St., New York, N. Y.
BRyant 9-9380
Producer and distributor, organized in 1921,
operating nationally.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Distributed:
Institutional Films
150. 16 mm., sound, black and whit e
400, 16 mm., silent, black and white
Produced:
Institutional Films
44. 16 mm., sound, black and white
PERSONNEL
President Ilsley Boone
Secretary-Treasurer Walter A. Yorke
Vice-President M. BrotUerton
Slide Films
15, 35 mm., sound, color
PERSONNEL
President-Production Manager Ted Eshbaugh
Sccretary-Treas. -Business Mgr Jack Eshbaugh
Vice-President Bill Eshbaugh
Story Editor Alma Lloyd
Music Director William Russell
Film Arts Corp.
717 W. Wells St., Milwaukee, Wise.
Daly 5670
Producer, organized in 1937. operating in the
West.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced:
Institutional Films
One, 16 mm., sound, black and white
Sales-Dealer Instruction Films
One. 16 mm., sound, black and white
One, 16 mm., silent, black and white
Sponsored Films
Two, 35 mm., sound, black and white
Short Length Ad Films
27, 35 mm., sound, black and white
Slide Films
..12, 35 mm., black and white
PERSONNEL
President Harold E. Detzer
Vice-President Robert M. Reinhardt
Secretary Warren S. O'Brien
Treasurer Archie K. Hadley
Filmach Laboratories and
Filmach Trailer Co.
843 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago, HI.
HARrison 9393
Producer and distributor, organized Sept. 1,
1939; operating internationally.
PERSONNEL
Owner and General Manager Irving Mack
Sales Manager Sydney E. Abel
Advertising-Editorial Depts Leon Lee
Production Manager Oscar Furstenberg
Sales Promotion Manager A. Weinberg
Filmart Motion Pictures
IS Richmond St., E., Toronto, Canada
Elgin G564
Producer of trailers and titles, organized in
1922, operating in Canada.
PERSONNEL
Owner Norman A. Gunn
Artist Walter Swaffield
Cameraman Roy O'Connor
Escar Motion Picture Service,
Inc.
7315 Carnegie Ave., Cleveland, O.
Endicott 2707
Producer and distributor, organized in 1925,
operating in the Mid-West.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced and Distributed:
Sponsored Films
Nine, 35 mm., sound, black and white
Three, 16 mm., sound, color
PERSONNEL
President Ernest S. Carpenter
Secretary-Treasurer Earl P. Carpenter
Ted Eshbaugh Studios, Inc.
35 W. 45th St., New York, N. Y.
CHickering 4-3930
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced:
Institutional Films-Animated Cartoons
Four. 35 mm., sound, black and white
30. 16 mm., sound, color
Sales-Dealer Instruction Films
Two. 35 mm., sound, black and white
Sponsored Films
Eight. 35 mm., sound, color
Short Length Ad Films
Six, 35 mm., sound, black and white
Films, ftic.
330 W. 42nd St., New York, N. Y.
MEdallion 3-5190
Distributor, organized in 1927. operating nation-
ally.
BRANCHES: 314 S. W. 9th Ave., Portland.
Ore.; 64 E. Lake St., Chicago, HI.
PERSONNEL
Chairman of the Board Eric H. Haight
Vice-President Winston Childs, Jr.
Vice-President Elmer Ericson
Treasurer John A. Riker
Secretary Andre Maximov
Films of Commerce Co., Inc.
21 W. 46th St., New York, N. Y.
BRyant 9-3050
Producer and distributor, operating internation-
ally.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Distributed:
Instructional Films
18, 35 mm., sound, black and white
10, 35 mm., silent, black and white
18, 16 mm., sound, black and white
61, 16 mm., silent, black and white
Sponsored Films
Two. 35 mm., sound, black and white
Four, 35 mm., silent, black and white
Two. 16 mm., sound, black and white
Two. 16 mm., silent, color
Four. 16 mm., 6ilent, black and white
600
Slide Films
Four, 35 mm., sound, black and white
PERSONNEL
President-Treasurer Don Carlos Ellis
Vice-President C. R. Templeton
Secretary Helen G. EJIis
William J. Ganz Co.
19 E. 47th St., New York, N. Y.
ELdoradn 5-14 I t
Producer and distributor, organized in 1919,
operating nationally.
President William J. Ganz
General Business Films, Inc.
565 Fifth Aye., New York, N. Y.
WIckersham 2-4346
Producer and distributor, organized in 1928,
operating in the East and near South.
PERSONNEL
President Francis Lawton, Jr.
Vice-President R. T. Naylor
Secretary-General Manager Ferd Springer
BRANCHES: Baltimore, Md., 211 E. Pleasant
St.. R. T. Naylor, Resident Vice-President: Phila
delphia. Pa., 1421 Chestnut St., W. I. Forbes,
Resident Vice-President
General Electric Company
Schenectady, N. Y.
Schenectady 4-2211
Producer and distributor, operating nationally.
PERSONNEL
Head of Section C. R. Brown
Laboratory Harold R. Walker
Sound James Cornell
Clerk William P. Walsh
Secretary Frances S. Reaves
Booker Marthena D. Gaige
Theatrical Booker Al O. Bondy
Maintenance Lawrence M. Kroger
Production Albert C. Perreault
Shipper John W. Schwam
Camera Kenneth F. Abeel
General Films, Ltd.
1924 Rose St., Regina, Sask., Canada
156 King St., W. Toronto, Out., Canada
"10 Seymour St., Vancouver, B. ('., Canada
Producer and distributor, organized in lO.'ifi,
operating in Canada.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced :
Institutional Films
6,000, 35 mm., silent, black and white
Sales-Dealer Instruction Films
7,200, 16 mm., sound, color
Distributed :
Institutional Films
50. 16 mm., sound, black and white
500, 16 mm., silent, black and white
Sponsored Films
10, 16 mm., sound, black and white
10, 16 mm., silent, black and white
Slide Films
Five, 35 mm., sound, color
Five. 35 mm., silent, color
20, 35 mm., silent, black and white
Entertainment Films
2,700, 16 mm., sound, black and white
1,700, 16 mm., silent, black and white
PERSONNEL
President S. C. Atkinson
V-P in ehg. of Sales O. M. Paulson
Secretary James Game
Manager, Toronto Office D. M. Way
Manager, Vancouver Office. . W. H. Faulkes
Laboratory Superintendent P. J. George
General Screen Advertising,
Inc.
400 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, III.
SUPerior 3426
Distributor, organized in 1933, operating nation-
ally.
NON-THEATRICAL
1939 ACTIVITIES
Created and distributed minute movie cam-
paigns, in color and black and white, shown in
some 8.000 theaters, through the following co-
distributor members: Alexander Film Co., Rey-
Bell Films, Inc., Screenad Exchange, Green's
Advertising Agency and Screen Adettes, Inc.
PERSONNEL
President R. H. Ray
St. Paul Minn.
Vice-President D. M. Alexander
Colorado Springs, Colo.
Secretary-Treas.-Genl. Mgr M. E. Zetterholm
Walter O. Gutlohn, Inc.
35 W. 45th St., New York, N. Y.
BRyant 9-9848
Distributor, organized Nov. 11, 1934, operating
nationally,
1939 ACTIVITIES
Distributed :
Educational Films
20. 16 mm., sound, color
500, 16 mm., sound, black and white
10, 16 mm., silent, color
35, 16 mm., silent, black and white
Entertainment Shorts
I, 000, 16 mm., sound, black and white
Entertainment Features
500, 16 mm., sound, black and white
PERSONNEL
President Harry A. Kapit
Treasurer Blanche Gutlohn
Chairman Orton H. Hicks
HarFilms, Inc.
Harcol Bldg., 600 Baronne St., New Orleans, La.
Magnolia 1744
Producer and distributor, organized in 1915.
operating nationally.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced and Distributed:
Institutional Films
Four, 35 mm., sound, color
Six, 35 mm., sound, black and white
11, 16 mm., sound, color
Three. 16 mm., sound, black and white
14, 16 mm., silent, color
26, 16 mm., silent, black and white
Sales-Dealer Instruction Films
Three. 35 mm., sound, color
Two, 35 mm., sound, black and white
One. 35 mm., silent, color
Sponsored Films
Nine, 16 mm., sound, color
Three, 16 mm., sound, black and white
Four, 16 mm., silent, color
Two, 16 mm., silent black and white
Short Length Ad Films
64, 35 mm., sound, black and white
14, 16 mm., sound, black and white
Slide Films
II, 35 mm., sound, black and white
PERSONNEL
President A. Harrison, Jr.
Vice-President Frank Richard
Secretary-Treasurer R. Harrison
Sales Manager J. H. Grainger
Auditor E. King
Service Manager W. Segui
Laboratory Manager Milton LeBlane
Sound Engineer George Pearce
Still Picture Dept E. Baer
Office Manager L. Charleton
Purchasing Agent J. C. Ackermann
Retail Manager James La Salle
Printing Dept Jack Le Baron
Credit Manager L. Knight
601
IVOIV-THEATRIC AL
Charles B. Hastings Studios
1545 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
Circle 6-6229
Producer, organized December, 1937; operating
in the East.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Troducer:
Institutional Films
One, 35 mm., silent, black and white
One, 16 mm., silent, color
Two, 16 mm., silent, black and white
Sponsored Films
Three, 35 mm., silent, black and white
One, 35 mm., sound, black and white
Two. 16 mm., silent, color
Distributed by the U. S. Dept. of Agriculture,
and New York distributors.
PERSONNEL
President Charles B. Hastings
Vice-President F. Merklen
Manager M. Warner
General Manager M. Warner
Burton Holmes Films, Inc.
7510 N. Ashland Ave., Chicago, 111.
KOgers Park 5056
Producer and distributor, organized in 1901.
operating in the East and Middle West.
PERSONNEL
President Oscar B. Depue
General Mgr. & Sales Burton W. Depue
Chief Sound Engineer W. A. Hotz
Camera Dept. Head G. D. Taylor
Title Dept. Head R. W. Mars
Art Director G. Gilbertson
Casting Director R- La Belle
Story Editor F. Barber
Film Editor H. Lignell
Laboratory Manager H. Lignell
Office Manager A. M. Evans
Purchasing Agent A. M. Evans
Paymaster B. McCormick
Publicity Director W. Vance
Printing Dept. Head W. Bersch
Negative Dept. Head H. Gehrke
Developing Dept. Mgr F. Anderson
Booking Dept. Head G. Smith
Sales-Dealer Instruction Films
4, 35 mm., sound, brack and white
1, 16 mm., sound, color
Sponsored Films
5, 35 mm., sound, color
2, 35 mm., silent, color
8, 16 mm., sound, color
5, 16 mm., silent, color
Short Length Ad Films
2, 35 mm., sound, color
7, 35 mm., silent, color
11, 16 mm., sound, color
1, 16 mm., silent, color
Slide Films
1, 35 mm., sound, color
1, 16 mm., sound, color
PERSONNEL
President Hubbard Hunt
In Chg. of Production William Murray,
W. C. Bosco
Sound Department Burton Perry
Script-Scenario Dept Kay Lenard
Domestic Sales-Home Economics Pearle Eddy
Cinematographer Ellis Varnell
Ideal Pictures Corp.
28 E. Eighth St., Chicago, 111.
HARrlson 1508
Distributor, organized in 1928, operating nation-
ally.
PERSONNEL
President Bertram Willoughby
Vice-President S. J. Sperberg
Secretary -Treasurer Marian E. Harvey
Industrial Film Laboratory
2733 Cherokee St., St. Louis, Mo.
LAcIede 2845
Producer, organized in 1907. reorganized in
1932), operating in the Middle West.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Producer:
Institutional Films
12, 35 mm., sound, black and white
12, 16 mm., sound, black and white
Short Length Ad Films
60. 35 mm., sound, black and white
Slide Films
40, 35 mm., sound, color and black and white
PERSONNEL
President-Treasurer J. D. Howe
Vice-President-Secretary M . Gilham
Business Manager E. F. Howe
Home Film Co.
3404 Main St., Dallas, Tex.
Telephone 7-4413
Producer and distributor, organized in 1933.
operating in the Southwest.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced and Distributed:
Short Length Ad Films
78, 35 mm., sound, color
500, 35 mm., sound, black and white
150, 16 mm., sound, black and white
PERSONNEL
Owner Elmer R. Home
Production Manager Lester Chastian
Cameraman Taylor Byars
Bookkeeper G. Marr
Editing Olen Painter
Hubbard Hunt Productions
Talisman Studios, 4516 Sunset Blvd.,
Hollywood, Calif.
OLympia 2131
Producer, organized in 1935, operating in the
West.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced:
Institutional Films
2, 35 mm., sound color.
2, 16 mm., sound, color
Industrial Pictures, Inc.
1925 Cadieux Road, Detroit, Mich.
Tuxedo 2-0300
Producer and distributor, organized in 1937.
operating nationally.
PERSONNEL
President Herbert V. Book
Vice-President Edmund Schaefer
Treasurer F. S. Ford
Secretary E. S. Holmgren
Isaacs & Walsh, Inc.
Park Way & Sandusky St., Pittsburgh, Pa.
FAirfax 5255
Producer.
Jam Handy Picture Service,
Inc.
2821 E. Grand Blvd., Detroit, Mich.
MADison 2150
Producer and distributor, operating nationally.
PERSONNEL
President Jamison Handy
V-P and General Manager Oliver Horn
Treasurer A. W. Kinney
Secretary John Strickler
Production Manager John Freese
Production Supervisor Max Staplefeldt
Publicity J- C. Coffey
602
Chief Sound Engineer Ernest Zatorsky
Laboratory Head Hugo Anders
Camera Dept. Head Richard Ganstrom
Still Dept. Head Ford Pearson
Technical Animation Rockwell Barnes
Cartoon Animation Frank Goldman
Research Lauretta Clinton
Stage Manager Charles Nasca
Property Master Armand Schettini
Casting, Costumes. Makeup John Henderson
Story Editor Ned Long
Dialogue Editor John Faricy
Film Editor Vincent Herman
Music Dept. Head Sam Benavle
Purchasing Agent John Strickler
Paymaster William Johnson
Transportation Manager William Huston
Head Projectionist A. J. Bradford
Theatrical Distribution Jack Haley
BRANCHES: New York, 19 W. 44th St.; Chi-
cago. 35 E. Wacker Drive: Hollywood. 7046 Hol-
lywood Blvd.; Dayton, 702-3 Mutual Home Bldg.
Jamieson Film Co.
2212 Live Oak St., Dallas, Tex.
Telephone 2-5644
Producer, organized in 1918, operating in the
Southwest.
PERSONNEL
President Hugh V. Jamieson
Chief Cameraman Jack A. Whitman
Sound Technician Richard E. Byers
Laboratory Manager Gordon Yoder
Larsen Picture Corp.
130 W. 57th St., New York, N. Y.
Circle 6-1517
PERSONNEL
In Charge of Production. . .William Burton Larsen
Sound Recordist Seth Beegle Larsen
Cinematographer James Andrew Larsen, Jr.
Script and Dialogue Zoe Mozer
Set Designer Roderick Hyskind
Technician James D. Martin
Studio: Jamestown, N. Y.; Branch: 4411 Beacon
St., Chicago, 111.
Loucks & Norling Studios
245 W. 55th St., New York, N. Y.
COlumbus 5-6974
Producer, organized in 1925, operating nation-
ally.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced:
Institutional Films
Four, 35 mm., sound, black and white
Two, 35 mm., silent, black and white
Two, 16 mm., silent, color
Two, 16 mm., silent, black and white
Three-Dimensional Films
Two, 35 mm., color and black and white
Sales-Dealer Instruction Films
Six, 35 mm., sound, black and white
Sponsored Films
Two, 3 5mm., sound, color
10, 35 mm., sound, black and white
Short Length Ad Films
Two, 35 mm., sound, color
Slide Films
Six, 35 mm., sound, color
PERSONNEL
Executives: J. A. Norling, A. H. Loucks, Walter
Ball, Bernard Rubin, Everett Dunn, William Gil-
martin, A. B. Weimann, E. C. Conover, Palmer
Shannon.
McCrory Studios
jVOlV-TflEATRICAL
PERSONNEL
Director John R. McCrory
Story-Narration Douglas Harlon
Research , . . . Hamilton Ross
Film Editor Malcolm Douglas
McCurdy Films
130 W. 46th St., New York, N. Y.
LOngacre 5-7961
Producer and distributor, organized in 1925,
operating nationally.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced and Distributed:
Institutional School Films
6, 16 mm., sound, black and white
56th & Woodland Aves., Philadelphia, Pa.
Saratoga 0466
Producer and distributor of short length ad
films and trailers, organized in 1905, operating
in the East.
Partners. .Robert K. McCurdy, Harold S. McCurdy
McLarty Business Films
Certain-teed Bldg., Buffalo, N. Y.
Riverside 9180
Producer, organized in 1933, operating in the
East.
PERSONNEL
Director of Production Henry D. McLarty
Supervisor Technical Dept William T. Clifford
Supervisor Scrips-Continuity Lloyd Graham
Manager Art Dept Donald Shanks
Cutting-Editing Marion D. Homer
Metropolitan Motion Picture
Co.
50 Branford Place, Newark, N. J.
Mitchell 2-7027
Distributor, organized in 1912, operating na-
tionally.
Modern Talking Picture
Service, Inc.
9 Rockefeller Plaza, New York, N. Y.
Circle 6-0910
Distributor, organized July 1, 1937, operating
nationally.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Distributed:
Institutional Films
Nine, 35 mm., sound, black and white
20, 16 mm., sound, black and white
Sales-Dealer Instruction Films
Three, 35 mm., sound, black and white
12, 16 mm., sound, black and white
Slide Films
Nine, 35 mm., sound, black and white
PERSONNEL
President F. H. Arlinghaus
Secretary -Treasurer H. H. Eberle
Manager of Operations H. W. Davidson
Circulation Manager E. L. Manke
MogulVs, Inc.
68 W. 48th St., New York, N. Y.
BRyant 9-3601
Distributor, organized in 1913, operating in-
ternationally.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Distributed:
Institutional & Educational Films
218, 16 mm., sound, black and white
412, 16 mm., silent, black and white
Sponsored & Entertainment Films
960 16 mm., sound, black and white
2,400, 16 mm., silent, black and white
PERSONNEL
President-General Manager Leo Mogull
Treasurer-Sales Manager Peter Mogull
Booking Manager Ann O'Leary
Librarian Harry Cohen
Advertising Manager Julius Elautner, Jr.
603
N OK -THEATRICAL
Motion Picture Advertising
Service Co., Inc.
1032 Carondelet St., New Orleans, La.
Magnolia 1 5 1 5
Producer and distributor, organized in 1910
operating in the South. North Central. East and
North East.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced and distributed:
Short Length Ad Films
210. 35 mm., sound, color
2.910.. 35 mm., sound, black and white
PERSONNEL
President W. Johnson
V-P and Sales Manager C. J. Mabry
Assistant Sales
Mgrs John Salyer, Charles Johnson
V P in chg. of Production P. A. Jones
V P in chg. of Service O. A. Johnson
Vice-President W. H. Hendren, Jr.
Auditor-Purchasing Agent A. C. Doskey, Jr.
Publicity Director L. H. Grandjean
Chief Sound and Lab. Engineer. . . .Glenn Dorsey
Camera
Dept Robert Dyer. Ed Hutton. W. Winford
Still Dept. Head Tally Clark
Art Director J. C. Kimberger
Casting Director Aby Coguenhem
Film Editors W. Kempff. J. Ahern
Motion Picture Service Co.
125 Hyde St., San Francisco, Calif.
Ordway 91(52
Producer of special announcement trailers, or-
ganized March, 1935, operating in the West.
Manager and Owner Gerald L. Karski
Motion Sltreenadz, Ltd.
1210 Bnrrard St., Vancouver, Canada
Trinity 3255
Producer and distributor, organized in 1918.
operating in the West.
PERSONNEL
Managing Director Leon C. Shelly
Assistant E. Logan
Production Manager R. E. Bourne
Chief Electrician C. Bourne
Chief Sound Engineer E. W. Hamilton
Camera Dept. Head E. W. Hamilton
Art Director C. M. Lambly
Northivest Motion Pictures
1710 30th Ave.. W., Seattle, Wash.
Garfield 0391
Producer, organized in 1934. operating in the
Pacific Northwest.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced:
5,
35 mm.
. sound.
black
and
white
1.
10 mm..
sound.
color
5,
Hi nun.
. sound.
black
and
white
1,
10 mm.
. silent.
black
and
white
Sponsored Films
5.
35 mm.
. sound.
black
and
white
1,
10 mm..
sound.
color
5,
16 mm.
. sound.
black
and
white
Short
Length
Ad Films
1,
35 mm.
. sound.
black
and
white
1,
10 mm.
, sound.
black
and
white
Local
Newsreels
3,
35 mm.
. sound.
black
and
white
Nu-Art Films, Inc.
145 W. 45th St., New Vork, N. V.
BRyant 9-3171
Distributor, organized in 1937. operating in-
ternationally.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Distributed:
Entertainment Films
10. 35 mm., sound, black and white
40. 35 mm., silent, black and white
400, 10 mm., sound, black and white
120. 10 mm., silent, black and white
Educational Films
15. 35 mm., sound, black and white
25. 35 mm., silent, black and white
100. 16 mm., sound, black and white
One, 16 mm., silent, color
50. 16 mm., silent, black and white
PERSONNEL
President G. W. Hedwig
Managing Director W. K. Hedwig
Sales Manager M. Goosmann
Accounting C. F. Fiorillo
Official Films, Inc.
1411 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
( Hickering 3-4632
Producer and distributor, organized in 1939.
operating internationally.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced :
Sales-Dealer Instruction Films
Five, 10 mm., sound, color
Seven, 10 mm., sound, black and white
Five. 10 mm., silent, color
Seven. 16 mm., silent, black and white
Produced at the New York World's Fair.
Puganelli
PERSONNEL
Manager Ray Paulsen
Assistant Manager Edna Paulsen
21 W. 16th St., New York, N. Y.
BRyant 9-6469
Producer of animations, charts, slide films,
titles, background shots, etc., organized in 1920.
operating nationally.
PERSONNEL
Proprietor A. Paganelli
Production Manager H. C. Grant
Parrot Films
1700 Keosauqua Way, Des Moines, la.
Telephone 5-8686
Producer and distributor, organized in 1919.
operating nationally.
Films produced by Parrot Films Studio, dis-
tributed by Parrot Distributing Co.
PERSONNEL
Manager I. E. Goldman
Production Manager T. B. Grinspan
Distribution Manager E. B. Goldman
Photo Media Corp.
663 Beacon St., Boston, Mass.
KENmore 3371
Producer, organized in 1935, operating in the
Northeast.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced :
Short Length Ad Films
One. 35 mm., silent, color
One. 35 mm., silent, black and white
slide Films
Two, 35 mm., sound, black and white
PERSONNEL
President-Treasurer George K. Thompson
Secretary Herbert F. Lang
Pietoruri Films, Inc.
1650 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
Circle 5-7090
Producer and distributor, organized in 1935.
operating internationally.
604
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced:
Institutional Films
Three, 16 mm., sound, black and white
Sponsored Films
Two. 16 mm., sound, black and white
Short Length Ad Films
Four, 35 mm., sound, black and white
Four, 16 mm., sound, black and white
Distributed:
Entertainment-Educational Films
60. 16 mm., sound, black and white
PERSONNEL
President J- Milton Salzburg
Vice-President Joseph S. Salzburg-
Secretary-Treasurer Harold Baumstone
Post Pictures Corp.
723 Seventh Ave., New York. N. Y.
ISK^int 9-5496
Distributor, organized March, 1938, operating
internationally.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Distributed :
Educational & Entertainment Films
24, 16 mm., sound, color
154. 16 mm., sound, black and white
54. 16 mm., silent, black and white
PERSONNEL
President Harry A. Post
Ramsey Pictures
Ramsey Tower Bldg., Oklahoma City, Okla.
Telephone 8-6111
Producer and distributor, organized in June.
1930. operating in the South West.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced :
Institutional Films
Two. 35 mm., sound, black and white
Sales-Dealer Instruction Films
One, 35 mm., sound, black and white
Sponsored Films
One. 35 mm., sound, black and white
One, 16 mm., sound, color
Short Length Ad Films
Four. 35 mm., sound, black and white
Slide Films
Two. 35 mm., sound, black and white
Distributed :
Institutional Films
Two, 35 mm., sound, black and white
One. 16 mm., sound, black and white
Sales-Dealer Instruction Films
One, 16 mm., sound, black and white
Short Length Ad Films
Four, 35 mm., sound, black and white
PERSONNEL
Production Manager Arthur B. Ramsey
Sales Department W. H. Turpie
W>Her George Hemaker
Dialogue Editor Perry W. Ward
Camera Dept. Heads. . .VV. J. Shroder. A. Ramsey
Electrical Department R. M. Fiers
Still Camera Dept Grant E. Ginter
Sound Department Fred Wheeler
Projectionist R- A. Schabel
Ray-Bell Films, Inc.
•»'»<»9 Highland Ford Parkway, St. Paul, Minn.
EMerson 1393
Producer and distributor, organized in 1010.
operating nationally.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced and Distributed:
Institutional Films
2, 35 mm., sound, black and white
Sales-Dealer Instruction Films
14, 35 mm., sound, black and white
10, 16 mm., sound, color
Short Length Ad Films
26, 35 mm., sound, color
507. 35 mm., sound, black and white
Slide Films
8, 35 mm., sound, black and white
NON'THEATRICAL
PERSONNEL
President R- H. Ray-
Vice-President C. E. Bell
Secretary A. M. Griswold
Treasurer C. A. Nyquist
Sales Executive 0. A. Abbott
Sales Promotion 1. R. Thirtyacre
Asst. to Sales Exec A. L. Pinet
Chief Cinematographer H. W. Cress
Head, Sound Recording H. C. Oslund
Animation-Cartoon Production B. 0. Foss
Assistant Treasurer W. R. Ringold
Head, Service Dept C. C. Tierney
Luther Reed, inc.
Fox Movietone Studies
460 W. 54th St., New York, N. Y.
Circle 6-2764
Producer, organized in 1935, operating in the
East.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced :
Institutional Films
One, 35 mm., sound, black and white
Sales-Dealer Instruction Films
Two, 35 mm., sound, black and white
Sponsored Films
Three, 35 mm., sound, black and white
Eight, 35 mm., silent, black and white
Slide Films
Three, 35 mm., sound, black and white
Produced at 20th Century-Fox Movietone Stu-
dio, 460 W. 54th St.. New York, N. Y.; Dis-
tributed by Modern Talking Picture Service, New
York. N. Y.
PERSONNEL
President Luther Reed
Secretary E. M. Caine
Treasurer M. E. Pioda
Roland Reed Protluctions
Selznick International Studios
Culver City, Calif.
AShley 4-3355
Producer, organized in 1924, operating nation-
ally.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced :
Institutional Films
Two. 36 mm., sound, color*
Sales-Dealers Instruction Films
Four, 35 mm., sound, black and white •
One, 35 mm., sound, color
Sponsored Films
Nine, 35 mm., sound, black and white*
Short Length Ad Films
18, 35 mm., sound, color*
*Also available in 16 mm.
PERSONNEL
President Roland D. Reed
Production Manager George R. Batcheller
Secretary-Treasurer Robert A. Montgomery
Director of Photography Paul Ivano
Art Director Ed Jewell
Sound Dept. Head Tom Carmen
Writer Arthur Hoerl
Chief Electrician Joe Wharton
Head Cutter Roy S. Luby
Musical Director Al Columbo
Frederich K. Rochett Co.
00. VI Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
GRanite 7920
Producer and distributor, organized in 1924.
operating nationally.
19.59 ACTIVITIES
Produced and Distributed:
1, 35 mm., sound, color
1, 35 mm., sound, black and white
1, 16 mm., sound, color
Sales-Dealer Instruction Films
2, 35 mm., sound, black and white
1, 35 mm., sound, black and white
605
JVOJV-THEATRICAL
Short Length Ad Films
3, 35 mm., sound, black and white
Slide Films
16, 35 mm., sound, black and white
PERSONNEL
General Manager Frederick K. Rockett
Production Manager E. B. Taylor
Slide Film Director Perry King
Art Director Stanley Overton
Casting Helen Rockett
Rowland Rogers Picture
Service, Inc.
151 W. 46th St., New York, N. Y.
LOngacre 5-8432
Producer and distributor, organized October.
1928, operating nationally.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced and distributed:
Slide Films
Two, 35 mm., sound, black and white
PERSONNEL
President Rowland Rogers
Vice-President Earl M. Welch
Secretary -Treasurer B. J. Hudson
Ruby Film Co.
729 Seventh Ave., New York, N. Y.
BRyant 9-9430
For activities, see Official Films, Inc. listing.
Screen Adettes, Inc.
314 S.W. 9th Are., Portland, Ore.
Beacon 5292
Producer and distributor, organized June, 1932.
operating on the Pacific Coast.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced and distributed:
Sales-Dealer Instruction Films
One, 35 mm., sound, black and white
One, 16 mm., sound, color
One, 16 mm., sound, black and white
Short Length Ad Films
15, 35 mm., sound, black and white
Company is also Western distributor for Films.
Inc., 330 W. 42nd St., New York, N. Y.
PERSONNEL
President Merriman H. Hollz
Vice-President Helene T. Holtz
Secretary George E. Bronaugh
Screen Rroadcast Corp.
30 Rockefeller Plaza, New York, N. Y.
Circle 7-2810
Distributor; organized August, 1935, operating
nationally.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Distributed short length ad films and longer
commercial films in color and black and white.
PERSONNEL
President-General Manager Al E. Fair
ASSOCIATE DISTRIBUTORS :
Motion Picture Advertising Service Co., New Or-
leans, La.
United Film Ad Service. Inc.. Kansas City. Mo.
Theater Advertising Corp., Minneapolis. Minn.
Motion Picture Advertising Service, Inc., Cleve-
land, O.
A. V. Cauger Service. Inc.. Independence. Mo.
Film Advertising Corp., Dallas, Tex.
Screenad Exchange
158 State St., Binghamton, N. Y.
Telephone 4-3623
724 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y.
Circle 7-4487
Producer and distributor, organized in 1830,
operating nationally.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced and distributed:
Short Length Ad Films
850, 35 mm., sound, black and white
117. 35 mm., sound, color
PERSONNEL
President William Waide Scott
Binghamton Manager George D. Hugunin
New York Manager Will J. Cooke
Sales Manager Clifford T. Burgess
C. R. Shinner Manufacturing
Co.
290 TURK St., San Francisco, Calif.
Ordway C909
Producer and distributor, operating in the
West.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced and distributed:
Sponsored Films
One, 35 mm., sound, color
One, 36 mm., sound, black and white
Short Length Ad Films
Three, 16 mm., sound, color
Slide Films
Eight. 16 mm., silent, color
PERSONNEL
Owner C. R. Skinner
Personnel: D. F. MacLachlan. M. C. Fredrick-
son. L. Strehl, W. Cornell, Fred Heiseler, C. Keiser.
Sly-Fox Films, Inc.
627 First Ave., N., Minneapolis, Minn.
Atlantic 0389
Producer, organized in 1914, operating in the
Middle West.
PERSONNEL
President-Treasurer Earle C. Sly
Vice-President Ethel H. Sly
Secretary R. S. Stebbins
Society for Visual Education,
Inc.
100 E. Ohio St., Chicago, III.
SUPerior 0383
Producer and distributor, organized In 1919.
operating nationally.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced:
Educational Slide Films
300, 36 mm., black and white
PERSONNEL
President Marie Witham
Vice-President B. J. Kleerup
Secretary Mrs. Irene Doyle
Sound Masters, Inc.
1560 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
BRyant 9-0680
Producer, organized in 1937. operating in the
East.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced:
Sales-Dealer Instruction Films
10, 35 mm., sound, black and white
1, 16 mm., sound, color
2, 16 mm., sound, black and white
Sponsored Films
5, 35 mm., sound, black and white
1, 35 mm., silent, black and white
1, 16 mm., sound, color
3, 16 mm., silent, color
1, 16 mm., silent, black and white
Short Length Ad Films
4, 35 mm., sound, black and white
2, 16 mm., silent, color
606
PERSONNEL
V.-P. and General Manager. . . .Harold E. Wondsel
Treasurer-Secretary Francis Carter Wood. Jr.
Office Manager Harry J. Mack
Standard Films of California
■: :c,r> Stillman Road, Cleveland, O.
FAirmount 0033
Producer and distributor, organized in 1936,
operating in New York, Cleveland and Hollywood.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced and Distributed:
Institutional Films
6, 35 mm., sound, black and white
6, 16 mm., sound, color
6, 16 mm., sound, black and white
Sponsored Films
3, 35 mm., sound, black and white
3, 16 mm., sound, black and white
PERSONNEL
President John Flory
Vice-President Marvin Kline
Associate Producers:
Roger Sumner, Charles E. Arnt
Scenario Dept. Head Jack W. Kelly
Camera Dept. Head Ned Scott
Art Dept. Head Phoebe Flory
Publicity Dept. Head Reed S. Seymour
Casting Dept. Head Elizabeth Flory
Accounting Dept. Head Harrison Korner
Cutting Dept. Head Ed Davis
Stark-Films
Howard Si Centre Sts., Baltimore, Md.
Vernon 3381
Producer and distributor, organized in 1920,
operating in the East.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced and Distributed:
Institutional Films
3, 35 mm., silent, black and white
3, 16 mm., sound, color
3, 16 mm., sound, black and white
4, 16 mm., silent, color
10, 16 mm., silent, black and white
Sponsored Films
2, 35 mm., sound, black and white
4, 35 mm., silent, black and white
2, 16 mm., sound, color
5, 16 mm., sound, black and white
7, 16 mm., silent, color
8, 16 mm., silent, black and white
PERSONNEL
General Manager Milton Stark
Head of Booking Dept. -Office Mgr.. .Rose S. Stark
Asst. Production Mgr Fred V. Williams
Chief. Projection Dept Charles J. Siebold
Dist. -Circulation Dir Helen Schaefer
Auditor-Comptroller Joseph Winakur
Stone Film Library, Inc.
201 W. 89th St.,, New York, N. Y.
SChuyler 4-1148
Producer and distributor, organized in 1908.
operating nationally.
PERSONNEL
President Dorothy T. Stone
Publicity Arthur Reef
Sales Victor Friedman
Strichland Industrial Film
Corp.
163 Walton St., N. W., Atlanta, Ga.
Jackson 2767
Producer, organized in 1927, operating in the
South.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced:
Nine Institutional Films
Two Sales-Dealer Instruction Films
Eight Sponsored Films
100 Short Length Ad Films
50 Slide Films
IVOiV-TBEATRICAL
PERSONNEL
President Robert B. Strickland
Vice-President C. H. Strickland
Secretary-Treasurer C. L. Strickland
Arthur Stvoger
921 Wood St., Pittsburgh, Pa.
CH 5224
Producer, organized April, 1933, operating in
the East.
Ttdking Sides Pictures, Inc.
540 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, 111.
SDPerior 6750
Producer and distributor, operating internation-
ally.
PERSONNEL
President J. I. Sheffield
Vice-President Herbert S. Futran
Secretary M. H. Brown
Production Manager Steve Hall
Technicians David Larson, Albert Nieth
Executive Stanley Henwood
BRANCH: New York, 480 Lexington Ave.
Theater Advertising Corp.
Metropolitan Bank Bldg., Minneapolis, Minn.
Atlantic 0397
Producer and distributor, organized in 1939 as
successor to business of the Al M. Smith Film
Service which was organized in 1932, operating
in Minnesota, Wisconsin, North Dakota, South
Dakota, and Montana.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced :
Short Length Ad Films
35, 35 mm., sound, black and white
Distributed:
Short Length Ad Films
1,032, 35 mm., sound, black and white
PERSONNEL
President John J. Kelly
Vice-President V. E. Smith
Secretary H. O. Lassila
Auditor R. L. Neuman
Service Manager Roland Hallonquist
Tratlefilms, Inc.
959 Seward St., Hollywood, Calif.
GRanite 6500
Producer, organized in 1937; operating in the
West.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced :
Sponsored Films
2, 35 mm., sound, black and white
Slide Films
5, 35 mm., silent, black and white
PERSONNEL
President Shirley C. Burden
Vice-President Henri Chappellet
United Film Ad Service, Inc.
2449 Charlotte St., Kansas City, Mo.
HArrison 5840
Producer and distributor, organized February,
1924, operating in the Northeast, Middle West,
Northwest and West Coast.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced:
Short Length Ad Film
119, 35 mm., sound, black and white
Distributed:
Short Length Ad Films
35, 35 mm., sound, color
1,128, 35 mm., sound, black and white
Produced by United Film Ad Service, Inc. and
Motion Picture Advertising Service Co., Inc. (New
Orleans) .
607
JVON-THEATRICAL
PERSONNEL
President W. H. Hendren. Jr.
Treasurer Aldridge Corder
Secretary J. E. Nugent
Sales Manager W. D. Zieger
Asst. Sales Managers
J. E. Trogdon. Jr.. J. T. Boyd. W. W. Cooper
Service Manager W. J. Scrogin
Auditor G. B. Hoffman
Wally Van Productions
141 Fifth Ave.. New York, N. Y.
\ I - in in 4-217 7
Producer, organized in 19.36, operating in the
East and South.
PERSONNEL
Director Wally Van
Technical Steve Golding
Editor Edward Pfitzenmeir
Assistant Lem Wheeler
Sound Technician Philip Rein
\ Isurox. Inc.
245 W. 55th St., New York, N. Y.
COlumbus 5-6974
Producer, organized Sept. 1938.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced :
Slide Films
10. 35 mm., sound, color
25, 35 mm., sound, black and white
PERSONNEL
President E. C. Conover
Vice-President J. A. Norling
Secretary-Treasurer A. H. Loucks
Studio Manager Palmer Shannon
Art Director Walter Ball
Wildina Picture Productions,
inc.
7635 Grand River Ave.. Detroit, Mich.
Tyler 5-8180
Producer, organized in 1927, operating in the
Middle West.
PERSONNEL
President N. E. Wilding
V P and Gen l Sales Mgr H. W. Fish
Treasurer Comptroller C. H. Bardfield. Jr.
Secretary J. J. Emery
Sales Maneger W. I. Irvine
BRANCHES: Chicago, 1345 Argyle St.. J. W.
Inglefield. Mgr.; Cleveland. 310 Swetland Bldg..
B. N. Darling. Mgr.: New York, 385 Madison Ave.,
F. C. Foy, Mgr.
PRODUCTION UNIT: Hal Roach Studios. Cul-
ver City, Calif., G. J. Altfilisch. Production Mgr.
Willard Pictures
130 W. 46th St., New York, N. Y.
BRyant 9-1470
Producer, organized in 1932, operating in the
East.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced:
Institutional Films
Three, 35 mm., sound, black and white
Two. 16 mm.. 6onnd. color
One. 16 mm., sound, black and white
Six. 16 mm., silent, color
Sales-Dealer Instruction Films
Two. 35 mm., sound, black and white
Two, 35 mm., silent, black and white
Two. 16 mm., sound, color
One, 16 mm., sound, black and white
Short Length Ad Films
One. 35 mm., silent, color
Two, 16 mm., sound, color
PERSONNEL
President T. W. Willard
General Manager T. H. Westermann
Comptroller S. H. Childi
Editorial Dept. Mgr R. T. Furman Jr
Production Dept. Mgr R. S. Bushnell
Casting Director S. S. Westermann
Account Executives B. N. Skellie.
D. H. Lion. Jr.. G. C. Van de Carr.
Cameramen H. P. Nath, N. G. Dyhrenfurth
Clem Williams Films
403 Diamond Bank Bldg., Pittsburgh, Pa
Atlantic 7845
Distributor, organized in 1936. operating nation-
ally.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Distributed :
Institutional Films
Two. 16 mm., sound, black and white
Sales-Dealer Instruction Films
Five, 16 mm., sound, black and white
Sponsored Films
Two. 16 mm., sound, black and white
PERSONNEL
Manager-Owner Clem Williams
Sales Manager John K. Dunning
Office Manager Elizabeth Masie
Assistant Manager Elizabeth Williams
Modern Talking Picture Dept.
Mgr Robert L. Beisel
Raphael G. Wolff, Mnc.
1714 N. Wilton Place, Hollywood, Calif.
GRanite 6126
Producer, organized in 1932 (1936 in Cali-
fornia), operating nationally.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Produced:
Institutional Films
One, 16 mm., sound, color
Two, 16 mm., silent, color
PERSONNEL
Executives: Raphael G. Wolff, Isabel Shobert, A.
W. Treutelear: Stanley R. Paterson. Chicago;
Dick Allen, Detroit.
Y.M.C.A. Motion Picture
Bureau
347 Madison Ave.. New York, N. Y.
MUnay Hill 6-1200
19 S. LaSalle St., Chicago, HI.
351 Turk St., San Francisco, Calif.
Distributor, organized in 1911, operating nation-
ally.
1939 ACTIVITIES
Distributed:
Entertainment and Classroom Films
Six, 16 mm., sound, color
387, 16 mm., sound, black and white
442, 16 mm., silent, black and white
Sponsored Films
Three. 16 mm., sound, color
135, 16 mm., sound, black and white
Two, 16 mm., silent, color
148, 16 mm., silent, black and white
PERSONNEL
Director George J. Zehrung
Associate Director A. L. Fredrick
Emerson Yorke Studio
245 W. 55th St., New York, N. Y.
Circle 6-3688
Producer and distributor, organized in 1931.
operating nationally.
PERSONNEL
Emerson Yorke. Harry N. Blair. Elmer J. Mo-
Govern, Solita Palmer, Barbara Holmes.
Zenith Cinema Service
5011 N. Sawyer Ave., Chicago, HI.
IRVing 2104
Producer, organized in 1924, operating in the
Central States.
PERSONNEL
Proprietor Otto Hangartner, Sr.
Cameraman Otto Hangartner. Jr.
608
COMPANIES
Personnel, Subsidiaries and Branches of
Leading Motion Picture Organizations
Other personnel departments in this book include: Production
Organizations (page 627), Non-Theatrical companies
(page 591), and Associations (page 663).
A.F.E. Corp.
1270 Sixth Ave., New York, N. Y.
Circle 7-3945
OFFICERS
President Paul Graetz
Alexander Preview Company
Alexander Film BIdg., Colorado Springs, Colo.
OFFICERS
President Don Alexander, Jr.
Vice-President Harold N. Schwarz
Secretary-Treasurer Byers E. Smith
DEPARTMENT HEADS
Production Manager T. G. Paterson
Sales Manager R. E. Fulham
Service Manager R. G. Hemingway
Auditor P. A. Campbell
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Don Alexander, Jr., Harold N. Schwarz, Byers
E. Smith.
Alliance Films Corp.
1720 Sixth Ave., New York, N. Y.
Circle 7-3945
OFFICERS
President Maurice Arthur Dent
Vice-President-General Manager Budd Rogers
Asst. Secretary Beatrice Blaurock
Altec Service Corp.
250 W. 57th St., New York, N. Y.
COlumbus 5-3255
OFFICERS
President L. W. Conrow
Vice-President G. L. Carrington
Secretary-Treasurer H. M. Bessey
Comptroller E. Z. Walters
Staff Representative S. W. Hand
Director of Publicity Harold Wengler
DIRECTORS
L. W. Conrow, G. L. Carrington. H. M. Bessey.
Roswell C. Tripp. Matthew Robinson. W. J. Al-
ford, Jr., H. W. Dodge, T. H. Blodgett.
DISTRICT OFFICES
Atlanta. Ga. — 87 Walton St.. Jackson 4000. A.
Fiore, District Manager; H. B. Moog, Branch Man-
ager.
Boston, Mass. — 20 Providence St., Hubbard
4710, L. J. Hacking, District Manager; J. A.
Cameron, Branch Manager.
Chicago, 111. — 624 S. Michigan Ave.. Wabash
6644, R. Hilton, District Manager: O. Hunt,
Branch Manager.
Detroit, Mich. — 2111 Woodward Ave., Cherry
3180. F. C. Dickely, District Manager: E. C.
Shriver, Branch Manager.
Kansas City, Mo. — 1717 Wyandotte St., Har-
rison 7330, C. J. Zern, District Manager.
Los Angeles, Calif. — 1584 W. Washington Blvd..
Rochester 2141, H. W. Dodge, District Manager;
S. M. Pariseau, Branch Manager.
New York, N. Y. — 250 W. 57th St.. COlumbus
5-3255. B. Sanford, Jr.. District Manager: D. L.
Turner. A. J. Rademacher, Branch Managers.
Philadelphia. Pa. — 219 N. Broad St., Locust
7110, E. O. Wilschke. District Manager: W. Con-
ner, Branch Manager.
Amkino Corp.
723 Seventh Ave., New York, N. Y.
BRjant 9-7680
OFFICERS
President Dmitry Yassiliev
Treasurer N. Napoli
Publicity Dept T. Lewis
FOREIGN REPRESENTATIVES
MEXICO — Alberto Martin. Av. del Rosal 1659.
Mexico, D. F.
CHILE — Amador Pairoa. Casilla 3830. Santiago.
CUBA — Antonio Pedrinan, Consulado 164,
Havana.
A rt cinema Associates, Inc.
729 Seventh Ave., New York, N. Y.
MEdallion 3-4850
OFFICERS
President Emil C. Jensen
Treasurer Victor Jensen
Secretary Harry G. Kosch
Mgr. Foreign Department Al Aronson
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Emil C. Jensen, Victor Jensen, Harry G. Kosch.
Astor Pictures Corp.
1270 Sixth Ave., New York, N. Y.
Circle 7-3687
OFFICERS
President R. M. Savini
Vice-President W. J. Figueroa
Secretary R. M. Figueroa
DEPARTMENT HEADS
General Sales Manager O. K. Bourgeois
Comptroller W. J. Figueroa
610
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
R. M. Savini, W. J. Figueroa, R. M. Figueroa,
C. J. Tevlin.
Bonded Film Storage Corp.
1600 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
Circle 6-0081
Vault Building
36-25 Vernon Ave., Long Island City, N. Y.
STillwell 4-5378
OFFICERS
President-Secretary M. J. Kandel
Treasurer Sam Besner
N. Y. Vault Manager Emanuel Kandel
L. I. Vault Manager Aaron Ray
Comptroller B. Miller
Service Department P. Seigelaub
Traffic Manager A. Lawner
John Boyce-Smith and Mitch
Leichter
420 Taft Bldg., Los Angeles, Calif.
Hillside 4116
Executives John Boyce-Smith. Mitch Leichter
British & Continental
Trading Co., Inc.
1270 Sixth Ave., New York, N. Y.
Circle 7-4697
OFFICERS
President-Treasurer Jack Barnstyn
Vice-President Blanche Berger
Secretary P. Barnstyn
FOREIGN BRANCHES
PRANCE — 33 Avenue des Champs Elytees,
HOLLAND — Filmstad, The Hague.
SWEDEN — 24 Johannesgatan, Stockholm.
J. E. Brulatour, Inc.
John St., Fort Lee, N. i.
FOrt Lee 8-2460
LOngacre 5-7270
OFFICERS
President J. E. Brulatour
V-P and Treasurer W. J. German
Secretary M. B. Reilly
Special Representative L. A. Bonn
Branch: 1727 Indiana Ave., Chicago. 111., Calu-
met 5205, Thomas L. Gibson, Manager.
J. E. Brulatour, Inc. (California)
6700 Santa Monica Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
Hillside 6131
OFFICERS
President J. E. Brulatour
V P and Treasurer E. O. Blackburn
Vice-President W. J. German
Vice-President P. E. Younkin
Secretary G. L. Nestel
Special Representatives G. H. Gibson,
J. L. Courcier.
Casino Film Exchange, Inc. .
210 E. 86th St., New York, N. Y.
REgent 4-0257
OFFICERS
President Joseph Scheinman
Vice-President Mendel Gruenberg
Secretary Munio Podhorzer
Celebrity Productions, Inc.
723 Seventh Ave., New York, N. Y.
BRyant 9-6067
COMPANY PERSONNEL
OFFICERS
President P. A. Powers
Secretary Mae O'Leary
Cinecolor, Inc.
2800 S. Olive Ave., Burbank, Calif.
STanley 7-1126
OFFICERS
President-Treasurer-
General Manager A. L. McCormick
1st Vice-President-
Technical Director A. M. Gundelflnger
2nd Vice-President-
Research Engineer W. T. Crespinel
Vice-President-Secretary William Prynne
Assistant Treasurer Doll Rhodes
Plant Superintendent Jack Smith
Production Manager John Glavin
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
A. L. McCormick, A. M. Gundelflnger, W. T.
Crespinel, William Prynne, G. Brashears.
Columbia Pictures Corp.
729 Seventh Ave., New York, N. Y.
BRyant 9-7900
OFFICERS & DEPARTMENTAL HEADS
President Harry Cohn
Executive Vice-President Jack Cohn
Treasurer A. Schneider
Assistant Treasurer Louis J. Barbano
Secretary Charles Schwartz
General Sales Manager A. Montague
Foreign Mgr. & Asst. Secy.. .Joseph A. McConville
Assistant Sales Manager Rube Jackter
Circuit Sales Lou Weinberg, Louis Astor
Shorts Sales Supervisor Max Weisfeldt
Controller Mortimer Wormier
Assistant Controller C. W. Sharpe
Assistant to A. Schneider Leo Jaffe
Mgr. Exchange Operations Henry Kaufman
Mgr. Foreign Exchange Operations .... Jack Segal
Supervisor for Latin America. . . .Charles Roberts
Dir. of Sales Promotion Maurice Grad
Mgr. of Sales Accounting George Josephs
Dir. Adv.-Pub. -Exploit Maurice A. Bergman
Publicity Manager Hortense Schorr
Exploitation Manager Frank McGrann
Art Director Jack Meyers
Bus. Mgr. Publicity Dept Dave O'Malley
Foreign Publicity Mgr Clarence J. Schneider
Eastern Scenario Editor Eve Ettinger
Title Department Hannah Kasa
Exec. Asst. to Jack Cohn Hal Hode
Mgr. Contract & Music Depts Floyd Weber
Personnel Director John Kane
Assistant to Jack Cohn Harry Takiff
Director of Purchases Max Seligman
Accessories Sales Mgr Al Seligman
Mgr. of Print Dept Bill Brennan
Sales Contract Dept Seth Raisler
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Harry Cohn, Jack Cohn, A. Schneider. Charles
Schwartz, Leo M. Blancke, S. Bornstein, J. Kerner.
FOREIGN BRANCHES
GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND — Columbia
Pictures Corp., Ltd., 139 Wardour St., London.
Joseph Friedman, Managing Director: Max Thorpe,
Sales Manager; G. J. Maidment, Secretary.
FRANCE — A. Stein, Managing Director, Colum-
bia Films, S. A., 20 Rue Trovon, Paris.
BELGIUM — Columbia Films, S. A. Beige, 69
Rue Du Pont, Brussels, R. Ragot, Managing Di-
rector.
SWEDEN — Columbia Film, A. B., Kungsgaten
48, Stockholm, O. Bjorkman, Branch Manager.
DENMARK — Columbia Film, A. S., Ham-
merichsgade 13, Copenhagen, H. Malmttrcm,
Branch Manager.
611
COMPANY PERSONNEL
SPAIN" — A. Manez. Sales Manager. Columbia
Films. S. A.. Avcnida del Generalisimo Franco
484. Barcelona.
HOLLAND — L. C. Barnstijn, Standard Films,
Filmstad, The Hagrue.
SWITZERLAND — Columbus Film A. G., Glar-
nisehstr 30, Zurich.
EGYPT — Columbia Pictures Near East, Ltd.,
40 rue Fouad Ier. Alexandria. E. Malak. Manager.
NORWAY — Kamera Film, Oddfellow Bygningen,
Oslo.
ITALY — R. Boeehi. 15 Piazza Adriana. Rome.
Special Representative: Distributor, Consorzio
Cinematosrafico, E, I. A., via Varese 16-B. Rome.
ARGENTINE — L. Goldstein, General Manager,
Columbia Pictures of Argentina, Inc.. Lavalle
2086. Buenos Aires.
CHILE — Columbia Pictures of Chile. Inc.. (P.
O.) Casilla 3770, Morande 246, Santiago, E. Lopez
Perez, Manager.
BRAZIL — A. M. Noye, General Manager, Colum-
bia Pictures of Brazil, Inc., Caixa Postal 110!).
Rio de Janeiro.
CUBA — Columbia Pictures de Cuba, S. A., 158
Consulado, Havana. Ernesto Smith. Manager.
MEXICO — Columbia Pictures. S. A., P. O. Box
911. Calle Donato Guerra 5 Bis. Mexico City.
PERU — Columbia Pictures of Peru. Inc., Apdo.
Postal 2532. Edificio Mineria, Lima, Max Ehren-
reieh. Manager.
BRITISH WEST INDIES AND BRITISH AND
DUTCH GUIANA — Columbia Pictures of West
Indies. Ltd.. 58 Frederick St.. P. O. Box 442. Port
of Spain, Trinidad. B. W. I., Ed Kerner, Manager.
VENEZUELA — Christiaan van der Ree, Chorro
a Coliseo 33, Aptdo. 1026. Caracus.
PUERTO RICO — Medal Film Exchange. Film
Center Bids'.. P. O. Box 422, Parado 8. San Juan.
PANAMA — H. B. Prosdocimi. General Mana-
ger for Central America. Canal Zone. Ecuador and
Colombia. Columbia Pictures of Panama, Inc.,
Avenida Balboa 5060, Colon.
CANAL ZONE — Columbia Pictures of Panama.
Inc.. P. O. Box 5073, Cristobal.
JAPAN — M. Bergher. General Manager, Colum-
bia Films. Ltd.. Osaka Bldg.. Tokio.
INDIA — N. C. Laharry. General Manager, Co-
lumbia Films of India, Ltd., 170 Dharamtala St..
Calcutta.
CHINA — P. S. Chung. General Manager. Colum-
bia Films of China, Ltd.. 142 Museum Road.
Shanghai.
PHILIPPINE ISLANDS — Columbia Pictures of
Philippines. Inc., 404 Avenue Rizal, Manila. E.
Goldman. Manager.
NETHERLAND EAST INDIES — S. S. Samuels.
Supervisor for Netherland East Indies. Straits
Settlements, Federated Malay States. Unfederated
Malay States and Siam. Columbia Films of Neth-
erlands Indies, Ltd., P. O. Box 88, Kiningsplein N.
9. Batavia-Centrum, Java.
STRAITS SETTLEMENTS — Columbia Films of
Malaya. Ltd.. P. O. Box 134, 76 Orchard Road.
Singapore. N. Sen, Manager.
AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND — Columbia
Pictures Proprietary, Ltd., C. F. Mason. General
Manager: C. Jones, Asst. to General Manager, 251
a Pitt St., Sydney.
Consolidated Film Industries,
Inc.
1776 Broadway. New York. N. Y.
COlumbus 5-1 77C
East Coast Laboratory
Fort Lee, X. J.
FOrt Lee 8-3400
New York Laboratory
250 W. 51th St., New York, N. Y.
Circle 7-0870
Hollywood Office
933 Seward St., Hollwood, Calif.
HOlIywood 1441
West Coa»t Laboratory
959 Seward St., Hollywood, Calif.
Hollywood 1441
OFFICERS
President h. J. Yates
Vice-President j. l Aller
Vice-President R. I. Poucher
Vice-President M. J. Siegel
Vice-President w. W. Vincent
Vice-President-Treasurer H. J. Yates Jr
Secretary j. e. McMahon
Assistant Treasurer R. S. Rodgers
Assistant Treasurer E. H. Seifert
Assistant Treasurer N. K. Loder
Assistant Secretary A. E. Schiller
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
H. J. Yates, Chairman; J. L. Aller, R. W. Alt-
schuler, E. H. Seifert, J. W. Coffman, E. C. Dear-
Btyne, J. E. MaePherson, R. I. Poucher. M J
Siegel, W. P. Stevens. W. W. Vincent, H. J. Yates
Jr.
SUBSIDIARY:
Cinema Patents Company, Inc.
OFFICERS
President M. J. Siegel
Vice-President R. I. Poucher
Vice-President M. C. Green
Secretary-Treasurer H. J. Yates. Jr.
Assistant Secretary-Assistant
Treasurer j. Petrauskas, Jr.
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
H. J. Yates, M. J. Siegel.
Cosmocolor Corp.
1 Exchange Place. Jersey City, N. i.
1001 N. Mansfield Ave., Holivwood, Calif.
Hillside 8244
OFFICERS
President David Blankenhorn
V P & Treasurer Waldo M. Hatch
Director of Research Otto C. Gilmore
Asst. to the President John R. Stair
Secretary David P. Blankenhorn
Assistant Treasurer Harry P. Weston
Office Manager John Blankenhorn
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Waldo M. Hatch. David Blankenhorn. Otto C.
Gilmore. David P. Blankenhorn.
Danubia Pictures, Inc.
729 Seventh Ave., New York, N. Y.
BRyant 9-1175
OFFICERS
President-Sales Manager E. J. Lang
V-P-Distribution Manager Bela Black
V-P-Foreigh Buyer Dezso Szenes
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
E. J. Lang. Bela Black, Dezso Szenes, John
Black.
Dimningcolor Corp.
932 N. La Brea Ave., Hollywood, Calif.
GRanite 3174
OFFICERS
President Carroll H. Dunning
Vice-President Dodge Dunning
Secretary Lauriston E. Clark
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Carroll H. Dunning, Dodge Dunning, Lauriston
E. Clark, Mary D. Dunning, Virginia C. Dunning.
DuPont Film Manufacturing
Corp.
9 Rockefeller Plaza, New York, N. Y.
Circle 6-3347
612
OFFICERS
President-General Manager Newton I. Steers
Vice-President-Asst. General
Manager George A. Scanlan
Vice-President J. J. Mossmann
Treasurer J. B. Eliason
Secretary M. D. Fisher
Asst. Treasurer-Asst. Secretary A. L. Koester
Dir. of Manufacture D. H. Kinloch
Plant Manager K. R. Myers
Dir. of Laboratory V. B. Sease
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
A. B. Echols. Chairman; Newton I. Steers, G.
A. Scanlan. J. J. Mossman. H. C. Haskell, R. R.
Young-, T. C. Davis.
Eastman Kodak Company
313 State St., Rochester, N. Y.
MAin 4800
6706 Santa Monica Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
HEmpstead 3171
350 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y.
MUrray Hill 3-6068
OFFICERS
Chairman of the Board William G. Stuber
President-General Manager .... Frank W. Lovejoy
V-P and Secretary Thomas Jean Hargrave
V-P and Genl. Sales Counselor. .Charles F. Ames
V-P and Asst. General Manager. .Albert F. Sulzer
V-P in Chg. of Research-
Development Dr. C. E. Kenneth Mees
V-P in Chg. of Sales-
Advertising Herman C. Sievers
Assistant Vice-President Adolph Stuber
Asst. V-P and Production
Mgr Dr. Albert K. Chapman
Treasurer Marion B. Folsom
Assistant Treasurer Jack L. Gorham
Assistant Treasurer Frank M. Page
Assistant Treasurer A. H. Robinson
General Comptroller Cornelius J. Van Niel
Assistant Comptroller I. L. Houley
Assistant Secretary Milton K. Robinson
Gen. Mgr. of Kodak Park Works. .Charles K. Flint
Sales Mgr. Motion Picture Film
Dept Edward Peck Curtis
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
James Sibley Watson. Daniel E. Evarts. Frank
W. Lovejoy, William G. Stuber, George H. Clark.
Dr. C. E. Kenneth Mees, Thomas Jean Hargrave.
Francis C. Mattison, Albert F. Sulzer, Herman C.
Sievers, Perley S. Wilcox. Raymond N. Ball, Paul
S. Achilles.
PRINCIPAL SUBSIDIARIES
Tennessee Eastman Corp., Eastman Gelatine
Corp., Recordak Corp.. Eastman Kodak Stores,
Inc., Canadian Kodak Co., Ltd., Kodak Ltd., Ko-
dak-Pathe. E. A. F.. Kodak (Australia), Pty.,
Ltd.
Electrical Research
Products, Inc.
105 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
BArclay 7-5900
OFFICERS
President \ .T. K. Stevenson
Vice-President D. C. Collins
Vice-President T. E. Shea
Vice-President Clifford W. Smith
Secretary H. B. Gilmore
Assistant Secretary E. R. Finch
Assistant Secretary E. T. Purcell
Assistant Secretary J. C. R. Palmer
Assistant Secretary B. F. Bistline, Jr.
Treasurer Charles Olajos
Assistant Treasurer B. L. Glaser
Assistant Treasurer E. T. Purcell
Comptroller F. B. Foster, Jr.
General Counsel T. Brooke Price
COMPANY PERSONNEL
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
E. S. Bloom, D. C. Collins, T. B. Price. T. K.
Stevenson, C. G. Stoll, W. H. Hosford.
SUBSIDIARIES
Audio Productions, Inc.
35-11 35th Ave.. Long Island City, N. Y.
KAvenswood 8-8300
OFFICERS
Presiden t F . K . Speidell
Vice-President A. J. Wilson
Secretary E. G. Wagner
Assistant Secretary P. J. Mooney
Treasurer E. G. Wagner
Assistant Treasurer P. J. Mooney
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
D. C. Collins, E. E. Shumaker, F. K. Speidell,
T. K. Stevenson, E. J. Moriarty.
Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.
.!.->- II 35th Ave.. Long Island City, N. Y.
KAvenswood 8-1 100
OFFICERS
President E. E. Shumaker
Vice-President V. C. Arnspiger
Vice-President H. C. Grubbs
Treasurer E. E. Shumaker
Assistant Treasurer J. McGilvray
Secretary J. McGilvray
Assistant Secretary V. C. Arnspiger
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
V. C. Arnspiger. D. C. Collins, H. C. Grubbs.
E. E. Shumaker, T. K. Stevenson. •
General Service Studios, Inc.
6625 Romaine St., Holywood, Calif.
OFFICERS
President D. C. Hickson
Vice-President Clifford W. Smith
Secretary G. H. Medley
Assistant Secretary S. E. Hawkins
Treasurer G. H. Medley
Assistant Treasurer Charles Olajos
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
K. E. Grant. D. C. Hickson, G. C. Pratt. C. W.
Smith, T. K. Stevenson.
Esperia Film Distributing Co.
1650 Broadway, New York, N". Y'.
Circle 6-3169
OFFICERS
General Manager Dr. Francesco Macaluso
Treasurer L. Di Carlo
Film Alliance of the United
States, Inc.
1870 Sixth Ave., New York, N. Y.
Circle 7-1970
OFFICERS
President L. E. Thompson
Vice President Nat Wachsberger
Treasurer A. D. Erickson
Secretary Percival E. Furber
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
L. E. Thompson, Nat Wachsberger, Harry
Brandt.
613
COMPANY PERSONNEL
Film Company of Ireland
437 Central Park West, New York, N. Y.
ACademy 2-8342
OFFICERS
Manager George Crommey
Secretary Hugh Smythe
Franco-American Film Corp.
G6 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y.
ALgonquin 3-6980
OFFICERS
President Samuel Kaplan
Secretary -Treasurer A. T. Kaplan
Vice-President I. Kaplan
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Samuel Kaplan, A. T. Kaplan, I. Kaplan.
SUBSIDIARIES
Cinemas Francais, Inc.
Eskap, Inc.
French Cinema Center, Inc.
35 W. 45th St., New York, N. Y.
LOngacre 3-5254.
OFFICERS
President Andre R. Heymann
V-P & Treasurer P. Arnaud
Secretary Jerry Heymann
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Andre R.- Heymann. P. Arnaud. Jerry Heymann.
L. Arnaud.
SUBSIDIARY
French Films Import Co., Inc.
OFFICERS
President Andre R. Heymann
V-P & Treasurer P. Arnaud
Secretary Jerry Heymann
French Film Exchange
545 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y.
VAnderbilt 6-5178
Proprietor Leo Malchin
Garrison Film Distributors,
Inc.
1600 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
Circle 6-4868
OFFICERS
President L. Landy
Vice-President Irving M. Plaine
Treasurer T. J. Brandon
Mgr. Booking Department A. J. Stevens
Mgr. Foreign Sales T. J. Brandon
Ganmont British Picture
Corp. of America
1600 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
Circle 6-4848
OFFICERS
Vice-President-Treasurer Arthur A. Lee
Secretary M. E. Frewer
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Mark Oetrer, David Ostrer, Arthur A. Lee.
General Film Library, Inc.
1600 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
Circle 6-0081
OFFICERS
President-Secretary M. J. Kandel
Vice-President Emanuel Kandel
Treasurer Sidney Kandel
Comptroller B. Miller
Librarian p. Seigelaub
Zane Grey, Inc.
280 E. Mariposa St., Atladena, Calif.
SYcamore 7-9555
250 Park Ave., New York, N. Y.
ELdorado 5-2544
OFFICERS
President Lina Elise Grey
V-P & Secretary Romer Grey
Treasurer E. E. Doyle
N. Y. Representative Stephen Slesinger
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Lina Elise Grey, Romer Grey, E. E. Doyle.
Loren Grey, Betty Zane Carney.
Romer Grey Pictures, Ltd.
OFFICERS
President Romer Grey
Vice-President Theodore W. Webster
Secretary Marie Lower
Treasurer E. E. Doyle
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Lina Elise Grey, Romer Grey, E. E. Doyle.
Grono Film Productions, Ine.
33 W. 42nd St., New York, N. Y.
LOngacre 3-5657
OFFICERS
President John F. Gulmantowicz
V-P & Exec. Producer Michael J. Gann
First Vice-President Stephen Ne6ter
Secretary -Treasurer Eleanora S. Szczawinska
Musical Director A. N. VaUky
Guaranteed Pictures Co.,
Inc.
729 Seventh Ave., New York, N. X.
BRyant 9-4369
OFFICERS
President Mortimer D. Sikawitt
Secretary-Treasurer Samuel Goldstein
Hoffberg Productions, Inc.
1600 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
Circle 6-9031
OFFICERS
President J. H. Hoffberg
Vice-President Oliver A. Unger
Secretary M. Bonowitz
DEPARTMENT HEADS
Sales Department Oliver A. Unger
16 mm. and Non-Theatrical Div... Howard Rinsrel
Foreign Department Mark A. Brum
FOREIGN REPRESENTATIVES
ENGLAND — Reginald Reubenson, 95 Holme-
field Court. Belsize Grove. London, N. W. 3.
MEXICO — Rafael de la Cruz Blanco, Apartado
2362, Mexico, D. F.
FRANCE — J. P. Lamy. 20 Rue Baudin, Paris
(9e).
BRAZIL — N. A. Rucklin, Hotel Argentine, Rio
de Janeiro.
614
Ideal Pictures Corp.
1600 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
Circle 6-0081
OFFICERS
President-Secretary M. J. Kandel
Vice-President Emanuel Kandel
Treasurer Sidney Kandel
Comptroller B. Miller
Production Manager Sam Besner
Imperial Pictures, Inc.
729 Seventh Ave., New York, N. Y.
BRyant 9-8669
OFFICERS
President William M. Pizor
Vice-President Lewen Pizor
Secretary Arthur J. Bonns
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
William M. Pizor, Lewen Pizor, Arthur J.
Bonus, Irwin Pizor, Nathan BraunBtein.
Inter-Allied Films, Inc.
250 W. 67th St., New York, N. Y.
Circle 5-7600
OFFICERS
President J. E. Otterion
Vice-President (France) Edouard C. Molinier
Secretary-Treasurer Charles B. Paine
Assistant Treasurer W. E. Van Beveren
Asst. Secretary-Asst. Treasurer M. Braun
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
J. E. Otterson, Edouard C. Molinier, Charles
Schwartz.
SUBSIDIARY
Tri-National Films, Inc.
OFFICERS
President J. E. Otterson
Vice-President (France) Edouard C. Molinier
Vice-President (England) John Sutro
Secretary-Treasurer Charles B. Paine
Assistant Treasurer W. E. Van Beveren
Aist. Secretary-Asst. Treasurer M. Braun
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
J. E. Otterson. C. B. Paine, Charles Schwartz.
International Road Shows
630 Ninth Ave., New York, N. Y.
Circle 6-0655
OFFICERS
General Manager Jack Goldberg
Office Manager Lou Goldberg
WEST COAST REPRESENTATIVE
Bert Goldbert & Port, Inc.
9171 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
CRestview 1-5755
OFFICERS
Executive Bert Goldberg
Production Supervisor George Randol
Publicity James Asendio
Sound Engineer Glen Glenn
Producers Dixon Harwin,
George Roland, Bernard Ray, Arthur Dreifuss.
16 mm. Dept F. Strange Kolle
Lenauer International Films,
Inc.
38 Grove St., New York, N. Y.
OFFICERS
President-Treasurer Jean H. Lenauer
Secretary -Booker Rosalind Kossoff
COMPANY PERSONNEL
Lloyds Film Storage Corp.
729 Seventh Ave., New York, N. Y.
BRyant 9-5600, Cable: LOYFILSTOR
OFFICERS
President-Treasurer Florence E. Miles
Assistant to President Charles J. Gribbon
Secretary E. B. Diel
Storage Supervisor William O'Hara
N. Y. Vault Manager John Donovon
L. I. Vault Manager Sam Carlton
Loew's, Inc.
1540 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
BRyant 9-7800
OFFICERS
President Nicholas M. Schenck
1st Vice-President Arthur M. Loew
Vice-President J. Robert Rubin
Vice-President -Treasurer David Bernstein
Vice-President Edward A. Schiller
Vice-President Edgar J. Mannix
Vice-President Al Lichtman
Vice-President Sam Katz
Secretary Leopold Friedman
Assistant Treasurer Charles K. Stern
Assistant Treasurer Charles C. Moskowitz
Assistant Treasurer Len Cohen
Assistant Treasurer R. Lazarus
Assistant Treasurer Nicholas Mayfack
Assistant Secretary J. T. Mills
Assistant Secretary H. Helborn
Assistant Secretary Ben Thau
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Nicholas M. Schenck. David Bernstein, J. Rob-
ert Rubin, David Warfleld. Henry Rogers Win-
throp, John R. Hazel, Leopold Friedman, Charles
C. Moskowitz, George N. Armsby, William A.
Parker, Al Lichtman.
DEPARTMENT HEADS
Genl. Mgr. of Sales-
Distribution William F. Rodgers
Eastern, Southern-Canadian Sales
Mgr Thomas J. Connors
Western Sales Manager Edward M. Saunders
Dir. Adv. -Pub. -Exploitation Howard Dietz
Asst. to W. F. Rodgers E. W. Aaron
Assts. to E. M. Saunders Joel Bezahler,
Irving Helfont.
Assts. to T. J. Connors Charles F. Deesen,
Harold Postman, I. Leonard Hirsch.
Sales Development Mgr Jay A. Gove
Mgr. Short Feature Dept Fred C. Quimby
Advertising Manager Silas F. Seadler
Mgr. of Exploitation William R. Ferguson
Art Director Harold L. Burrows
Mgr. Exchange Operations. .. .Alan F. Cummings
Mgr. Exchange Maintenance J. S. MacLeod
Mgr. Transportation Ernest Morrell
Mgr. Film Department William D. Kelly
In Chg. Out-of-Town Theater
Operation J. R. Vogel
Mgr. Contract Department ... William L. Levine
Mgr. Purchasing Dept '..Charles J. Sonin
Mgr. "News of the Day" Bookings. .Arthur Lacks
Editor "The Distributor" M. L. Simons
INTERNATIONAL DEPARTMENT
1st V-P and in Chg. International
Operations Arthur M. Loew
Assistant to A. M. Loew Morton S. Spring
Secretary. International Dept David Blum
Comptroller, International
Dept Henry F. Krecke
In Chg. of Foreign Theater
Operations William Melniker
FOREIGN BRANCHES
ALGERIA — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, S. A.. 10
Rue Charras, Algiers.
615
COMPANY PERSONNEL
ARGENTINA— Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer de la Ar-
gentina, Calle Sarmiento 2570, Buenos Aires — S
Dunlap.
AUSTRALIA — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pty.. Ltd.,
Box 2576 E.. G. P. O.. 20-28 Chalmers St., Sydney
— N. Bernard Freeman.
BELGIUM — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer S. A. Beige,
4/6 Rue des Plantes, Brussels — S. Habib.
BULGARIA — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Film Ver-
triebs A. G.. Klementina 11, Sofia — J. Birkhahn.
BRAZIL — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer do Brasil, Edi-
fieio Metro, Rua Passeio No. 62, Caixa Postal
2724, Rio de Janeiro — D. Lewis.
BRITISH WEST INDIES — Metro-Goldwyn-
Mayer of the West Indies. 10 Broadway. P. O.
Box 111, Trinidad, Port of Spain — D. J. Golden-
berg'.
CHILE — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer de Chile, Casilla
C. Edifieio Teatro Metro Calle Bandera Esq. Union
Central. Santiago — R. J. Brenner.
CHINA — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer of China,
Rooms 1.38-141 Embankment House, Sooehow
Rond. Shanghai — M. Marcus.
COLOMBIA — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer de Colom-
bia. Carrera 8A No. 17-00. Boerota — D. Banker.
CUBA — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer de Cuba. Con-
sulado 254. Havana — E. F. O'Connor.
CZECHOSLOVAKIA — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer A.
G.. Ina Prikope .35. Prague II.
DENMARK — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer A/S, Ham-
meriehsgade 14, Copenhagen.
EGYPT — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer of Egypt, 35
Soleman Pasha St., Cairo — L. Lober.
ESTONIA — Filmindustrie A. G. Metro-Goldwyn-
Mayer. Kinga 6/8 Kort. 1, P. O. B. 295, Tallinn —
R. Muldau.
FINLAND — O. Y. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Films.
A. B., Mikeelsgatan 0. Helsingfors.
FRANCE — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer S. A. F„ 37
Rue Condoreet, Paris — A. Byre.
GERMANY — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Film A. G..
Friedriehstrasse 225, Berlin, S. W. 68 — P. Witzig.
GREAT BRITAIN — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pic-
tures. Ltd., 10-21 Tower St., London W. C. 2 — S.
Eckman. Jr.
GREECE — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Films (Hel-
las) Ltd.. 10 Efpolidos St., Athens — E. S. Harty.
HOLLAND — N. V. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Film
Maatsehappii, Damrak 49. Amsterdam — H. Hem-
mes.
HUNGARY — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Dist. Corp.,
Foherecg-Sandor Ter 3, Budapest VIII — K. Gutt-
man.
INDIA — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer India. Ltd..
Metro House. Esplanade Road, P. O. Box 837.
Bombay — A. R. Jones.
IRAQ — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer of Egypt. 387/1
Al Rashid St.. Bagdad.
IRELAND — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures, Ltd.,
9a Lower Abbey St., Dublin.
JAPAN — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Co., Ltd., Osaka
Bldg., Dai Ni Go Kan, No. 3-1, Itchome, Uehisai-
waieho. Kojimaehi-ku P. O. Box 414, Tokio —
J. D. Bermann.
LATVIA — Filmindustrie A. G. Metro-Goldwyn-
Mayer. Elizabetes iela 51, Pasta Kastite 895, Riga
— L. Model.
LITHUANIA — F. W. N. Becker savo atstovybe
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Filmu Lietuvoje, Doncliacio
Gatve 9B, Kaunas (Kowno)- — C. Kagan.
MEXICO — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer de Mexico, 51
Refornia. Mexico City — C. Niebla.
MOROCCO — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer S. A.. 2 Rue
du General Moinier, Casablanca.
NETHERLANDS INDIES — Metro-Goldwyn-
Mayer Oriental Co., Inc., Ryswyk 12 A, Batavia
Centrum. Java — B. Greenherg.
NETHERLAND WEST INDIES — Metro-Gold-
wyn-Mayer de Puerto Rico, P. O. Box 160. Curacao.
NEW ZEALAND — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pic-
tures. Ltd.. Hafe Gibbons Bldg., Wellington. C. 1.
NICARAGUA — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer de la
America Central, Apartado Postal, Managua.
NORWAY — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer A/S. Ovre
Slotsgate 21, Oslo — S. Dulin.
PALESTINE — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer of Egypt.
Montefiore Str. 11, P. O. Box 1539, Tel Aviv — O.
Chazanas.
PANAMA — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer de Panama.
P. O. Box T., Ancon, Canal Zone — W. L. Simpson
PERU — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer del Peru, Casilla
922, Lima — L. Sarmiento.
PHILIPPINE ISLANDS — Metro-Gold wvn-Mavcr.
Manila, Inc., 309 Bustos. P. O. Box 743. Manila —
I. Cohen.
POLAND — Tow Film Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Sp.
Z. ogr. odp., Marszalkowska 96, Warsaw — M.
Goichrach.
PORTUGAL — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Films Lda.
Rua Braamcamp 10. 1, Esq.. Lisbon — L. Leon.
PUERTO RICO — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer de
Puerto Rico, P. O. Box 1035, San Juan — D.
Gould.
ROUMANIA — Metro-Goldwyn-Film. S. A. R..
Strada Sf. Constantin No. 29, Casuta Postala 294.
Bucharest — E. Zaharovici.
SALVADOR — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer de la
America Central, Apartado No. 105. San Salvador.
SOUTH AGRICA — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Film-
(S. A.), Pty., Ltd., P. O. Box 5493, Metro-House.
Plein St.. Johannesburg — M. I. Davis.
SPAIN — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Iberiea S. A..
Calle Mallorea 201/302. Barcelona.
STRAITS SETTLEMENTS — Metro-Goldwyn-
Mayer Oriental Co., Inc., 144-B Robinson Road.
Singapore — M. Silverstein.
SWEDEN — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer A/B, 16-18
Kungsgatan. Stockholm — A. Hallin.
SWITZERLAND — M-G-M. S. A.. Geschaf tshaus.
"Zentrum" Sihlporte 3. Zurich I. — R. Weil.
SYRIA — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer of Egypt, Place
des Canons, B. P. 34, Beyrouth (Liban) — S.
Mandil.
URUGUAY — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer de Uruguay.
Edifieio Cine Metro, Calle San Jose y Cuareim.
Casilla 800. Montevideo — H. Bryman.
VENEZUELA — Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer de Vene-
zuela— Conde a Cramelitas No. 11. P. O. Box 309.
Caracas — J. R. Neal.
YUGOSLAVIA — Metro-Goldwyn-jugoslavensko
drnstvo za promet filmova, Pejaeevicev Trg. 17.
Zagreg — S. Beckeris.
Luporini & Variety Film
Corp.
:'.:! W. 12nd St.. New York. N. Y.
I.Ongaere 5-0790, CHiekering 4-6205
OFFICERS
President Ferdinand V. Luporini
Treasurer Amerigo Beneficio
Assistant Treasurer Frank P. Calabro
Secretary Carmen Sayago
Mavflower Pictures Corp.,
Ltd.
1270 Sixth Ave., New York, N. Y.
Circle 7-3915
OFFICERS
General Manager in U. S Budd Rogers
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
John Maxwell. Charles Laughton, Erich Pom-
mcr. F. M. Guedalla.
Miles Film Library Corp.
fl'.l Seventh Ave., New York, N. Y.
BRyant 9-5600
OFFICERS
President -Treasurer Florence E. Miles
General Manager Robert Matthews
Secretary E. B. Diel
Modern Film Corp.
729 Seventh Ave., New York, N. Y.
BRyant 9-9635
616
OFFICERS
President George Barnett
Viee-President-Treasurer Henry R. Arias
Secretary Benjamin Hemsey
DEPARTMENT HEADS
Mgr. Advertising-Publicity Helen Teitel
Mgr. Equipment Department ... Benjamin Hemsey
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
George Barnett. Henry R. Arias. Mrs. George
Barnett, Mrs. Henry R. Arias.
FOREIGN BRANCHES
ENGLAND — 191 Wardour St., London, W. 1.
FRANCE — 92 Blvd. des Champs Elysees, Paris.
Monogram Pictures Corp.
1370 Sixth Avenue, New York, N. Y.
COlumbus 5-7674
OFFICERS
President W. Ray Johnston
Vice-President Scott R. Dunlap
Secretary Madeleine S. White
Treasurer Thomas P. Loach
Comptroller Joseph H. Lamm
Assistant Treasurers Hugh G. Davis,
Edward G. Schreiber.
DEPARTMENT HEADS
General Sales Manager Edward A. Golden
Foreign Export Manager Norton V. Ritchey
Dir. of Adv. & Pub Louis S. Lifton
Mgr. Film Accessory Dept John S. Harrington
Art Director Russell M. Bell
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
W. Ray Johnston, Scott R. Dunlap. Trem Carr,
J. A. Sisto, O. Henry Briggs, William Jaffe, Thomas
P. Loach, Norton V. Ritchey, Samuel S. Broidy.
SUBSIDIARIES
Monogram Distributing Corp.
1341 Vine St., Philadelphia, Pa.
932 New Jersey Ave., N. W., Washington, D. C.
OFFICERS
President W. Ray Johnston
Vice-President Edward A. Golden
Secretary Madeleine S. White
Treasurer Edward G. Schreiber
Assistant Treasurer Hugh G. Davis
General Manager ol N. Y., Phila.,
Washington Exchanges Harry H. Thomas
Monogram Productions, Inc.
4510 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, California
Moniingside 11191
OFFICERS
President W. Ray Johnston
V-P in charge ol Production Scott R. Dunlap
Secretary E. Mulchrone
Treasurer J. P. Friedhoff
Technical Director Ernest Hickson
Production Manager Charles Bigelow
Assistant Production Manager Allan Wood
Production Supervisors Edward F. Finney,
Paul Malvern, T. R. Williams, William Lackey,
Grant Withers, Harry Webb.
Publicity William L. Peirce, Jr.
Costume Department Head Lou Brown
Property Master John Huff
Story Editor Dorothy Reid
Film Editor Russell Schoengarth
Music Dept. Head Edward Kay
Purchasing Agent Joel Fox
Transportation Manager Lou Deutch
Foreign Studio Representative. . . .Ralph Bettinson
FOREIGN BRANCHES
Export Manager Norton V. Ritchey
Assistant Export Manager Charles A. Morla
Foreign Service Manager Joseph Hanley
Foreign Publicity Robert Socas
ENGLAND — Pathe Pictures, Ltd., Ill Wardour
St., London, W. 1.
FRANCE — Ernest Wettstein, 111 bis Champs
Elysees, Paris.
COMPANY PERSONNEL
National Pictures Corp.
1501 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
LAckawanna 1-3544
OFFICERS
President Edwin Fadiman
Vice-President Clifton Fadiman
Secretary William Fadiman
Foreign & Domestic Saics Manager. .H. Pergament
FOREIGN OFFICE
FRANCE — G Rue Lamennais, Paris.
National Screen Service
Corp. and Advance Trailer
Service Corp.
C30 Ninth Ave., New York, N. Y.
Circle 6-5700
OFFICERS
President Herman Robbins
1st V P and Treasurer Toby Gruen
2nd Vice-President Frank J. C. Weinberg
Secretary Moses H. Gros6m»n
Asst. Treasurer & Asst. Secy.. .Elliott E. Pearlman
General Sales Manager George F. Dembow
General Executive William B. Brenner
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Herman Robbins. Toby Gruen. Frank J. C.
Weinberg, Jack G. Leo, Moses H. Grossman, Louis
J. Vorhaus.
SUBSIDIARIES
National Screen Accessories, Inc.
OFFICERS
President Herman Robbins
Vice-President & Treasurer Toby Gruen
Vice-President & Secretary. . .Charles L. Casanave
Asst. Treas. & Asst. Secy. ... Elliott E. Pearlman
General Sales Manager George F. Dembow
General Executive William B. Brenner
Advertising Accessories, Inc.
OFFICERS
President Herman Robbins
Vice-President & Treasurer Toby Gruen
Vice-President & Secretary ... Charles L. Casanave
Asst. Treas. & Asst. Secy. ... Elliott E. Pearlman
General Sales Manager George F. Dembow
General Executive William B. Brenner
Olympic Pictures Corp.
1600 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
Circle 6-0081
OFFICERS
President-Secretary M. J. Kandel
Vice-President Emanuel Kandel
Treasurer Sidney Kandel
Comptroller B. Miller
Production Manager Sam Besner
Paramount Pictures, Inc.
1501 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
CHickering 4-7010
OFFICERS
President Barney Balaban
Chairman of the Board Adolph Zukor
Chairman of Executive
Committee Stanton Griffis
Vice-President Neil F. Agnew
Vice-President Y. Frank Freeman
Vice-President George L. Bagnall
Vice-President John W. Hicks, Jr.
617
COMPANY PERSONNEL
Vice-President Austin C. Keough
Treasurer Walter B. Cokell
Secretary Austin C. Keough
Assistant Secretaries Norman Collyer,
Jacob H. Karp, Frank Meyer.
Comptroller Fred Mohrhardt
DEPARTMENT HEADS
V-P in Chg. of Distribution Neil F. Agnew
Dlr Advertising-Publicity Robert M. Gillham
V-P in Che. of Foreign
Distribution John W. Hicks, Jr.
Paramount News A. J. Richard
Eastern Production Rep Russell Holman
Eastern Story Editor Richard Mealand
Play Editor John Byram
Legal Department Austin C. Keough
Publicity Manager Al Wilkie
Advertising Manager Alec Moss
Mgr. Purchasing Dept Frank Meyer
Short Subject Dept. Head Lou Diamond
Personnel Manager J. P. McLoughlin
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Barney Balaban, Neil F. Agnew. Stephen Callag-
han. Harvey D. Gibson. A. Conger Goodyear,
Stanton Griffis, Duncan G. Harris, John D. Hertz,
Austin C. Keough, Earl I. McClintock, Maurice
Newton, E. V. Richards. Adolph Zukor, Y. Frank
Freeman, John W. Hicks, Jr., Edwin L. Weisl.
SUBSIDIARIES
Paramount Film Distributing Corp.
OFFICERS
President Barney Balaban
Vice-President Neil F. Agnew
Vice-President Austin C. Keough
Secretary Austin C. Keough
Assistant Secretaries Norman Collyer.
Frank Meyer
Treasurer Walter B. Cokell
Comptroller Fred Mohrhardt
Cashier Edward A. Brown
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Neil F. Agnew, Barney Balaban. J. J. Unger.
Charles M. Reagan, Austin C. Keough.
Paramount Theaters Service Corp.
OFFICERS
President Barney Balaban
Vice-President L. D. Netter
Secretary Edith Schaffer
Assistant Secretary Arthur Israel. Jr.
Treasurer M. F. Gowthorpe
Assistant Secretary Leonard H. Goldenson
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Barney Balaban, L. D. Netter, M. F. Gowthorpe.
Leonard H. Goldenson.
FOREIGN BRANCHES
GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND — David E.
Rose, Managing Director, Paramount Film Service,
Ltd.. 166 Wardour St., London W. 1. England.
AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND — -Harry
Hunter, Managing Director, Paramount Film Serv-
ice Pty, Ltd., 66 Reservoir St.. Sydney. Australia.
STRAITS SETTLEMENTS - NETHERLAND
EAST INDIES — J. A. Groves. Managing Director.
Paramount Film Service. Ltd.. 51 Robinson Road.
Singapore, Straits Settlements.
INDIA — Paramount Films' of India, Ltd., 170
Dharamtala St., Calcutta.
JAPAN— J. E. Perkins, Managing Director
(Japan, Korea, China, Hong Kong. Philippine
Islands), Paramount Films, Ltd., Osaka Bldg.,
Uchisaiwaicho Kojimaehiku, C. P. 0. Box 378,
Tokyo.
CHINA — Paramount Films of China, Inc., Cap-
itol Bldg., 142 Museum Road, Shanghai: Y. Kao.
General Sales Manager.
PHILIPPINE ISLANDS — Paramount Films of
Philippines, Inc., P. O. Box 587, Cu Unjieng Bldg.,
Calle Pinpin, Manila; F. C. Henry, Manager.
BRAZIL — Paramount Films. S. A., Avenida Rio
Branco 247, Caixa Postal 179. Rio de Janeiro:
John L. Day, Jr., General Manager (Brazil, Argen-
tina, Uruguay, Paraguay, Chile, Peru, Bolivia).
ARGENTINA — Paramount Films. S. A.. Ayacu-
cho 518/20, Buenos Aires; John B. Nathan, Man-
aging Director.
URUGUAY — Paramount Films, S. A., Calle Yi
1385, Montevideo.
CHILE — Paramount Films. S. A., Tenderini 159,
Santiago; Benito Del Villar, Manager (Chile, Peru,
Bolivia) .
PERU — Paramount Films, S. A., Apartado 582.
Lima.
CUBA — A. L. Pratchett. General Manager (Pan-
ama, Mexico, Jamaica, B. W. I., Guatemala. Puerto
Rico, Colombia, Venezuela. Ecuador), Paramount
Films of Cuba, Inc., Industria 312, Havana.
MEXICO — Paramount Films, S. A., Calle Ayun-
tamiento No. 46, (Apartado Postal 108 bis),
Mexico City.
CANAL ZONE — Paramount Films. S. A., P. O.
Box A, Aneon.
GUATEMALA — Paramount Films of Guate-
mala, Inc.. Apartado 253, Guatemala City.
PUERTO RICO — Paramount Films, Inc., Apar-
tado 653. Tanca 10 y2, San Juan.
COLOMBIA- — Paramount Films, S. A., Apartado
333. Bogota.
BRITISH WEST INDIES — Paramount Films of
Trinidad, Inc., P. O. Box 64, Port of Spain, Trini-
dad.
FRANCE — Henri Klarsfeld, Director General
(France, Switzerland, Egypt, Algeria, Tunis, Mo-
rocco), Films Paramount. 1 Rue Meyerbeer, Paris.
ALGERIA — Films Paramount, 51, rue Michelet.
Alger.
TUNISIA — Films Paramount (Sous-Agence), 13
rue de Grece, Tunis.
MOROCCO — Films Paramount (Sous-Agence).
42 Boulevard de la Gare. Casablanca.
EGYPT — Films Paramount, 21 rue Twefik, Le
Caire.
SYRIA — Films Paramount, P. O. Box 849, Bey-
routh.
SWITZERLAND — Eos Film A. G., Agence Gen-
erale pour la Suisse, Reichensteinerstrasse 14,
Basle 8.
BELGIUM — Films Paramount, S. A., 31 Chaus-
see de Haecht, Brussels.
GERMANY — Andre Olsen. General Manager
(Germany, Holland, Hungary, Yugoslavia, Pro-
tectorate of Bohemia and Moravia) Paramount
Film A-G, Friedrichstrasse 50-51, Berlin.
HOLLAND — N. V. Paramount Films Holland,
399 Keizersgracht, Amsterdam.
YUGOSLAVIA — Yugoslavensko D. D. Za
Promet. Paramount Filmova, Frankopanska-ul
HUNGARY — Paramount Filmforgalmi R. T..
Rakoczi-ut 59, Budapest VIII.
PROTECTORATE OF BOHEMIA AND MO-
RAVIA— Paramount Filmova spol. s. r. o., Ste-
pansak Ul 35. Prague.
POLAND — Paramount Films sp. zogT. odp.,
Sienna 4, Warsaw.
SWEDEN — Carl P. York, General Manager
(Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Finland) Filmaktie-
bolaget Paramount. Hamngatan 22. Stockholm.
DENMARK — Filmaktieselskabet Paramount.
Vestre Boulevard 29, Copenhagen.
NORWAY — Film-Aktieselskapet Paramount.
Stortingsgaten 12, Oslo.
FINLAND — Oy. Paramount Films, AB. Hogbers-
gatan 47, Helsingfors.
SPAIN — Paramount Films. S. A., 91 Paseo de
Gracia, Barcelona (S. Vidal Batet. General Man-
ager Spain. Portugal).
PORTUGAL — Paramount Films, S. A.. Rua
Braamcamp 10, Lisbon.
Pathe Film Corp.
30 Rockefeller Plaza, New York, N. Y.
COlumbus 5-0760
OFFICERS
President K. M. Young
618
Vice-President T. P. Loach
Secretary M. M. Malone
Treasurer T. P. Loach
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
K. M. Young:, R. R. Young", A. P. Kirby, R. M.
McKinney, H. J. Guild, Louis Phillips, C. A. Stone.
Pathe Laboratories, Inc.
30 Rockefeller Plaza, New York, N. Y.
COlumbus 5-0760
OFFICERS
President 0. H. Briggs
Vice-President T. P. Loach
Secretary M. M. Malone
Treasurer T. P. Loach
Assistant Treasurer K. G. Fraser
Sales Manager D. Frankel
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
R. H. Young-, R. M. McKinney, O. H. Briggs, T.
P. Loach. A. W. Miller, R. M. Young:.
SUBSIDIARIES
Pathe Laboratories, Inc. of California
6823 Santa Monica Boulevard, Hollywood, Calif.
Hollywood 3961
President 0. Henry Brig-g-s
Vice-President T. P. Loach
Vice-President and General Manag-er,
C. Merlin Travis
Secretary and Treasurer R. E. Young
DIRECTORS
O. Henry Brig-g-s, T. P. Loach, C. Merlin Travis,
Trem Carr, Russell H. Wilson, Robert Benjamin,
Arthur Miller.
State Theater Company
OFFICERS
President O. H. Brig-g-s
Secretary-Treasurer T. P. Loach
Assistant Treasurer K. G. Fraser
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
O. H. Brig-g-s, T. P. Loach. M. M. Malone.
Pax Film. Inc.
723 Seventh Ave., New York, N. Y.
MEdallion 3-3248
OFFICERS
President I. E. Lopert
Vice President R. Lopert
Secretary -Treasurer B. Witkin
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
I. E. Lopert, T. Witkin, R. Lopert.
Progress Films, Inc.
729 Seventh Ave., New York, N. Y.
BRyant 9-5600
OFFICERS
President-Treasurer Florence E. Miles
Assistant to President Charles J. Gribbon
Managing- Director Robert Matthews
Secretary E. B. Diel
Puritan Pictures Corp.
723 Seventh Ave., New York, N. Y.
BRyant 9-2790
OFFICERS
Treasurer Nathan Saland
Secretary Gus Harris
Assistant Treasurer S. Stein
Vice-President Irving B. J. Levine
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Nathan Saland, Gut Harris, S. Stein, Irving- B.
J. Levine.
COMPANY PERSONNEL
RCA Manufacturing Co., Inc.
201 N. Front St., Camden, N. 3.
Camden 8000
OFFICERS
President G. K. Throckmorton
Executive Vice-President R. Shannon
Vice-President (Sales) H. C. Bonfig
Vice-President (Engineering) L. M. Clement
Vice-President (Financial) F. H. Corregan
Vice-President (Sales) F. R. Deakins
Mgr. of Photophone Division E. C. Cahill
Service Manager W. L. Jones
Mgr. of Hollywood Plant J. E. Francis
Assistant Vice-President R. B. Austrian
Assistant Vice-President M. F. Burns
Mgr. of International Division J. D. Cook
Vice-President (Advertising) T. F. Joyce
Vice-President (Purchasing) N. A. Mears
Vice-President (Law) L. B. Morris
Vice-President (Mgr. of Indianapolis plant)
J. M. Smith
Vice-President (Sales) F. B. Walker
Vice-President (Sales) V. C. Woodcox
Treasurer E. F. Haines
Comptroller A. McGillivray
Secretary H. F. Corregan
PLANTS
Harrison, N. J., 415 S. Fifth St.
Indianapolis, Ind., 601 N. LaSalle St.
Hollywood, Calif., 1016 N. Sycamore Ave.
RECORDING STUDIOS
New York, N. Y., 155 E. 24th St.
Hollywood, Calif., 1016 N. Sycamore Ave.
Radio Corporation of
America
30 Rockefeller Plaza, New York, N. Y.
COlumbus 5-5900
OFFICERS
Chairman of the Board. General James G. Harbord
President David Sarnoff
Vice-President-General Counsel Manton Davis
Vice-President in chg. of Patents. Otto S. Schairer
Vice-President in chg. or Labor Relations,
Edward F. McGrady
Vice President, Advertising and Publicity
Frank E. Mullen
V-P and Treasurer George S. DeSousa
Assistant Treasurer Lunsford P. Yandell
Assistant Treasurer William R. Eberlo
Comptroller Henry A. Sullivan
Secretary Lewis MacConnach
Assistant Secretary Robert C. Proppe
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
General James G. Harbord, Chairman: Cor-
nelius N. Bliss, Arthur E. Braun. Bertram Cutler,
Charles G. Dawes, Gano Dunn, John Hays Ham-
mond, Jr., Edward W. Harden, Edward W. Mc-
Grady, DeWitt Millhauser, Edward J. Nally, David
Sarnoff.
SUBSIDIARIES
National Broadcasting Co., Radiomarine Cor-
poration of America, R. C. A. Institutes, Inc.,
R. C. A. Communications, Inc., RCA Manufactur-
ing Co., Inc.
Radio-Kcith-Orpheum Corp.
(The new Delaware corporation which acquired
on January 26th, 1940, the assets of Radio-Keith-
Orpheum Corporation, the Maryland corporation
recently reorganized. The Delaware corporation
will conduct the business heretofore carried on
by the Maryland corporation and its Trustees,
and will constitute the parent holding company of
619
COMPANY PERSONNEL
the so-called RKO group of corporations and will
continue the business at
1270 Sixth Ave., New York, N. Y.
COlunibus 5-6500
OFFICERS
Chairman of the Board. .Richard C. Patterson, Jr.
President George J. Schaefer
Vice-President Ned E. Depinet
Vice-President and Treasurer W. J. Merrill
Secretary William Mallard
Assistant Secretary Gordon E. Youngman
Assistant Secretary J. Miller Walker
Assistant Treasurer O. R. McMahon
Assistant Treasurer W. H. Clark
Assistant Treasurer Garrett Van Wagner
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Raymond Bill. Ned E. Depinet. Thomas P.
Durell, Frederick L. R. Ehrman, L. Lawrence
Green. James G. Harbord. Conde Nast, John E.
Parsons, Richard C. Patterson. Jr., N. Peter
Rathvon, George J. Schaefer, W. G. Van Schmus,
Lunsford P. Yandell
SUBSIDIARIES
RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.
OFFICERS
President George J. Schaefer
Vice-President Ned E. Depinet
V P and General Counsel William Mallard
Vice-President J. R. McDonough
Vice-President Phil Reisman
Assistant to the President J. J. Nolan
Treasurer William H. Clark
Secretary William Mallard
Comptroller Walter V. Derham
Assistant Treasurer George Muchnic
Assistant Treasurer G. B. Howe
Assistant Secretary Gordon E. Youngman
Assistant Secretary J. J. Nolan
Assistant Secretary George Muchnic
DEPARTMENT HEADS
Mgr. Print-Negative Dept Sid Kramer
Purchasing Agent L. E. Gaudreau
Sales Promotion Manager Leon J. Bamberger
Director of Advertising and Publicity
S. Barret McCormick
Mgr. Branch Operations A. A. Schubart
Asst. Mgr. Branch Operations W. J. McShna
Mgr. Play Date Dept M. G. Poller
Head of Talent Dept Arthur Willi
Press Representative Rutgers Neilson
Director of Research Harold Hendee
Head of Story Dept Leda Bauer
Editor of "Flash" Harry Gittleson
Head of Art Dept D. L. Strumpf
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Ned E. Depinet, James G. Harbord. William
Mallard. J. R. McDonough, John E. Parsons,
Richard C. Patterson. Jr., George J. Schaefer, Luns-
ford P. Yandell, N. Peter Rathvon.
Pathe News, Inc.
35 W. 45th St., New York, N. Y.
BRyant 9-1300
OFFICERS
Chairman of the Board George J. Schaefer
President Ned E. Depinet
Vice-President Frederic Ullman. Jr.
Treasurer William H. Clark
Secretary William Mallard
Assistant Treasurer O. R. MeMahon
Assistant Treasurer A. J. MacPhail
Assistant Secretary Gordon E. Youngman
Assistant Secretary J. Miller Walker
Assistant Secretary A. J. McPhail
Comptroller Walter V. Derham
Production Manager Frank R. Donovan
Editor Walton C. Ament
Assistant Editor George Masterton
Mgr. Library Department George P. Mills
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Ned E. Depinet, James G. Harbord, William
Mallard. John E. Parsons, N. Peter Rathvon.
George J. Schaefer, Frederic Ullman, Jr., Luns-
ford P. Yandell.
RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.
EXPORT DIVISION PERSONNEL
General Manager Phil Reisman
Asst. to Phil Reisman Ben Y. Cammack
Division Manager B. D. Lion
Division Manager R. K. Hawkinson
Foreign Publicity Michael Hoffay
Foreign Service Mgr Harry Ehrreieh
FIELD SUPERVISORS
European Manager Reginald Armour
Far East Manager Leon Britton
South American Manager Nat Liebeskind
Caribbean Territory Mgr Gustav J. Schaefer
FOREIGN BRANCHES
ARGENTINA — RKO Radio Pictures Argentina.
S. A., Nat Liebeskind, General Manager, Sarmiento
1755. Buenos Aires.
AUSTRALASIA — RKO Radio Pictures (A/sia)
Pty. Ltd.. Ralph R. Doyle, Managing Director. 300
Pitt St.. Sydney, Australia.
BELGIUM — RKO Radio Films. S. A. B.. Leon
Wynbergen, Manager, 62 Rue St. Lazare, Brus-
sels.
BRAZIL — RKO Radio Pictures do Braeil. S.
A.. Bruno Cheli, General Manager, Caixa Postal
419. Rio de Janeiro.
CHILE — RKO Radio Pictures Chilena. S. A..
George Kallman, General Manager, Casilla 241-V.
Santiago.
CHINA — RKO Radio Pictures of China, Inc..
Arno F. Kerske, Manager, P. O. Box 237.
Shanghai.
CUBA — RKO Radio Pictures de Cuba, S. A..
Pedro Saenz, Manager, Paseo de Marti 206.
Havana.
CZECHOSLOVAKIA — Radiofilm A. G.. K.
Molacek. Manager. Vaelavske Namesti 51. Prague.
DUTCH EAST INDIES — RKO Radio Films N.
V., Louis L. Lioni, General Manager, Postweg
Noord 63. Batavia Centrum, Java.
NEAR EAST — RKO Radio Pictures Near East.
S. A.. G. E. Georgoussy, Manager. P. O. Box 1319.
Cairo.
FRANCE — RKO Radio Films S. A., Reginald
Armour, Managing Director, 52 Avenue des
Champs Elysees, Paris.
HOLLAND — RKO Radio Films. N. V., Max
Westebbe, Manager. Keizersgracht 698, Am-
sterdam.
INDIA — RKO Radio Pictures. Ltd.. Norman
M. Durant, General Manager, P. O. Box 454.
Calcutta.
JAPAN — RKO Radio Pictures of Japan Ltd..
Richard D. Spierman. General Manager, P. O.
Box 557, Tokyo Central, Tokyo.
MEXICO — RKO Radio Pictures de Mexico. S.
A., Max Gomez, Manager, Avenida Morelos. 59,
Mexico, D. F.
PANAMA — Radio Pictures of Panama. Inc..
Fred S. Gulbransen, Manager, P. O. Box 2015,
Ancon, Canal Zone.
PERU — RKO Radio Pictures del Peru. S. A.,
Bert Reisman. Manager, Apartado 2558. Lima.
PHILIPPINE ISLANDS — RKO Radio Pictures
(Philippines), Inc.. Daniel F. Greenhouse. Man-
ager, P. O. Box 3350. Manila.
PORTUGAL — Radio Filmes Lda, Rene Beja.
Manager. Avenida Duque de Louie 95. Lisbon.
SPAIN — Radio Films, S. A. E., Antonio Blanco.
Manager. Paseo de Gracia 76, Barcelona.
STRAITS SETTLEMENTS — RKO Radio Pic-
tures (Malaya), Inc., P. O. Box 517. Singapore.
SWEDEN — -RKO Radio Films. A/B. Carl Ger-
hard-Wallman, Manager, Vasagatan 16, Stock-
holm.
SWITZERLAND — S. A. d'Exploitation Des
Films Sonores, Armand Palivoda, Manager. 6,
Passage des Lions, Geneva.
620
TRINIDAD — RKO Radio Pictures (Trinidad),
Inc., James J. Bulnes, Manager, 13 Abercromby
St.,, Port-of-Spain.
UNITED KINGDOM — RKO Radio Pictures,
Ltd., Ralph Hanbury. Managing Director, 2 Dean
St., London.
Raspin Productions, Inc.
580 Fifth Ave, New York, N. Y.
BKyant 9-5338
OFFICERS
President E. B. Raschbaum
Vice-President Benjamin D. Chern
Secretary-Treasurer T. M. Roth
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
E. B. Raschbaum, Benjamin D. Chern, T. M.
Roth.
Republic Pictures Corp.
J7T6 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
COlumbus 5-2501
OFFICERS
Chairman of the Board Walter W. Vincent
President and General Sales
Manager James R. Grainger
Vice President in charge of
Foreign Sales Morris Goodman
Vice President and Treasurer. . . . Grover C. Shaefer
Vice President Milton C. Green
Secretary and Assistant
Treasurer John J. O'Connell
Assistant Treasurer John J. Petrauskas
Assistant Secretary A. L. Pindat
Director of Advertising mid
Publicity David B. Whalen
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Walter W. Vincent. Chairman: James R.
Grainger, Morris Goodman. Nathan Dobson, M. J.
Siegel, Milton C. Green.
Republic Productions, Inc.
1024 Radford Ave., North Hollywood, Calif.
STanley 7-1121
Chairman of the Board M. J. Siegel
President M. J. Siegel
Secretary and Treasurer E. H. Goldstein
Assistant Secretary Max Sehoenberg
Assistant Secretary Grover C. Schaefer
Assistant Secretary Morris Goodman
Assistant Treasurer Milton C. Green
Assistant Treasurer H. J. Glick
Assistant Treasurer John Petrauskas
Assistant Treasurer John J. O'Connell
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
M. J. Siegel, Chairman: Sol Siegel, Joseph Aller,
Harry Grey, E. H. Goldstein.
Republic Films of Central America, Inc.
P. O. Box "E" — Cristobal, Canal Zone
President Morris Goodman
Vice President Grover C. Schaefer
Secretary, Treasurer,
Comptroller Grover C. Shaefer
Assistant Treasurer John J. O'Connell
Assistant Secretary Paul Wir
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Morris Goodman, Grover C. Shaefer, John J.
O'Connell.
Cia. Republic Films Chilena, Inc.
President Morris Goodman
Vice President Grover C. Schaefer
Secretary and Treasurer John J. O'Connell
Assistant Secretary Harry Davis
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Morris Goodman, Grover C. Schaefer, John J.
O'Connell.
COMPANY PERSONNEL
FOREIGN DISTRIBUTORS
ENGLAND — Sam Smith, Managing- Director.
British Lion Film Corp. Ltd., 76 Wardour Street.
London, W. 1. L. E. Kalker, Manager, Republic
Pictures Corp.. 7(5 Wardour Street, London, W. 1.
FRANCE — Filmes de Koster, 20, Boulevard
Poissonniere. Paris, IXe.
BELGIUM — Minerva Film of Sovox Sound
Equipment S.A.. 130 Rue Linne. Brussels.
SWITZERLAND — Monopole Films, A.G., Toe-
distrasse 61, Zurich.
PORTUGAL — Filmes Luiz Machado, 160-161
Avenida da Liberdade, Lisbon.
FINLAND — Yksityisteatterien Filmviuokraamo
O.Y., P. Esplanaadikatu 37 C, Helsingfors.
ROUMANIA — Criterion Film, 2 Strada Isvor,
Bucarest.
SWEDEN — A/B Svensk Filmindustri, Kungs-
gatan 47, Stockholm.
DENMARK — Gefion Film, Vesterport 3, Etage
No. 20, Copenhagen.
NORWAY — Fotorama A/S, 16 Stortengagaten.
Oslo.
GREECE — Athina Film, Rue Themistocleos 13.
Athens.
YUGOSLAVIA — Pan Film, Svaciev Trg. 11.
Zagreb.
TURKEY — Fernando Franko ve Emin Enis
Aytan, Beyoglu Sakiz Agac No. 21, Istanbul.
PHILIPPINE ISLANDS — Acme Films Inc..
2215 Azcarraga, Manila.
DUTCH EAST INDIES — RKO Radio Films.
N. V. of Batavia, Postweg Noord 53, Batavia.
Java.
IRAQ — Mutual Overseas Trading Co., 443 F/l
Al Raschid St., Bagdad.
AUSTRALIA — British Empire Films (Pty) Ltd..
Shell House, Ann St., Brisbane. Queensland.
NEW ZEALAND — R. Lyall Grant, British Em-
pire Films (N.Z.) Ltd., 15 Courtenay Place, Well-
ington.
MEXICO — Luis Lezama, Calle del Ejido No. 19,
Mexico, D. F.
CUBA — Tropical Films de Cuba, Trocadero No.
111. Havana.
TURKEY — Kemal Film. Kemal & Chakir
Freres. Beyoglu. Istiklal Caddessi 373. Istanbul.
JAPAN — U. Ono & Company, 1 Tori. 2 Chome
Nihon Bashi Ku. Tokyo.
STRAITS SETTLEMENTS — Eastern Film
Agency, 116 Robinson Road, Singapore.
INDIA — Kcshavlal D. Mody & Co., 228 Hindu
Colony, Matunga, Bombay.
SOUTH AFRICA — African Consolidated Films
Ltd.. P. O. Box 4552. Johannesburg.
VENEZUELA — Luis Enriciue Perez, A., Perez
& Company, Socarras & Puente Yanes No. 103,
Caracas.
PUERTO RICO — Republic Pictures of Puerto
Rico. P. O. Box No. 16. San Juan.
URUGUAY — Juan U. Porta, Calle Independencia
No. 832. Montevideo.
BRAZIL — Universal Pictures do Brasil, S. A..
Rua Senador Dantas No. 39. Rio de Janeiro.
BERMUDA — Chas. H. Monks, Hillside, Wesley
St., Hamilton.
COLOMBIA — Cine Colombia, S. A., Apartado
Postal 176. Medellin.
ARGENTINA — Jacobo Huberman, S., Calle
Tueuman 1946. Buenos Aires.
PERU — J. Calero Paz, Plaza San Martin,
Apartado 1281, Lima.
Ross Federal Service, Inc.
18 E. 48th St., New York, N. Y.
I'Laza 3-0500
OFFICERS
President & Treasurer Harry A. Ro6s
V-P & General Manager Densmore A. Ross
Vice-Presidents. .Clifford B. Ross, Richard E. Ross
Secretary Frank X. Miske
Asst. to the President Edward J. Wall
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Harry A. Ross, Densmore A. Ross, Clifford B.
Ross, Frank X. Miske, Richard E. Ross.
621
COMPANY PERSONNEL Trailer-Made, Inc.
The Screen Traveler, Inc.
2 W. 67th St., New York, N. Y.
OFFICERS
President-Treasurer Andre de LaVarre
Secretary Bernard Goodwin
Illustrations Philip Gendreau
Recordings H. E. Reeves
Music Edward Craig
Select Attractions, Inc.
1501 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
CHickering 4-7748
OFFICERS
President Charles Kranz
Vice-President Joseph Plunkett
Secretary-Treasurer Al O. Bondy
Spectrum Pictures Corp.
729 Seventh Ave., New York, N. Y.
OFFICERS
President Fred Bellln
Secretary-Treasurer I. M. Muleay
Special Representative John Cosentino
Standard Pictures
Distributing Co., Inc.
1370 Sixth Ave., New York, N. Y.
COlumbus 5-6345
OFFICERS
President George Laganas
General Manager George E. Trainer
General Sales Manager Harry Segal
Dir. Advt.-Publicity Peter Witt
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
G. Laganas, A. Laganas, G. E. Trainer.
Technicolor, Inc.
15 Broad St., New York, N. Y.
HAnover 2-6290
OFFICERS
President-General Manager. . . .Herbert T. Kalmus
V-P-General Counsel-Secretary. .. George F. Lewis
Treasurer L. G. Clark
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
J. Ei. Anderson, Eversley Childs. L. G. Clark.
Robert Cushman. Alfred Fritsche. A. W. Hawkes.
James H. Hayes, Herbert T. Kalmus, George F.
Lewis, H. K. McCann, John McHugh. Murray D.
Welch.
SUBSIDIARY
Technicolor Motion Picture Corp.
Hollywood, Calif.
30 Rockefeller Plaza, New York, N. Y.
Circle 7-7934
OFFICERS
President-General Manager Herbert T. Kalmus
V-P-Asst. General Manager. ... Gerald F. Rackett
Vice-President George F. Lewis
Secretary -Treasurer David Shattuck
In Charge of New York Office. . .Morgan Hobart
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Eversley Childs. Robert Cushman, A. W. Hawkes.
Herbert T. Kalmus. George F. Lewis. John Mc-
Hugh.
35 W. 45th St., New York, N. Y.
BRyant 9-1777
OFFICERS
President I. E. Schwartz
Secretary -Treasurer Harry Schwartz
Trans-Oceanic Film Export
Co.
723 Seventh Ave., New York, N. Y.
MEdallion 3-5377
OFFICERS
General Manager Arthur Sanchez
Secretary p. e. Johnson
Twentieth Century-Fox Film
Corp.
444 W. 56th St., New York, N. Y.
COlumbus 5-3320
OFFICERS
Chairman of the Board Joseph M. Schenck
President Sidney R. Kent
Executive Vice-President William C. Michel
Vice-President Darryl F. Zanuck
Vice-President William Goetz
Treasurer Sydney Towell
Comptroller-Assistant Treasurer. .Wilfred J. Eadie
Secretary Felix A. Jenkins
Assistant Secretary John P. Edmondson
Assistant Secretary J. Harold Langr
Assistant Secretary Georcre F. Wa«nn. Jr.
Assistant Treasurer Read B. Simonson
DEPARTMENT HEADS
Genl. Mgr. in chg. of Distribution . Herman Wobber
Eastern Studio Rep Joseph Moskowiti
Dir. Publicity-Advertising ... Charles E. McCarthy
Advertising Manager Arch Reeve
Mgr. Exploitation-Publicity Rodney Bush
Dir. Foreign Distribution. .Walter J. Hutchinson
Foreign Publicity Mgr Les Whelan
Chg. of Legal Dept Edwin P. Kilroe
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
H. Donald Campbell, John R. Dillon. Wilfred J.
Eadie, Felix A. Jenkins, Sidney R. Kent. Daniel
O. Hastings. William C. Michel. William P. Phil-
lips, Herman G. Place, Seton Porter. Joseph M.
Schenck, Sydney Towell.
SUBSIDIARY
National Theaters Corporation
Ufa Films, Inc.
729 Seventh Ave.. New York, N. Y.
BRyant 9-7890
OFFICERS
President-Treasurer George Nitzs
Vice-President Ernest Eisele. Jr.
Secretary Robert C. Richter
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Ernest Eisele, Sr., Robert C. Richter. Fritz
Thorhauer, George Nitze, William B. Devoe, Er-
nest Eisele, Jr., Wilhelm Meydam.
United Artists Corp.
729 Seventh Ave., New York, N. Y.
BRyant 9-7300
OFFICERS
General Manager Murray Silverstone
Vice-President A. W. Kelly
Vice-President H. D. Buckley
Vice-President Harry L. Gold
Vice-President L. J. Schlaifer
Treasurer-Asst. Secretary Harry J. Muller
Assistant Treasurer N. A. Thompson
622
Secretary E. C. Raftery
Assistant Secretary Paul D. O'Brien
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Dennis F. O'Brien, Charles Schwartz, James A.
Mulvey, Emanuel Silverstone, Theodore Caruso.
DEPARTMENT HEADS
Dir. of Advertising-Publicity Lynn Farnol
Dir. of Exploitation Monroe Greenthal
Publicity Manager Albert Margoliea
Office Manager Norris Wilcox
Purchasing: Department Ida H. Garretson
Art Director Herbert Jaediker
Foreign Publicity Manager Sam Cohen
Contract Manager Paul N. Lazarus
Statistician Charles Steele
Foreign Sales Manager T. P. Mulrooney
Head Foreign Accounting Walter Leibler
Sales Controller N. A. Thompson
Mgr. Accessory Department Robert Goldfarb
Mgr. Film Department Robert G. Hilton
FOREIGN BRANCHES
ENGLAND— George Archibald. E. T. Carr. Joint
Managing Director, United Artists Corp., Ltd.,
United Artists (Export), Ltd., Film House, War-
dour St.. London W. 1.
BELGIUM — Marcel Coppens, Les Artistes As-
socies, S. A. Beige, 126 Boulevard Emile Jacq-
main. Brussels.
CZECHOSLOVAKIA — United Artists A. S.,
Vaclavske Namesti 49, Palais Avion, Prague EC.
DENMARK — Ingolf Madsen, United Artists A/S,
Hammerichsgade 14, Copenhagen V.
FRANCE — George Rouvier, General Manager.
Les Artistes Associes, S. A., 25-27 rue d'Astorg,
Paris 8.
SPAIN — M. Castelli, Acting Manager, Los Artis-
tas Asociados, Rambla de Cataluna 62, Barcelona.
SWEDEN — Harold Astrom. United Artists Ak-
tiebolag, Jungsgatan 13, Stockholm.
SWITZERLAND — Paul Rappaport, Unartisco
S. A., 3 rue de la Confederation, Geneva.
SOUTH AFRICA — A. A. Lowe. United Artists
Corp. S. A. Pty, Ltd., Normandie Court, 80
Delvers St., Johannesburg.
ARGENTINE — Guy P. Morgan, U. A. South
American Corp., Lavalle 1747-61, Buenos Aires.
URUGUAY — Bernardo Glucksmann, Av. 18 de
Julio E6q; Rio Branco, Montevideo, R. O. del
Uruguay.
CHILE — Jorge Suarez. U. A. South American
Corp., Estado 91, 3° pido, Casilla Correo 623,
Santiago.
BRAZIL — Enquige Baez, U. A. of Brazil, Inc.,
Caixa Postal 569, Rio de Janeiro.
COLOMBIA — W. F. Frohlich, United Artists
Corp. de Colombia, S. A., Aptdo. Nac. 383.
Bogota.
CANAL ZONE — Guy C. Smith, United Artists
Corp.. P. O. Box 5044, Cristobal.
BRITISH WEST INDIES — Major Charles H.
Tebay, United Artists Corp., 25 Chacon St., P. O.
Box 336, Trinidad. Port-of-Spain.
COSTA RICA — L. Larrad, Apartado 816, San
Jose.
ECUADOR — Jaime Puig Arosemena, Aptdo.
Postal 89. Guayaquil.
GUATEMALA — Prederico Gonzales H., Apar-
tado Postal 205, Guatemala City.
NICARAGUA — Victor M. Delgadillo, 420 Pri-
mera Ave., S. E., Managua.
EL SALVADOR — Esteban Ulloa M., Ave. Sur.
57. San Salvador.
VENEZUELA — Muro and Carcel, Ediflcio Prin-
cipal. Apartado 1001, Caracas.
CUBA — Henry Weiner, United Artists Corp. of
Cuba. S. A., Consuelado No. Ill, Havana.
MEXICO — S. L. Seidelman, General Manager,
Juvenal B. Urbina, Branch Manager, Artistas
Unidos, S. A., 6a, Calle de Bolivar 44, Mexico.
D. F.
PERU — Victor J. Schoehet, United Artists Corp..
Casilla Correo 2782, Lima.
PUERTO RICO — Carl Ponedel, United Artists
Corp. of Puerto Rico, P. O. Box 1399, San Juan.
COMPANY PERSONNEL
AUSTRALASIA — Cecil Marks. General Manager.
United Artists (A/asia), Ptd., Ltd., 221-225 Eliza-
beth St., Sydney, N. S. W.
CHINA— Norman Westwood, United Artists
Corp., Box 1005, Shanghai.
INDIA — Carlos E. Moore, United Artists Corp.,
Marshall Bldg., Frere & Ballard Roads, Bombay.
JAPAN — Joe C. Goltz, United Artists Corp.
of Japan, P. O. Box 443. Central, Tokyo.
NETHERLANDS EAST INDIES — Sydney J. Al-
bright, United Artists Corp. of N. E. I., Secre-
tarieweg 3, Batavia-Centrum, Java.
PHILIPPINE ISLANDS — Charles H. Core,
United Artists Corp.. P. O. Box 434, Manila.
STRAITS SETTLEMENTS — Marcus Baker,
United Artists Corp., 80 Orchard Road. Singapore.
Universal Pictnres Co., Inc.
1250 Sixth Ave., New York, N. Y.
Circle 7-7100
OFFICERS
Chairman of the Board J. Cheever Cowdtn
President Nate J. Blumberg
Vice-President Cliff Work
Vice-President William A. Scully
Vice-President Matthew Fox
Vice-President J. H. Seidelman
V-P & General Counsel Charles Prutzman
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
J. Cheever Cowdin, Nate J. Blumberg. Daniel
M. Sheaffer. Ottavio Prochet, Paul G. Brown.
William Freiday, Daniel C. Collins, Willis H.
Taylor, Jr., Samuel I. Posen, J. Dabney Penick.
Preston Davie, Charles Prutzman, Budd Rogers.
DEPARTMENT HEADS
V-P and Genl. Sales Manager W. A. Scully
V-P and Genl. Foreign Manager. .J. H. Seidelman
V-P and Asst. to the President Matthew Fox
Treasurer S. Machnovitch
Secretary Peyton Gibson
Eastern Div. Sales Manager. . . .F. J. A. McCarthy
Western Div. Sales Manager W. J. Heineman
General Counsel Charles D. Prutzman
Attorney Adolph Schimel
Comptroller Eugene F. Walsh
Dir. of Pub.-Adv.-Exploitation John Joseph
Newsreel Editors Tom Mead, Joseph O'Brien
Scenario Editor Marshall Grant
Asst. Foreign Manager Charles A. Kirby
Eastern Adv.-Pub. Manager Louis Pollock
Accessories Sales Mgr.-Studio Sales
contact A. J. Sharick
Manager Branch Operations Tom Murray
Sales Mgr. of Short Product Leo Abrams
Manager Branch Maintenance O. C. Binder
Foreign Publicity Dir Fortunat Baronat
Mgr. Contract Sales Dept J. A. Jordan
Mgr. Print Dept J. D. Miller
Mgr. Non-Theatrical Exhibitions and
16 mm Herman Stern
Cashier John F. Byrne
Mgr. Purchasing Dept Walter Barber
SUBSIDIARIES
Big U Film Exchange, Inc.; Cellofilm
Corp., Universal Film Exchanges, Inc.,
Universal Music Corp.
FOREIGN BRANCHES
GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND — General
Film Distributors, Ltd., 127 Wardour St., London,
W. 1, England. Representatives of Universal
Pictures Co., Inc.: William Jay, Special Sales Rep-
resentative: J. R. Ranee, Audit Representative.
CONTINENTAL EUROPE — Ernest Koenig,
Supervisor of Latin Europe: B. O. Sielian. Head
Auditor. Headquarters: 33 Avenue des Champs-
Elysees, Paris VIII, France. Louis Foldes. Super-
visor for Central and Eastern Europe. Headquar-
623
COMPANY PERSONNEL
ters: VIII Nepszinhaz Ucca 21, Budapest, Hun-
gary. Representative, Amerieo Aboaf. no head-
quarters.
BELGIUM — Universal Film Soeiete Anonyme.
20 Place des Martyrs. Brussels. Charles Weill,
Manager.
CZECHOSLOVAKIA — Universal Film Sp., s.r.o.,
Vodickova ul. 20. Prague II. V. Tulacek, Man-
ager.
DENMARK — Universal Film A/S. Vestre Boule-
vard 27. Copenhagen. Knud Birch, Manager.
EGYPT. ALBANIA. CYPRUS. GREECE. IRAN.
IRAQ. PALESTINE. SUDAN. SYRIA. TURKEY —
Universal Pictures Corp. of Egypt, 32 Rue Fou.-kI
Ier. Alexandria. Egypt. Paul Schlatcrmund. Dis-
trict Supervisor.
FRANCE — Ernest Koenig, General Manager; B.
Goldman, Northern District Sales Manager; T.
Guaitella, Southern District Sales Manager: R.
Delcourt. Short Subjects Sales Manager. Univer-
sal Film Soeiete Anonyme. .33 Avenue des Champs-
Elysees, Paris VIII. R. Grinstein. Paris Manager.
ALGERIA — Universal Film Soeiete Anonyme,
27 Rue Hoeho. Algiers. J. Colom. Branch Man-
ager.
GERMANY. — Deutsche Universal Film A. G..
Friedrichstrasse 13. Berlin S. W. (18. F. Genegel,
Liquidator.
HOLLAND — N. V. Universal Film Booking
Office. Nietiwe Doelen Straat 8, Amsterdam. J. S.
freeze. Manager.
HUNGARY — Universal Film R. T.. VIII Nep-
szinhaz Ucca 21, Budapest. Frigyes Siegler, Man-
ager.
NORWAY — Universal Pictures of Norway A/S,
Stortingsgaten 22. Oslo. Axel H. Haslund. Man-
ager.
POLAND — Universal Pictures Corp. sp. z. Org.
Odp.. 35 Aleja Jerozolimska. Warsaw. J. Wein-
reb. Manager.
RUMANIA — B. D. C. Film. Strada Ion Ghica
II. Bucharest.
SPAIN — Hispano American Films S. A.. Calle
Mallorca 220, Barcelona. E. Aguilar, General
Manager.
SWEDEN — Universal Film Aktiebolag. Kungs-
gaten 7. Stockholm. Leo Gussen. Manager.
SWITZERLAND — Selection Film S. A.. 12 Rue
du General Du Foir. Geneva. Andre Cosandey.
Manager.
LATIN AMERICA — Clarence C. Margon. Latin
American Supervisor. Headquarters: 1250 Sixth
Avenue, New York City. Monroe Isen. District
Manager. Headquarters: Calle Lavalle 1860.
Buenos Aires. Argentina.
ARGENTINA. PARAGUAY, URUGUAY — Uni-
versal Films Argentina. S. A.. De Peliculas Cine-
matograficas, Calle Lavalle 1860. Buenos Aires.
Monroe Isen. General Manager. Enrique Pardo.
Buenos Aires Manager.
BRAZIL — Universal Pictures do Brasil. S. A..
Rua Senador Dantas 39, Rio de Janeiro. Al
Szekler. Manager.
CENTRAL AMERICA (BRITISH WEST IN-
DIES. CANAL ZONE. COSTA RICA. ECUADOR.
GUATEMALA. HONDURAS. NETHERLANDS
WEST INDIES. NICARAGUA. PANAMA. SAL-
VADOR I — Universal Films. S. A.. Drawer "1."
Ancon. Canal Zone. E. N. Ferro. Manager.
CHILE — Universal Pictures Corp. of Chile.
Casilla 1331. Nueva York 17, Santiago. Raul
Vianeos. Manager.
COLOMBIA — Jaime Puig Arosemena. Apar-
tado Nacional No. 398. Calle 23— No. 6-52,
Bogota.
CUBA — Ramon Garcia, Special Representative.
Calle Consulado 165. Havana.
MEXICO — Universal Pictures Corp. of Mexico.
Paseo de la Reforma 152. Apartado Po9tal 70
Bix.. Mexico D. F. J. Epstein, Manager.
PERU. BOLIVIA — Universal Pictures Corp. of
Peru. Edificio Olceso. 2nd Piso. Calle Pileta de la
Merced 148. Lima. Ramon A. Pazos. Manager.
VENEZUELA — Luis Martinez. Conde a Carmel-
itas 2-1, P. O. Box 503. Caracas.
FAR EAST — Alfred E. Daff. Far Eastern Super-
visor. Headquarters: Universal Pictures India
Ltd., Mustafa Building, Sir Pherozshah Mehta
Road Fort, Bombay, India.
CHINA — Universal Pictures Corp. of China. 136
Embankment Building. 400 Soochow Road.
Shanghai. B. W. Palmertz. Manager.
INDIA — Universal Pictures India Ltd.. Mustafa
Building. Sir Pherozshah Mehta Road Fort. Bom-
bay. Harold Dudoff. Acting Manager.
JAPAN — Universal Pictures (Japan) Ltd.,
Takaehiho Building. 2 of No. 1, Uchisaiwaicho,
2-Chome, Kojimachi-Ku. Tokio. Robert Lury.
Manager.
NETHERLANDS EAST INDIES — N. V. Uni-
versal Film Mij. N. I.. Postweg Noord 13. Batavia
Centrum. Java. E. W. Weskin. Manager.
PHILIPPINE ISLANDS — Universal Pictures
Corp. of Far East. 2262 Azcarraga Street. Manila.
Larry De Prida. Manager.
STRAITS SETTLEMENTS — Universal Pictures
(Singapore) Ltd.. 287 Orchard Road. Singapore.
K. H. Tann. Manager.
AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND — Here C.
Mclntyre. Managing Director; Dan Casey. Sales
Manager: F. R. Holdaway. Secretary. Headquar-
ters: Universal Pictures Proprietary Ltd., 499
Kent Street. Sydney, Australia.
NEW ZEALAND — Universal Pictures Proprie-
tary Ltd.. Nimmo's Building, Willis & Bond
Streets. G.P.O. Box 925. Wellington. W. A.
Hislop. Manager.
SOUTH AFRICA — International Variety &
Theatrical Agency. Inc. (Agent of African Con-
solidated Films, Ltd.), 220 West 42nd Street.
New York City.
Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.
321 W. Ilth St.. New York, N. Y.
Circle 6-1010, Cable: WANE WAR
OFFICERS
President Harry M. Warner
Vice-Presidents Albert Warner,
Jack L. Warner. Sam E. Morris. Herman Starr.
Stanleigh P. Friedman, Joseph H. Hazen.
Treasurer Albert Warner
Assistant Treasurers Samuel Carlisle.
W. Stewart McDonald. Cyril H. Wilder.
Secretary and General Counsel R. W. Perkins
Assistant Secretaries Harold S. Bareford.
Edward K. Hessberg. Roy J. Obringer. Herbert
Freston.
Controller Samuel Carlisle
Auditor Thomas J. Martin
General Sales Manager Gradwell L. Sears
Dir. Adv. -Publicity S. Charles Einfeld
In Chg. Advt.-Pub. (East) Mort Blumenstock
Short Subjects-Trailers Sales Mgr.
Norman H. Moray
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Terms expire 1940: Stanleigh P. Friedman.
Charles S. Guggenheimer, Sam E. Morris. Morris
Wolf, Samuel Carlisle.
Terms expire 1941 : Joseph Bernhard. Waddill
Catchings, R. W. Perkins, Albert Warner, Harry
M. Warner. Jack L. Warner.
SUBSIDIARIES
Vitagraph, Inc.
OFFICERS
President Gradwell L. Sears
Vice-President Carl Leserman
Vice-President S. Charles Einfeld
Secretary R. W. Perkins
Assistant Secretary H. S. Bareford
Assistant Secretary Edward Hessberg
Treasurer Samuel Carlisle
Auditor T. J. Martin
Assistant Auditor H. M. Doherty
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Gradwell L. Sears. Carl Leserman. H. S. Bare
ford. Sam E. Morris, R. W. Perkins.
624
Stanley Company of America
OFFICERS
President Harry M. Warner
Vice-Presidents Albert Warner,
S. P. Friedman. Joseph Bernhard. Sam E.
Morris. Herman Starr. W. S. McDonald.
Secretary Morris Wolf
Assistant Secretaries H. S. Bareford.
E. K. Hessberg. D. Benjamin Kresch.
Treasurer S. Carlisle
Assistant Treasurers J. M. Brennan.
W. S. McDonald.
Controller S. Carlisle
Auditor T. J. Martin
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
H. S. Bareford. Joseph Bernhard. S. Carlisle.
Waddill Catchings. S. P. Friedman. C. S. Guggen-
heimer. R. W. Perkins, Albert Warner, H. M.
Warner, Morris Wolf.
The Vitaphone Corp.
OFFICERS
President H. M. Warner
Vice-Presidents Major Albert Warner,
J. L. Warner, Sam E. Morris.
Secretary R- W. Perkins
Treasurer Major Albert Warner
Asst. Treasurer and Controller ... Samuel Carlisle
Asst. Secretaries H. S. Bareford,
Edward Hessberg.
Asst. Treasurer W. S. McDonald
Auditor T. J. Martin
Asst. Auditors H. M. Doherty. E. J. Savin
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
H. M. Warner, Major Albert Warner, R. W.
Perkins, W. S. McDonald, T. J. Martin.
Other Warner Bros, subsidiaries and holdings in-
clude: First National Pictures, Inc.. Music Pub-
lishers Holding Corp.. Warner Bros. Circuit Man-
agement Corp. and others.
FOREIGN BRANCHES
ENGLAND — Warner Bros. Pictures. Ltd.. Max
Milder. Managing Director. 135-141 Wardour St..
London, W. 1.
FRANCE, BELGIUM AND SWITZERLAND —
Warner Bros. First National Films. Inc.. T. Bellini.
General Manager. 5 Avenue Velasques, Paris.
ITALY — Mario Zama, General Manager, War-
ner Bros. First National Film S. A. I.. Piazza
Barberini No. 12. Rome (Distribution in Italy
ceased as of Dec. 1. 1938).
SPAIN — A. Alfaro. General Manager, Warner
Bros. First National Films. S. A. E.. 77 Paseo de
Gracia. Barcelona.
EGYPT — E. De Leon. Warner Bros. First Na-
tional Pictures, Inc., Ill Avenue de la Reine
Nazli. Cairo.
DENMARK — George Westergaard. Warner Bros.
First National Film A. S., Raadhuspladsen 16.
Copenhagen.
NORWAY — Thorleif Aas, Warner Bros. First
National Vitaphone Pictures A/S, Stortingsgaten
30. Oslo.
SWEDEN — C. L. Conradsen. Warner Bros. First
National Films A. B.. Kungsgatan 44, Stockholm
FINLAND — Jack Kamras, O. Y. Warner Bros.
First National Films A. B., Centralgatan 1. Hel
singfors.
HUNGARY — B. Hodaszy, Warner Bros. First
National Vitaphone Pictures, Joszef-Korut 30-32
Budapest.
HOLLAND — J. Wessel. Warner Bros. First Na
tional Pictures. 778 Keizersgracht. Amsterdam.
JUGOSLAVIA — Richard Richter, Jugoslavenski
Film Warner Bros. First National D. D., Ilica 34
Zagreb.
ROUMANIA — Armand Paucker. Warner Bros
First National S. A. R.. Strada Brezoianu 44
Bucharest.
GREECE — Victor Michaelides. Warner Bros
First National Films Hellas A. E.. 32 Patissia St
Athens.
COMPANY PERSONNEL
AUSTRALASIA — Ralph H. Clark, General
Manager. Warner Bros. First National Pictures
Pty. Ltd., 221 Elizabeth St., Sydney, Australia.
NEW ZEALAND — George Dillon. Warner Bros.
Pictures (N. Z.) Ltd.. 122 Wakefield St.. Welling-
ton.
JAPAN — Michael Shathin. General Manager.
Warner Bros. First National Pictures (Japan), Inc..
Tokio Taemono Bldg., 3 of 7 Gofukubashi, 3
ehome. Nihonbash-ku. Tokyo.
INDIA — A. A. Walter. Warner Bros. First Na-
tional Pictures. Inc.. Hague Bldg.. Ballard Estate.
P. O. Box 189. Bombay.
CHINA — A. L. Caplan. General Manager, War-
ner Bros. First National Pictures, Inc., Capitol
Bldg.. 142 Museum Road, Sanghai.
STRAITS SETTLEMENTS — E. Moses, Warner
Bros. First National Pictures, Inc.. 267 Orchard
Road. Singapore.
JAVA — J. R. E. Lambert. Warner Bros. First
National Pictures. Inc.. Rijswijk 2a. Batavia-Cen-
trum. Java.
PHILIPPINE ISLANDS — Clifford E. Almy, War-
ner Bros. First National Pictures, Inc., Cu Un-
jieng Bldg., Eseolta. Manila.
BRAZIL — Arthur S. Abeles. General Manager.
Warner Bros. First National South Films, Inc.,
19 Senador Dantas. Rio de Janeiro.
ARGENTINE — Harry Novak, Warner Bros.
First National South Films. Inc., Tueuman 1938,
Buenos Aires.
URUGUAY — N. E. Bertolini. Warner Bros. First
National South Films, Inc., Convencion 1290.
Montevideo.
CHILE — I. Rosenfeld. Warner Bros. First Na-
tional South Films. Inc.. P. O. Box Casilla 469,
Morande 246, Santiago.
CUBA — Basilio De Armas. Warner Bros. First
National South Films, Inc., Paseo de Marti 102.
Havana.
PANAMA — Armando Trucios, Warner Bros.
First National South Films. Inc., Juan B. Sosa y
Estudiantes. Panama, R. P.
PUERTO RICO — Frank G. Planas, Warner Bros.
First National South Films. Inc., Avenida Fer-
nandez Jundos. Parado 10 Santuree.
PERU — Antonio Garcia, Warner Bros. First Na-
tional South Films, Inc., Jesus Nazareno 165.
Lima.
MEXICO — Joseph G. Mullen. Warner Bros.
First National Pictures. S. A., Apartado bis 75,
Donato Guerra 24. Mexico, D. F.
TRINIDAD — Arthur S. Abeles. Jr.. Warner
Bros. First National South Films, Inc.. 58 Fred-
crick St.. Port-of-Spain. Trinidad. B. W. I.
World Pictures Corp.
729 Seventh Ave., New York, N. Y.
MEdallion 3-2944
DEPARTMENT HEADS
General Manager Irvin Shapiro
Director of Distribution Arthur A. Mayers
Eastern Sales Manager Edward Barlson
Auditor Martin Mermelstein
Booker A. Axelberth
York Pictures Company, Inc.
250 W. 57th St., New York, N. Y.
Circle 7-1518
OFFICERS
President-Treasurer Charles B. Paine
Secretary Ivan Pochna
Asst. Treasurer- Asst. Secretary M. Braun
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Charles B. Paine. Ivan Pochna. M. Braun.
625
FOR
22
YEARS
THE
NHS PfiiniG CO.
HAS PRINTED THE
fILffl DfllLy yfflfi BOOK
229 WEST 28th STREET
Near Seventh Avenue, New York
PEnnsylvania 6-4740
626
PRODUCTION
PERSONNEL
OF THE MOTION PICTURE INDUSTRY
Academy Productions, Inc.
General Service Studios
1010 N. Las Palmas Ave., Hollywood, Calif.
GRanite 3111
President-Producer Lee Garmes
V-P — Story Editor Adele Comandini
Secretary-Legal Advisor Harry Sokolov
Assistant Secretary Julia Hall
Production Manager Joe Nadel
Auditor Charles Simpson
Publicity Director Hal Hall
Casting: Director Jack Murton
Film Editor Otto Ludwig
Music Dept. Head Frank Tours
Arcadia Pictures Corp.
Grand National Studios
7250 Santa Monica Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
GRanite 6131
In Chg. of Production Jack H. Skirball
President William N. Skirball
Vice-President Ferd A. Gumberta
Secretary -Treasurer Norman C. Nicholson
Production Supervisors Philip H. Leonard,
Fred J. Scheld
Camera Dept. Head Charles J. Van Enger
Story Editor Adele G. Nathan
Music Dept. Head Walter Jurmann
Argus Pictures, Inc.
4516 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
President Dixon Harwin
Director Arthur Dreyfuss
Astor Productions, Inc.
1270 Sixth Ave., New York, N. T.
Circle 7-3687
President-Treasurer R. M. Savini
Vice-President C. J. Tevlin
Secretary W. J. Figueroa
Production Supervisor Don Malkames
Story Editor Helen Walpore
MBuic Dept. Head James C. Bradford
Atlas Pictures, Inc.
4376 Sunset Drive, Hollywood, Cal.
NOrmandie 2-2410
President C. C. Burr
Vice-President R. K. Johnson
General Manager B. King
Sales Manager David Biederman
Distribution Lou Rogers
Secretary Harold Strotz
Asst. Secretary Orville C. Sanborn
Production Manager Ben Berke
Production Supervisors C. C. Burr.
R. K. Johnson. C. Bricker
Publicity Director J. Parks
Chief Electrician W. Bosworth
Chief Sound Engineer Tom Lambert
Camera Dept. Head E. G. Dyer
Miniature Dept. Head Lou Bedford
Makeup Dept. Head William Woods
Property Master Ray Hunt
Art Director Vin Taylor
Casting Director C. C. Burr
Location Director Victor Adamson
Story Editor William Johnston
Music Dept. Head Abe Meyer
Purchasing Agent Harold Stroti
Avramenko Film Co., Ltd.
457 Main St., Winnipeg, Canada
33 W. 42nd St., New York, N. Y.
LOngacre 3-5657
President Vasile Avramenko
Vice-President R. Ratuski
Secretary M. Mandryka
Treasurer S. Hancharyk
Production Supervisors Vasile Avramenko,
Michael Gann.
Publicity Director R. Rubemko
Costume Dept. Head F. Brajneff
Art Director E. Voklech
Music Dept. Head N. Rudneff
Dance Dept. Head V. Avramenko
Bud Barsky Productions
Grand National Studios
7250 Santa Monica Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
GRanite 6131
Producer Bud Barsky
Associate Producer Robert M. Barsky
General Manager Bud Barsky
Production Manager Sid Algiers
Director Louis Gasnier
Production Supervisors Bud Barsky,
Robert M. Barsky.
Chief Electrician Roy Woolf
Chief Sound Engineer Buddy Myers
Camera Dept. Head Charles Van Enger
Still Dept. Head Sig Levey
Miniature Dept. Head Martin Boe
Stage Manager Joseph Praskins
Property Master Raymond Hunt
Art Director Ralph Berger
Story Editor Louis Greenspan
Film Editor Guy Thayer
Dance Dept. Head Carlos Romero
627
PRODUCTION PERSONNEL
Boots & Satldles Pictures, Inc.
Monogram studio*
4516 Sunset Blvil., Hollywood, Calif.
President Edward F. Finney
Secretary -Treasurer Clarita B. Finney
Vice-President Sam Wallis
Production Supervisors Al Lane,
Gordon Griffith, William Nolte.
Publicity Directors William Pierce,
Joseph Shea.
Chief Electrician M. Serrati
Chief Sound Engineer Glenn Glenn
Laboratory Head Mark Ryan
Camera Dept. Head Marcel Le Picard
Still Dept. Head William Crosby-
Miniature Dept. Head Ken Peach
Costume Dept. Head Hal Clendenning
Property Master Charles Stevens
Art Director Ernest Hickson
Story Editor Edmond Kelso
Film Editor Fred Bain
Music Dept. Head Frank Sanucci
Purchasing Agent Alice Blake
Transportation Mgr Nelson Hunter
Head Projectionist Tom Jones
Century Pictures Corp.
1426 N. Beachwood Drive, Hollywood, Calif.
HEmpstead 1191
President M. M. Landres
Production Supervisor Herman Wohl
Publicity Director Robert Le Vinson
Camera Dept. Head Clark Ramsay
Research Dept. Head George Landres
Film Editor Charles Diltz
Music Dept. Head Dr. Edward Kilenyi
Charles Chaplin Film Corp.
Charles Chaplin Studio
1416 N. LaBrea Ave., Hollywood, Calif.
HEmpstead 2141
President Charles Chaplin
V P & General Manager Alfred Reeves
Asst. to General Manager Jack Wilson
Secretary-Treasurer Lois Runser
Corresponding Secretary Kathleen Pryor
Booking Dept Bill Gooding
Production Supvervisor Charles Chaplin
Publicity Director Catherine Hunter
Chief Electrician Frank Testera
Chief Sound Engineer Percy Townsend
Laboratory Head Rollin Brown
Camera Dept. Heads Karl Struss.
Rollie Totheroh
Still Dept. Head Bill Wallace
Construction Dept. Head William Bogdanoff
Costume Dept. Head Paul Tetrick
Property Master Clem Widrig
Art Director Russell Spencer
Casting Director Joe Collum
Location Director Jack Wilson
Story Editor Charles Chaplin
Film Editor Harold Rice
Music Dept. Head Charles Chaplin
Purchasing Agent Oscar Wright
Transportation Manager Oscar Wright
Head Projectionist Bert Moody
Colonial Pictures Corp.
Selznick International Studios
9336 Washington Blvd., Culver City, Calif.
AShley 4-2931
President John Speaks
Secretary Felix Cunningham
Assistant Treasurer B. Benjamin
Colony Pictures, Inc.
6018 Sunset Blvd., Ilollvwood, Calif.
Hillside 9685
President Herman Stern
Vice-President Arthur Alexander
Secretary-Treasurer Alfred Stern
Production Supervisors Max Alexander.
Arthur Alexander.
Chief Electrician Herbert Meeks
Chief Sound Engineer Clifford Ruberg
Camera Dept. Head William Hyers
Stage Manager Fred Prepple
Property Master Gene Stone
Casting Director Arthur Alexander
Story Editor Alfred Stern
Film Editor Fred Bain
Transportation Manager Dan Weaver
Head Projectionist Carl Miller
Columbia Pictures Corp.
1438 N. Govver St., Hollywood, Cal.
HOlIynood 3181
President Harry Cohn
Vice-Presiednt Samuel J. Briskin
Vice-President B. B. Kahaoe
Counsel Mendel Silberberff
Studio Manager H. A. McDonell
Comptroller Stanley Love
Production Manager Joseph Gilpin
Producers William Perlberg,
Irving Briskin. Robert Sparks, Wesley Ruggles,
Max Siegel. Sam Bischoff. Charles Rogers. Irv-
ing Starr.
Publicity Director Lou Smith
Chief Electrician Denver Harmon
Laboratory Head George Seid
Camera Dept. Head Emil Oster
Still Dept. Head Adolph Schaefer
Research Dept. Head Lily Haviland
Costume Dept. Head Ray Howell
Makeup Dept. Head William Knight
Property Master Ray Howell
Art Director Lionel Banks
Casting Director Ira Uhr
Location Director Ralph Black
Story Editor Sam Man
Personnel & Insurance Dave Lentz
Film Editor Richard Cahoon
Music Dept. Head Morris StoloO
Purchasing Agent George Smith
Transportation Manager Ward Rawlinga
Head Projectionist Howard Edgar
Continental Pictures, Inc.
6362 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
GRanite 3546
President-Producer J. D. Kendis
Publicity Director Eddie Granneman
Coronudo Films, Inc.
Grand National Studios
7250 Santa Monica Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
GRanite 6131
President Donald K. Lieberman
Comptroller Herman A. Darstein
Secretary Frances Steen9
Production Supervisor Herman A. Darstein
Coronet Pictures, Inc.
8949 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
C Rest view 5-6193
President Howard M. Lang
Production Manager Monroe Shall
Publicity Director Ted Loefl
Crescent Pictures Corp.
Talisman Studios
4516 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
OLympia 1918
628
President E. B. Derr
Publicity Director William Peirce
Chiet Sound Engineer Carl Zint
Camera Dept. Head Paul Ivano
Still Dept. Head William Crosby
Costume Dept. Head Lew Brown
Makeup Dept. Head Phillip Shear
Property Master Ralph Martin
Casting Director Harry Franklin
Story Editor Jack Neville
Film Editor Robert Golden
Music Dept. Head Edward Kay
Crime Club Productions
6253 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
Hillside 7474
President Lawrence F. Fox. Jr.
Vice-President Ben Hersh
Secretary Therma Thayer
Production Supervisor Ben Hersh
Dale Productions, Inc.
7904 Santa Monica Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
GRanite 7083
President M. M. Dale
Treasurer-Secretary Leonard Dale
Darmour, Inc.
Darmour Studios
5823 Santa Monica Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
GRanite 1166
President Larry Darmour
Secretary-Treasurer Lillian Stromberg
Production Supervisor Rudolph Flothow
Publicity Director Fred Stanley
Chief Electrician Walter Lea
Chief Sound Engineer Tom Lambert
Camera Dept. Head James S. Brown
Still Dept. Head Jack Hoffman
Casting Director J. A. Duffy
Film Editor Dwight Caldwell
Music Dept. Head Lee Zahler
Purchasing Agent Lillian Stromberg
Cecil B. deMille Productions,
Inc.
Paramount Studios
5451 Marathon St., Hollywood, Calif.
Hollywood 2411
President Cecil B. deMille
Vice-President Constance A. deMille
Secretary-Treasurer Gladys Rosson
Asst. Secretary & Auditor R. A. Treacy
Assistant Treasurer Cecilia deMille Harper
Associate Producer William H. Pine
Publicity Director Ted Bonnet
Secy, of Research Frank Calvin
Art Director Roland Anderson
Casting Director Joe Egli
Location Director Arthur H. Rosson
Film Editor Anne Bauchena
PRODUCTION PERSONNEL
Arthur Dreifuss Productions,
Inc.
Talisman Studios
4516 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
OLympia 2131
President Arthur Dreifuss
Vice-President William C. Kent
Secretary-Treasurer Perry P. Burch
Auditor John Tittley
Producer-Director Arthur Dreifuss
Associate Producer William C. Kent
Camera Dept. Head Mack Stengler
Film Editor Robert Crandall
Music Dept. Head Ross Di Maccio
Eastern Service Studios
35-11 35th Ave., Long Island City, N. Y.
RAvenswood 8-8300
President Frank K. Speidell
Vice-President A. J. Wilson
Secretary-Treasurer E. G. Wagner
Asst. Secy.-Treas P. J. Mooney
Studio Manager and Sound Director. . .R. O. Strock
Production Supervisor Robert R. Snody
Chief Electrician E. F. Flaherty
Camera Dept. Head Al Dillinger
Property Master A. H. Koenig
Art Director Oscar Yerg
Casting Director J. A. Bannon
Location Director J. M. Aichele
Story Editor Robert R. Snody
Film Editor A. E. Gansell
Music Dept. Head E. E. Ludig
Purchasing Agent R. L. Lyons
Head Projectionist B. Turner
Ted Eshbaugh Studios, Inc.
35 W. 45th St., New York, N. Y.
CHickering 4-3930
President Ted E«hb«ugh
Secretary-Treasurer Jack Eshbaugh
Vice-President Bill Eshbaugh
Production Supervisors Ted Eshbaugh
John Eshbaugh
Story Editor Alma Lloyd
Music Dept. Head William Ruiiell
Famous Paintings
Productions, Ltd.
6636 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
Gladstone 8111
General Manager Eugene H. Roth
Production Supervisor Alfred A. Grasso
Camera Dept. Head James R. Palmer
Still Dept. Head Raoul A. Roth
Story Editor Eugene H. Roth
Film Editor Alfred A. Grasso
Music Dept. iieau Lee Zahler
Walt Disney Productions
2719 Hyperion Ave., Hollywood, Calif.
MOrningside 12131
1270 Sixth Ave., New York, N. Y.
Circle 6-3120
President-In chg. of Production Walt Disney
Secretary Dolores Voght
Exec. V-P & Genl. Mgr Roy Disney
Secretary Marian Collins
General Counsel Gunther Lessing
Comptroller George E. Morris
Purchasing Agent E. M. Francis
Paymaster A. G. Keener
Casting Director Stuart Buchanan
Supervisor of Distribution Hal Horne
Publicity Mgr. — New York Richard Condon
Studio Publicity Dept Janet Martin
Fine Arts Pictures
7250 Santa Monica Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
GRanite 6131
President Franklyn Warner
Vice-President j. Samuel Berkowitz
Vice-President George Bigelow
Chief Accountan V. A. Bonesteel
Publicity Director Billy Leyser
FitzPatrich Pictures
M-G-M Studios
Culver City, Calif.
AShley 4-3311
Proprietor
.James A. FitzPatricK
629
PRODUCTION PERSONNEL
Fleischer Studios, Inc.
N. W. 17th St. & 30th Ave., Miami, Fla.
Telephone 4-1646
President Mai Fleischer
Vice-President Dave Fleischer
Secretary to Max Fleischer Vera Coleman
General Manager Sam Buchwald
Production Supervisor Isidore Sparber
Chief Electrician Joseph Fleischer
Camera Dept. Head Charles Schettler
Research Dept. Head John Burks
Story Editor William Turner
Film Editor Kitty Plister
Music Dept. Head Louis Fleischer
Asst. General Manager James Dent
Casting Director R. W. Webb
Gateway Productions, Inc.
6040 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
Hnislde 8520
President Dr. Herbert Meyer
Secretary-Treasurer Richard C. Kahn
Production Supervisor Richard C. Kahn
General Film Company
6253 Hollywood Blvd., Hollvwood,, CaJif.
HUIslde 7474
President Lawrence W. Fox, Jr.
Vice-President Ben Hersh
Secretary Therma Thayer
Production Supervisor Ben Hersh
Mgr. Radio Dept Walter K. Davies
Mgr. Commercial Dept Walter K. Davies
Production Manager D. Iezard
Still Dept. Head Robert Coburn
Art Director James Baseri
Film Editor Sherman A. Todd
Samuel Goldwyn Studios
1041 S. Formosa Ave., Hollywood, Calif.
GRanite 5111
General Manager Marvin A. Ezzell
Superintendent g. b. Hill
Hairdressing Dept Nina Roberts
Wardrobe Business Mgr W. C. McClenaghan
Auditor W. H. Turk
Timekeeper j. f. Masson
Construction Supt O. J. Brodin
Chief Electrician W. H. Whisler
Chief Sound Engineer T. T. Moulton
Camera Dept. Head C. H. Lindblom
Still Dept. Head C. E. Bulloch
Makeup Dept. Head Bob Stephanoff
Property Master T. George Hazenbush
Art Director James Basevl
Casting Office W. H. Tinsman
Music Dept. Head Charles Dunworth
Purchasing Agent S. B. Hill
Transportation Manager Harry Englander
Paymaster c. C. Calhoun
>l«.v Gordon Plays & Pictures
Corp.
RKO Radio Pictures Studio
780 N. Cower St., Hollywood, Calif.
Hollywood 5911
President Harry M. Goetz
V-P in chg. of Production Max Gordon
Secretary-Treasurer Marcus Heiman
Production Supervisors Max Gordon,
Harry M. Goetz
General Service Studios, Inc.
6625 Romaine St., Hollywood, Calif.
GRanite 3111
President D. C. Hickson
Secretary-Treasurer G. H. Medley
Asst. Secy .-Studio Manager S. E. Hawkins
Construction Superintendent
William G. McDonald
Chief Electrician Harold Titus
Sound Operating Director J. R. Whitney
Lot Superintendent F. A. Emmert
Camera Dept. Head W. C. Eberle
Sound Maintenance Manager A. V. Gregory
Globe Productions, Inc.
Samuel Goldwyn Studios
1041 N. Formosa St., Los Angeles, Calif.
GRanite 5111
President James Roosevelt
Vice-President H. W. Banks
V-P & Associate Producer Henry Henigson
Assistant to Mr. Roosevelt Henri Verstappen
Publicity Director John Leroy Johnston
Story Editor Guy Trosper
Samuel Goldwyn, Inc., Ltd.
Samuel Goldwyn Studios
7210 Santa Monica Blvd., Hollvwood, Calif.
GRanite 5111
President Samuel Goldwyn
Vice-President Reeves Espy
Vice-President James E. Mulvey
Vice-President James Roosevelt
Secretary A. R. Evens
Production Executives Jock Lawrence,
Edwin H. Knopf
Publicity Director Fred A. Storm
Casting Director R. B. Mclntyre
Location Director August Schroeder
Story Editor Guy Trosper
Eastern Story Editor Bertram Bloch
Charles R. Hastinys Studios
1545 Broadwav, >"ew York, N. Y.
Circle 6-6229
President Charles B. Hastings
Vice-President F. Merklen
General Manager M. Warner
Hollywood Famous Pictures,
Inc.
733 N. Cahuenga Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
GLadstone 6252
President John Charles
Vice-President Henry S. Orozco
Secretary-Treasurer Henry Orozco
Assistant Secretary V. Strauss Charles
Production Supervisors John Charles,
Henry Orozco.
Publicity Director Chet Rosen
Laboratory Head H. Kruse
Camera Dept. Head Ross Fisher
Research Dept. Head E. Williams
Hollywood Film Enterprises,
Inc.
6060 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
Hillside 2181
President William Horsley
Vice-President T. H. Emmett
Secretary-Treasurer H. F. Cook
Assistant Secretary Mary S. Moore
Laboratory Head Larry E. Layos
Hollywood Productions
6040 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
Hillside 8520
Producer Richard C. Kahn
Casting Director Clarence A. Brooke
Story Editor Spencer Williams, Jr.
630
ideal Sound Studios, Inc.
1996 Boulevard East, Hudson Heights, N. J.
UNion 7-0953
General Manager Josef Zimanich
Publicity Director Milton Silver
Chief Sound Engineer Edward Johnstons
Assistant Sound Engineer John Dolan
Laboratory Head Al Guffanti
Camera Dept. Head "Alynlu" Semels
Miniature Dept. Head Pud Lane
Story Editors Edward J. McNamee.
Sigmund Maitles
Film Editor Stella Whipple
Gen'l Dir. Music-Sound Josef Zimanich
Assistant George Moore
Purchasing- Agent Irving Rice
Paymaster R- Duhan
Head Projectionist Walter Hill
Jewel Productions Co.
1908 S. Vermont Ave., Los Angeles, Calif.
PArkway 5660
Producer-General Manager William G. Smith
Associate Producer Al Alt
Business Manager William C. Kohler
Production Manager Ben Berk
Story Editor Jackson Parks
Casting Department R. B. Smith
Writer D. R. Smith
Production Supervisors William G. Smith.
Al Alt, Ben Berk.
Jewish Art Pictures, Inc.
6048 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
President George Fox
Vice-President Harry Shulman
Treasurer Max Kornbluth
General Manager Sid Blake
Kobzar Film Corp.
308 Symington Ave., Toronto, Canada.
33 W. 4!ind St., New York, N. Y.
LOngacre 3-5657
President V. Avramenko
Secretary-Treasurer Fred Pelech
Vice-President N. Pelech
Production Supervisors V. Avramenko.
M. J. Gann.
Publicity Director R. Rubenko
Costume Dept. Head Thomas Brajneff
Art Director E. Voklech
Music Dept. Head Ralph Seedoff
Dance Dept. Head 0. Avramenko
Walter Lantz Productions
Universal Studios
Universal City, Calif.
STanley 7-1211
Executives Walter Lantz,
George Hall.
Publicity Director Dick Hunt
General Manager George Hall
Production Manager Walter Lantz
Production Supervisors Burt Gillett,
Alex Lovy.
Laboratory Head Bob Moore
Still Dept. Head Don Dexter
Backgrounds Edgar Kiechle
Music Director Frank Marsales
Laurel & Hardy Feature
Productions
511 Pacific Mutual Bldg., Los Angeles, Calif.
Michigan 4047
PRODUCTION PERSONNEL
President Stan Laurel
Vice-President Oliver Hardy
Secretary-Treasurer Benjamin W. Shipman
Harold Lloyd Corp.
General Service Studios
1020 N. Las Palmas Ave., Hollywood, Calif.
GRanite 3111
President Harold C. Lloyd
Vice-President-Treasurer J. Darsie Lloyd
Secretary-General Manager William R. Fra»er
Auditor J. E. McVeigh
Production Manager J. L. Murphy
Publicity Director J. P- Reddy
Purchasing Agent J- E. McVeijh
Majestic Pictures, Inc.
Talisman Studios
4516 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
OLympia 2131
President Alvin G. Manuel
Publicity Director David Arlen
Casting Director Doc Merman
March of Time
369 Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y.
Circle 5-4400
Producer Louis de Rochemont
Associate Producer Thomas Orchard
Associates Beverly Jones.
Lothar Wolff. Robert L. Richards, James L.
Shute. James Wolcott.
Bus. Mgr .-Treasurer John R. Wood, Jr.
Production Supervisors Jack Glenn,
George Black, Alan Brown.
Advt. -Promotion-Pub.
Dir Albert E. Sindlinger
Publicity Director Donald F. Higgins
Chief Electrician William Shaw
Chief Sound Engineers D. Y. Bradshaw,
W. K. Hawk.
Still Dept. Head Frank Calabria
Research Dept. Head Samuel Bryant
Casting Directors Philippe de Lacy.
Elmore Bostwick.
Story Editors James L. Shute.
Robert L. Richards.
Film Editor Lothar Wolff
Cutting Dept. Head John P. Bradford
Mascot Pictures Co.
6331 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
Hillside 6311
President Nat Levine
General Manager J. S. Keasler
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Washington Blvd., Culver City, Calif.
AShley 4-3311
Executives Louis B. Mayer.
E. J. Mannix. Al Lichtman, Sam Katz, Ben
Thau, J. J. Cohn. Bernard Hyman. Louis D.
Lighton, J. G. Mayer, Nicholas Nayfack, W. K.
Craig.
Producers Milton Bren.
Edward Chodorov, John W. Considine. Jr.,
Merian Cooper, Jack Cunnings, Sidney Franklin.
Lucien Hubbard, Robert Z. Leonard, Mervyn
LeRoy, Al Levoy, Joseph L. Mankiewicz. Harry
Rapf, W. Walter Ruben, Winfield Sheehan,
Frederick Stephani, Hunt Stromberg, Lawrence
Weingarten, Carey Wilson, Sam Zimbalist.
Comptroller W. K. Crai*
Art Dept. Head Cedric Gibbon*
Camera Dept. Head John Arnold
631
PRODUCTION PERSONNEL
Cutting: Dept. Head Daniel Gray
Casting- Dept. Head Fred Datig
Laboratory Dept. Head J. M. Nickolaus
Makeup Dept. Head Jack Dawn
Music Dept. Head Nat Finston
Production Dept. Head Charles Chic
Property Dept. Head Edwin B. Willis
Purchasing- Dept. Head J. G. Mayer
Scenario Dept. Head Kenneth MacKenna
Script Dept. Head Edith Farrell
Shorts Dept. Head Jack Chcrtok
Sound Dept. Head Douglas Shearer
Wardrobe Dept. Head Sara Kress
Metro-Goldivyn-Mayer
Cartoon Studios
Overland Street. Culver City, Calif.
ASh. 4-3311
General Manager Fred C. Quimby
Production Supervisors Hugh Harman.
Rudolf Isingr.
Publicity Director Howard Strickling
Metropolitan Pictures Corp.
5215 Franklin Ave., Hollywood. Calif.
Hillside 9118
President-General Manager Harry S. Webb
Secretary-Treasurer Rose Gordon
1st Vice-President Richard D. Pearsall
2nd Vice-President Harry Gordon
Production Manager Ira S. Webb
Production Supervisor Edward M. Seata
Publicity Director Harold Flavin
Chief Electrician Herb Meeks
Chief Sound Engineer Clifford Ruberg
Laboratory Head Mark James
Camera Dept. Head Edward A. Kull
Still Dept. Head R. S. Crandall
Miniature Dept. Head Lew Dow
Research Dept. Head Charles Stevens
Costume Dept. Head R. Gordon
Makeup Dept. Head James Aubrey
Stage Manager Gordon Allen
Property Master Sam Gordon
Art Director Fred Prebble
Casting Director Robert Melvin
Location Director Chance Parrv
Story Editor Carl Krusada
Film Editor Fred Bain
Dance Dept. Head B. Powell
Purchasing Agent Jay J. Bryan
Transportation Manager Dan Weaver
Head Projectionist Newt Adams
Monogram Productions
4516 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
MOrningside 11191
President W. Ray Johnston
V P in chg. of Production Scott R. Dunlap
Treasurer J. p. Friedhoff
Production Manager Charles J. Bigelow
Production Supervisors Grant Withers,
William Lackey. Paul Malvern. Edward F.
Finney, Harry S. Webb, T. R. Williams.
Publicity Director Bill Pcirce
Chief Electrician Tom Ouelette
Chief Sound Engineer Karl Zint
Laboratory Head Mark Guerrine
Camera Dept. Head Harry Neumann
Still Dept. Head Warner Crosby
Miniature Dept. Head Fred Jackmann
Research Dept. Head Lockwood Frost
Costume Dept. Head Lew Brown
Property Master Johnny Huff
Art Director E. R. Hickson
Casting Director Bill Drake
Location Director Allen Wood
Story Editor Dorothy Reid
Film Editor Russell Schoengarth
Music Dept. Head Edward Kay
Purchasing Agent Joel Fox
Transportation Manager Lou Deutch
Head Projectionist Frank Gaily
Roris Morros Productions,
inc.
General Service Studios
1010 X. Las Pal mag Ave., Hollywood, Calif.
GBanite 3111
President Boris Morros
Secretary Jacques Grinieff
Comptroller Samuel Rheiner
Production Supervisors J. H. Nadel,
Robert Stilhnan, John London.
Art Director Boris Leven
Casting Director Jack Murtor,
Music Dept. Head Edward Paul
Movietonews, inc.
KiO W. 54tb St.. New York, N. Y.
COIumbus .V7200
President W. C. Michel
V-P in chg. of Production Truman H. Talley
General Manager Edmund Reek
Studio Manager Steve Fitzgibbon
News Editor Jack Haney
Technical Supervisor E. I. Sponable
Chief Commentator Lowell Thomas
Sports Commentator Ed Thorgersen
Fashion Director Vyvyan Donner
Feminine Commentator Helen Claire
Production Supervisor Lew Lehr
Chief Film Editor Ben Loweree
Publicity Director Dan Doherty
Chief Electrician George Wilson
Chief Sound Engineer Walter Hicks
Laboratory Head Al Freedman
Camera Dept. Head Jack Painter
Still Dept. Head Art Sorensen
Makeup Dept. Head Morgan Jones
Stage Manager Ed Kelly-
Art Director Al Panci
Location Director Joe Farrington
Film Editor Russ Shields
Short Subject Film Editor Russ Shields
Music Dept. Head John Rochetti
Head Projectionist Ray Nolan
Musart Film Productions,
Inc.
33 W. 42nd St.. New York, N. Y.
LOngacre 3-5657
President Michael J. Gann
Treasurer E. S. Gillman
Secretary E. N. Lesser
Producer Michael J. Gann
Associate Producer P. S. Yusoff
Publicity Director E. G. Greevs
Art Director A. K. Remmer
Music Dept. Head A. N. Malas
National Screen Service
West Coast Studios
7026 Santa Monica Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
GLadstone 3136
Studio Director Tom Baily
Production Assistant Ralph Wilshin
Editorial Assistant Gene S. Fox
Editorial Dept Robert Faber.
James Majorell, James Pollak. Lou Harris. Ar-
thur Housman.
Art Dept. Head Don Miller
Chief Cinematographer Walter Bader
Laboratory Head Charles Fairall
Theater Service Cameraman Charles Glenar
Chief Film Editor Peter Hecht
Special Effects Head Herbert Bond
632
Morris Bros. Productions
6406% Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
Associates Walter Norris, Harold Norris
Production Super. -Genl. Mgr Alfred A. Grasso
Camera Dept. Head James R. Palmer
Chief Sound Engineer Ben Winkler
Research Head and Commentator.
William MacGinnis
Story and Film Editor Alfred A. Grasso
PRODUCTION PERSONNEL
President Gene Towne
Vice-President Graham Baker
Secretary Henry Herzbrun
Production Supervisors Gene Towne.
Graham Baker.
Publicity Director Arthur Janisch
Harold Orlob Productions,
Inc.
Fox Movietone Studios
160 W. 54th St.. New York, N. Y.
COIumbns 5-7800
President Harold Orlob
Paramount Pictures, Inc.
5451 Marathon St., Hollywood, Calif.
Hollywood 2411
V-P in ehg. of Studio Operations
Y. Frank Freeman
Managing Dir. of Production .... William LeBaron
Executive Studio Manager George L. Bagnall
Asst. to W. LeBaron A. M. Botsford
Production Control Manager Fred Leahy
Treasurer Walter B. Cokell
Comptroller A. C. Martin
Production Manager Richard L. Johnston
Operations Manager T. Keith Glennan
Resident Attorney Jacob H. Karp
Producers George Arthur,
Arthur Hornblow. Jr.. Harold Hurley. Jack
Moss, Harlan Thompson, Dale Van Every, Paul
Jones, A. M. Botsford. Anthony Veiller. Cecil
B. DeMille. William Wellman, Mark Sandrich.
Publicity Director Cliff Lewis
Chief Electrician Fred Geiger
Chief Sound Engineer Loren Ryder
Laboratory Head James R. Wilkinson
Camera Dept. Head C. Roy Hunter
Still Dept. Head Harry Cottrell
Miniature Dept. Head Gordon Jennings
Research Dept. Head Helen Gladys Percey
Costume Dept. Head Frank C. Richardson
Makeup Dept. Head Wally Westmore
Stage Manager Clarence Slater
Property Master 0. C. Stratton
Art Director Hans Dreier
Casting Director John Zinn
Location Director Fred Harris
Story Editor Francis Langton
Film Editor Charles West
Music Dept. Head Louis Lipstone
Dance Dept. Head Leroy Prinz
Purchasing Agent L. H. Buell
Transportation Manager Lee Hinson
Head Projectionist Charles West
Head of Story Dept Richard Halliday
Head of Talent Dept Arthur Jacobson
Peerless Pictures, Inc.
1655 N. Cherokee Ave., Hollywood, Calif.
GRanite 9051
President Sam Efrus
Assistant Arthur Sturm ak
Production Supervisors Sam Efrus,
Mel DeLay.
Publicity Director Arthur Sturmak
Chief Electrician Pat Patterson
Camera Dept. Head William Hyer
Research Dept. Head John Lopez
Stage Manager Mel Delay
Casting Director Mel DeLay
Story Editor Arthur St. Clair
The Play's the Thing
Productions, Inc.
RKO Radio Studio
780 N. Gower St., Hollywood, Calif.
HOUywood 5011
Principal Productions, Inc.
1011 N. Formosa Ave., Hollywood, Calif.
AS. 1-2135
Producer Sol Lesser
Associate Producer Barnett Briskin
Distribution Louis Hyman
Comptroller Martin F. Eisenberg
Publicity Director Al Vaughan
Art Director Lewis J. Rachmil
Casting Director Barnett Briskin
Film Editor Sherman Todd
Purchasing Agent Martin F. Eisenberg
Producers Pictures Corp.
1436 X. Beachwood Drive. Hollywood, Calif.
Hillside 8101
President Ben Judell
Production Supervisors Sigmund Neufeld,
Sherman Scott, Peter Stewart.
Publicity Director Eddy Graneman
Chief Electrician Robert Burns
Chief Sound Engineer Hans Weeran
Camera Dept. Head Jack Greenhalgh
Still Dept. Head Fred Grossi
Miniature Dept. Head Vern Thrasher
Property Master Bill Billings
Art Director Fred Preble
Casting Director Robert Jordan
Story Editor Del Hedrick
Film Editor Holbrook N. Todd
Music Dept. Head David Chudnow
Purchasing Agent William Henley
RCA Photophone Division of
RCA Manufacturing Co.
411 Fifth Ave.. New York, N. Y.
AShland 4-7605
1016 N. Sycamore Ave., Hollywood, Calif.
Hillside 5171
V-P in chg. of Engineering Products
Frank R. Deakins
Manager Edward C. Cahill
Service Manager W. L. Jones
Assistant V-P (New York) Ralph Austrian
Assistant V-P (Hollywood) Frank Burns
Mgr. Hollywood Activities James E. Francis
Asst. Mgr. Photophone Div Frank Wentker
Dir. Sound Research-Engineering. . .Max C. Batsel
Publicity Director Julius Haber
Advertising Manager E. T. Jones
RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.
780 N. Gower St., Hollywood, Calif.
HOUywood 5911
President George J. Schaefer
Vice-President J. J. Nolan
Vice-President J. R. McDonough
Studio Commitments Danny Winkler
Assistant Treasurer G. B. Howe
Studio Manager Sid Rogell
Production Supervisors Lee Marcus,
Robert Sisk, Cliff Reid, George Haight. William
Sistrom, Leo McCarey. Bert Gilroy. Howard
Benedict, Lou Brock, Gregory LaCava.
Publicity Director Perry Lieber
Chief Electrician Earl O. Miller
Chief Sound Engineer John Aalberg
Camera Dept. Head William Eglinton
Still Dept. Head William Eglinton
Miniature Dept. Head Tommy Thompson
633
PRODUCTION PERSONNEL
Research Dept. Head Elizabeth McGaffey
Costume Dept. Head Clair Cramer
Makeup Dept. Head Mel Berns
Construction Manager Harold V. Barry
Property Master Darrell Silvera
Art Director Van Nest Polglase
Casting Director Robert Palmer
Location Director Louis Shapiro
Story Editor Lillie Messinger
Film Editor J. James Wilkinson
Music Dept. Head Dave Dreyer
Purchasing Agent W. A. Wilde
Transportation Manager E. G. Cline
Head Projectionist John Aalberg
George Randol Productions
Talisman Studios
451G Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
OLympia 2131
President George Randol
Vice-President Charles Baker
Secretary Helen Colley
Treasurer Charles W. Hester
Production Supervisors George Randol.
Raoul Pagel.
Publicity Director Jimmy Asendio
Reeves Sound Studios, Inc.
1600 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
Circle 6-CG86
President Hazard E. Reeves
Republic Productions. Inc.
4024 N. Radford Ave., North Hollywood, Calif.
SUnset 2-1121
President M. J. Siegel
Secretary-Treasurer E. H. Goldstein
General Manager E. H. Goldstein
Production Manager Allen A. Wilson
Chief Engineer Charles Lootens
Assistant Treasurer Hy J. Glick
Production Supervisors Sol C. Siegel,
Robert North, Armand Schaefer, Joe Kane,
William Berke, Harry Grey, George Sherman
H. B. Brown.
Publicity Director Walter Compton
Chief Electrician Paul Guerin
Chief Sound Engineer Daniel Bloomberg
Camera Dept. Head Al Horowitz
Miniature Dept. Head Howard Lydecker
Research Dept. Head Mauria Hanline
Costume Dept. Heads: Men Robert Ramsey.
Women Adele Palmer
Makeup Dept. Head Robert Mark
Stage Manager Ralph Obergr
Property Master Moe Braun
Art Director John Victor Mackay
Casting Director Harold Dodds
Location Director John Bourke
Story Editor Albert J. Cohen
Film Editor Murray Seldeen
Music Dept. Head Cy Feuer
Purchasing Agent Richard W. Altschuler
Transportation Manager Pierre Valin
Grantland Rice Sport
Pictures Corp.
22 W. 48th St., New York, N. Y.
BRyant 9-4564
President Grantland Rice
Vice-President-Treasurer Jack Eaton
Field Representative Rod Warren
Production Supervisors Russell T. Ervin,
Ernest Corta.
Hal Roach Studios, Inc.
8822 W. Washington Blvd., Culver City, Calif.
AShley 8-2185
President Hal E. Roach
Vice-President Victor Ford Colling
Vice-President S. S. Van Keuren
Secretary-Treasurer Mat D. O'Brien
Asst. Secretary -Treasurer Hugh Huber
Publicity Director Frank N. Seltzer
Chief Electrician W. P. Lewis
Chief Sound Engineer Elmer Raguse
Laboratory Head Charles Levin
Still Dept. Head Stax Graves
Costume Dept. Head Harry Black
Art Director Danny Hall
Casting Director Earl Rettig
Location Director Jack Roach
Purchasing-Transportation Russ Walker
Head Projectionist Hamlet Bsnnett
Charles A. Rossi Studios
Strand Theater Bldg., Schroon Lake, N. Y.
Telephone 43
In Charge of Production Charles A. Rossi
Associate Producer c. Clyde Carlysle
Production Supervisors C. Dell Avell.
Jack Lombard.
Publicity Director Eugene Clements
William Rowland
Productions
444 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y.
Azteca Studio, Mexico City, D. F.
Producer William Rowland
Associate Producer David Rowland
Publicity Director Sam Kopp
Chief Sound Engineer B. J. Kroger
Laboratory Head Gabriel Moreno
Camera Dept. Head Fred Mandl
Makeup Dept. Head Anita Guerrero
Stage Manager George Fallon
Art Director George Fernandez
Film Editor H. L. Mandl
Dance Dept. Head Larry Ceballos
Jach Schaindlin Screen
Scores
Eastern Service Studios
35-11 35th Ave., Long Island City, N. Y.
RAvenswood 8-8300
General Manager Jack Schaindlin
Composer-Arranger William J. Moore
Vocal Arranger James Peterson
Copyists Howard Emerson.
Helen Ferrucci.
Leon Schlesinger
Productions
Warner Bros. -Sunset Studio
1351 N. Van Ness Ave., Hollywood, Calif.
GLadstone 4131
Producer Leon Schlesinger
Assistant Henry Binder
Production Supervisors Raymond G. Katz,
Fred Avery, Charles M. Jones, Isadore Freleng.
Robert Clampett.
Publicity Director Rose Joseph Horsley
Chief Sound Engineer Treg Brown
Camera Dept. Head John W. Burton
Art Directors J. D. Johnsen.
Robert L. Holdeman. John McGrew.
Music Dept. Head Carl W. Stalling
In-between Dept. Head Arthur Milman
Inking & Painting Dept. Head Frank Powers
Secretary Ada Ruinello
Scientific Films, Inc.
6052 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
GLadstone 7101
President Jerry Fairbanks
Secretary-Treasurer Robert Carlisle
634
Vice-President Austin Sherman
Chief Electrician R. A. Lindsay
Camera Dept. Head Jerry Fairbanks
Research Dept. Head Dick Diamond
Narration Dept. Head Gayne Whitman
Property Master Robert Connelly
Casting Director Minnetta Gardner
Dialogue Editor Gayne Whitman
Story Editor Walter Anthony
Film Editor Robert Carlisle
Music Dept. Head Eddie Paul
Screen Gems, Inc.
7000 Santa Monica Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
HOllywood 2907
Vice-President-Manager James Bronis
Production Supervisors Arthur Davis.
Sidney Marcus. Allen Rose, Harry Love.
Camera Dept. Head Otto Riemer
Film Editor George Winkler
Music Dept. Head Joe DeNat
Selznick International
Pictures
9336 Washington Blvd., Culver City, Calif.
AShley 4-3355
Chairman of the Board John Hay Whitney
President David 0. Selznick
V-P and Secretary Daniel T. O'Shea
Assistant Secretary Loyd Wright
Assistant Treasurer E. L. Scanlon
Asst. Seey.-Treas L. R. Case
Production Manager Raymond A. Klune
Publicity Director Russell Birdwell
Chief Electrician George Mitchel
Chief Engineer R. D. Musgrave
Camera Dept. Head Roy Overbaugh
Special Effects Jack Cosgrove
Research Dept. Head Lilliam K. Deighton
Costume Dept. Head Ned Lambert
Makeup Dept. Head Monte Westmore
Property Master Harold Coles
Art Director Lyle Wheeler
Casting Director Fred Schuessler
Story Editor Val Lewton
Film Editor Hal C. Kern
Music Dept. Head Lou Forbes
Purchasing Agent & Transportation Mgr.,
Joyce Allen
Head Projectionist Charles Hawker
Harry Sherman Productions
General Service Studios
1040 N. Las Palmas Ave., Los Angeles, Calif.
HOllywood 1101
Producer Harry Sherman
Associate Producer Joseph W. Engel
Production Manager Edward Wolfe
Publicity Director Eddie Mills
Chief Electrician Roy Fullerton
Chief Sound Engineer Earl Sitar
Camera Dept. Head Russell Harlan
Costume Dept. Head Earl Moser
Makeup Dept. Head Jack Casey
Set Dresser Emil Kurl
Property Master Henry Donavan
Art Director Lewis J. Rachmil
Film Editor Sherman Rose
Purchasing Agent Edward Wolfe
Transportation Manager Sam Ecclestone
Sherivill Productions, Inc.
Talisman Studios
4516 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
NOrmandie 11191
President T. R. Williams
Vice-President William Watson
Treasurer Fred Scheld
Secretary Bernard Logan
PRODUCTION PERSONNEL
Edward Small Productions,
Inc.
General Service Studios
1040 N. Las Palmas Ave., Hollywood, Calif.
GRanite 3111
President Edward Small
Treasurer-Executive Business Mgr.
C. W. Thornton
Secretary Seymour Steinberg
Production Manager Val Paul
Publicity Director Murphy McHenry
Art Director Jack DuCasse Schulze
Casting Director Victor Sutker
Film Editor Grant Whytock
Soundfilm Enterprises, Inc.
723 Seventh Ave., New York, N. Y.
MEdallion 3-3248
President I. E. Lopert
Secretary Peggy Quia
Sports World Pictures,, Inc.
1509 N. Vine St., Hollywood, Calif.
Hillside 7178
President A. W. Hackel
Supreme Pictures Corp.
1509 N. Vine St., Hollywood, Calif.
Hillside 7178
President A. W. Hackel
Talisman Pictures Corp.
Talisman Studios
4516 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
OLympia 2131
Executive Manager John F. Meehan
Comptroller Peggy L. Hutson
Secretary to Studio Mgr Marjorie Hearn
Supt. of Construction Frank Dexter
Paint. Dept. Foreman George Alston
Chief Electrician Carl L. Stratton
Machine Shop Foreman M. H. Serotti
Transportation Manager Frank J. Duffy
Chief, Studio Police James A. Hoye
Head Projectionist Frank Gaily
Camera Dept. Head Faxon M. Dean
Art Director Frank Dexter
Purchasing Agent Peggy L. Hutson
Terrytoons, Inc.
271 North Ave., New Roehelle, N. Y.
New Roehelle 3467
President Paul H. Terry
V-P in chg, of Sales Harvey B. Day
Secretary-Treasurer William M. Weiss
Musical Director Philip A. Scheib
Twentieth Century-Fox Film
Corp.
10201 West Pico Blvd., Los Angeles, Calif.
OXford 2211; BRadshaw 22161; WEst Los
Angeles 31144
President Sidney R. Kent
Chairman of the Board Joseph M. Schenck
V-P in chg. of Production Darryl F. Zanuck
V-P and Exec. Asst. to D. F. Zanuck
William Goetz
Executive Producer Sol M. Wurtzel
Studio Treasurer F. L. Metzler
Production Manager William Koenig
Associate Producers Harry Joe Brown,
Raymond Griffith, Nunnally Johnson, Kenneth
Macgowan, Gene Markey, John Stone.
Publicity Director Harry Brand
635
PRODUCTION PERSONNEL
Chief Electrician Walter T. Strohm
Chief Sound Engineer e. H Hansen
Laboratory Head Michael S. Leshing
Camera Dept. Head Daniel B. Clark
Still Dept. Head Charles Goldie
Miniature Dept. Head Fred Sersen
Research Dept. Head Prances Richardson
Costume Dept. Head Arthur M Levy
Makeup Dept. Head S. Clay Campbell
Stage Manager Joseph R. Stofel
Property Master Thomas K. Little
Art Director Richard W. Day
Casting Director Lew Schreiber
Location Director R. c. Moore
Story Editor Julian Johnson
Film Editor Hector S. Dods
Music Dept. Head James O'Keefe
Dance Dept. Head Nicholas Castle
Purchasing Agent Alex Kelly
Transportation Manager Joseph J. Hirigoyen
Head Projectionist William P. Weischeit
Universal Pictures Co., Inc.
Universal City, Calif.
STanley 7-1211
V-P and General Manager Cliff Work
Production Manager Martin Murphy
Comptroller Harold Brewster
Manager of Operations David Garber
General Business Mgr J. p. Normanly
Production Supervisors Milton H. Feld.
Jack Gross. Milton Schwarzwald.
Publicity Director John E. Joseph
Chief Electrician Frank Graves
Chief Sound Engineer Bernard S. Brown
Laboratory Supervisor Sid Lund
Camera Dept. Head Frederick Campbell
Still Dept. Head Ray Jones
Miniature Dept. Head Richard Hentschel
Research Dept. Head Nan Grant
Men's Wardrobe Frank Tait
Women's Wardrobe Vera West
Makeup Dept. Head .Jack Pierce
Property Master Russell A. Gausman
Art Director Jack Otterson
Casting Director Dan Kelley
Location Director Jack Lawton
Story Editor Marshall Grant
Film Editor Maurice Pivar
Music Dept. Head Charles Previn
Purchasing Agent Frank Patchell
Transportation Manager Carl Beringer
Head Projectionist Reginald Bunce
Victor Pictures
0018 Fountain Ave., Los Angeles, Calif
HEmpstead 1744
Producer Victor B. Fisher
Associate Producer N. R. Dawley
Manager Bart Carre
stor.v Robert Rose
Victoria Films, Inc.
P. O. Box 74,1, W. Hollywood, Calif.
President Melville A. Shauer
Secretary -Treasurer William Gordon
Vitttphotie Studio
1277 E. 14th St., Brooklyn, N. T.
Nightingale 4-8700
Wafilms, Inc.
1 126 N. Beachwood Drive, Hollywood, Calif.
Gladstone 6137
President Walter Futter
Walter Wanger Productions,
Inc.
.Samuel Goldwyn Studios
1045 N. Formosa Ave.. Hollywood, Calif.
GRanite 5111
President Walter F. Wanger
Treasurer-Business Manager C. E Ericksen
Secretary r^yd Wrisfht
Comptroller P R Guth
Production Manager James Dent
Publicity Directors John LeRoy Johnston
Alexander Toluboff.
Art Director Alexander Golitzen
Production Executive Maxwell Arnow
Film Editor otho Loverinr
Warner Rros. Pictures, Inc.
1000 S. Olive St., Burliank, Calif.
Hollywood 1251
President H. M. Warner
\ -P in chg. of Production J. L. Warner
Associate Exec, in chg. of Production
Hal B. Wallis
Asst. Associate Executive Bryan Foy
Production Manager T. C. Wright
Studio Business Mgr Carrol Sax
Dir. Advertising-Publicity S. Charles Einfeld
Comptroller c. H. Wilder
Production Supervisors Henry Blanke
William Cagney. Louis Edelman, Robert Fellows.
Mark Hellinger, Gordon Hollingshead. William
Jacobs, David Lewis. Robert Lord. Wolfgang
Reinhardt.
Publicity Director Robert S. Taplinger
Chief Electrician Leon Combs
Chief Sound Engineer Maj. Nathan Levinson
Laboratory Head Fred Gage
Camera Dept. Head Mike McGreal
Still Dept. Head Mike McGreal
Miniature Dept. Head Byron Haskin
Research Dept. Head Herman Lissauer
Costume Dept. Head L. L. Burns
Makeup Dept. Head Perc Westmore
Property Master A. C. Wilson
Art Director Bertram Teitlebaum
Casting Director Steve Trilling
Location Director William Guthrie
Story Editor Irene Lee
Film Editor Harold McCord
Music Dept. Head Leo Forbstein
Purchasing Agent Harvey Briggs
Transportation Manager Arthur Klein
Head Projectionists Bennie Marks. Al Kearns
Wichmar Film Productions,
Inc.
100 E. 42nd St., New York. N. Y.
LExington 2-3570
President Robert J. Marshall
Vice-President John R. Davies
Secretary -Treasurer George H. Wicke
World Famous Artists, Inc.
527 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y.
VAnderbilt 6-4180
President Emil Neugebauer
Vice-President George R. Mance
Treasurer Nicholas K. DeRose
Production Supervisor Jack Schaindlin
Camera Dept. Head William Kelly-
Makeup Dept. Head Fred Ryle
Stage Manager Harold Godsoe
Art Director Harry Saulter
Beit Hie F. Ac id tint n
Productions, Ltd.
Talisman Studios
4516 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
Olympia 2131
Publicity Director David Arlen
636
Los Angeles, Calif.
Academy Productions, Inc.
General Service Studio GRanite 3111
Aetna Film Corp.
Talisman Studios OLympia 2131
American Pictures, Inc.
Selznick International Studios ... AShley 4-2931
Argus Pictures
Talisman Studio OLympia 2131
Atalaya Films
6331 Hollywood Blvd HEmpstead 4121
Arcadia Pictures
Grand National GRanite 6131
Burke, Billy, Productions
7416 Beverly Blvd WEbster 4133
Capra, Frank-Robert Risk in Productions
Warner Bros. Studio Hollywood 1251
Carr, Trem, Inc.
0008 Sunset Blvd Hillside 8260
Cartoon Films, Ltd.
9713 Santa Monica Blvd OXford 2316
Cathedral Films, Inc.
9336 W. Washington Blvd.. Culver City
AShley 4-2931
Century Pictures Corp.
1426 N. Beachwood HEmpstead 119
Chaplin, Charles, Film Corp.
1416 N. La Brea Ave HEmpstead 2141
Cinema Sales, Inc.
Grand National GRanite 6131
Cinemart Films, Inc.
6912 Hollywood Blvd Hillside 0153
Cinemaphone Studios
1357 N. Gordon St HEmpstead 2131
Cohen, Maury
6331 Hollywood Blvd HEmpstead 4121
Colonial Pictures Corp.
9336 Washington Blvd., Culver City
AShley 4-2931
Colony Productions
6048 Sunset Blvd Hillside 9585
Columbia Pictures
1438 N. Gower St Hollywood 3181
Shorts:
1443 N. Beachwood Drive .... GLadstone 5122
Commodore Pictures, Inc.
1040 N. Las Palmes Ave GRanite 3111
Continental Pictures, Inc.
6362 Hollywood Blvd GRanite 3546
Coronado Pictures
Grand National Studios GRanite 6131
Cosmopolitan Pictures, Inc.
20th Century-Fox CRestview 1-5696
Crescent Pictures Corp.
4516 Sunset Blvd OLympia 2131
Crime Club Productions
Universal Studios STanley 71211
Criterion Productions
Talisman Studios OLympia 2131
Darmour, Larry, Productions
5823 Santa Monica Blvd GRanite 1166
Mario Productions, Inc.
Grand National GRanite 6131
deMille, Cecil B., Productions, Inc.
Paramount Studios Hollywood 2411
Disney, Walt, Studios
2719 Hyperion Ave MOrningside 12131
Dowling & Brownell Productions
General Service Studios GRanite 3111
Dreifuss, Arthur, Productions, Inc.
Talisman Studio OLympia 2131
Equity Pictures
Talisman Studios OLympia 2131
Este Pictures, Inc.
General Service Studios Hollywood 1101
Excelsior Pictures Corp.
1033 N. Cahuenga Blvd Hollywood 5873
Fine Arts Piotureg
Selznick International Studios. .. AShley 4-2931
Putter, Walter A.
1426 N. Beachwood Drive ... GLadstone 6187
Gallagher, J.
Grand National GRanite 6131
Garmes, Lee-Adele Comandini Productions
General Service Studio GRanite 3111
Gateway Productions, Inc.
6048 Sunset Blvd Hillside 8520
General Film Co.
6253 Hollywood Blvd Hillside 7474
General Service Studios
1040 N. Las Palmas Ave GRanite 3111
Gilliam, Rodney, Productions
7904 Santa Monica Blvd Hillside 2220
Globe Productions, Inc.
1041 N. Formosa Ave GRanite 5111
Gold Seal Productions
6048 Sunset Blvd GLadstone 5175
Golden West Productions
Grand National Studios GRanite 6181
Goldstone, Phil, Productions
6192 Hollywood Blvd Hillside 7661
Goldwyn, Samuel, Inc., Ltd.
Goldwyn Studio GRanite 5111
Goldwyn, Samuel, Studios
1041 N. Formosa Ave GRanite 6111
Grey, Romer
280 E. Mariposa, Altadena. . . . STerling 7-9665
Harman-Ising
M-G-M AShley 4-3811
Hirliman, George, Productions
Grand National Studios GRanite 6131
Hollywood Famous Pictures, Inc.
998 Cahuenga Blvd GLadstone 6252
Hollywood Productions
6(148 Sunset Blvd Hillside 8520
Hughes Products, Ltd.
7020 Romaine Ave HEmpstead 1181
Hunt, Hubbard, Productions
1206 Maple Ave PRospect 3603
Jeffers, Oliver, Productions
Selznick International Studios ... AShley 4-2931
Jester, Ralph, Productions
Selznick International Studios ... AShley 4-2931
Judell, Ben
1430 N. Beachwood Drive Hillside 8101
Kent, Willis, Productions
4376 Sunset Drive OLympia 2978
Landres, M. M., Productions
1426 N. Beachwood Drive. . . HEmpstead 11B1
I, ant/,, Walter, Productions
Universal Studios STanley 71211
Lascello, Ward
P. O. Box 2694
Laurel & Hardy Feature Productions
Pacific Mutual Bldg Michigan 4047
Lesser, Sol-Ernst Lubitsch
Goldwyn Studios GRanite 5111
Levine, Nat
6331 Hollywood Blvd Hillside 6361
Lewyn, Lewis, Productions
937 N. Sycamore Ave GRanite 8606
Lloyd. Frank-SkirbaU, Jack, t reductions
General Service Studios GRanite 3111
Loew, David L. -Albert Lewin Productions
Selznick International Studios. . .AShley 4-2931
Lubitsch, Ernst-Sol Lesser
Goldwyn Studios GRanite 6111
Malvern, Paul, Productions
6606 Sunset Blvd Hillside 8266
637
Mascot Pictures
m^33^ Hollywood Blvd Hillside 0311
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
10202 Washing-ton Blvd.. Culver City
. ... _. AShley 4-3311
Metropolitan Pictures Corp.
,„f0 Sunset Blvd Hillside 9418
Million Dollar Productions
M-6248^un,Bet BIvd GLadstone 6177
Mintz, Charles, Studios
7000 Santa Monica Blvd HOllywood 2907
Monogram Pictures, Inc.
Talisman Studios NOrmandie 11191
Morgan, James, Associates
Talisman Studios OLympia 2113
Morros, Boris, Productions
General Service Studios GRanite 3111
.National Philharmonic Symphony Productions
xr ■:■ ,N<; Las PaImas Ave GRanite 3111
National Screen Service
7026 Santa Monica Blvd GLadstone 3188
Paramount Pictures
5411 Marathon St HOllywood 2411
Pickford, Mary
Goldwyn Studios GRanite 5111
Principal Productions
Goldwyn Studios GRanite 5111
Producers Corp. of America
8780 Sunset Blvd CRestview 1-0125
Producers Pictures Corp.
1436 N. Beachwood Drive Hillside 8101
Progressive Pictures Corp.
-J-J?33, CahuenS-a Ave HOllywood 6873
RkO Radio Pictures
o 7^°,NA Gower st HOllywood 6911
Kandol, George, Productions
Talisman Studios ..OLympia 2131
Kantz, Lew, Productions
Grand National Studios GRanite 6131
Republic Studios
North Hollywood SUnset 211-21
Retsama Productions
4376 Sunset Drive NOrmandie 2-2166
Richmond, Ted
Grand National GRanite 6131
Roach, Hal, Studios
8822 Washington Blvd., Culver City
n . ^ „ AShley 4-2761
Rockett, Frederick K., Co.
6050 Sunset Blvd GRanite 7920
Rogers, Charles R.
Columbia Studios HOllywood 3181
Rosen, Al
6404 Hollywood Blvd HOllywood 9808
Rowland, Richard, Productions
General Service Studios GRanite 3111
Royal Revues, Inc.
6642 Santa Monica Blvd HEmpstead 7806
Sanforth, Clifford, Productions
6048 Sunset Blva GLadstone 5175
Schlesinger, Leon, Productions
1351 N. Van Ness Ave GLadstone 4131
Schrotter, Dave
Grand National GRanite 6131
Schulberg, B. P., Studios
650 N. Bronson Drive Hillside 2825
Scientific Films
6052 Sunset Blvd GLadstone 7101
Scott, Lester, Productions
6048 Sunset Blvd Hillside 9585
Screen Gems, Inc.
7000 Santa Monica Blvd Hollywood 2907
Selznick International Pictures
9336 Washington Blvd., Culver City
„. .„ _ , AShley 4-2931
Sherwill Productions
Talisman Studios OLympia 2131
Sherman Harry, Productions
General Service Studios HOllywood 1101
Shorts, Inc.
1040 N. Las Palmas Ave GRanite 3111
Sklrball, Jack
Grand National Studios GRanite 6131
Small, Edward, Productions
General Service Studios GRanite 3111
Standard Pictures
1108 N. Lillian Way HEmpstead 6631
Stephens-Lang Productions
1040 N. Las Palmas Ave GRanite 3111
Sunset Studios
6048 Sunset Blvd GRanite 0604
638
Supreme Pictures Corp.
1509 N. Vine St Hillside 7178
Symphonic Featurettes
TaHilmnn SiUdi°8 OLympia 2131
lalisman Studios
4516 Sunset Blvd OLvmnia 21 ?1
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp. P
1714 N Western Ave HOllywood 3141
Universal Pictures Corp.
Vi^orT^* 712-"
Vl2££ Picture." HEmpstead 1744
«r15°9 ,Vine St HOllywood 5036
Wanger, Walter, Productions
Goldwyn studio GRanite 6111
Warner-Bros.-First National
RR^an£ "Vw'V Hollywood 1251
5842 Sunset Blvd Hollywood 5811
Warner, Franklyn
Selznick International Studios. . .AShley 4-2931
Webb, Harry, Productions
«,»n°40 9"i?Set Blvd Hillside 9418
Williams, T. R., Productions
Talisman Studios OLympia 2181
Young, Lon, Productions
Grand National Studios GRanite 6131
Zeidman, B. F., Productions, Inc.
1426 N. Beachwood Drive GLadstone 6131
New York, N. Y.
American Documentary Films, Inc.
11 W. 42nd St. LOngacre 5-6078
Astor Productions, Inc.
„ 1F° S"?tn Ave Circle 7-3C87
Audio Pictures, Inc.
35-11 35th Ave., Long Island City
. RAvenswood 8-8300
Banner Pictures, Inc.
723 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-55X0
Blake, B. K., Inc.
1270 Sixth Ave COlumbus 6-1864
Collective Film Producers, Die.
1560 Broadway BRyant 9-7281
Columbia Pictures Corp.
729 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-7900
Cosmopolitan Productions, ,Inc.
1540 Broadway BRyant 9-9020
Courier Productions, Die.
2 W. 45th St VAnderbilt 6-0560
Disney, Walt, Enterprises
1270 Sixth Ave circle 6-8120
Documentary Film Productions, Die.
9 Rockefeller Plaza circle 6-1949
Flitter, Walter A.
1501 Broadway PEnnsylvania 6-7440
Gold Seal Productions Co.
1775 Broadway COlumbus 5-0121
Imperial Pictures, ,Inc.
. 729, Seventh Ave BRyant 9-8669
Jewish Talking Picture Co., Inc.
33 W . 60th St COlumbus 5-1469
Kobzar Film Corp.
33 W 42nd St LOngacre 3-5658
Loew s, Inc.
1540 Broadway BRyant 9-7800
March of Time, Inc.
.r.3,?9 Lexington Ave circle 5-4400
Million Dollar Productions, Inc.
723 Seventh Ave LOngacre 5-7745
Monogram Pictures Corp.
1270 Sixth Ave COlumbus 5-7673
Musart Film Productions, Inc.
33 W. 42nd St LOngacre 3-6657
udessco Productions
1501 Broadway CHickering 4-8187
Paramount Pictures, Inc.
1501 Broadway CHickering 4-7050
Pastime Pictures Corp.
1270 Sixth Ave Circle 7-1699
Pioneer Pictures, Inc.
pirn0pi'rftll„-AJe CIrCle 5-7070
RKO Radio Pictures
1270 Sixth Ave COlumbus 5-6500
Raspin Productions, Inc.
20 W. 22nd St GRamercy 6-6693
Reliance Pictures, Inc.
1501 Broadway BRyant 9-0145
Republic Pictures Corp.
1776 Broadway COlumbus 5-2501
Bice, Grantland, Sport-Pictures Corp.
22 W. 48th St BRyant 9-4564
Roach, Hal, Studios, Inc.
729 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-7266
Rowland. William, Productions
444 Madison Ave PLaza 5-7733
Screen Traveler, The
2 W. 67th St
Sepia-art Pictures Co.
2352 Seventh Ave AUdubon 3-1814
Small, Edward, Productions, Inc.
729 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-0680
Spectrum Pictures Corp.
729 Seventh Ave BRyant 8-2964
Terrytoons, Inc.
271 North Ave., New Rochelle NR 3467
Tru Pictures Co., Inc.
1270 Sixth Ave COlumbus 5-1854
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
444 W. 56th St COlumbus 6-3321
Universal Pictures Corp.
30 Rockefeller Plaza Circle 7-7100
Warner Bros.
321 W. 44th St Circle 6-1010
Wickmar Film Productions, Inc.
100 E. 42nd St LExington 2-3570
SHORT SUBJECT
PRODUCERS
Los Angeles, Calif.
American Pictures, Inc.
Selznick International AShley 4-2931
Beche, Bob
Republic Studios SUnset 21121
Carlisle, Robert
6052 Sunset Blvd GLadstone 7101
Cartoon Films, Ltd.
9713 Santa Monica Blvd OXford 2316
Chertok, Jack
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer AShley 4-3311
Columbia Pictures
1438 Gower St Hollywood 3181
Darmour, Larry, Productions
5823 Santa Monica Blvd GRanite 1166
Disney, Walt
2719 Hyperion St MOrningside 12-131
Dowling & Brownell
6625 Romaine St GRanite 3111
Dreifuss, Arthur, Productions, Ijic.
Talisman Studios OLympia 2131
Excelsior Pictures
1033 N. Cahuenga Blvd Hollywood 5873
Fairbanks, Jerry
6052 Sunset Blvd GLadstone 7101
Feher, Frederick
General Service Studios GRanite 3111
FitzPatrick, James A.
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer AShley 4-3311
Flynn-Hill Productions, Inc.
Warner Bros Hollywood 1251
Frazier, Del
5852 Corbin Ave., Canoga Park. . .REseda 9351
Futter, Walter
1426 N. Beachwood Drive .... GLadstone 6137
General Film Co.
6253 Hollywood Blvd Hillside 7474
Gilliam, Rodney
7904 Santa Monica Blvd Hillside 2220
Grey, Ronier
280 E. Mariposa Ave., Altena. . STerling 7-9555
Harman-Ising Productions
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer AShley 4-3311
Hollingshead, Gordon
Warner Bros Hollywood 1261
Hubbard, Hunt, Productions
1206 Maple Ave PRospect 5409
Landres, M. M.
1426 Beachwood Drive HEmpstead 1191
Lantz, Walter
Universal Studio STanley 712-11
Lewyn, Lewis
937 N. Sycamore Ave GRanite 8606
McRae, Henry
Universal Studio STanley 712-11
Morgan, James & Associates
Talisman Studios OLympia 2131
Moulton, Herbert
Paramount Studios Hollywood 2411
Murphy, Stanley P., Inc.
6623 Santa Monica Blvd Hollywood 7376
National Philharmonic Spmphony Productions
1040 N. Las Palmas Ave GRanite 3111
Pacific Cine Film
5676 Santa Monica Blvd Hollywood 6485
Rockett, Frederick K., Co.
6050 Sunset Blvd GRanite 7920
Scientific Films, Inc.
6052 Sunset Blvd GLadstone 7101
Schlesinger, Leon
1351 N. Van Ness Ave GLadstone 4131
Screen Gems, Inc.
7000 Santa Monica Blvd Hollywood 2807
Shorts, Inc.
General Service Studios GRanite 3111
Skeets Lloyd Productions
6513 Hollywood Blvd Hillside 9277
Smith, Pete
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer AShley 4-3311
Symphonic Featurettes
Talisman Studios OLympia 2131
Tradefilms, Inc.
959 N. Soward St GRanite 6600
Victor Pictures
0018 Fountain Ave HEmpstead 1744
White, Jules
Columbia Studios Hollywood 1193
New York, ]\. Y.
Audio Productions, Inc.
35-11 35th Ave., Long Island City
RAvenswood 8-8800
Columbia Pictures
729 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-7900
Disney, Walt, Enterprises
1270 Sixth Ave Circle 6-3120
March of Time, Inc.
369 Lexington Ave VAnderbilt 3-2400
Musart Film Productions, Inc.
33 W. 42nd St LOngacre 3-5667
Paramount Pictures, Inc.
1501 Broadway CHickering 4-7050
RKO Radio Pictures
1270 Sixth Ave COlumbus 5-6500
Rice, Grantland, Sport-Pictures Corp.
22 W. 48th St BRyant 9-4564
Roush, Leslie
Paramount Pictures CHickering 4-7060
Screen Traveler, The, Inc.
2 W. 67th St.
Terry, Paul
271 North Ave., New Rochelle 3467
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
444 W. 56th St COlumbus 5-3321
Universal Pictures Corp.
30 Rockefeller Plaza Circle 7-7100
Vitaphone Corp. (Warner Bros.)
321 W. 44th St Circle 6-1010
639
16 in. m.
PRODUCERS
DISTRIBUTORS
PRODUCERS
Atlas Educational Film Co.
1111 South Blvd.. Oak Park, 111.
Bray Productions, Inc.
729 Seventh Ave.. New York, N. Y.
Columbia Pictures
729 Seventh Ave.. New York, N. Y.
Disney, Walt
2719 Hyperion Ave., Hollywood, Calif.
Eastman Teaching Films, Inc.
Rochester. N. Y.
Erpi Picture Consultants
35-11 35th Ave., Long Island City. N. Y.
Educational Film Corp.
1501 Broadway. New York, N. Y.
Film Circulation Corp.
1600 Broadway. New York. N. Y.
Fit/Patrick Pictures, Inc.
729 Seventh Ave., New York, N. Y.
Fried Camera Co.
6156 Santa Monica Blvd., Hollywood. Calif.
Gilliam, Rodney
7904 Santa Monica Blvd.. Hollywood, Calif.
Hollywood Film Enterprises
6060 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
Holmes Burton, Films, Inc.
7510 N. Ashland Ave., Chicago. 111.
Ideal Picnres Corp.
2402 W. Seventh St.. Los Angeles. Calif.
International Geographic Pictures, Inc.
52 Vanderbilt Ave., New York, N. Y.
International Film Bureau, Inc.
59 E. Van Buren St., Chicago. 111.
Motion Picture Corp. of America
729 Seventh Ave., New York, N. Y.
Paramount Pictures
1501 Broadway. New York, N. Y.
Religious Motion Picture Foundations, Inc.
140 Nassau St.. New York, N. Y.
Kichter's Photo Service
7936 Santa Monica Blvd.. Hollywood. Calif.
Rockett, Frederick, Productions
6050 Sunset Blvd.. Hollywood, Calif.
Rothacker, Douglas D.
729 Seventh Ave.. New York, N. Y.
Scientific Films
6052 Sunset Blvd.. Los Angeles. Calif.
Sound Masters, Inc.
1560 Broadway, New York. N. Y.
Universal Pictures
30 Rockefeller Plaza. New York, N. Y.
West Coast Sound Studios, Inc.
510 W. 57th St., New York. N. Y.
Yorke, Emerson
245 W. 55th St., New York, N. Y.
DISTRIRUTORS
American Social Hygiene Associations
50 W. 60th St., New York, N. Y.
Amkino Corp.
729 Seventh Ave.. New York, N. Y.
Bell & Howell Co.
1803 Larchmont Ave., Chicago, HI.
Castle Films, Inc.
30 Rockefeller Plaza, New York, N. Y.
Columbia Pictures
729 Seventh Ave.. New York. N. Y.
Commonwealth Pictures Corp.
729 Seventh Ave.. New York, N. Y.
DeVry, Herman A., Inc.
1111 Center St., Chicago. HI.
Eastman Kodak Co.
Rochester. N. Y. (Stores in important cities).
Easton Feature Films
322 Ripley St.. Davenport. Ia.
Edited Pictures System
330 W. 42nd St.. New York, N. Y.
Garrison Film Distributors
729 Seventh Ave., New York, N. Y.
(iotlohn, Walter O.
35 West 45th St.. New York. N. Y.
Hastings Motion Pictures
Hasting!. Mich.
CARTOON
PRODUCERS
Los Angeles, Calif.
Disney, Walt
2719 Hyperion St MOrningside 12131
Harman, Hugh-Rudolph Ising
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Ashley 4-3311
Lantz, Walter
Universal Studio STanley 712-11
Schlesinger, Leon
1351 N. Van Ness Ave GLadstone 4iai
Screen Gems, Inc.
7000 Santa Monica Blvd Hollywood 2907
Miami, Fla.
Fleischer Studios
N. W. 17th St. & 30th Ave 4-1646
l\ew Rochelle, N. Y.
Terry, Paul
271 North Ave 3467
New York, X. Y.
Disney, Walt, Enterprises
1270 Sixth Ave Circle 6-31E0
Hoffberg, .1. H., Co., Inc.
729 Seventh Ave., New York, N. Y.
Hollywood Color Films Co.
4772 Santa Monica Blvd., Los Angeles. Calif.
Hollywood Film Enterprises
6000 Sunset Blvd.. Hollywood. Calif.
Holmes Burton, Films, Inc.
7510 N. Ashland Ave., Chicago,, 111.
Ideal Pictures Corp.
28 E. 8th St., Chicago, 111.
[deal Pictures Corp.
2402 W. Seventh St.. Los Angeles. Calif.
Institutional Cinema Service
130 W. 46th St.. New York, N. Y.
Kodascope Libraries
33 W. 42nd St.. New York. N. Y.
King Cole's Sound Service
203 E. 26th St.. New York, N. Y.
Magnet Pictures, Inc.
630 Ninth Ave., New York, N. Y.
Mai chin, Leo
545 Fifth Ave.. New York. N. Y.
Major Film Laboratory
120 W. 41st St.. New York, N. Y.
Mogull Bros.
68 W. 48th St., New York, N. Y.
Nil-Art Filmco
145 W. 45th St.. New York. N. Y.
Parry Film Co.
Hollywood, Calif.
Pathegrams, Inc.
30 Rockefeller Plaza, New York. N. Y.
Pictorial Films, Inc.
1650 Broadway, New York. N. Y.
Post, Harry
723 Seventh Ave., New York. N. Y.
Religious Motion Picture Foundation
140 Nassau St.. New York, N. Y.
Rothacker, Douglas D.
729 Seventh Ave., New York. N. Y.
Show-at-Home Movie Library (Universal)
30 Rockefeller Plaza, New York, N. Y.
Society for Visual Education, Inc.
327 S. LaSalle St., Chicago. HI.
Stollins Movie and Film Service
Box 810. Ellenville. N. Y.
Victor Animatograph Corp.
242 W. 55th St., New York, N. Y.
Wholesome Film Service
48 Melrose St., Boston. Mass.
Willoughby's
110 W. 32nd St.. New York. N. Y.
World Enterprises
318 Campbell Bldg.. Honolulu. T. H.
Y. M. C. A. Motion Picture Bureau
347 Madison Ave.. New York. N. Y.: 19 S.
LaSalle St.. Chicago. 111.
Yale University Press Service
286 Fourth Ave.. New York, N. Y.
Yorke, Emerson
245 W. 65th St., New York. N. T.
640
New York, IV. Y.
Advance Film Exchange, Inc.
630 Ninth Ave Circle 6-6765
Alliance Films Corp.
1270 Sixth Ave Circle 7-3945
American Trading Association
723 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-4312
Amkino Corp.
723 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-7680
Artcinema Associates, Inc.
729 Seventh Ave MEdalion 3-4960
Astor Pictures Corp.
1270 Sixth Ave Circle 7-3687
Atlas Film Exchange
723 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-0581
British & Continental Trading Co.
1270 Sixth Ave Circle 7-4697
C. & M. Pictures, Inc.
729 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-6541
Casino Film Exchange, Inc.
210 E. 86th St REgent 4-0267
Criterion Film Productions, Inc.
729 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-7300
Cummins, Samuel
230 E. 41st St VAnderbilt 6-1172
Danubia Pictures, Inc.
729 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-4175
Esperia Film Distributing Co.
1650 Broadway Circle 6-3169
Exhibitors Film Exchange
630 Ninth Ave Circle 6-0888
Federal Film Co., Inc.
790 Seventh Ave Circle 7-7668
Film Company of Ireland
437 Central Park West ACademy 2-9425
Foreign Cinema Arts, Inc.
729 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-9694
Franco-American Film Corp.
66 Fifth Ave ALgonquin 4-6980
French Cinema Center, Inc.
35 W. 45th St BRyant 9-9848
French Film Exchange
545 Fifth Ave VAnderbilt 6-5178
French Motion Picture Corp.
126 W. 46th St BRyant 9-0866
Gallic Films, Inc.
1270 Sixth Ave Circle 7-5737
Garrison Film Distributors, Inc.
1600 Broadway Circle 6-4868
Gerden Pictures
729 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-4384
Goldwitt Film Sales Co.
729 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-4369
Guaranteed Pictures Co.
729 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-4369
Hoffberg, J. H., Co., Inc.
729 Seventh Ave MEdalion 3-3813
Hungaria Pictures, Inc.
1600 Broadway COlumbus 6-1760
Ideal Pictures Corp.
1600 Broadway Circle 6-0081
Imperial Pictures, Inc.
729 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-8669
International Cincmart Corp.
729 Seventh Ave MEdalion 3-3781
International Road Shows Co.
630 Ninth Ave Circle 6-0655
Kassler, Frank
1600 Broadway Circle 6-6963
Lenauer International Films, Inc.
202 W. 68th St Circle 7-6691
Loew's, Inc.
1540 Broadway BRyant 9-7800
Luporini & Variety Films Corp.
33 W. 42nd St LOngacre 5-0790
Malchin, Eeo
545 Fifth Ave VAnderbilt 6-5178
Marcy Pictures Corp.
630 Ninth Ave Circle 6-4665
Mayer Si Burstyn
1481 Broadway MEdalion 3-2881
Modern Film Corp.
729 Seventh Ave Bryant 9-9635
Monogram Pictures Corp.
1270 Sixth Ave COlumbus 5-7674
National Pictures Corp.
1501 Broadway LAckawanna 4-3644
New Star Films, Inc.
1560 Broadway BRyant 9-7281
Olympic Motion Picture Corp.
325 W. 44th St COlumbus 5-3176
Oriental Film Importing Co.
83 Washington St BOwling Green 9-9711
Paramount Pictures
1501 Broadway CHickering 3-7050
Pax Film, Inc.
723 Seventh Ave MEdallion 3-3248
Puritan Pictures Corp.
723 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-2790
RKO Radio Pictures
1270 Sixth Ave COlumbus 5-6500
Ra.spin Productions, Inc.
20 W. 22nd St GRamerey 5-6993
Record Pictures Corp.
1501 Broadway LAckawanna 4-8833
Reliable Film Export Co.
1560 Broadway MEdallion 3-0436
Reliable Pictures Corp.
565 Fifth Ave PLaza 3-1135
Republic Pictures
1776 Broadway Circle 5-7300
Roma Film Co.
630 Ninth Ave Circle 6-5095
Scandinavian Talking Pictures, Inc.
220 W. 42nd St Wisconsin 7-2152
Screen Attractions
630 Ninth Ave Circle 6-0888
Screencraft Pictures, Inc.
723 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-2790
Select Attractions, Inc.
1501 Broadway CHickering 4-7748
Special Pictures Corp.
1270 Sixth Ave Circle 7-4915
Spectrum Pictures Corp.
729 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-2964
Sphinx Films Corp.
535 Fifth Ave MUrray Hill 2-1727
Tri-National Films, Inc.
250 W. 57th St Circle 7-1548
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
444 W. 56th St COlumbus 5-3321
Ufa Films, Inc.
729 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-7890
United Artists Corp.
729 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-7300
Universal Pictures Corp.
1250 Sixth Ave Circle 6-7100
Vedis Films, Inc.
1270 Sixth Ave Circle 6-7392
Vitagraph, Inc. (Warner Bros.)
321 W. 44th St Circle 6-1010
World Pictures Corp.
729 Seventh Ave MEdallion 3-2943
641
EXCHANGES
PRODUCT— MANAGERS
UNITED STATES
Albany, \ . Y.
Columbia Pictures Corp.
1050 Broadway 3-4287
Joseph J. Miller, Manager (Columbia).
Loew's, Inc.
1080 Broadway 4-2187
Ralph Pielow, Manager (M-G-M).
Paramount Pictures, Inc.
1044 Broadway 3-2187
Clayton G. Eastman. Manager (Paramount).
RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.
1048 Broadway 4-0187
Bernard G. Kranze, Manager (RKO Radio).
Republic Distributing Corp.
1046 Broadway 5-2291
Arthur G. Newman. Manager (Republic).
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
1052 Broadway 3-1203
Moe N. Grassgreen, Manager (20th Century-
Fox, Gaumont British).
Universal Film Exchanges, Inc.
1054 Broadway 4-4177
Joseph Engel, Manager (Universal).
Vitagraph, Inc.
1058 Broadway 4-8137
Paul S. Krumenacker, Manager (Warner Bros.,
First National. Vitaphone).
Atlanta, Ga.
Affiliated Producers, Inc.
164 Walton St.. N.W JAckson 5735
Amity Exchange
109 Walton St WAlnut 8374
J. U. McCormick. Manager.
Columbia Pictures Corp.
131 Walton St WAlnut 1624
Walter W. Anderson. Manager (Columbia).
Dixie Film Exchange
145 Walton St MAin 3117
Loew's, Inc.
198 Luckie St JAckson 2180
R. M. Avey, Manager (M-G-M).
Monogram Southern Exchanges, Inc.
163 Walton St.. N.W WAlnut 3959
John W. Mangham. Manager (Monogram. Mas-
cot, Criterion. Commercial. Bert Ennis).
Paramount Film Distributing Corp.
154 Walton St.. N.W JAckson 2740
J. F. Kirby, Manager (Paramount).
RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.
191 Walton St JAckson 1742
H. W. Lyons. Manager (RKO Radio).
Republic Pictures Corp. of the S. E.
162 Walton St., N.W JAckson 0680
Carl C. Floyd. Manager (Republic).
Sack Amusement Enterprises
109 Walton St., N.W WAlnut 9527
Howard Wallace, Manager (Million Dollar Pro-
ductions, Hollywood Productions. Oscar
Micheaux. Select Attractions, Screen Attrac-
tions Corp).
Savinl Films
189 Walton St MAin 8792
N. £. Savini. Manager (Atlantic. Actor, Film
Alliance of the U. S.).
Southwestern Amusement Enterprises, Inc.
660 Peachtree St.. N. E JAckson 2613
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
197 Walton St., N.W JAckson 1083
Paul S. Wilson, Manager (20th Century-Fox,
Gaumont British).
United Artists Corp.
158 Walton St WAlnut 6386
T. L. Davis. Manager (United Artiste).
Universal Film Exchanges, Inc.
193 Walton St.. N.W JAckson 0930
John T. Ezell, Manager (Universal).
Vitagraph, Inc.
194 Luckie St., N.W JAckson 6161
R. L. McCoy. Manager, (Warner Bros.. First
National, Vitaphone).
Boston, Mass.
Bay State Film Co.
31 Melrose St DEvonshire 7843
Cameo Screen Attractions, Inc.
16 Piedmont St HANcock 3880
Samuel J. Davidson, Manager.
Columbia Pictures Corp.
67 Church St HANcock 9890
Harry Rogovin. Manager (Columbia).
Hub Film Exchange
1 S. Cedar Place HUbbard 7033
Imperial Pictures, Inc.
50 Melrose St LIBerty 3903
Harry Segal, Manager (Imperial, Standard. J.
H. Hofiberg, World. Select, Jam Handy) .
Loew's, Inc.
46 Church St HANcock 0044
John P. Byrne, Manager (M-G-M).
Monogram Pictures, Inc.
39 Church St HUBbard 4360
Steve Broidy. Manager (Monogram).
Paramount Film Distributing Corp.
68 Berkeley St HANcock 1070
Albert M. Kane. Manager (Paramount).
Popular Pictures, Inc.
60 Piedmont St HANcock 6287
Producers Distribution Corp. of N. E.
12 Piedmont St HAncock 6387
RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.
60 Church St HANcock 0467
R. C. Cropper. Manager (RKO Radio).
Republic Pictures Corp. of N. E.
25 Winchester St HANcock 4290
E. Edward Morey, District Manager (Repub-
lic).
Specialty Pictures Co., Inc.
14 Piedmont St LIBerty 9306
R. E. Heffner, Manager (Astor).
Twentieth Century-Fox Corp.
105 Broadway HANcock 2180
E. X. Callahan. Manager (20th Century-Fox,
Gaumont British).
United Artists Corp.
62 Church St HANcock 8346
John J. Dervin. Manager (United Artists).
642
Universal Film Exchanges, Inc.
37 Piedmont St HANcock 8780
W. P. Kelly, Manager (Universal).
Vitagraph, Inc.
131 Arlington St HUBbard 3290
Norman Ayres, Manager (Warner Bros., First
National, Vitaphone).
Buffalo, JV. Y.
Columbia Pictures Corp.
509 Pearl St WAshington 3523
Phil Fox, Manager (Columbia).
F. C. Pictures Corp.
505 Pearl St CLeveland 1246
Charles H. Tarbox, Manager.
Loew's, Inc.
294 Franklin St WAshington 1224
Ralph W. Maw. Manager (M-G-M).
Monogram Film Exchanges, Inc.
505 Pearl St CLeveland 2145
Harry L. Berkson, Manager (Monogram).
Pam-0 Film Exchange, Inc.
265 Franklin St CLeveland 7149
Eleanor M. Paradeis, Manager (Malmar, Alli-
ance, Conn, Spectrum, Leichter, Burr, Art
Cinema) .
Paramount Pictures, Inc.
464 Franklin St QArfield 1707
K. G. Robinson, Manager (Paramount).
RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.
505 Pearl St CLeveland 0742
Charles Boasberg, Manager (RKO Radio).
Republic Pictures Corp.
505 Pearl St CLeveland 2421
Jack Bellman, Manager (Republic).
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
290 Franklin St CLeveland 0784
Sydney Samson, Manager (20th Century -Fox,
Gaumont British).
United Artists Corp.
605 Pearl St WAshington 1500
Sydney Lehman. Manager (United Artists).
Universal Film Exchanges, Inc.
505 Pearl St AMherst 1427
John J. Scully, Manager (Universal).
Vitagraph, Inc.
470 Franklin St Lincoln 2700
Charles Rich, Manager (Warner Bros., First
National, Vitaphone).
Butte, Mont.
Columbia Pictures Corp.
Ill E. Granite St 7681
(Sub-Station).
Loew's, Inc.
109 E. Granite St 5249
(Shipping Station).
Paramount Pictures, Inc.
107 E. Granite St.
(Shipping Station).
RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.
113 E. Granite St 2-4992
(Shipping Station).
Republic Pictures (Sheffield Exchange System)
115 E. Granite St 2-4404
R. D. Boomer, Manager (Republic).
Charlotte, JV. C.
Affiliated Producers, Inc.
300 W. Third St 6047
Amity Pictures Exchange
212 S. Poplar St 3-9261
Atlantic Pictures
212 S. Poplar St 3-9261
W. L. Parker, Manager (Spectrum, Astor).
Columbia Pictures Corp.
225 W. 4th St 2-1256
R. J. Ingram, Manager (Columbia).
Loew's, Inc.
426 W. Fourth St 6147
Benn H. Rosenwald, Manager (M-G-M).
EXCHANGES - PRODUCT
Monogram-Southern Exchanges, Inc.
212 S. Poplar St 3-9261
M. L. Stevens, Manager (Monogram).
Paramount Film Distributing Corp.
306 S. Church St 8101
Scott Lett, Manager (Paramount).
RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.
215 W. 4th St 6112
J. B. Brecheen, Manager (RKO Radio).
Republic Pictures Corp. of the S. E.
227 W. 3rd St 3-6138
J. H. Dillon, Manager (Republic).
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
308 S. Church St 7101
Philip Longdon. Manager (20th Century-Fox,
Gaumont British).
United Artists Corp.
224 W. Second St 6109
Jay Schrader. Manager (United Artists).
Universal Film Exchanges, Inc.
313 S. Church St 2-3169
Paul Baron, Manager (Universal).
Vitagraph, Inc.
311 S. Church St 3-1194
J. A. Bachman. Manager (Warner Bros., First
National, Vitaphone).
Chicago, III.
Columbia Pictures Corp.
1301 S. Wabash Ave CALumet 7244
Phil Dumas, Manager (Columbia).
Franklin, Irwin
831 S. Wabash Ave WABash 7616
(Amkino. Garrison, New Star, Carmel. Credo).
Judell, B. N., Inc.-Producers Pictures Corp.
831 S. Wabash Ave HARrison 9669
A. H. Fischer, Manager (Producers Pictures
Corp.) .
Loew's, Inc.
1327 S. Wabash Ave CALumet 6700
W. E. Banford, Manager (M-G-M).
Midwest Film Exchange, Inc.
1325 S. Wabash Ave CALumet 3592
Arthur S. Benjamin, President (Hoffberg).
Monogram Pictures Corp.
1250 S. Wabash Ave CALumet 2900
Henri Elman, Manager (Monogram).
Paramount Pictures, Inc.
1306 S. Michigan Ave CALumet 6740
J. J. Donohue (Paramount).
Polish American Film Corp.
1641 W. Division St ARMitage 2102
John C. Gordon, Manager (Polish films).
RKO Radio Pictures
1025 S. Wabash Ave HARrison 8460
J. C. Osserman, Manager (RKO Radio).
Republic Pictures Corp. of III.
1304 S. Wabash Ave CALumet 6300
Irving W. Mandel. President, Harry S. Loreh,
General Sales Manager (Republic).
Sack Amusement Enterprises
1325 S. Wabash Ave Victory 7105
Saul Goldman, Manager (Million Dollar Pro-
ductions, Astor) .
Superior Pictures, Inc.
1300 S. Wabash Ave CALumet 2910
James N. Jovaney, President (Imperial, Victory,
Spectrum, Metropolitan, Colony, Standard).
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
1260 S. Wabash Ave Victory 1200
Clyde W. Eckhardt, Manager (20th Century-
Fox, Gaumont British).
United Artists Corp.
1301 S. Wabash Ave Victory 7130
Irving Schlank, Manager (United Artists).
Universal Film Exchanges, Inc.
1301 S. Wabash Ave Victory 7117
M. M. Gottlieb, Manager (Universal).
Vitagraph, Inc.
1307 S. Wabash Ave Victory 3223
Tom R. Gilliam. Manager (Warner Bros., First
National. Vitaphone).
Western Feature Film Exchange
1018 S. Wabash Ave WEBster 3489
643
EXCHANGES - PRODUCT
Cincinnati, O.
Big Feature Rights Exchanges, Inc.
1632 Central Parkway CHerry 1272
Lee L. Goldberg-, Manager (Producers Distribut-
ing Corp., Alliance, Astor).
Columbia Pictures Corp.
1634 Central Parkway CHerry 6883
Allan S. Moritz. Manager (Columbia).
Loew's, Inc.
1638 Central Parkway CHerry 3557
E. M. Booth, Manager (M-G-M) .
Monogram Pictures, Inc.
1634 Central Parkway PArkway 0179
William Onie. Manager (Monogram).
Paramount Pictures, Inc.
1214 Central Parkway CHerry 6150
J. J. Oulahan, Manager (Paramount).
KKO Radio Pictures, Inc.
1634 Central Parkway CHerry 1470
Stanley Clay Jacques, Manager (RKO Radio).
Remington Quality Pictures
1635 Central Parkway CHerry 7251
Mrs. S. Remington, Manager.
Republic Pictures Corp. of Ohio
1635 Central Parkway CHerry 5686
Max Margolis. Manager (Republic).
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
1638 Central Parkway PArkway 5867
J. J. Grady. Manager (20th Century-Fox, Gau-
mont British).
I'nited Artists Corp.
1634 Central Parkway CHerry 1546
Harris Dudelson, Manager (United Artists).
Universal Film Exchanges, Inc.
1634 Central Parkway CHerry 4525
Paul E. Krieger, Manager (Universal).
Vitagraph, Inc.
1600 Central Parkway CHerry 6824
Ralph Kinsler, Manager (Warner Bros.. First
National. Vitaphone).
Cleveland, O.
Big Feature Rights Exchanges, Inc.
Film Bldg MAin 2819
S. Gerson, Manager (Astor).
Columbia Pictures Corp.
2100 Payne Ave CHerry 3645
Lester Zuker, Manager (Columbia).
Independent Film Service
Film Bldg MAin 0624
Lee Goldberg, Manager.
Loew's, Inc.
2346 Payne Ave PRospect 3340
Frank D. Drew. Manager (M-G-M).
Monogram Film Distributors, Inc.
2108 Payne Ave PRospect 2741
Nate Schultz, Manager (Monogram).
Paramount Pictures, Inc.
1735 E. 23rd St PRospect 3914
Duke Clark, Manager (Paramount).
Polish American Film Corp.
4147 E. 141st St PRospect 3970
L. Adamczak, Manager (Polish films).
RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.
2340 Payne Ave PRospect 5980
G. Lefko, Manager (RKO Radio).
Republic Pictures Corp. of Ohio
450 Film Bldg PRospect 0034
Nat L. Lefton. Franchise holder, S. P. Gorrell.
Manager (Republic).
Selected Pictures Co.
Film Exchange Bldg PRospect 2741
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
2219 Payne Ave PRospect 2257
I. J. Schmertz, Manager (20th Century-Fox,
Gaumont British).
United Artists Corp.
10017 Lake Ave PRospect 2985
A. M. Goodman. Manager (United Artists).
Universal Film Exchanges, Inc.
2342 Payne Ave PRospect 0413
J. R. Kauffman. Manager (Universal).
Vitagraph, Inc.
2300 Payne Ave PRospect 5920
Herbert J. Ochs. Manager (Warner Bros., Firit
National. Vitaphone).
Dallas, Tex.
Adams Film Exchanges
308% E. Harwood St 7-1393
L. F. Turner, Manager (Victory, Spectrum.
Astor, Colony, Metropolitan. Artcinema. Im-
perial, Puritan).
Columbia Pictures Corp.
1818 Wood St 7-8488
J. B. Underwood, Manager (Columbia).
Loew's, Inc.
2013 Jackson St 7-4172
Leroy Bickel, Manager (M-G-M).
Lone Star Film Corp.
208 S. St. Paul St 7-5993
.Monogram Pictures, Inc.
304 S. Harwood St 7-4736
John L. Franconi, Sales Manager, Edwin Blum-
enthal. Manager (Monogram).
Paramount Film Distributing Corp.
412 S. Harwood St 7-4386
L. W. McClintock, Manager (Paramount).
KKO Radio Pictures, Inc.
402 S. Harwood St 2-6175
S. M. Sachs, Manager (RKO Radio).
Republic Pictures Corp. of Texas
2011 Jackson St 7-1791
W. G. Underwood, C. C. Ezell. Managers (Re-
public) .
Sack Amusement Enterprises
Film Exchange Bldg 7-6474
Alfred Sack. Manager (Million Dollar Produc-
tions, India white product).
Texas Film Service, Inc.
412 S. St. Paul St 7-3092
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
1801 Wood St 7-5391
H. R. Beirsdorf, Manager (20th Century-Fox,
Gaumont British).
United Artists Corp.
308 S. Harwood St 7-1364
Hugh Owen, Manager (United Artists).
Universal Film Exchanges, Inc.
308 S. Harwood St 7-6312
Edward S. Olsmith, Manager (Universal).
Vitagraph, Inc.
508 Park Ave 2-8726
Doak Roberts, Manager (Warner Bros.. First
National, Vitaphone).
Denver, Colo.
Affiliated Enterprises, Inc.
2165 Broadway TAbor 6288
Atlantic Film Exchange
828 21st St CHerry 2434
Columbia Pictures Corp.
2140 Champa St KEystone 6341
R. C. Hill, Manager (Columbia).
Coppel Amusement Co.
307 Fourteenth St MAin 8879
Loew's, Inc.
2100 Broadway TAbor 8166
Henry A. Friedel, Manager (M-G-M).
Mercury Film Exchange
2075 Broadway MAin 3668
Monogram Pictures Distributing Co.
2071 Broadway TABor 1433
L. T. Fuller. President (Monogram).
Paramount Pictures, Inc.
2100 Stout St KEystone 8246
Chester J. Bell, Manager (Paramount).
644
RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.
807 21st St TAbor 6356
J. H. Ashby, Manager (RKO Radio).
Republic Pictures Corp. of N. W.
2145 Broadway TAbor 2263
Eugene Gerbase, Manager (Republic).
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
2101 Champa St TAbor 5331
R. J. Morrison, Manager (20th Century-Fox,
Gaumont British).
United Artists Corp.
2065 Broadway TAbor 2326
Earl R. Collins, Manager (United Artists).
Universal Film Exchanges, Inc.
801 21st St MAin 3281
Jack Langan, Manager (Universal).
Vitagraph, Inc.
2115 Champa St KEystone 6178
E. A. Bell, Manager (Warner Bros., First Na-
tional, Vitaphone).
Des Moines, fa.
Columbia Pictures
1003 High St 3-0105
Mel H. Evidon, Manager (Columbia).
Loew's, Inc.
618 12th St 4-6271
D. C. Kennedy. Manager (M-G-M).
Monogram Film Distributors, Inc.
515 Tenth St 3-7454
Forrest E. Judd. President (Monogram).
Paramount Pictures, Inc.
1125 High St 4-3187
R. M. Copeland, Manager (Paramount).
KKO Radio Pictures, Inc.
1022 High St 4-8184
Lou Elman, Manager (RKO Radio).
Republic Pictures Midwest, Inc.
1123 High St 4-2239
E. J. Tilton, Manager (Republic).
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
1300 High St 4-4281
Stanley J. Mayer, Manager (20th Century-Fox,
Gaumont British).
Universal Film Exchanges, Inc.
1005 High St 4-4219
J. J. Spandau, Manager (Universal).
Vitagraph, Inc.
1001 High St 4-3297
A. W. Anderson, Manager (Warner Bros., First
National, Vitaphone).
Detroit, Mich.
Columbia Pictures Corp.
2310 Cass Ave RAndolph 8021
Carl Shalit, Manager (Columbia).
Excellent Pictures Corp.
2310 Cass Ave CAdillac 1150
A. V. O'Donell, William Flemion, Managers
(Astor) .
Loew's, Inc.
2310 Cass Ave CAdillac 4456
F. J. Downey, Manager (M-G-M).
Monogram Pictures, Inc.
2310 Cass Ave CAdillac 2992
William Hurlbut, President (Monogram).
Paramount Pictures, Inc.
479 Ledyard St RAndolph 4741
John T. Howard, Manager (Paramount).
Polish American Film Corp.
1988 E. Grand Ave TOwnsend 6-4062
E. Albin, Manager (Polish films).
RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.
2310 Cass Ave CAdillac 8681
James F. Sharkey, Manager (RKO Radio).
Republic Pictures Corp. of Michigan
2310 Cass Ave CAdillac 6416
Sam Seplowin, Manager (Republic).
EXCHANGES - PRODUCT
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
2211 Cass Ave CAdillac 3726
Lester Sturm, Manager (20th Century-Fox,
Gaumont British).
United Artists Corp.
2310 Cass Ave RAndolph 6500
Morris Dudelson, Manager (United Artists).
Universal Film Exchanges, Inc.
2310 Cass Ave CAdillac 2141
E. Heiber, Manager (Universal).
Vitagraph, Inc.
2310 Cass Ave CAdillac 6236
Fred E. North, Manager (Warner Bros., First
National, Vitaphone).
Indianapolis, fuel.
Big Feature Rights Exchanges
438 N. Illinois St Lincoln 7121
Lee L. Goldberg, Manager (Producers Distribut-
ing Corp., Alliance, Astor, Metropolitan,
Regal, Warwick).
Capitol Monogram Pictures
404 N. Illinois St Lincoln 7066
Carl Harthill, Manager (Monogram).
Columbia Pictures Corp.
432 N. Illinois St Lincoln 8408
W. Guy Craig, Manager (Columbia).
Exhibitors Exchange, Inc.
402 N. Illinois St Lincoln 6943
Loew's, Inc.
421 N. Illinois St Lincoln 4361
W. W. Willman, Manager (M-G-M).
Paramount Pictures, Inc.
116 W. Michigan St Lincoln 7563
J. H. Stevens. Manager (Paramount).
RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.
428 N. Illinois St Riley 2682
Roy E. Churchill, Manager (RKO Radio).
Republic Pictures Corp. of 111.
404 N. Illinois St Riley 6765
L. W. Marriott, Manager (Republic).
Superior Pictures, Inc.
406 N. Illinois St Lincoln 0676
Charles W. Tyler, Manager (Colony, Superior,
Imperial, Victory).
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
326 N. Illinois St Lincoln 5581
George T. Landis. Manager (20th Century-Fox,
Gaumont British).
United Artists Corp.
448 N. Illinois St Lincoln 3551
G. R. Frank, Manager (United Artists).
Universal Film Exchanges, Inc.
326 N. Illinois St RUey 3662
G. C. Craddock, Manager (Universal).
Vitagraph, Inc.
120 W. Michigan St Lincoln 3681
Fred Greenberg, Manager (Warner Bros., First
National, Vitaphone).
Jachsonville, Fla.
Paramount Film Distributing Corp.
110 N. Lee St
(Shipping Station).
5-6210
Kansas City, Mo.
Astor Pictures
1710 Wyandotte St.
S. E. Foland, Manager (Astor).
Atlantic Pictures
115 W. 18th St Victor 3809
645
EXCHANGES - PRODUCT
Columbia Pictures Corp.
219 W. 18th St HArrison 3892
Ben Marcus, Manager (Columbia).
Commonwealth Amusement Corp.
216 W. 18th St GRand 2390
Independent Film Distributors
110 W. 18th St GRand 2074
Homer L. Blackwell. Manager.
Loew's, Inc.
220 W. 18th St GRand 2109
Frank C. Hensler, Manager (M-G-M) .
Majestic
1717 Wyandotte St GRand 0672
William Wintroub. Manager (Invincible, Ches-
terfield. Ambassador, Film Alliance ol the
U. S.).
Monogram Film Distributors, Inc.
130 W. 18th St HArrison 3346
Douglas Desch, Manager (Monogram).
Paramount Film Distributing Corp.
1800 Wyandotte St GRand 0410
J. J. Manfre, Manager (Paramount).
RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.
1712 Wyandotte St HArrison 7740
T. R. Thompson. Manager (RKO Radio).
Republic Pictures-Midwest Film Distributors, Inc.
216 W. 18th St GRand 2390
Robert Withers. Manager (Republic).
Royal Film Exchange
1818 Wyandotte St HArrison 4783
Standard Film Co.
1820 Wyandotte St Victor 9218
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
1720 Wyandotte St HArrison 7253
George W. Fuller, Manager (20th Century-Fox,
Gaumont British).
United Artists Corp.
221 W. 18th St GRand 1123
W. E. Truog, Manager (United Artists).
Universal Film Exchanges, Inc.
214 W. 18th St HArrison 6624
L. J. Miller, Manager (Universal).
Vitagraph, Ine.
1701 Wyandotte St HArrison 4645
James Winn, Manager (Warner Bros., First
National, Vitaphone).
Little Rock, Arh.
Republic Pictures Corp. of Arkansas
108 S. Cross St 4-2431
B. F. Busby, Manager (Republic).
Los Angeles, Calif.
Astor Film Co. of So. Calif.
1912 S. Vermont Ave PArkway 9131
Louis Goldstein. Manager (Astor).
Azteca Film Distributing Co.
1907 S. Vermont Ave Rochester 2191
Columbia Pictures Corp.
1920 S. Vermont Ave REpublic 5137
Wayne Ball. (Columbia).
Empire Pictures Corp.
1908 S. Vermont Ave REpublic 5042
(Hoffberg, Laemmle).
Foreign Film Exchange
1909 S. Vermont Ave PArkway 3173
C. A. B. Emanuel, Manager.
Goldberg 4 Port, Inc.
9171 Sunset Blvd CRestview 1-5755
Goldstein, Ben
1912 S. Vermont Ave PArkway 9131
( Amkino) .
Jewel Productions Co.
1908 S. Vermont Ave PArkway 6660
William G. Smith, Manager (Jewel, Trans-
Atlantic, French Film Exchange, Bluebird) .
Loew's, Inc.
1620 Cordova St REpublic 4181
Clayton T. Lynch. Manager (M-G-M).
Majextlc Distributing Corp.
1928 S. Vermont Ave REpublic 3138
H. J. Peskay, Manager (Artcinema. Victory.
Standard. Metropolitan. Eureka. First Inter-
national. Lichter).
Monogram Pictures of Calif, Inc.
1924 S. Vermont Ave REpublic 3148
Howard Stubbins. President (Monogram).
Paramount Pictures, Inc.
1613 W. 20th St REpublic 5191
C. N. Peacock. Manager (Paramount).
Producers Distributing Corp.
1909 S. Vermont Ave PArkway 1226
RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.
1980 S. Vermont Ave REpublic 5131
N. P. Jacobs, Manager (RKO Radio).
Republic Tictures Corp. of Calif.
1926 S. Vermont Ave PArkway 1131
Francis A. Bateman. Manager (Republic).
Royal Film Exchange
1908 S. Vermont Ave PArkway 5660
Standard Pictures
1108 N. Lillian Way HEmpstead 6631
Symphonic Featurettes
1908 S. Vermont Ave PArkway 5660
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
2019 S. Vermont Ave REpublic 4186
J. N. Dillon. Manager (20th Century -Fox, Gau-
mont British).
United Artists Corp.
1966 S. Vermont Ave PArkway 1166
Ewen MacLean. Manager (United Artists).
Universal Film Exchanges
1960 S. Vermont Ave REpublic 3171
Charles J. Feldman, Manager (Universal).
Vitagraph, Inc.
1918 S. Vermont Ave REpublic 3177
N. H. Brower (Warner Bros.. First National.
Vitaphone) .
Memphis. Tenn.
Columbia Pictures Corp.
396 S. Second St 8-3268
John J. Rogers, Manager (Columbia).
Loew's, Inc.
502 S. Second St 8-5181
J. Frank Willingham, Manager (M-G-M).
Monogram Southern Exchanges, Inc.
395 S. Second St 8-6971
Mike Carmichael, Manager (Monogram. Jam
Handy).
Paramount Pictures, Inc.
265 S. Front St 8-7425
F. W. Bugie. Manager (Paramount).
RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.
492 S. Second St 8-1281
A. M. Avery. Manager (RKO Radio).
Republic Pictures Corp. of S. E.
397 S. Second St 8-2676
W. M. Snelson, Manager (Republic).
Roadshow Attractions
Mulberry & Pontotoc 8-5491
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
151 Vance Ave 8-2164
T. W. Young. Manager (20th Century -Fox.
Gaumont British).
Universal Film Exchanges, Inc.
399 S. Second St 8-4161
J. A. Prichard. Manager (Universal).
Vitagraph, Inc.
384 S. Second St 8-1191
W. O. Williamson, Jr.. Manager( Warner Bros.,
First National, Vitaphone).
M ilivaukee, Wise.
Astor Pictures
1250 S. Wabash Ave.
Dick Sachsel. Manager (Astor).
Celebrated Players Film Corp.
717 W. Wells St MArquette 2364
Columbia Pictures Corp.
1133 N. Eighth St MArquette 3361
Oscar J. Ruby, Manager (Columbia).
Loew's, Inc.
736 W. State St MArquette 4024
Sam Shurman, Manager (M-G-M).
646
Monogram-Midwest Film Co.
1030 N. Eighth St MArquette 5226
Charles W. Trampe, Manager (Monogram).
Paramount Film Distributing Corp.
1121 N. Eighth St MArquette 7340
Frank C. Clark. Manager (Paramount).
Producers Distributing Corp.
749 N. Seventh St MArquette 4472
Charles D. Koehler, Manager (Producers Pic-
tures Corp.)
RKO Radio Pictures
732 W. State St MArquette 4445
A. N. Schmitz, Manager (RKO Radio).
Republic Pictures of Wisconsin
641 N. Seventh St MArquette 1876
Jack Frackman, Manager (Republic).
Superior Pictures, Inc.
717 W. Wells St BRoadway 9315
William Stern. Manager (Imperial, Metropolitan,
Victory, Colony, Spectrum, Standard) .
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
1016 N. Eighth St MArquette 6710
Jack H. Lorentz, Manager (20th Century-Fox,
Gaumont British).
United Artists Corp.
1137 N. Eighth St MArquette 6530
J. S. Abrose, Manager (United Artists).
Universal Film Exchanges, Inc.
1032 N. Eighth St MArquette 4080
Frank Mantzke. Manager (Universal).
Vitagraph, Inc.
812 N. Eleventh St MArquette 7500
Robert T. Smith, Manager (Warner Bros., First
National, Vitaphone).
Minneapolis, Minn.
Celebrated Film Exchange
1109 Currie Ave ATlantic 0098
Columbia Pictures Corp.
1104 Currie Ave., N ATlantic 3561
H. J. Chapman, Manager (Columbia).
Elliott Film Co.
72 Glenwood Ave GEneva 4219
Mrs. E. Louise Elliott, Manager (Astor).
Loew's, Inc.
1104 Currie Ave., N MAin 3351
W. H. Workman, Manager (M-G-M).
Majestic Pictures Corp.
64 Glenwood Ave MAin 1359
J. L. Stern, President
Monogram Pictures Corp. of Minn.
1111 Currie Ave ATlantic 0916
Charles M. Weiner. Manager (Monogram).
Paramount Pictures, Inc.
1100 Currie Ave ATlantic 0537
Ben Blotcky. Manager (Paramount).
RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.
1025 Currie Ave., N ATlantic 6367
C. J. Dressell, Manager (RKO Radio).
Republic Pictures Corp. of Minn.
42 Glenwood Ave BRidgeport 1497
Gilbert Nathanson, Manager (Republic).
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
1015 Currie Ave., N ATlantic 2201
J. M. PodoloS, Manager (20th Century-Fox.
Gaumont British).
United Artists Corp.
1101 Currie Ave., K GEneva 4343
Ralph S. Cramblet, Manager (United Artists).
Universal Film Exchanges, Inc.
1019 Currie Ave.. N ATlantic 6335
H. B. Johnson, Manager (Universal).
Vitagraph, Inc.
1104 Currie Ave ATlantic 3281
Clarence K. Olson. Manager (Warner Bros.,
First National, Vitaphone).
New Haven. Conn.
Columbia Pictures Corp.
134 Meadow St 8-2197
T. F. O'Toole, Manager (Columbia).
EXCHANGES - PRODUCT
Connecticut Films Distributing Co.
134 Meadow St 6-6835
H. Gibbs. Manager (Astor).
Loew's, Inc.
134 Meadow St 7-4278
T. J. Donaldson, Manager (M-G-M).
Paramount Film Distributing Corp.
82 State St 8-6167
Edward Ruff, Manager (Paramount).
RKO Radio Pictures
134 Meadow St 7-2119
Barney Pitkin. Manager (RKO Radio).
Republic Pictures Corp. of New England
130 Meadow St 8-6468
Samuel Seletsky. Manager (Republic).
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
40 Whiting St 6-6151
Benjamin A. Simon, Manager (20th Century-
Fox, Gaumont British).
United Artists Corp.
114 Meadow St 7-1213
L. C. Wechsler, Manager (United Artists).
Universal Film Exchanges, Inc.
125 Meadow St 6-1181
Morris Joseph. Manager (Universal).
Vitagraph, Inc.
134 Meadow St 7-4138
John V. Pavone, Manager (Warner Bros.. First
National, Vitaphone).
New Orleans, La.
Affiliated Producers, Inc.
218 S. Liberty St RAymond 6623
Atlantic Pictures „„„„
218 S. Liberty St RAymond 6240
F. F. Goodrow, P. A. Sliman, Managers (Astor).
Columbia Pictures of La., Inc.
150 S. Liberty St RAymond 6229
Houston Duvall, Manager (Columbia).
Loew's, Inc. , „„„„
150 S. Liberty St RAymond 1276
C. J. Briant, Manager (M-G-M).
Monogram Southern Exchanges, Inc.
223 S. Liberty St RAymond 9136
J. Harry Spann, Manager (Monogram).
Paramount Film Distributing Corp.
215 S. Liberty St RAymond 3357
E. B. Price, Manager (Paramount).
RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.
1418 Cleveland Ave RAymond 1148
Page M. Baker, Manager (RKO Radio).
Republic Pictures Corp. of the S. E.
1307 Tulane Ave RAymond 2055
Leo V. Seichshnaydre, Manager (Republic).
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
220 S. Liberty St RAymond 8958
E. V. Landaiche, Manager (20th Century -Fox,
Gaumont British).
United Artists Corp.
147 S. Liberty St MAgnolia 2212
C. E. Peppiatt, Manager (United Artists).
Universal Film Exchanges, Inc.
143 S. Liberty St RAymond 1159
W. M. Richardson, Manager (Universal).
Vitagraph, Inc.
150 S. Liberty St RAymond 4225
Lucas S. Conner, Manager (Warner Bros., First
National, Vitaphone).
New York, N. Y.
Advance Film Exchange
630 Ninth Ave Circle 6-6765
Alliance Films Corp.
630 Ninth Ave Circle 6-6660
Arthur Greenblatt, Manager (Alliance).
Atlas Film Exchange
723 Seventh Ave.
Central Film Co.
630 Ninth Ave Circle 6-6499
Philip M. Brown, Manager.
647
EXCHANGES - PRODUCT
Columbia Pictures Corp.
630 Ninth Ave Circle 6-0900
Nathan J. Cohn, Manager (Columbia).
Garrison Film Distributors, Inc.
1600 Broadway Circle 6-4868
T. J. Brandon. Manager (Frontier Films, Inc.,
Cine Liberte, British Progressive. Ltd., His-
tory Today, Inc., Sepba, Kino, Ltd., China
Film Co.. American M. P. Institute).
Guaranteed Pictures Co., Inc.
729 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-4369
International Road Shows
639 Ninth Ave Circle 6-0655
I.oew's, Inc.
630 Ninth Ave Circle 6-6200
J. J. Bowen, New York, Manager; B. Abner,
New Jersey Manager (M-G-M).
Merit Pictures Corp.
630 Ninth Ave Circle 6-0271
(Lichter).
Monogram Distributing Corp.
630 Ninth Ave Circle 6-8886
J. J. Felder, Manager (Monogram).
Paramount Pictures, Inc.
331 W. 44th St Circle 6-6160
Milton S. Kusell, District Manager (Paramount).
Polish American Film Corp.
5328 65th Place, Maspeth, L. I.
Edward Albin. Manager (Polish Films).
Producers Distributing Corp.
630 Ninth Ave Circle 6-8866
Bert Kulick, Melvyn Hirsh, Managers (Pro-
ducers Distributing Corp.).
RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.
630 Ninth Ave Circle 6-4700
Robert S. Wolff, Manager (RKO Radio).
Republic Film Exchange, Inc.
630 Ninth Ave Circle 6-0760
Morris Epstein. Manager (Republic).
Sack Amusement Enterprises
723 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-8395
Lester J. Sack, Manager (Million Dollar Pro-
ductions) .
Syndicate Exchanges, Inc.
630 Ninth Ave Circle 6-8866
Melvyn Hirsch, Bert Kulick, Managers (Syndi-
cate, Warwick).
Times Pictures, Inc.
630 Ninth Ave Circle 6-0980
Treo Film Exchange of New York, N. Y.
630 Ninth Ave Circle 6-4724
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
345 W. 44th St Circle 6-6700
Harry H. Buxbaum. Manager (20th Century-
Fox, Gaumont British).
United Artists Corp.
630 Ninth Ave Circle 6-5480
Clarence Eiseman, Manager (United Artists).
Universal Film Exchange
630 Ninth Ave Circle 6-4747
David A. Levy, Manager (Universal).
Vitagraph, Inc.
315 W. 44th St Circle 6-1010
Ed. M. Schnitzer, District Manager (Warner
Bros.. First National, Vitaphone).
World Pictures Corp.
729 Seventh Ave MEdallion 3-2943
Arthur A. Mayers, Manager (World, Standard).
Oklahoma City, Okla.
Allied Film Exchange
702 % W. Grand Ave 3-5546
H. K. Buchanan, Manager (Astor).
Columbia Pictures Corp.
702 W. Grand Ave 2-3480
C. A. Gibbs, Manager (Columbia).
Loew's, Inc.
529 W. Grand Ave 3-5301
W. B. Zoellner, Manager (M-G-M).
Monogram Pictures Corp. of Okla.
704 W. Grand Ave 3-5802
Carr Scott, Manager (Monogram).
Paramount Film Distributing Corp.
701 W. Grand Ave 3-5461
J. J. Curry. Manager (Paramount).
RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.
706 W. Grand Ave 2-0271
Ralph B. Williams, Manager (RKO Radio).
Republic Pictures Corp.
623 W. Grand Ave 7-6628
Sol Davis, Manager (Republic).
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
10 N. Lee Ave 2-1105
Charles W. Clark. Manager (20th Century-Fox,
Gaumont British).
Universal Film Exchanges, Inc.
625 W. Grand Ave 3-4351
J. E. Hobbs, Manager (Universal).
Vitagraph, Inc.
630 W. Grand Ave 7-7544
J. O. Rohde. Manager (Warner Bros., First
National, Vitaphone).
Williams K. Lee, Film Exchange
9% N. Lee St 2-8313
K. Lee Williams. Manager (Metropolitan. Col-
ony, Spectrum, Victory, Willis Kent. Conti-
nental).
Omaha, Neb.
American Distributing Corp.
1506 Davenport St ATlantic 1953
S. J. Francis. Manager (Artcinema).
Columbia Pictures Corp.
1516 Davenport St JAckson 2424
J. H. Jacobs, Manager (Columbia).
Liberty Films, Inc.
1407 Davenport St ATlantic 5853
Mayer H. Monsky, Manager.
Loew's, Inc.
1512 Davenport St ATlantic 4314
Harry J. Shumow, Manager (M-G-M).
Monogram Pictures of Nebraska, Inc.
1506 Davenport St ATlantic 1953
S. J. Francis. Manager (Monogram).
Paramount Film Distributing Corp.
1704 Davenport St ATlantic 1550
A. Mendenhall, Manager (Paramount).
RKO Radio Pictures. Inc.
1508 Davenport St ATlantic 5424
R. E. Egner. Manager (RKO Radio).
Republic Pictures Midwest, Inc.
1514 Davenport St ATlantic 1906
Carl F. Reese. Manager (Republic).
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
1502 Davenport St JAckson 4860
J. E. Scott. Manager (20th Century-Fox, Gau-
mont British).
United Artists Corp.
1508 Davenport St ATlantic 9944
D. V. McLucas, Manager (United Artists).
Universal Film Exchanges, Inc.
1525 Davenport St ATlantic 8918
Otto A. Siegel, Manager (Universal).
Vitagraph, Inc.
1610 Davenport St JAckson 4838
Sid Rose, Manager (Warner Bros., First Na-
tional. Vitaphone).
Philadelphia, Pa.
Allied Pictures, Inc.
1333 Vine St RITtenhouse 6336
Capital Film Exchange
1314 Vine St SPRuce 2699
Edward J. Gabriel. Manager (Spectrum. Len-
auer International, Hoffberg, Central Film
Co., Screen Classics, Pictorial Films).
Clark Film Distributors, Inc.
1225 Vine St LOCust 9500
Columbia Pictures Corp.
1240 Vine St SPRuce 2062
Harry E. Weiner, Manager (Columbia).
648
Hollywood Film Corp. of Pennsylvania
1220 Vine St RITtenhouse 0972
John Golder, Manager.
International Picture Distributing Co., Inc.
1225 Vine St RIttenhouse 3790
Jaslow, J.
1225 Vine St
( Amkino)
Loew's, Inc.
1233 Summer St SPRuce 5160
R. Lynch, Manager (M-G-M).
Masterpiece Film Attractions
1329 Vine St RITtenhouse 7858
Monogram Distributing Corp.
1241 Vine St RITtenhouse 8342
L. O. Ringler, President (Monogram).
Paramount Pictures, Inc.
248 N. 12th St LOCust 3672
Earle W. Seigert. Manager (Paramount).
Peerless Distributing Corp.
1321 Vine St RITtenhouse 4695
William J. Hesnan, Manager (Astor. Film Alli-
ance of the U. S., General Electric).
Preferred Pictures, Inc.
1239 Vine St RITtenhouse 1851
Murray F. Beier. Manager (Ace, Puritan, Vic-
tory, Stage & Screen, Crescent).
RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.
302 N. 13th St LOCust 1704
F. L. McNamee, Manager (RKO Radio).
Republic Pictures Co. of Pa.
1232 Vine St LOCust 4712
Maxwell Gillis, Manager (Republic).
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
302 N. 13th St LOCust 2850
Sam Gross, Manager (20th Century-Fox, Gau-
mont British).
United Artists Corp.
1304 Vine St LOCust 514G
Harry G. Bodkin, Manager (United Artists).
Universal Film Exchanges, Inc.
302 N. 13th St LOCust 4221
George E. Schwartz, Manager (Universal).
Vitagraph, Inc.
1225 Vine St RITtenhouse 9530
William G. Mansell, Manager (Warner Bros..
First National, Vitaphone).
World Pictures Corp.
1235 Vine St.
(World)
EXCHANGES - PRODUCT
United Artists Corp.
1717 Blvd. of the Allies GRant 8960
A. I. Weiner. Manager (United Artists).
Universal Film Exchanges, Inc.
1709 Blvd. of the Allies GRanite 497C
Jules Lapidus, Manager (Universal).
Vitagraph, Inc.
1623 Blvd. of the Allies GRant 185'.
Harry Seed, Manager (Warner Bros., First Na
tional, Vitaphone).
Portland, Ore.
Astor Pictures of Oregon
1935 N. W. Kearney St BEacon 1350
Ed. I. Hudson. Manager (Astor, Mitch Leichter) .
Columbia Pictures Corp.
1927 N. W. Kearney St BEacon 3101
James R. Beale, Manager (Columbia).
Loew's, Inc.
1133 N. W. Glisan St BRoadway 2521
Louis Amacher, Manager (M-G-M).
Monogram Pictures of the Northwest
1931 N. W. Kearney St BEacon 6665
Walter S. Wessling, Manager (Monogram).
Paramount Film Distributing Corp.
909 N. W. 19th St BRoadway 4377
A. R. Anderson, Manager (Paramount).
RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.
915 N. W. 19th Ave BRoadway 6635
M. E. Cory, Manager (RKO Radio).
Republic Pictures of the N. W.
925 N. W. 19th Ave BRoadway 0136
J. H. Sheffield, Manager (Republic).
Star Exchange System
925 N. W. 19th St BEacon 4656
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
1932 N. W. Lovejoy St BEacon 6129
C. F. Powers. Manager (20th Century-Fox,
Gaumont British).
Universal Film Exchanges, Inc.
1953 N. W. Kearney St BRoadway 1231
R. O. Wilson, Manager (Universal).
Vitagraph, Inc.
935 N. W. 19th Ave BRoadway 5624
Vete Stewart, Manager (Warner Bros., First
National, Vitaphone).
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Columbia Pictures Corp.
1623 Blvd. of the Allies ATlantie 0808
Arthur H. Levy, Manager (Columbia).
Loew's, Inc.
1631 Blvd. of the Allies ATlantie 6690
Burtus Bishop, Jr., Manager (M-G-M).
Monarch Pictures
1623 Blvd. of the Allies GRanite 2783
Lew Lefton, Manager (Producers Distributing
Corp., Standard, Astor. Spectrum. Victory,
Metropolitan) .
Monogram Pictures, Inc.
86 Van Braam St ATlantie 3635
Mark Goldman, Manager (Monogram).
Paramount Pictures, Inc.
1727 Blvd. of the Allies ATlantie 9270
D. Kimelman. Manager (Paramount).
RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.
1623 Blvd. of the Allies GRanite 2237
H. H. Greenblatt, Manager (RKO Radio).
Republic Pictures Corp. of Pittsburgh
1701 Blvd. of the Allies ATlantie 4868
James H. Alexander, Manager (Republic).
Royal Pictures, Inc.
86 Van Braam St ATlantie 3635
Standard Film Service Co.
1623 Blvd. of the Allies GRant 2783
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
1716 Blvd. of the Allies GRanite 3572
Ira H. Cohn, Manager (20th Century-Fox.
Gaumont British).
St. Louis, Mo.
Columbia Pictures Corp.
3306 Olive St FRanklin 2265
C. D. Hill, Manager (Columbia).
Judell, B. N.. Inc.
3206 Olive St FRanklin 6274
O. F. Lessing, Manager (Producers Distributing
Corp.).
Loew's, Inc.
3010 Olive St JEfferson 0201
John X. Quinn, Manager (M-G-M).
Monogram Pictures, Inc.
3212 Olive St JEfferson 8989
Robert Taylor, Manager (Monogram).
Paramount Film Distributing Corp.
3201 Olive St JEfferson 4348
Maurice Schweitzer, Manager (Paramount).
RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.
3143 Olive St JEfferson 3000
R. V. Nolan, Manager (RKO Radio).
Republic Pictures Corp. of St. Louis
3214 Olive St JEfferson 6548
Nat Steinberg, Barney Rosenthal, Managers (Re-
public) .
Superior Pictures, Inc.
3317 Olive St JEfferson 8610
A. R. Dietz, Manager (Spectrum, Malcolm-
Browne. Imperial. Victory, Standard, Colony,
Regal, Metropolitan, Olympic).
649
EXCHANGES - PRODUCT
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
3330 Olive St JEfferson 3185
B. B. Reingold. Manager (20th Century-Fox.
Gaumont British).
United Artists Corp.
3312 Olive St ■ JEfferson 034b
Ben~Robbins. Manager (United Artists).
Universal Film Exchanges, Inc.
3320 Olive St JEfferson 2300
Joseph E. Garrison. Manager (Universal).
V*ffiPOl£%t JEfferson 8656
Hall Walsh. Manager (Warner Bros.. First Na-
tional, Vitaphone).
Soil Lake City, Utah
Capitol Film Exchange
258 E. First South St WAsatch 1495
Columbia Pictures Corp.
206 E. First South St ..WAsatch 5363
W. G. Seib. Manager (Columbia).
L°123S'sInSecond East St WAsatch 1438
Sam J. Gardner, Manager (M-G-M).
Mercury Film Exchanges
252 E. First South St WAsatch 7638
Monogram Pictures Distributing Co.
254 E First South St WAsatch 3020
W. W. McKendrick. Manager (Monogram).
Paramount Pictures, Inc.
200 E. First South St WAsatch 6014
F. H. Smith, Manager (Paramount).
KKO Radio Pictures, Inc.
204 E First South St WAsatch 3093
H C. Fuller. Manager (RKO Radio).
Republic Pictures (Sheffield Exchange Syst*™)
"14 E First South St WAsatch 1685
G. S. Pinnell, Manager (Republic).
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
"16 E. First South St WAsatch 3651
Charles L. Walker. Manager (20th Century-
Fox. Gaumont British).
l nited Artists Corp.
210 E First South St WAsatch 6470
A. W. Hartford. Manager (United Artists).
Universal Film Exchanges, Inc.
208 E. First South St WAsatch 3443
C. R. Wade, Manager (Universal).
Vit2aig2raEh*FirsC{ South St WAsatch 6112
William F. Gordon. Manager (Warner Bros..
First National. Vitaphone).
San Antonio, Tex.
Latin American Film Exchange
610 Soledad St GArfield 288-
J. J. Jiminez, Manager (Azteca).
Monogram Pictures of Calif., Inc.
308 Turk St ORdway 5045
W. M. Duggan. Jr.. Manager (Monogram).
Paramount Pictures, Inc.
201 Golden Gate Ave MArket 0816
H. Neal East. Manager (Paramount).
KKO Radi* Pictures, Inc.
251 Hyde St ORdway 2808
G. W. Wolf. Manager (RKO Radio).
Republic Pictures Corp. of Calif., Inc.
221 Golden Gate Ave MArket 6880
S. D. Wiesbaum. Manager (Republic).
Roadshow Attractions _.„„
177 Golden Gate Ave HEmlock 9408
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
245 Hyde St PRospect 1600
G. M. Ballentine. Manager (20th Century-Fox.
Gaumont British) .
United Artists Corp.
255 Hyde St PRospect 6760
D. J. McNerney, Manager (United Artists).
Universal Film Exchanges, Inc.
129 Hyde St ORdway 4080
Barney Rose, Manager (Universal).
Vitagraph, Inc.
215 Golden Gate Ave UNderhill 1087
Al Shmitkin. Manager (Warner Bros., First
National, Vitaphone).
Seattle, Wash.
Astor Pictures of Washington
2321 Second Ave MAin 7710
(Astor, Mitch Leichter)
Columbia Pictures
2415 Second Ave ELiott 6439
Neal Watson. Manager (Columbia).
Loew's, Inc.
231 Second Ave ELiott 4056
Maurice Saffle. Manager (M-G-M).
A. M. Goldstein, Manager (Monogram).
Paramount Film Distributing Corp.
2330 First Ave .MAin
Morris Segel. Manager (Paramount).
RKO Radio Pictures mtnt* B99K
1216 Second Ave ELiott 8225
E. A. Lamb. Manager (RKO Radio).
Republic Pictures of the N. W.
2417 Second Ave ELiott 8678
E. L. Walton, Manager (Republic).
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
2421 Second Ave ELiott 7816
Herndon Edmond. Manager (20th Century-Fox.
Gaumont British).
United Artists Corp.
2403 Second Ave • • -MAin 3788
Guy Navarre, Manager (United Artists).
Universal Film Exchanges, Die.
2401 Second Ave MAin 3245
L. J. McGinley, Manager (Universal).
VWsecond Ave ,*-MAlnB0048
William S. Shartin. Manager (Warner Bros..
First National, Vitaphone).
San Erancisco, Calif.
All Star Features Distributors
247 Golden Gate Ave UNderhill 1526
Armand S. Colin. Manager (Standard. Metro
politan. Victory. Colony).
Atlantic Film Exchange n*MorV,ill 1R26
247 Golden Gate Ave UNderhill 15_5
F. L. Patterson. Manager (Astor).
Columbia Pictures Corp. r-791
230 Hyde St .ORdway 8721
L. E. Tillman. Manager (Columbia).
International Films
604 Golden Gate Ave.
^'Hyde St ;^fVvVPR09PeCt 1M*
L. Wingham, Manager (M-G-M).
Sioii.v Falls, S. D.
Paramount Pictures, Inc.
318 S. Main Ave 470V
Shipping Station.
RKO Radio Pictures, Die.
121 w. 12th st
Sherman W. Fitch. Manager (RKO Radio).
Tampa, Ela.
Republic Pictures Corp.
115 S. Franklin St • • •
Henry B. Glover, Manager (Republic).
650
Washington, D. C.
EXCHANGES
- PRODUCT
Clark Film Distributors, Inc.
922 New Jersey Ave., N. W DUpont 7200
Columbia Pictures Corp.
928 New Jersey Ave., N. W NAtional 4035
S. A. Galanty. Manager (Columbia).
Liberty Film Exchange
925 New Jersey Ave., N. W REpublic 0155
Loew's, Inc.
1009 New Jersey Ave.. N. W District 6539
Rudolph Berger, Manager (M-G-M).
Monogram Distributing Corp.
922 New Jersey Ave.. N. W. . MEtropolitan 2133
H. P. Baehman, Manager (Monogram).
Paramount Pictures, Inc.
1101 N. Capitol St NAtional 7661
J. E. Fontaine, Manager (Paramount).
Peerless Distributing Co.
203 Eye St.. N. W District 7516
Teddy Shull. Manager (Astor, Film Alliance of
the U. S.).
Preferred Pictures, Inc.
135 K. St., N. W NAtional 8689
RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.
203 Eye St., N. W District 3672
R. J. Polliard. Manager (RKO Radio).
Republic Pictures Corp. of Washington, D. C.
925 New Jersey Ave., N. W. ... REpublic 0155
Sam Flax, Jake Flax, Managers! Republic).
Trio Productions, Inc.
203 Eye St., N. W NAtional 6648
George J. Gill. Manager (Producers Distributing
Corp., Progressive, Bort Ennis, Warwick).
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
932 New Jersey Ave., N. W District 8420
Samuel N. Wheeler, Manager (20th Century-
Fox).
United Artists Corp.
924 New Jersey Ave.. N. W NAtional 6316
Fred A. Rohrs, Manager (United Artists).
Universal Film Exchanges, Inc.
913 New Jersey Ave., N. W District 3377
B. Bernard Kreisler, Manager (Universal).
Vitagraph, Inc.
901 New Jersey Ave., N. W. ... NAtional 1130
Fred W. Beirsdorf, Manager (Warner Bros.,
First National, Vitaphone).
CANADA
Calgary, Alta.
Columbia Pictures of Canad3, Ltd.
Film Exchange Bldg MAin 2551
Harvey H. Hornick, Manager (Columbia).
Empire-Universal Films, Ltd.
Film Exchange Bldg MAin 4674
I. W. Blankstein, Manager (Universal, Repub-
lic, Gaumont British).
Paramount Film Service
702 8th Ave., W.
William Kelly, Manager (Paramount).
RKO Distributing Corp. of Canada, Ltd.
Eighth Ave. W. at Sixth St MAin 9178
H. F. Taylor, Manager (RKO Radio).
Regal Films, Ltd.
Eighth Ave. W. at Sixth St MAin 5465
J. Myers, Manager (M-G-M), Monogram, Lon-
don Films).
Twentieth Century-Fox Corp. Ltd.
717 Sixth St.. W MAin 7765
Vernon M. Skorey, Manager (20th Century
Fox) .
United Artists Corp., Ltd.
708 Eighth Ave.. W MAin 3779
A. Feinstein, Manager (United Artists).
Vitagraph, Ltd.
704 Eighth Ave., W MAin 1606
Sam Pearlman, Manager (Warner Bros., Firtt
National, Vitaphone).
Montreal, Que.
Columbia Pictures of Canada, Ltd.
6975 Monkland Ave ELwood 1144
W. Elman, Manager (Columbia).
Empire-Universal Films, Ltd.
5969 Monkland Ave ELwood 1195
H. O. Painter, Manager (Universal, Republic,
Gaumont British).
France-Film
637 Craig St.. W LAncaster 6141
J. A. De Seve. Manager (French films).
Paramount Film Service
6965 Monkland Ave ELwood 1163
Mannie A. Brown, Manager (Paramount).
RKO Distributing Corp. of Canada, Ltd.
5975 Monkland Ave WAlnut 2743
Mark Plottel. Manager (RKO Radio).
Regal Films, Ltd.
(M-G-M, Monogram, London Films).
Twentieth Century-Fox Corp., Ltd.
5963 Monkland Ave.
Howard English, Manager (20th Century-Fox).
United Artists Corp., Ltd.
5975 Monkland Ave ELwood 2536
A. J. Jefiery, Manager (United Artists).
Vitagraph, Ltd.
5957 Monkland Ave ELwood 1192
M. J. Isman, Manager (Warner Bros.. First
National. Vitaphone).
Saint John, V. St.
Eastern Film Co.
87 Union St 3-2183
S. Jacobs, S. V. Kunitsky, Managers (Grand
National) .
Empire-Universal Films, Ltd.
12 Hazen Ave 3-6581
G. M. Hoyt, Manager (Universal, Republic,
Gaumont British).
Maritime Film Co.
12 Hazen Ave 3-2463
M. S. Bernstein, L. Lieberman, Managers
(Columbia) .
Paramount Film Service
133 Princess St 3-3136
P. J. Hogan, Manager (Paramount).
RKO Distributing Corp. of Canada, Ltd.
92 Union St 3-3161
E. A. Whelpley, Manager (RKO Radio).
Regal Films, Ltd.
131 Princess St 3-2176
A. E. Smith, Manager (M-G M, Monogram).
Twentieth Century-Fox Corp., Ltd.
12 Hazen Ave 3-3207
Reginald G. March, Manager (20th Century-
Fox).
United Artists Corp., Ltd.
96 Union St 3-3840
Charles S. Chaplin, Manager (United Artists).
Vitagraph, Ltd.
12 Hazen Ave 3-3946
L. McKenzie, Manager (Warner Bros., Firit
National, Vitaphone) ,
651
EXCHANGES - PRODUCT
Toronto, Ont.
Colonial Pictures, Ltd.
277 Victoria St ADelaide 2872
Columbia Pictures of Canada, Ltd.
21 Dundas Square WAverley 4531
D. H. Coplan. General Sales Manager, A. B.
Cass, Branch Manager (Columbia).
Cosmopolitan Films, Ltd.
279 Victoria St.
( Amkino ) .
Empire-Universal Films, Ltd.
277 Victoria St WAverly 8621
A. W. Perry, General Sales Mgr. for Canada
(Universal, Republic, Gaumont British).
Paramount Film Service
111 Bond St ELgin 037ti
J. L. Hunter, Manager (Paramount).
Peerless Films, Ltd.
277 Victoria St WAverly 2258
J. Roher, Manager.
KKO Distributing Corp. of Canada, Ltd.
277 Victoria St ELgin 6121
J. F. Meyers, Manager I RKO Radio).
Kegal Films, Ltd.
(M-G-M, Monogram, London Films).
Twentieth Century-Fox Corp., Ltd.
110 Bond St ELgin 7221
Harry J. Bailey. Manager (20th Cenutury Fox).
United Artists Corp., Ltd.
277 Victoria St ELgin 3371
S. Glazer, Manager (United Artists).
Vitagraph, Ltd.
21 Dundas Square ELgin 8118
Joseph Plottal, Manager (Warner Bros.. First
National, Vitaphone).
Vancouver, B. C.
Columbia Pictures of Canada, Ltd.
1210 Burrard St TRinity 0730
N. Levant, Manager (Columbia).
Empire-Universal Films, Ltd.
1218 Burrard St DOuglas 0602
M. Plottel. Manager (Universal. Republic, Gau-
mont British).
Paramount Film Service
900 Davie St DOuglas 3244
William Handier, Manager (Paramount.)
KKO Distributing Corp. of Canada, Ltd.
1212 Burrard St DOuglas 0752
W. S. Jones, Manager ' RKO Radio).
Kegal Films, Ltd.
1204 Burrard St TRinity 7475
Charles Ramage. Manager (M-G-M. Monogram.
London Films ) .
Twentieth Century-Fox Corp., Ltd.
1214 Burrard St DOuglas 608
James E. Patterson. Manager (20th Century-
Fox) .
United Artists Corp. Ltd.
1206 Burrard St DOuglas 0710
Sam Nagler. Manager (United Artists).
Vitagraph, Ltd.
970 Davie St TRinity 5374
Irwin Coval, Manager (Warner Bros., First
National, Vitaphone).
Winnipeg, iff a.
Columbia Pictures of Canada, Ltd.
283 Colony St 33-583
I. Levit, Manager (Columbia).
Empire-Universal Films, Ltd.
Colony St 37-051
D. V. Rosen. Manager (Universal. Republic.
Gaumont British).
Paramount Film Service
281 Colony St 37-041
D. M. Brickman. Manager (Paramount).
KKO Distributing Corp. of Canada, Ltd.
383 Colony St 33-770
H. Woolfe, Manager (RKO Radio).
Kegal Films, Ltd.
Cinema Centre 37-226
T. J. Gould. Manager (M-G-M. Monogram.
London Films).
Twentieth Century-Fox Corp., Ltd.
287 Colony St 37-241
J. H. Huber. Manager (20th Century -Fox) .
United Artists Corp., Ltd.
289 Colony St 34-455
D. Griesdorf. Manager (United Artists).
Vitagraph, Ltd.
295 Colony St 37-291
Lou Geller, Manager (Warner Bros., First
National. Vitaphone).
NEWSREELS
New York, IV. Y.
Fox Movietone News
460 W. 64th St COlumbus 5-7200
Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox.
News of the Day
450 W. 56th St COlumbus 5-0402
Distributed by Loew's, Inc.
Paramount News
544 W. 43rd St MEdallion 3-4300
Distributed by Paramount Pictures
Pathe News
35 W. 45th St BRyant 9-1300
Distributed by RKO Radio Pictures
Universal Newsreel
1250 Sixth Ave Circle 7-7100
Distributed by Universal Pictures.
BACKGROUND
PROCESSES
Los Angeles, Calif.
Anderson, Howard A.
General Service Studios GRanite 3111
Consolidated Film Industries, Inc.
959 Seward St Hollywood 1441
Dunningcolor Corp.
932 N. La Brea Ave GRanite 3174
Jackman Color & Process Corp.
1809 S. Magnolia Blvd., Burbank
GLadstone 7191
Mercer, Ray
4241 Normal Ave OLympia 8436
Pacific Art Title Studios
1123 N. Bronson Ave Hollywood 9220
Peach, Kenneth, Processing Co.
1033 Cahuenga Ave Hollywood 5873
Schmidt, Al
Goldwyn Studios GRanite 6111
Smallwod, Arthur G.
7250 Santa Monica Blvd GRanite 6131
Teague Projector Process
4850 Vineland Ave STanley 712-11
Techniprocess & Special Effects Corp.
1117 N. McCadden Place Hillside 8179
Williams Lab.
8111 Santa Monica Blvd Hollywood 7241
Los Angeles, Calif.
Ace Entertainment Service
7904 Santa Monica Blvd Hillside 2073
Allen. Edgar, Ltd.
8863 Sunset Blvd CRestview 1-4323
Allied Artists Agency
9172 Sunset Blvd CRestview 6-3715
Arnovv, Sam
8979 Sunset Blvd OXford 3538
Arnatt, Jack, Theatrical Agents
8820 Sunset Blvd BRadshaw 2-1942
Artists Agency, Inc.
9126 Sunset Blvd CRestview 6-6264
Artists & Authors
8555 Sunset Blvd OXford 2371
Artists Bureau, Inc.
7046 Hollywood Blvd Hollywood 6591
Artists Management Co.
1509 N. Vine St Hollywood 6283
Artists Managers Guild
9441 Wilshire Blvd., Beverly Hills
OXford 4585
Artists Sponsors Foundation, Inc.
8507 Sunset Blvd CRestview 1-9163
Associated Artists, Ltd.
8627 Sunset Blvd OXford 6286
Bachman, J. C, Inc.
9000 Sunset Blvd OXford 7061
Baldey Agency
9172 Sunset Blvd CRestview 1-6872
Ball, George
7904 Santa Monica Blvd GRnite 9064
Bard, Ben, Agency
6040 Wilshire Blvd YOrke 8221
Barnes, Marie Babcock
9107 Sunset Blvd OXford 1067
Batchelor, Walter
8782 Sunset Blvd CRestview 18181
Back, John
8627 Sunset Blvd OXford 6286
Berg-Allenberg
9483 Wilshire Blvd.. Beverly Hills
OXford 3131
Bergerman, Stanley
9165 Sunset Blvd OXford 3196
Beyer-MacArthur
1680 N. Vine St Hillside 2125
Blrdwell, Russell & Associates
200 S. Beverly Drive, Beverly Hills
CRestview 5760
Blum, Myrt
9441 Wilshire Blvd., Beverly Hills
OXford 7071
Bostock, Claude W.
9126 Sunset Blvd OXford 1081
Brand, George
1584 Cross Roads of the World . GLadstone 3882
Brandies, Bob
8780 Sunset Blvd OXford 7238
Brill Bros.
815 S. Hill St MAdison 4895
British American Film Agency, Inc.
9010 Sunset Blvd CRestview 15285
Browne, Flo
8913 Sunset Blvd CRestview 1-5209
Carroll, Sue & Associates
9006 Sunset Blvd CRestview 1-8151
Central Casting Corp.
5504 Hollywood Blvd GArfield 3711
Chadwick-LaMarr
9157 Sunset Blvd CRestview 12137
Charney, William B.
9615 Brighton Way, Bev. Hills . CRestview 19111
Chinese Cinema Players
745% N. Main St MUtual 0875
Chudnovv, David
8779 Sunset Blvd OXford 3638
Coast to Coast
6233 Hollywood Blvd GRanite 4129
Cole, 3. S. Rex
6353 Hollywood Blvd Hollywood 2975
Collier. Ruth, Co.
8584 Sunset Blvd OXford 3101
Colombo, John, & Co.
7904 Santa Monica Blvd GRanite 4602
Columbia Management of California
6111 Sunset Blvd Hollywood 6365
Conlon-Armstrong
8734 Sunset Blvd CRestview 16181
< union, SCOOP
10111 Valley Spring Rd., N. Hollywood
SUnset 2-2626
Consolidated Radio Artists
9028 Sunset Blvd Oxford 1005
Cooley-Hallam Agency, Inc.
9111 Sunset Blvd CRestview 6-6161
Crawford, Winslow, Curtis Agency
9405 Brighton Way, Beverly Hills
CRestview 1-7161
Crosby, Everett N.
9028 Sunset Blvd CRestview 11171
Crow, R. R.
5663% Hollywood Blvd HEmpstead 5063
Davis, Don — Artists Unlimited
9123 Sunset Blvd CRestview 57444
Dembling, Gus
9120 Sunset Blvd CRestview 12101
DeShon-Dcllar Agency
8736 Sunset Blvd CRestview 5-6600
Deuser, Lewis J.
9470 Santa Monica Blvd OXford 4606
Diamond, David, Inc.
9121 Sunset Blvd CRestview 1-1101
Dohson, Ned
202 N. Canon Dr., Beverly Hills
CRestviewl-6161
Dolan & Doane
9538 Brighton Way, Beverly Hills
CRestview 6-0194
Donaldson, Richard, Corp.
8584 Sunset Blvd OXford 6141
Horn. Lou
6021 Hollywood Blvd HEmpstead 9781
DuBain, Bruno
8905 Sunset Blvd BRadshaw 2-1385
Dunn, Bill & Sabel
7904 Santa Monica Blvd HOllywood 3677
Edington-Vincent
9441 Wilshire Blvd., Beverly Hills
CRestview 1-5222
Ellison, Clara
0042 Eleanor Ave HOllywood 7484
Epstein, Dave A.
0777 Hollywood Blvd GRanite 2169
Fairfax, Betty
8333 Ocean Way, Santa Monica
CRestview 1-9111
Famous Artists Corp.
9441 Wilshire Blvd., Beverly Hills
CRestview 1-5222
Fanchon & Marco
5600 Sunset Blvd HOllywood 5341
Faye, William
8782 Sunset Blvd CRestview 5-0330
Fcldman-BIum
9441 Wilshire Blvd., Beverly Hills
CRestview 16222
Ferguson, Helen
8019 Sunset Blvd BRadshaw 2-3323
Fitzgerald, Leo
9122 Sunset Blvd CRestview 18532
Fizdale, Tom, Inc.
8532 Sunset Blvd BRadshaw 2-3101
Fralick, Freddie
204 S. Beverly Drive CRestview 6-6111
Frank, George
1626 N. Vine St Hlllsido 3188
653
Gardner, Jack
205 S. Beverly Drive, Beverly Hilli
CRestview 6-0188
Gear, Bruce, Agency
8949 Sunset Blvd CRestview 6-6406
Gertz, Mitchell
8500 Sunset Blvd OXford 7018
Gill-House & Worthen
8820 Sunset Blvd CRestview 1-7601
Goldberg, Lou
202 N. Canon Drive, Beverly Hills -
CRestview 1-6161
Colder, Lew
9122 Sunset Blvd CRestview 1-2127
Goldstone, Nat C.
8782 Sunset Blvd OXford 1131
Gubbins, lorn
746 N. Los Angeles St Michigan 3881
Gustafson, Ted
7904 Santa Monica Blvd GLadstone 0132
Hamilburg, Michael J.
6305 Yucca St Hillside 6126
Hanson, Fred R.
6400 Hollywood Blvd HEmpstead 9739
Hawks-Volck, Inc
9441 Wilshire Blvd., Beverly Hills
OXford 3121
Hayward, Leland Co., Ltd.
9200 Wilshire Blvd., Beverly Hills
CRestview 1-5161
Henry, Edd
9172 Sunset Blvd CRestview 15296
Herzbrun, Walter
8983 Sunset Blvd OXford 4157
Hirsch, Mrs. Jessie
1238 Larabee St CRestview 60220
Hunt, Dick
8981 Sunset Blvd BRadehaw 2-2322
International Artists
6331 Hollywood Blvd Hillside 2121
Irwin, Lou
9134 Sunset Blvd OXford 1006
Jaffe, Sam, Inc.
8555 Sunset Blvd OXford 6121
Johnstone, Menifee
9439 Santa Monica Blvd., Beverly Hills
CRestview 5-0146
Juvenile Casting Bureau
111 N. Robertson Blvd.. Beverly Hills
CRestview 19537
Kane, » alter-Wertheimer Agency Corp.
8485 Sunset Blvd OXford 2396
Keatin Theatrical Agency
122 V2 S. Vermont Ave DRexel 0440
Kempner, Alex
861 Sunset Blvd CRestview 5-0104
Kingston, Al
9441 Wilshire Blvd., Beverly Hills,
„ , CRestview 1-5222
Klagas, Nell, Management
7903 Santa Monica Blvd Hollywood 3677
Knowlden, Robert
9161 Alden Dr., Beverly Hills . CRestvlewl-1103
Kohner, Paul
9157 Sunset Blvd CRestview 1-6166
Kosloff, Maurice
8800 Wilshire Blvd., Beverly Hills
CRestview 6-7630
Kramer, Earl
204 S. Beverly Dr., Beverly Hills
OXford 2338
Lancaster, John
9615 Brighton Way, Bev. Hills .. OXford 4041
Lance, Leon O.
8776 Sunset Blvd CRestview 1-2141
Landau, Arthur M.
8555 Sunset Blvd OXford 2371
Lang, Howard, Ltd.
8949 Sunset Blvd CRestview 6-6193
Lang-Pain Agency
9172 Sunset Blvd CRestview 16109
Lehr, Abraham
8923 Sunset Blvd OXford 4153
Levee, M. C, "Mike'
1300 N. Crescent Heights Blvd.
GLadstone 3117
Levey, Bert, Circuit
6425 Hollywood Blvd Hillside 0284
Levine, Abe
6912 Hollywood Blvd GLadstone 7141
654
Lerton, Harold
9172 Sunset Blvd CRestview 6-0121
Llehtlg & Englander
8776 Sunset Blvd CRestview 12141
Lyons, A. & 8.
0441 Wilshire Blvd., Bev. Hills .. OXford 1116
MacQuarrie Agency
8913 Sunset Blvd OXford 7162
Mann, Gene
8949 Sunset Blvd CRestview 1-1135
Marbert Agency
8584 Sunset Blvd OXford 2396
Marchetti, Milo
8780 Sunset Blvd OXford 3666
Martyn, Marty & Max Schall
8949 Sunset Blvd OXford 1101
Marx, Zeppo
8732 Sunset Blvd OXford 4161
McCormick, John, Inc.
8983 Sunset Blvd CRestview 1-6181
McKee, Grace, Agency
112 W. Ninth St TUcker 4345
McCray, Ray H.
*" „W- Seventh St TUcker 3889
Medford, Ben
9441 Wilshire Blvd.. Beverly Hills
. . CRestview 1-7021
Meyer, Art
9615 Brighton Way, Beverly Hills
„, . CRestview 6-7865
Meyers, Walter, Agency
205 S. Beverly Dr., Beverly Hills
„.,., , „ CRestview 6 035
Middleton-Sackin
9006 Sunset Blvd CRestview 1-8197
Mills Artists, Inc.
1680 N. Vine St Hillside 8354
Monter-Gray
8736 Sunset Blvd CRestview 11191
Montgomery, Donald
205 S Beverly Drive CRestview 1-8289
Moore, Lola
8649 Sunset Blvd CRestview 66193
Morris, William, Agency
202 N. Canon Dr., Bev. Hills. .CRestview 1-6161
Morrison, Leo
204 S. Beverly Drive CRestview 19191
Music Corp. of America
9370 Burton Way, Bev. Hills.. .OXford 2001
National Theatrical Agency
202 S. Hamilton Drive. Bev. Hills. ,WA 3461
Newconi & Tnlly
8500 Sunset Blvd OXford 2069
N. B. C. Artists Service
1500 N. Vine St Hollywood 6161
Olenik & Gold
9172 Sunset Blvd CRestview 17149
O'Reilly, Eleanore, Agency
9615 Brighton Way, Beverly Hills
„ , . CRestview 12128
Orsafcti & Co.
9130 Sunset Blvd OXford 1008
Pantages, Rodney
6233 Hollywood Blvd Hollywood 2211
Patrick & Marsh
846 S. Broadway TUcker 2504
Poe, Coy
5600 Sunset Blvd HOllvwood 5341
Polimer, Richard K.
9157 Sunset Blvd CRestview 66190
Pomeroy, Jack
8464 Sunset Blvd HEmpstead 0741
Rawlings, Ed, Agency
9172 Sunset Blvd CRestview 1-6872
Rebecca & Silton
6605 Hollywood Blvd Hillside 1121
Republic Investment Corp.
8555 Sunset Blvd CRestview 1-2134
Richardson Agency
9120 Sunset Blvd CRestview 1-7689
Representation Unlimited
8741 Sunset Blvd CRestview 7444
Rlvkin. Jee, Inc.
9165 Sunset Blvd CRestview 12188
Robhins Arts Bureau
9120 Sunset Blvd CRestview 18161
Robinson, Fred
7004 Santa Monica Blvd Hollywood 3677
Rockwell-O'Keefe
9028 Sunset Blvd CRestview 1-8101
B°8065 Sunset Blvd CRestview 12134
Room-), Tom
9615 Brighton Way. Beverly Hills
CRestview 5-7000
Rubinstein, J. William .
8911 Sunset Blvd CRestview 1-6230
Rush, Art, Inc.
205 S. Beverly Drive CRestview 1-2165
Salkow, Lester „.
8627 Sunset Blvd OXford 6286
Saphler, James I.
9370 Burton Way, Bev. Hills ... OXford 2001
Sehall-Martyn Agency . ,„.,
8949 Sunset Blvd OXford 1101
Schaller. Jack
7904 Santa Monica Blvd GRamte 9064
Schlager, Sig, Inc. ,.,„.
8780 Sunset Blvd CRestview 1-0125
Sehulberg Ad., Ltd.
8656 Sunset Blvd OXford 6121
Schwartz. Milton I.
9012 Sunset Blvd OXford 2376
Selxnlck-Myron
9700 Wilshire Blvd., Beverly Hills,
CRestview 19171
Shagrin, Max
6263 Hollywood Blvd GRamte 5171
Shelton Agency
9441 Wilshire Blvd.. Bev. Hills
CRestview 1-4094
Sherrill, Jack
9441 Wilshire Blvd CRestview 1-8185
Shurr, Louis .
9166 Sunset Blvd CRestview 1-1116
SUber-Thompson
8820 Sunset Blvd OXford 7144
Simon Agency ..cio
9441 Wilshire Blvd., Bev. Hills. . .OXford 454,2
Singer, Harry, Agency
7046 Hollywood Blvd Hollywood 6951
Skeebj, Lloyd, Agency ml...
6613 Hollywood Blvd Hillside 9277
Sn8"272C09unshet Blvd Hollywood 2722
Smith, Jonathan .....
8949 Sunset Blvd CRestview 56193
Staunton, Arnold, Agency nT. . ....
8655 Sunset Blvd OXford 3940
Stempel, Frank . 01 KO
8736 Sunset Blvd OXford 9152
Sterling, Frieda, Agency „..,
1067 N. Fairfax Ave GRamte 2645
Stewart, Rosalie, Agency
6253 Hollywood Blvd Hollywood 7234
Swanson, H. N. . ,
9018 Sunset Blvd CRestview 1-5116
Tarver, Lawrence, Agency
8500 Sunset Blvd CRestview 1-2429
Thompson, David H., Agency
1626 N. Vine St Hollywood 3691
Vl16"4ACronsCsy Roads of the World. . .Hillside 8148
Volck, A. George, Inc. nv*„rA qi2l
9441 Wilshire Blvd.. Bev. Hills. . .OXford 31/1
Wadsworth, Jessie ...
9111 Sunset Blvd CRestview 5 6161
Wager, Al, Agency
707 S. Broadway VAndike 8138
Walker, Granville
9615 Brighton Way, Bev. Hills
CRestview 19111
Wallls, Minna n-ri~rA R9RR
8627 Sunset Blvd OXford 8286
Wamer, David 9f,ql
8853 Sunset Blvd OXford 2091
Weed, Richard M. nT. p, fiSo4
8584 Sunset Blvd OXford 6834
Welsner, Thelma
6331 Hollywood Blvd GRamte 7666
W6418ASeanC.a Monica Blvd GRanite 9233
WI9uTsPunUset Blvd CRestview 6-6161
Winship, William C. , .OQO
8500 Sunset Blvd CRestview 1-9989
Wookey, Betty nuanite 4768
1332 K. Sycamore Ave GRanite »/oo
Woolfenden, Bill
9470 Santa Monica Blvd., Beverly Hills
OXford 3191
Wurttel, Harrr . ._„ K
8979 Suii.et Blvd CRestview 5-6175
New York, N. Y.
Allen, Charles H. 41„4
1270 Sixth Ave Circle 7-41/14
Bentham, M. S. 0
1664 Broadway BRyant 9-1227
Be622' f"!™^1":: VAnderbilt 6-3980
^i^oadway CHickering 3-3393
Bl07045 FPmn Ave WIckersham 2-8900
Bt2TF* th5°Avenlth'. * . . -MUrray Hill 2-6244
Br°ld475 Broadway BRyant 9-4185
^"•w^thtt1" BRyant 9-8480
C°?6D19 bE.SU COlumbus 6-1566
C04^bF«Br0Avr.t,ne .C°'. • .Wlckersham 2-2000
^^/Broa^way COlumbus 6-1930
^ V^th St LAckawanna 4-8553
Fltzpatrlck, Thomas 3. ....
1564 Broadway LOngacre 6-9603
FOIk66TBMroadyway BRyant 9-0766
twKl'S Ave MUrray Hill 2-0020
Golden. Maurice, Theatrical P"*™""" 7.3888
30 Rockefeller Plaza Circle / 3ooo
Hahlo, Sylvia rTrr>1« 7-7440
146 W. 58th St Circle 7 rtiu
^dl^BroaSway Circle 6-1234
K"lo«V4«h St BRyant 9-0936
^Madfson'Ave0: P^za 3-6181
M6d6drFi«hBAve VAnderbilt 6-6423
MT5d6el' Brtdway 1-Omj.ere 6-8176
M^~AvtenCy'InC- Circle 7-2160
Morrison, Leo, Inc. 7-6413
1776 Broadway ^.liuo
National Co- . . .circle 7-8300
30 Rockefeller ±"iaza "
N°ir564MB^dway BRyant 9-8667
Pl16U19 Broadway COlumbus 5-6230
P,tr674 Broadway COlumbus 5-2535
^fe^Broadway Circle 7-4074
BO220'°W. «Sl St Wisconsin 7-2308
Sa234Uw: 4^ St ^ngacre 6-5988
^"otXldwaV Circle 6-6446
9Cb3rRock°efnelltr Plaza Circle 7-6630
S^3n0CkFinhrAveL!d: Circle 7-6201
^rebw^etn St BRyant 9-4318
9h?rdlToadway CHickering 4-8240
W11l2rwW42endISnt: Wisconsin 7-6664
Wood, George CHickering 3 1310
1601 Broadway t,Hicnenu»
655
PLAY AMI STORY BROKERS
Los Angeles, Calif.
Adams, Gerald Drayson
8272 Sunset Blvd Hollywood 2722
Alvord, Adeline
6605 Hollywood Blvd HEmpstead 2561
American Play Co.
321 N. Arden Blvd GLadstone 3527
Artists & Authors Corp.
8555 Sunset Blvd OXford 2371
Associated Artists, Ltd.
8627 Sunset Blvd Oxford 6286
Bachman, J. G. Co., Inc.
9000 Sunset Blvd OXford 7061
Rader, David A.
8776 Sunset Blvd CRestview 1-2141
Batcheler, Walter, Agency
8782 Sunset Blvd CRestview 18181
Bentel, George
6606 Sunset Blvd GRanite 8608
Berg, Phil-Bert Allenberg
9484 Wilshire Blvd., Bev. Hills .. OXford 3131
Bergerman. Stanley, Inc.
0165 Sunset Blvd OXford 3196
Beyer & MacArthur
1680 N. Vine St Hillside 2125
Blaney, Harry Clay
9336 W. Olympic Blvd.. Bev. Hills
CRestview 1-5550
Blum, Myrt
9441 Wilshire Blvd.. Bev. Hills .. OXford 7071
Rostock, Claude
9126 Sunset Blvd OXford 1081
Browne, Flo
8913 Sunset Blvd CRestview 1-5209
Century Play Co.
9366 W. Olympic Blvd.. Bev. Hills
CRestview 1-5550
Charney, William, B„ Agency
9615 Brighton Way CRestview 19111
Collier, Ruth, Co.
8584 Sunset Blvd OXford 3101
Conlon- Armstrong
8734 Sunset Blvd CRestview 1-5181
Crawford, Winslow, Curtis, Inc.
9406 Brighton Way. Bev. Hills.CRestview 1-7161
DeShon & Dellar
8736 Sunset Blvd CRestview 5-6600
Deuser, Lewis J.
9470 Santa Monica Blvd OXford 4606
Diamond, David, Inc.
9121 Sunset Blvd CRestview 1-1101
Donaldson, Richard
8584 Sunset Blvd OXford 6141
Edlngton & Vincent
California Bank Bldg CRestview 15222
Epstein, Dave A.
6777 Hollywood Blvd GRanite 2159
Feldman-Blum, Inc.
9441 Wilshire Blvd CRestview 15222
Fralich, Freddie
204 S. Beverly Drive CRestview 5-6111
Frank, George, Inc.
1609 N. Vine St Hillside 3188
French, Samuel, Inc.
811 W. Seventh St VAndike 6884
Gardener, Jack
205 S. Beverly Dr., Bev. Hills.CRestview 5-0188
Gertz, Mitchell
8600 Sunset Blvd OXford 7018
Gill, House & Worthelm
8820 Sunset Blvd CRestview 1-7551
Golder, Lou
9122 Sunset Blvd CRestview 1-2127
Goldstone, Nat C.
8782 Sunset Blvd OXford 1131
Hawks-Volck, Inc.
9441 Wilshire Blvd OXford 3121
Hayward, I. Hand Co., Ltd.
9200 Wilshire Blvd CRestview 15151
Jaffe, Sam, Inc.
8555 Sunset Blvd OXford 6121
Herzbrun, Walter, Agency
8983 Sunset Blvd OXford 4157
Kane, Walter-Wertheimer Agency Corp.
8485 Sunset Blvd OXford 2396
Kingston, Al
9441 Wilshire Blvd., Bev. Hills
CRestview 1-5222
Kramer, Earl
204 S. Beverly Dr., Bev. Hills ... OXford 2338
Lance, Leon O., Agency
8516 Sunset Blvd CRestview 12141
Landau, Arthur M.
8555 Sunset Blvd OXford 2371
Lehr, Abraham
8923 Sunset Blvd OXford 4153
Leyton, Harold, Inc.
9172 Sunset Blvd CRestview 50121
Levee, M. C.
1300 N. Crescent Hts. Blvd. . . GLadstone 3117
Levine, Abe
6912 Hollywood Blvd GLadstone 7141
I.ichtig & Englander
8776 Sunset Blvd CRestview 12141
Lovett. George A.
California Bank Bldg OXford 1515
Lyons, A. & S., Inc.
9441 Wilshire Blvd OXford 1116
MacQuarrie Agency
8913 Sunset Blvd OXford 7162
McCormick, John, Inc.
8983 Sunset Blvd CRestview 1-6181
Mann, Gene, Agency
8949 Sunset Blvd CRestview 11135
Marbert Agency
8584 Sunset Blvd OXford 2396
Marchetti, Milo M., Agency
8780 Sunset Blvd OXford 3666
Marx. Zeppo
8732 Sunset Blvd OXford 4161
Middleton, Sackheim Agency
9006 Sunset Blvd CRestview 18197
Monter, Richard-Edward Gray
8736 Sunset Blvd CRestview 11191
Morris, William, Agency
202 N. Canon Dr., Bev. Hills.CRestview 1-6161
Morrison, Leo, Inc.
204 S. Beverly Drive, Beverly Hills
CRestview 19191
Music Corp. of America
9370 Burton Way, Bev. Hills.. .OXford 2001
Orsatti & Co.
9121 Sunset Blvd OXford 1008
Rebecca & Silton
6605 Hollywood Blvd Hillside 1121
Reynolds, Paul C.
8272 Sunset Blvd HOllywood 2722
Rockwell & O'Keefe, Inc.
9028 Sunset Blvd CRestview 1-9101
Schley, Edna-Leonardson
318 N. Camden Drive, Beverly Hills
CRestview 50178
Schulberg, Ad, Ltd.
8555 Sunset Blvd OXford 6121
Selznick, Mvron & Co., Inc.
9700 Wilshire Blvd CRestview 19171
Shagrin, Max
6252 Hollywood Blvd GRanite 5171
Shurr, Louis, Agency
9165 Sunset Blvd CRestview 11116
Silber, Arthur-Edward Thompson, Agency
8820 Sunset Blvd OXford 7144
Simon Agency
9441 Wilshire Blvd., Bev. Hills. .OXford 4642
656
Small Co., The
8272 Sunset Blvd HOllywood 2722
Stewart, Rosalie
6253 Hollywood Blvd Hollywood 7234
Swanson, H. N., Inc.
8523 Sunset Blvd CRestview 15116
Valentine, Spencer
7621 Norton Ave GRanite 4036
Volek, George A., Inc.
9441 Wilshire Blvd., Bev. Hills .. OXford 3121
Walker, Granville, Agency
9615 Brighton Way CRestview 1-9111
Wallis, Minna-International Play Co.
8627 Sunset Blvd OXford 6286
Wilck, Laura
6253 Hollywood Blvd Hillside 5162
Wnolfenden, Rill, Inc.
9470 Santa Monica Blvd OXford 3191
Wurtzel, Harry, Agency
8979 Sunset Blvd CRestview 5-6175
Mew York, N. Y.
Allied Authors Agency
229 W. 42nd St Wisconsin 7-8805
Bartsch, Hans
1639 Broadway COlumbus 5-7077
Berg, Herbert S.
185 McClellan St JErome 7-3858
Brandt & Brandt
101 Park Ave AShland 4-5890
Brown, Curtis, Ltd.
347 Madison Ave MUrray Hill 6-6170
Century Play Co., Inc.
522 Fifth Ave MUrray Hill 2-9145
Co-National Plays, Inc.
1545 Broadway Circle 6-8696
Cooper, Viola Irene
42 W. 58th St PLaza 3-3500
Cushing, Bartley
367 W. 27th St CHickering 4-1531
Fishbein, Frieda
1674 Broadway COlumbus 5-7077
French, Samuel
25 W. 45th St BRyant 9-4778
Gordon. Edith
229 W. 42nd St Wisconsin 7-8751
Hardy, Robert Thomas, Inc.
55 W. 42nd St LOngacre 6-5481
Hayward, Leland, Inc.
654 Madison Ave REgent 4-7000
International Literary Bureau, Inc.
11 W. 42nd St PEnnsylvania 6-4163
International Play Co.
25 W. 43rd St BRyant 9-4593
Kauser, Alice
152 W. 42nd St Wisconsin 7-9422
Lyons, A. & S., Inc.
515 Madison Ave PLaza 3-5181
Mill, Michael S.
286 Fifth Ave LAckawanna 4-0493
Morris, William, Agency, Inc.
1270 Sixth Ave Circle 7-2160
National Artists Bureau
156 W. 44th St BRyant 9-8750
Osso, Bory
14 W. 18th St BRyant 9-2655
Paget Literary Agency, Inc.
599 Fifth Ave WIckersham 2-6950
Pauker, Dr. Edmund
1639 Broadway COlumbus 5-1726
Reynolds, Paul R. & Son
599 Fifth Ave Volunteer 5-0640
Salisbury, Leah
234 W. 44th St LOngacre 5-5988
Simon, Ruth
125 W. 45th St LOngacre 5-0376
Sukennikoff, Alex
229 W. 42nd St Wisconsin 7-8805
Taylor, Ethel C.
55 W. 55th St Circle 6-8620
Wilck, Laura D., Inc.
522 Fifth Ave MUrray Hill 2-9145
Writers Workshop, Inc.
670 Lexington Ave WIckersham 2-7571
PROJECTION
ROOMS
Los Angeles, Calif.
Consolidated Film Industries, Inc.
959 Seward St HOllywood 1441
Eastman Kodak Co.
6706 Santa Monica Blvd HEmpstead 3171
General Film Library
1426 N. Beachwood Drive ... HEmpstead 1191
General Service Studios
6625 Romaine St GRanite 3111
Hollywood Film Enterprises, Inc.
6060 Sunset Blvd Hillside 2181
Hollywood Sound Institute, Inc.
1040 N. Kenmore Ave MOrningside 12345
Moviola Co.
1451 N. Gordon St HOllywood 9440
Pathe Laboratories, Inc.
6823 Santa Monica Blvd HOllywood 3961
RCA
1016 N. Sycamore Ave Hillside 5171
Talisman Studios
4516 Sunset Blvd OLympia 2131
Technicolor Motion Picture Corp.
823 Seward St GRanite 1101
New York, N. Y.
Bonded Film Storage Corp.
1600 Broadway Circle 6-0081
Lloyd's Projection Room
729 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-5600
Miles Projection Room
729 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-5600
Preview Theater, Inc.
1600 Broadway Circle 6-0865
Soundfilm Enterprises, Inc.
723 Seventh Ave MEdallion 3-3248
LIBRARIES
FILM MLSIC
Los Angeles, Calif.
Dennis, William M.
2506 y3 W. Seventh St FItzroy 3722
Fut/ter Library
1426 N. Beachwood Drive .... GLadstone 6137
General Film Library
1426 N. Beachwood Drive. . . HEmpstead 1191
Meyer Synchronizing Service. Ltd.
9370 Burton Way, Bev. Hills OXford 2001
Thrasher, Vern
937 N. Sycamore Ave GLadstone 3106
New York, N. Y.
General Film Library, Inc.
1600 Broadway Circle 6-0081
Miles Film Library
729 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-5600
Progress Film Library, Inc.
729 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-5600
Stone, Dorothy T.
201 W. 89th St SChuyler 4-1148
STORAGE VAULTS
Los Angeles, Calif.
Consolidated Film Industries, Inc.
933 Seward St HOllywood 1441
General Film Library
1426 N. Beachwood Drive ... HEmpstead 1191
Hollywood Storage Co.
1025 N. Highland Ave GRanite 1161
Lyon Van & Storage Co.
1080 N. Cahuenga Blvd HOllywood 1401
New York, N. Y.
Bonded Film Storage Corp.
1600 Broadway Circle 6-0081
Consolidated Film Indus-tries
1776 Broadway COlumbus 5-1776
Lloyds Film Storage Corp.
729 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-5600
Miles, Joseph R., Film Storage
729 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-5600
657
PIIOHMpK AI'IIIICS
PORTRAIT—STILL
Los Angeles, Calif.
Acme Newspictures
1257 S. Loa Angeles St PRospect 1572
Alberts, Sergis
6362 Hollywood Blvd HEmpstead 2117
Alexander, Kenneth
Selzniek International AShley 4-2931
Apger, Virgil
M-G-M . . . '. AShley 4-3311
Autrey, Mas Munn
7063 Sunset Blvd GRanite 1910
Bachrach, Ernest
RKO Radio Hollywood 5911
Blanc, Harry
Darmour Studio GRanite 1166
Bjerrlng, Frank
M-G-M AShley 4-3311
Brown, Milton
M-G-M AShley 4-3311
Benninger, Otto
RKO Radio Hollywood 5911
Bruno Studio
6412 Hollywood Blvd HOllywood 9268
Bullock, Charles
Samuel Goldwyn GRanite 5111
Bullock, Malcolm
Paramount HOllywood 2411
Carpenter, Erich
M-G-M AShley 4-3311
Clark, Sherman
Universal STanley 71211
Crail, Marty
Warner Bros HOllywood 1251
Coburn, Robert
Goldwyn GRanite 5111
Cronenworth, Ed
M-G-M AShley 4-3311
D'Gaggeri, Gonzola
9397 Wilshire Blvd CRestview 5-6756
English, Don
Paramount HOllywood 2411
Elliott, Mack
Warner Bros HOllywood 1251
Estabrook, Ed
Universal STanley 71211
Freulich, Roman
Universal STanley 71211
Fryer, Homer
Warner Bros HOllywood 1251
Gillum, Tad
20th Century-Fox OXford 2211
Gold, Milt
20th Century-Fox OXford 2211
Graves, Stax
Hal Roach AShley 5-2761
Graybill, Ward
M-G-M AShley 4-3311
Grimes, William
M-G-M AShley 4-3311
Head, Gordon
Universal STanley 7-1211
Hastings, T. R.
6616 Santa Monica Blvd HEmpstead 0727
Hendrlckson, Fred
RKO Radio HOllywood 6911
Hoffman, Jack
Paramount HOllywood 2411
Hurrel, George
Warner Bros HOllywood 1261
Jones, Eddie
Universal STanley 71211
Jones, Ray
Universal STanley 71211
Julian, Mac
Warner Bros HOllywood 1251
Kahle, Alex
RKO Radio HOllywood 5911
Kornman, Gene
20th Century -Fox OXford 2211
Lacey, Madison
Warner Bros HOllywood 1261
Llppmann, Irving
Columbia HOllywood 3181
Little Studio
6412 Hollywood Blvd HEmpstead 9268
Lobben, Kenneth
Paramount HOllywood 2411
Longet, Gaston
RKO Radio HOllywood 5911
MarAlpin, Hal
Paramount HOllywood 2411
Manot, Jimmy
M-G-M AShley 4-3311
Marigold, Mickey
Warner Bros HOllywood 1261
Martin, Shirley Vance
Columbia HOllywood 3181
Maupin, Cliff
20th Century-Fox OXford 2211
Maurice Studios
6636 Hollywood Blvd GLadstone 2331
Miehle, John
RKO Radio HOllywood 5911
Mllligan, J. C.
20th Century-Fox OXford 2211
Morrison, Talmadge
Paramount HOllywood 2411
Newberg, Philip, Studio
4350 Beverly Blvd MOrningside 11444
Newberry, Frank
Hal Roach AShley 4-2761
Nolan, Ray
20th Century-Fox OXford 2211
Paul, M. R.
Columbia HOllywood 3181
Polard, Lyman
6047 Hollywood Blvd GLadstone 6707
Powolaney, Frank
20th Century-Fox OXford 2211
Richardson, G. E.
Paramount HOllywood 2411
Richey,, E.
Paramount HOllywood 2411
Bies Laboratories
1606 N. Cahuenga Ave GRanite 8711
Schafer, Adolf (Whitey)
Columbia HOllywood 3181
658
Sehoenbaum, Emmett
20th Century -Fox Oxford 2211
Seeley, Walter Frederick
8226 Sunset Blvd Hollywood 0707
Slbbald, Merritt
M-G-M AShley 4-3311
Six, Bert
Warner Bros Hollywood 1251
Spurr, Melbourne
3900 Wilshire Blvd DRexel 3631
Tanner, Frank
M-G-M AShley 4-3311
Ugrin, Anthony
20th Century-Fox OXford 2211
Van Pelt, Homer
Warner Bros Hollywood 1261
Walters, Joe
Republic SUnset 211-21
Welburn, Scotty
Warner Bros Hollywood 1251
WHzel Studios
1011 W. Seventh St MAdison 5733
Woods, Jack
20th Century -Fox OXford 2211
New York, N. Y.
Apeda Studio, Inc.
212 W. 48th St Circle 6-0790
Arthur Studios, Inc.
1457 Broadway BRyant 9-7342
Bachrach, Inc.
507 Fifth Ave MUrray Hill 2-4517
683 Fifth Ave WIckersham 2-4517
Brickel, Max
1595 Broadway Circle 6-0366
Brown Bros
126 W. 42nd St BRyant 9-4742
Browning, Irving, Studios
70 W. 45th St MUrray Hill 2-7491
Brunei, Emile
597 Fifth Ave ELdorado 5-9620
Chidnoff, Irving
650 Fifth Ave BRyant 9-4190
Cosmo-Slleo Co.
79 W. 46th St BRyant 9-8196
Delar
30 Rockefeller Plaza COlumbus 6-2327
Donaldo Studios
1601 Broadway BRyant 9-7120
Hill, Ira L.
677 Fifth Ave PLaza 3-3847
Johnston, Alfred Cheney
222 W. 69th St Circle 7-0696
Kesslere, G. Maillard
143 E. 62nd St REgent 4-3276
Metropolitan Photo Service
1664 Broadway BRyant 9-8218
Muray, Nikolas
18 E. 48th St WIckersham 2-1752
Nasib
160 W. 46th St LOngacre 3-0027
National Studios
145 W. 45th St BRyant 9-3684
Pach Bros.
6 E. 67th St PLaza 8-3366
Phyfe, Hal
867 Madison Ave BUtterfield 8-2060
Stern Photo Co., Inc.
318 W. 46th St Circle 6-4688
Underwood & Underwood
608 Fifth Ave MEdallion 3-6100
White Studio, Inc.
620 Fifth Ave MUrray Hill 2-1933
Los Angeles, Calif.
Behrendt-Levy, Ltd.
325 W. Eighth St VAndike 1261
Chappell, Ernest J.
723 N. Western Ave Hollywood 1416
Cosgrove & Co., Inc.
6218 Hope St Michigan 8761
Curry, R. M.
704% N. Bronson Ave Hollywood 7808
Ebenstein-Kunody Corp.
6253 Hollywood Blvd Hollywood 5333
Flynn, Frank M.
1446 N. Highland Ave Hollywood 2262
Hawkins & Blassick, Inc.
6381 Hollywood Blvd Hollywood 2972
Insurance Research Corp.
Pershing Square Bldg Mutual 6111
Leven, Benjamin
6777 Hollywood Blvd HEmpstead 3862
May, Mitchell, Jr., Co., Inc.
610 W. Sixth St MUtual 2192
Priester, Harvey U.
6331 Hollywood Blvd GLadstone 4811
Ruben, Albert J.
610 W. Sixth St Mutual 2192
Sehaefer, Leo P., Co.
5631 Wilshire Blvd YOrke 8281
Stebbins, Arthur W.
621 S. Hope St Michigan 8761
Taberman, C. E., Co.
6763 Hollywood Blvd HEmpstead 4141
Watts, Howard I.
6331 Hollywood Blvd Hollywood 1664.
New York, N. Y.
Cohen, Jerome J.
1650 Broadway Circle 5-7920
Ebenstein-Kunody Corp.
1270 Sixth Ave COlumbus 6-3161
Lubln, Max
51 Chambers St WOrth 2-6317
May, Mitchell, Jr., Co., Inc.
75 Maiden Lane BOwling Green 9-1400
Samuels Agency, Inc.
1540 Broadway BRyant 9-3740
Stebbins, Arthur W.
1640 Broadway BRyant 9-3740
Tierney, Howard S., Inc.
100 William St BOwlln* Green 9-6440
659
Los Angeles, Calif.
A-A-D Hollywood Messenger Service
1506 N. Ivar Ave GLadstone 2526
Advance Messenger & Delivery Co.
822 S. San Pedro St MAdison 1091
Angeles Messenger & Delivery Co.
939 S. Grand Ave TRinity 3724
Goldberg Film Delivery
1930 S. Vermont Ave PArkway 4141
Hollywood Messenger & Delivery Service
6361 Seneca Ave HEmpstead 2306
Kenyon Film Delivery Co.
1639 Cordova St BEpublic 8106
Red Arrow Bonded Messenger Corp.
6361 Selma Ave GLadstone 1177
Shontz Film Delivery
1965 y2 S. Vermont Ave REpublic 6308
United Parcel Service
1140 S. Flower St PRospect 8201
San Francisco, Calif.
Gilboy Company
666 Ellis St ORdway 1272
Denver, Colo.
Exhibitors Film Delivery & Service Co., Inc.
2424 Arap St MAin 2824
New Haven, Conn.
Rosen Film Delivery System
22 Prince St 6-4014
Washington, D. C.
Horlacher Delivery Service, Inc.
1637 Third St.. N. E DUpont 7200
Atlanta, Ga.
Benton Bros. Film Express
192 Luckie St WAlnut 3659
Theater Service Co.
148 Ala St., N.W WAlnut 6565
Chicago, 111.
Film Delivery Service
1243 S. Wabash Ave CALumet 7930
Film Truck Service
1344 S. Michigan Ave CALumet 6510
Des Moines, la.
Film Transportation Co.
415 12th St 4-7637
Inland Film Express
1001 High St 3-3101
Iowa Film Delivery
1204 Woodland Ave 3-3101
Iowa Film Inspection & Shipping Depot
2 16th St 3-2753
King Delivery Service
906 Locust St 3-5269
New Orleans, La.
Electric Delivery System
2314 Iberville St GAlvez 5300
Teche Lines, Inc.
400 N. Rampart St RAymond 9371
Baltimore, Hid.
Baltimore & Washington Film Express
Arcade Bldg HAmilton 4410
Horlacher Delivery Service, Inc.
1801 Bayard St SOuth 0860
Boston, Mass.
Film Evchange Transfer Co.
24 Piedmont St HAncock 6969
Detroit, Mich.
Film Truck Service
5669 25th St TYler 6-3626
Minneapolis, Minn.
Film Express Service Co.
69 Holden St ATlantic 1439
Film Pick Up Si Theater Service
65 Holden St MAin 8817
Film Transfer Co.
65 Holden St GEneva 3505
Middle West Film Express
121 Glenwood Ave MAin 8275
Kansas City, Mo.
Exhibitors Film Delivery & Service Co.
St. Louis, Mo.
Kalian, Harry, Film Delivery
3330 Olive St FRanklin 6572
Lincoln, Neb.
Mills Film Transfer
1836 S. 26th St.
Omaha, Neb.
Film Transport Co.
1603 Davenport St ATlantic 2045
Newark, N. J.
Caruso, O.
33 Jackson St Mitchell 2-9501
Buffalo, N. Y.
Smith & Howell Film Service, Inc.
21 Northhampton St GArfield 3610
Bochester, N. Y.
Smith & Howell Film Service, Inc.
Brown & Maple Sts GEnesee 6344
Syracuse, N. Y.
Smith & Howell Film Service, Inc.
948 S. State St 2-6836
New York. N. Y.
Daily Film Delivery
690 Eighth Ave LOngacr* 6-4667
660
Horlacher Delivery Service, Inc.
606 W. 47th St Circle 6-6440
National Film Carriers, Inc.
110 William St BEekman 3-7670
Prudential Film Distributors Corp.
630 Ninth Ave LAckawanna 3-6938
State Film Delivery, Inc.
630 Ninth Ave Circle 6-4994
Tacme Film Service, Inc.
630 Ninth Ave Circle 6-0662
Charlotte, M, C.
Carolina Delivery Service Co., Inc.
301 S. Poplar St 2-5197
Inter-Carolina Delivery Service, Inc.
600 S. Tryon St 7121
Cleveland, O.
Film Transit Service Co.
Film Exchange Bldg PRospect 7996
Columbus, O.
Columbus-Cincinnati Trucking Co.
295 S. Front St MAin 3933
Toledo, O.
Theater Transport Co.
117 Jervis St ADams 1612
Portland, Ore.
Pacific Truck Express
1303 S.W. 16th St BRoadway 3691
Oklahoma City, Okla.
Big Four Truck Lines
111 E. Grand St 3-7396
Mistletoe Express Service, Inc.
10 N.W. Fifth St 7-7651
O. K. State Motor Express
15 N. Lee St 2-7335
Philadelphia, Pa.
Horlacher Delivery Service, Inc.
1228 Vine St LOcust 4311
New Jersey Messenger Service
250 N. Juniper St LOcust 4822
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Exhibitors Service Co.
W. General Robinson & Scotland
Aves CEdar 4121
Memphis, Tenn.
Film Transit, Inc.
518 S. Third St 8-2913
Dallas, Tex.
Liberty Film Lines, Inc.
2027 Young St 7-3808
Merchants Fast Motor Lines, Inc.
1300 S. Larmar St 2-8496
San Antonio, Tex.
Texas Valley Film Service
607 N. Main Ave FAnnin 2911
Salt Lake City, U.
Delivery Service Co.
44 Richards St WAsatch 4001
TITLES AND
SPECIAL EFFECTS
Los Angeles, Calif.
Anderson, Howard A.
1040 N. Las Palmas Ave GRanite 3111
Art Craft Screen Service
6610 Santa Monica Blvd Hollywood 9876
Consolidated Film Industries, Ltd.
959 N. Seward St Hollywood 1441
Dunning Process Co., Inc.
932 N. LaBrea Ave GRanite 3174
Hollywood Film Enterprises
6060 Sunset Blvd Hillside 2181
Jackson Color & Process Corp.
1809 S. Magnolia Blvd GLadstone 7191
Mercer, Ray
4241 Normal Ave OLympia 8436
Meyer, Louis
1140 N. Western Ave GRanite 5411
National Screen Service Corp.
7026 Santa Monica Blvd GLadstone 3136
Pacific Studios
7650 Melrose Ave WHitney 9202
Pacific Title & Art Studio
1123 N. Bronson Ave HOllywood 9220
Schleslnger, Leon
1123 N. Bronson Ave Hollywood 9220
Standard Screen Service
2028 S. Vermont Ave PArkway 1357
Technlprocess & Special Effects Corp.
1117 N. McCadden Place Hillside 8179
United Process
7260 Santa Monica Blvd HEmpstead 2992
New York, IV. Y.
Brock, Gustav (Hand-coloring)
628 Riverside Drive University 4-2073
Consolidated Film Industries
1776 Broadway COlumbus 5-1776
Eno, Ralph R.
645 Fifth Ave VAnderbilt 6-2430
Filmlab, Inc.
126 W. 46th St BRyant 9 4981
H. E. R. Studios, Inc.
457 W. 46th St Circle 6-5232
National Screen Service, Inc.
630 Ninth Ave Circle 6-5700
Q. Q. Motion Picture Titles
1243 Sixth Ave Circle 7-2127
Special Screen Service, Inc.
653 Eleventh Ave Circle 6-6950
Seattle, Wash.
Northwest Film Service
2330 Third Ave SEneca 0241
Pielow Transfer Co.
2607 Second Ave SEneca 0740
Milwaukee, Wise.
Film Service, Inc.
1030 N. 8th St MArquette 5224
Toronto, Ont.
Harper Delivery Service
94 Dalhousie St ELgin 4628
Mavety, G. F., Film Delivery
277 Victoria St ADelaide 2413
661
BUSINESS €OLOR
ADMINISTRATORS PROCESSES
Los Angeles, Calif.
Beverly Management Corp.
400 N. Camden Drive, Bev. Hills
BRadshaw 2-1037
Berg-Allenberg Co.
9484 Wilshire Blvd., Bev. Hills ... Oxford 3131
Beverly National Company
8780 Sunset Blvd BRadshaw 2-1946
Cashy, Milton
6253 Hollywood Blvd GRanite 7652
Cole, Rex
6253 Hollywood Blvd Hollywood 2975
Conlln, Scoop
10111 Valley Spring Lane, No. Hollywood
SUnset 2-2526
Epstein, David
6777 Hollywood Blvd GRanite 2159
Equitable Investment Corp.
6253 Hollywood Blvd Hollywood 2976
Frank, George
1626 N. Vine St Hillside 3188
Greene, Charles R.
9470 Santa Monica Blvd Oxford 3141
Hamilburg,, Mitchell
6305 Yucca St Hillside 6125
Heinze, Walter O.
Pantages Theater Bldg Hillside 3101
Levee, M. C.
1300 N. Crescent Heights Blvd.
GLadstone 3117
Moore, Arlen W.
6253 Hollywood Blvd Hillside 7591
Purvis, Robert F.
9441 Wilshire Blvd., Bev. Hills. . .Oxford 2131
Republic Investment Corp.
8555 Sunset Blvd CRestview 1-2134
Rogers, Ted
8655 Sunset Blvd CRestview 1-2134
Rush, Art
205 S. Beverly Drive, Bev. Hills
CRestview 12165
Shattuck & Ettinger
202 S. Hamilton Drive, Bev. Hills. .TOrke 8131
Taylor, Arthur W.
6263 Hollywood Blvd GLadstone 8129
Temple-Thomason, Inc.
6263 Hollywood Blvd HOllywood 2203
Walton, Charles
6253 Hollywood Blvd HEmpstead 9200
Wood, Vernon
6233 Hollywood Blvd HOllywood 6196
Wrenn, Joseph P.
6263 Hollywood Blvd GRanite 6994
662
Allison, Donald K.
Color process engineer, 9308 Santa Monica Blvd.,
Beverly Hills, Calif.
Brewster Color Motion Pictures Corp.
(P. D. Brewster) Laboratories: 58 First St.,
Newark, N. J.
Brock, Gustav
Hand-coloring of release prints. 528 Riverside
Drive, UNiversity 4-4228, New York, N. Y.
Cinemachrome Corp.
1108 Lillian Way, Hollywood, Calif.
Cinecolor, Inc.
2800 S. Olive St., Burbank, Calif.
Color Process Corp.
827 N. Fairfax Ave.. Los Angeles. Calif.
Color Research Corp.
723 Seventh Ave., New York, N. Y.
Cosmocolor Corp.
1001 N. Mansfield Ave., Hollywood, Calif.
Dufaycolor Co., Inc.
64 W. 48th St., New York, N. Y.
Dunnlngcolor
Dunning Process Co., Laboratory: 932 N. La
Brea Ave., Hollywood. Calif.
Dupac
Special negative raw stock for bi-pack color
cinematography and also cut film for color
stills. Hollywood depot: Smith & Aller, 6656
Santa Monica Blvd.
Eastman Sonochrome Tinted Positive Films
Ready-tinted positive raw stock, in a variety
of colors, adjusted so as not to interfere with
sound reproduction.
Fried Camera Co.
6156 Santa Monica Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
Harriscolor Films, Inc.
(Joseph B. Harris, Jr), 906 N. Olive St., Bur-
bank, Calif.
Hollywood Color Film Corp.
230 S. Olive St.. Burbank, Calif.
Kodachrome
Eastman Kodak Co., Rochester, N. Y. (16 and
8 mm. for motion pictures; 35 mm. cartridges
for stills only.)
Kromocolor Laboratory (closed)
Paramus, N. J.
Lysle, Edmond H.
R 902, 305 E. 46th St., New York, N. Y.
Magnacolor
Division of Consolidated Film Industries, Inc.,
1776 Broadway. New York, N. Y.; Color Lab-
oratory, Hollywood, Calif.
Monopack
Technicolor's color negative system, for use
with regular black and white cameras, not yet
available.
O'Grady, F. T.
22 E. 40th St., New York. N. Y.
Technicolor Motion Picture Corp.
6311 Romaine St., Hollywood Calif.: Labora-
tories: 1006 N. Cole Ave., Hollywood, Calif.
Associations
Personnel & Addresses
E xhibitor Groups
Organizations
Guilds
ASSOCIATIONS
Academy of Motion Picture
Arts and Sciences
Hollywood, Calif.
OFFICERS
President Walter Wander
1st Vice-President Prank Capra
2nd Vice-President Edward Arnold
Secretary Robert Riskin
Treasurer John Aalberg
Executive Secretary Donald Gledhill
BOARD OF GOVERNORS
Frank Capra, Ronald Colman, Cecil B. deMille,
Howard Estabrook, Clark Gable, Mervyn LeRoy,
Frank Lloyd, Robert Riskin, David O. Selznick,
Douglas Shearer. James Stewart, Norman Taurog,
Walter W anger, Sam Wood, Darryl F. Zanuek.
RESEARCH COUNCIL
Darryl F. Zanuck. Chairman: Nathan Levinson,
Vice-Chairman ; Gordon S. Mitchell, Manager.
STUDIO TECHNICAL REPRESENTATIVES
John Aalberg RKO Radio
Bernard Brown Universal
Fareiot Edouart Paramount
E. H. Hanson 20th Century-Fox
Nathan Levinson Warner Bros.
John Livadary Columbia
T. T. Moulton Samuel Goldwyn
Douglas Shearer M-G-M
Actors Equity Association
45 W. 47th St., New York, N. Y.
BRyant 9-3550
OFFICERS
President Arthur Byron
1st Vice-President Bert Lytell
2nd Vice-President Florence Reed
3rd Vice-President Burgess Meredith
4th Vice-President Peggy Wood
Executive Secretary-Treasurer Paul Dullzell
Assistant Executive Walter N. Greaza
Recording Secretary Leo Curley
Counsel Paul N. Turner
Auditor Frank Mesurac
COUNCIL
Walter Abel, John Alexander, Glen Anders, Lee
Baker, Beverly Bayne, James Harllee Bell, E. J.
Blunkall, Beulah Bondi. Reed Brown, Jr., Hugh
Cameron. Thomas Chalmers. Patricia Collinge.
Broderick Crawford, Dudley Digges, Eric Dressier,
Augustin Duncan, J. Malcolm Dunn, Edward Field-
ing, Clyde Fillmore. Franklyn Fox, William Gaxton,
Walter N. Greaza, Robert T. Haines, Ruth Ham-
mond, George Heller, Alfred Kappeler, Robert
Keith, Muriel Kirkland, Benjamin S. Lackland.
Earl Larimore, Winifred Lenihan, Philip Loeb,
John Lorenz, Claudia L. Morgan, Mary Morris,
Maida Reade, Hugh Rennie, Hiram Sherman,
Richard Sterling, Edith L. VanCleve, Harold Ver-
milyea. Joe Vitale, Katharine Warren, Jack Whit-
ing, Richard Whorf, Mervin Williams, Blanche
Yurka.
BRANCHES
SAN FRANCISCO: Theodore Hale, 220 Bush St.
HOLLYWOOD: I. B. Kornblum, 6331 Holly-
wood Blvd.
CHICAGO: Frank R. Dare, 729 Waveland Ave.
CHORUS EQUITY: 117 W. 48th St., New York,
N. Y.
Secretary Fred W. Birnbach
Financial Secretary-Treasurer. .. Harry E. Brenton
EXECUTIVE BOARD
C. A. Weaver. A. C. Hayden, James C. Petrillo,
Walter M. Murdoch, J. W. Parks.
American Society of
Cinematoyraphers
1783 N. Orange Drive, Hollywood, Calif.
GRanite 3135
OFFICERS
President John Arnold
1st Vice-President Kay June
2nd Vice-President Charles B. Lang
3rd Vice-President Arthur Edeson
Secretary-Treasurer Alfred Gilks
Executive Vice-President Frederick L. Kley
BOARD OF GOVERNORS
John Arnold, Arthur Edeson, George Folsey.
Alfred Gilks. Fred Jackman, Ray June. Charles B.
Lang, Jr.. Hal Mohr. Charles Rosher, Ted Tetzlaff.
Joseph Walker, Chas. G. Clarke, Robert DeGrasse.
Merritt Gerstad. Joseph Valentine.
American Society of
Composers, Authors and
Publishers
30 Rockefeller Plaza, New York, N. Y.
COlumbus 5-7464
OFFICERS
President Gene Buck
Vice-President Louis Bernstein
Vice-President Otto A. Harbach
Secretary George W. Meyer
Treasurer Gustave Schirmer
Assistant Secretary J. J. Bregman
Assistant Treasurer Irving Caesar
Chairman Administrative Committee. . . E. C. Mills
General Manager John G. Paine
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Fred E. Ahlert. Louis Bernstein, Saul Bornstein.
J. J. Bregman, Gene Buck, Irving Caesar, Max
Dreyfus, George Fischer, Walter Fischer, Oscar
Hammerstein II, Otto A. Harbach, Raymond Hub-
bell, Jerome Kern, Edgar Leslie, George W. Meyer.
Jack Mills, John O'Connor, J. J. Robbins. Gustave
Schirmer, Oley Speaks, Herman Starr. Deems
Taylor, Will Von Tilzer.
Associated Actors and
Artistes of America
Affiliated with A. F. of L.
25 W. 45th St., New York, N. Y.
BRyant 9-9237
OFFICERS
Int. Pres. -Executive Director Frank Gillmore
Int. Executive Secretary Paul Dullzell
1st Inter. Vice-President Jean Greenfield
2nd Inter. Vice-President Kenneth Thomson
Inter. Treasurer Ruth Richmond
Counsel Paul N. Turner
UNION BRANCHES
Actors Equity Association, American Federation
of Radio Artists, American Guild of Musical Ar-
tists, American Guild of Variety Artists, Brother
Artists Association, Chorus Equity Association.
Hebrew Actors Union. Hebrew Chorus Union, Hun-
garian Actors and Artists Association, Screen Ac-
tors Guild, Italian Actors Union.
American Federation of
Musicians
1450 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
PEnnsylvania 6-2546
OFFICERS
President Joseph N. Weber
Vice-President Charles L. Bagley
Associated Motion Picture
Advertisers
President's Address:
Warner Bros. Pictures,
321 W. 44th St., New York, N. Y.
OFFICERS
President Paul N. Lazarus, Jr.
664
Vice-President Vincent Trotta
Treasurer Herbert Berg-
Secretary Kenneth Clark
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Paul N. Lazarus, Jr.. Vincent Trotta, Herbert
Bergr, Kenneth Clark, Ralph Rolan, Eli E. Sugrar-
man, Lou Lifton, James Cron, Martin Starr.
Associated Motion Picture
Costumers
Local 705, I. A. T. S. E. & M. P. M. 0.
7024 Melrose Ave., Hollywood, Calif.
Webster 7251
OFFICERS
Business Representative Wra. L. Edward9
Association of Motion Picture
Producers, Inc.
5504 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
GLadstone 6111
OFFICERS
President Y. Frank Freeman
Vice-President Edgar J. Mannix
2nd Vice-President Cliff Work
Secretary-Treasurer and Executive
Vice-President Fred W. Beetson
Class A Members: Columbia Pictures Corp.,
1438 N. Gower St.: Twentieth Century-Fox Film
Corp., 10201 W. Pico Blvd.; Loew's, Inc., 10202
Washington Blvd., Culver City; Paramount Pic-
tures, Inc., 5451 Marathon St.; RKO Radio Pic-
tures. Inc., 780 N. Gower St.; Hal E. Roach
Studio, Inc., Culver City; Universal Pictures Co.,
Inc., Universal City; Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.,
Burbank: Samuel Goldwyn, Inc., Ltd., 7210 Santa
Monica Blvd.; Walter Wanger Productions, Inc.,
1045 No. Formosa Ave.
Class B Members and Directors: Harry Cohn,
Columbia; Joseph M. Schenck, Twentieth Century-
Fox; Edgar J. Mannix, Loew's, Inc.; Henry Herz-
brun. Paramount; J. R. McDonough, RKO Radio;
Hal E. Roach; Cliff Work, Universal; J. L. War-
ner, Warner Bros.; Samuel Goldwyn, Walter F.
Wanger, James Roosevelt.
Authors9 Club, Inc.,
Hollywood
6525 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
HIlKide 7197
OFFICERS
President Rupert Hughes
Honorary President Irvin S. Cobb
Vice-President Lee Shippey
Vice-President Gene Lockhart
Vice-President James G. Swinnerton
Secretary Grover Jones
Ass't Sec'y A. Gaylord Beaman
Treasurer Philbrick McCoy
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
A. Gaylord Beaman, Emmet Daly, Don Gilman,
Richard Hageman, Harold Hurlbut, Harry Kohr,
Robert Wildhack, Marek Windheim.
Authors' Guild
6 E. 39th St., New York, N. Y.
MUrray Hill 5-6930
OFFICERS
President Hendrik Willem van Loon
Vice-President Henry F. Pringle
Secretary Margaret Widdemer
COUNCIL
Sherwood Anderson, Helen Christine Bennett,
Silas Bent, Burton Braley, Dorothea Brande, Ben
Lucien Burman. Carl Carmer. Latrobe Carroll,
Octavus Roy Cohen, Elmer Davis, Fairfax Downey,
Arthur Guiterman, Harry Hansen, Marjorie Hillis.
Helen R. Hull. Fannie Hurst. Inez Haynes Irwin,
Will Irwin, Manuel Komroff, Alfred F. Loomis,
Denis Tilden Lynch, Mary Field Parton, Nathaniel
Peffer, Kenneth Roberts, Carl Sandburg, Lyman
Beecher Stowe, John W. Vandercook, M. R. Wer-
ner, Thyra Samter Winslow, W. E. Woodward.
ASSOCIATIONS
Authors' League
6 E. 39th St., New York, N. Y.
MUrray Hill 5-6930
OFFICERS
President Elmer Davis
Vice-President Kenyon Nicholson
Secretary Homer Croy
Treasurer Luise Sillcox
COUNCIL
Wade Arnold, Al Barker, John Boylan, Kath.
arine Brush, Eugene Buck, Ben Lucien Burman,
Carl Carmer, Donald H. Clark, Marc Connelly,
Russel Crouse, Merrill Denison, Philip Dunning,
Hermann Hagedorn, Laurence Hammond, Moss
Hart, Stuart Hawkins, Inez Haynes Irwin, Will
Irwin, Louis Kronenberger, John Howard Lawson,
Leonard L. Levinson, Denis Tilden Lynch, Albert
Maltz, Alice Duer Miller, Kenyon Nicholson, Irving
Reis, Arthur Riehman, Courtenay Savage, Oscar
Sehisgall, Arthur Schwartz, Katharine Seymour,
A. E. Thomas. Orin Tovrov, Arthur Train, John
Vandercook, Stanley Young.
Canadian Performing Right
Society, Ltd.
1003 Royal Bank Bldg., Toronto, Canada
OFFICERS
President-Managing Director
H. T. Jamieson, F. C. A.
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Gene Buck, Louis Bernstein, John G. Paine,
Ralph Hawkes, Holmes Maddock, H. T. Jamieson.
Catholic Actors Guild of
America, Inc.
Hotel Astor, New York, N. Y.
Circle 6-5566
OFFICERS
President George M. Cohan
1st Vice-President Gene Buck
2nd Vice-President Hugh O'Connell
Honorary Vice-Presidents Walter Connolly,
Bing Crosby. Dan Healy, Pat O'Brien
Chaplain .... Very Rev. Msgr. Edward F. Leonard
Treasurer Rev. John F. White
Recording Secretary Brandon Peters
Counsel Hon. Alfred J. Talley
Historian Jane Hoy
Executive Secretary George Buck
Catholic Writers Guild of
America, Inc.
128 W. 71st St., New York, N. T.
ENdicott 2-0411
OFFICERS
President Dr. Eugene A. Colligan
1st Vice-President Joseph A. Durkin
2nd Vice-President Edwin P. Kilroe
3rd Vice-President Daniel Halpin
Treasurer Hugh A. O'Donnell
Financial Secretary Eleanor M. Tucker
Recording Secretary Clarence E. Heller
Spiritual Director Rev. John B. Kelly
President Emeritus Dr. James J. Walsh
BOARD OF GOVERNORS
Thomas F. Woodlock, Very Rev. Fulton J.
Sheen, Joseph A. Durkin, Victor Ridder, Rev.
Joseph A. Daly, Hugh A. O'Donnell. Mrs. Philip
A. Brennan, Rev. Eckhard Koehle, Kenton Kil-
mer, Richard Reid, Nicholas Farley, Katherine
Edgerly, Charles H. Moran, Alex J. Morrison.
665
ASSOCIATIONS
Copyright Protection Bureau
1270 Sixth Ave., New York, N. Y.
Circle 7-1934
General Attorney Gabriel L. Hese
An agency maintained by national distributors
of motion pictures in the United States to protect
their motion pictures against unauthorized ex
hibitors.
Dramatists9 Guild
6 E. S9th St., New York, N. Y.
MUrray Hill 5-6930
OFFICERS
President Elmer Rice
Board Chairman Edward Childs Carpenter
Vice-President George S. Kaufman
Secretary Richard Rodgers
Executive Secretary Luise Sillcox
Annual meeting and election: November; Mem-
bership: 2,500.
Film Player's Club, Inc.
251 W. 51st St., New York, N. Y.
COlumbus 5-9222
OFFICERS
President Harry Hornick
Vice-President C. MacL. Savage
Treasurer W. Za Basso
Executive Secretary A. Nast
Recording Secretary Rose Keriter
Sergeant-at-Arms William Pastrtoll
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Christmas Seals, Thomas Hyland, William
Turner, Jack Morgan, Zeak Young, Jean Fox.
Film Technicians of the Mo-
tion Picture Industry
Local C.83, I. A. T. S. E. & M. P. M. O.
6461 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, California
Hillside 7151
OFFICERS
Business Representative David G. Lory
Vice-President Harold M. Miller
Secretary-Treasurer Joseph R. Pruett
Recording Secretary William Kislingbury
International Alliance of
Theatrical Stage Employees
and Moving Picture Ma-
chine Operators of the
United States and Canada
803 International Bldg., New York, N. Y.
Circle 5-4370
OFFICERS
President George E. Browne
General Secretary -Treasurer Louis Krouse
GENERAL EXECUTIVE BOARD
George E. Browne, John P. Nick. William P.
Covert. Harland Holmden, Richard F. Waish.
Floyd M. Billing6ley, James J. Brennan, Roger M.
Kennedy, Louie Krouse.
Membership: 42,000.
international Alliance of The-
atrical Stage Employees
and Moving Picture Ma-
chine Operators of the
United States and Canada
Studio Locals No. 44 and 80 — 6472 Santa
Monica Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
Studio Local No. 165 — 708 N. La Brea, Los
Angeles, Calif.
Studio Local No. 727 — 1108 Lillian Wav, Hollv-
wood, Calif.
Studio Local No. 728 — 7579 Melrose Ave.,
Hollywood, Calif.
International Film Center
American Film Center
45 Rockefeller Plaza, New York, N. Y.
Executive Director Donald Slesinger
Assistant Director Mrs. Margaret S. Summers
BOARD
James T. Shotwell. George F. Zook. Luther
Gulick, Richard J. Walsh, Henry Goddard Leach.
William Berien.
International Photographers
of the Motion Picture In-
dustries
Local 659, I. A. T. S. E. Si M. P. M. O.
6461 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
Hillside 0125
OFFICERS
President Hal Mohr
1st Vice-President Leon Shamroy
2nd Vice-President Lucien Ballard
3rd Vice-President William Skall
Financial Secretary-Treasurer E. S. Depew
Recording Secretary James V. King
Sergeant-at-Arms Len Powers
Chairman of Trustees Edward Pyle
Trustees Fleet Southcott, Lothrop Worth
Business Representative Herbert Aller
EXECUTIVE BOARD
Charles Bohny, James J. Brooks. William
Clothier, Robert Coburn. Eddie Fitzgerald. Marcel
Grand. Sanford Greenwald, Clifton Maupin. Wm.
Reinhold.
International Photographers
of the Motion Picture In-
dustries
Affiliated with I. A. T. S. E. Ss M. P. M. O.
Midwest Branch, Local 666
327 S. LaSalle St., Chicago, HI.
WEBster 7440
OFFICERS
President Bertel J. Kleerup
l6t Vice-President Emile Montemurro
2nd Vice-President Charles Geis
Treasurer Martin Barnett
Financial Secretary Fred Hafferkamp
Recording Secretary Walter Hotz
Sergeant-at-Arms Sam Savitt
Business Manager W. H. Strafford
BOARD OF GOVERNORS
Bertel J. Kleerup, Emil Montemurro, Walter
Hotz, Fred Hafferkamp, Sam Savitt, Floyd Trayn-
ham, Harry Peterson, Martin Barnett, Charles
Geis, Robert Tavernier.
The Lambs
130 TV. 44th St., New York, N. Y.
OFFICERS
Shepherd Fred Waring
Boy Raymond Peek
Corresponding Secretary Jack Whiting
Recording Secretary Bobby Clark
Treasurer J. C. Cuppia
Librarian Harold G. Hoffman
LIFE DIRECTORS
R. H. Burnside, A. O. Brown, Frank Crumit,
William Gaxton.
666
DIRECTORS
Arthur Hurley, J. W. Powell, Kenneth Webb,
Martin Gillen, Earl Benham, John Hayden, James
E. Meighan, Dr. M. Sayle Taylor, Edward C.
Lilley, Arthur Pierson, John McManus, Percy
Moore, Edwin Burke, M. D. Stauffer, William
P. Adams.
Make-lp Artists
Local 706, I. A. T. S. E. & M. P. M. O.
1627 N. Cahuenga Ave., Hollywood, Calif.
HOUywood 6351
OFFICERS
President Carl Azzelle
Secretary-Treasurer Karl Herlinger, Jr.
ASSOCIATIONS
2nd Vice-President Mort Bloom
Secretary-Treasurer Bill Vermont
Recording Secretary Boris Salko
Sergeant-at-Arms Adolph Qrude
EXECUTIVE BOARD
Joe Badner, Mike Davidson, Pat Farragher,
Mike Marotta, Eugene Moehring, William Schwab,
Robert Shields, Jack Stewart, Rose Vanoli, Al
Wharmby.
TRUSTEES
Ben Bloom, Lester Maas, Paul Press.
The Masquers
1765 N. Sycamore Ave., Hollywood, Calif.
HOUywood 2164
OFFICERS
Harlequin William B. Davidson
Pierrot Jean Hersholt
Ponchinello Stanley Taylor
Croesus Howard B. Henshey
Pantaloon Lloyd Corrigan
Reader Frank Campeau
JESTEBATE
Charles Chase. Berton Churchill, Benjamin W.
Shipman, Jed Prouty, Ernest Hilliard, Frank M.
Flynn, Robert Armstrong, David H. Thompson,
Raymond Walburn, Syd Saylor, William H. Dunn,
Dell Henderson, Charles Vanda, Ralph Murphy,
James P. Normanly.
Motion Picture Associates,
Inc.
c/o Moe Fraum, Columbia Pictures Corp.,
630 Ninth Ave., New York, N. Y.
Circle 6-0900
OFFICERS
President Jack Ellis
1st Vice-President Morris Sanders
2nd Vice-President Matty Cahan
Treasurer S aul Trauner
Recording Secretary Morris Fraum
Financial Secretary Charles Peneer
Sergeant-at-Arms Louis Kutinsky
Trustees Joseph J. Lee, Nat Beier
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Morris Sanders, Chairman; Jack Hattem, Harry
H. Buxbaum, Dave Levy, William Stein, Seymour
SchU6sel.
Motion Picture Distribtators
and Exhibitors of Canada
1715 Metropolitan BIdg., Toronto, Canada
ELgin 8019
President Colonel John Cooper
Secretary E. H. Wells
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Henry L. Nathanson, C. Hague. L. Devaney,
M. A. Milligan, H. M. Masters, J. P. O'Loghlin,
Colonel John Cooper.
The Motion Picture Distributors and Exhibitors
of Canada is modeled along the lines of the Hays
organization and succeeds the former Canadian
Distributors Association. Included in its member-
ship are seven prominent Canadian distributors.
Motion Picture Laboratory
Technicians
Local 702, IATSE
1560 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
BRyant 9-3281
OFFICERS
President John H. Rugge
1st Vice-President John Francavilla
Motion Picture Location
Managers' Association
Metro-Ooldwyn-Mayer Studios, Culver City, Cal.
ASHley 4-3311
OFFICERS
Honorary President Fred W. Beetson
President R. C. Moore
Secretary-Treasurer Lou Strohm
Motion Picture Producers
and Distributors of
America, Inc.
28 W. 44th St., New York, N. Y.
BRyant 9-4000
OFFICERS
President Will H. Hays
Secretary Carl E. Milliken
Treasurer F. L. Herron
Assistant Treasurer George Borthwick
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Will H. Hays, Chairman; Barney Balaban, Nate
J. Blumberg, Jack Cohn, Cecil B. deMille, Earle W.
Hammons, Edgar B. Hatrick, F. L. Herron, Sidney
R. Kent, Sol Lesser, Hal E. Roach, Nicholas M.
Schenck, Maurice Silverstone, George J. Schaefer,
Albert H. Warner, Harry M. Warner.
MEMBERSHIP
Bray Studios, Inc., 729 Seventh Ave., New
York, N. Y.; Caddo Co.. Inc., 7000 Romaine St.,
Hollywood, Calif.; Columbia Pictures Corp.. 729
Seventh Ave., New York, N. Y.; Cosmopolitan
Corp., 1540 Broadway, New York, N. Y.; Cecil B.
deMille Productions, 2010 deMille Drive, Holly-
wood, Calif.: Walt Disney Productions, 2719
Hyperion Ave., Los Angeles, Calif.; Eastman
Kodak Co., Rochester, N. Y.; Educational Film
Corp. of America. 1501 Broadway. New York.
N. Y.; Electrical Research Products, Inc., 195
Broadway, New York, N. Y.; First National Pic-
tures, Inc., 321 W. 44th St., New York. N. Y.:
Samuel Goldwyn, Inc., 7210 Santa Monica Blvd..
Los Angeles, Calif.; Inspiration Pictures, Inc., 729
Seventh Ave., New York, N. Y.; Loew's, Inc., 1640
Broadway, New York, N. Y.; Paramount Pictures.
Inc., 1601 Broadway, New York, N. Y.; Pioneer
Pictures, Inc., 1041 N. Formosa Ave., Los Angeles,
Calif.; Principal Pictures Corp., 5255 Clinton St.,
Hollywood. Calif.: RCA Manufacturing Co.,
Inc., Camden, N. J.; RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.,
1270 Sixth Ave., New York, N. Y.; Reliance Pic-
tures, Inc., 1601 Broadway, New York, N. Y.; Hal
Roach Studios, Inc., Culver City. Calif.; Selznick
International Pictures, Inc., 9336 Washington Blvd.,
Culver City, Calif.; Terrytoons, Inc., 271 North
Ave.. New Rochelle, N. Y.: Twentieth Century-
Fox Film Corp.. 444 W. 66th St., New York,
N. Y.; United Artists Corp, 729 Seventh Ave..
New York, N. Y.; Universal Pictures Co., Inc.,
1250 Sixth Ave., New York. N. Y.; Vitagraph.
Inc., 321 W. 44th St., New York. N. Y.: Walter
Wanger Productions, Inc., 1046 N. Formosa Ave.,
Los Angeles, Calif.; Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.,
321 W. 44th St., New York, N. Y.
667
ASSOCIATIONS
Motion Picture Relief Fund;,
Inc.
6902 vim. i Monica Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
Hillside 8211
OFFICERS
President Jean Hersholt
1st Vice-President Ralph Block
2nd Vice-President Joan Crawford
3rd Vice-President Joseph M. Schenck
4th Vice-President Ginger Rogers
Treasurer George Bag-nail
Executive Secretary Wilma Bashor
Counsel Ewell D. Moore
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
Ralph Morgan, Chairman: George Bagnall. Fred
W. Beetson, Francis Edwards Faragoh, Lucile
Webster Gleason. Mary McCall, Jr., Irving Piehel,
James Roosevelt, Richard Wallace, Walter F.
Wangrer.
FINANCE COMMITTEE
Ralph Block. Chairman: George Bagnall, Vice-
Chairman: Joseph M. Schenck, Ex-officio; W. K.
Craig, Mary McCall, Jr., Joseph R. McDonough,
William Schaefer.
TRDSTEES
Stephen Morehouse Avery, John L. Balderston.
Fred W. Beetson, Charles Brackett, Jack Cooper.
Francis Edwards Faragoh, John Ford, Lucile Web-
ster Gleason, Samuel Goldwyn, Frances Goodrich,
Bertha Mann Griffith, Sol Lesser, Mitchell Lewis,
Ernst Lubitsch, Mary McCall, Jr., Leo McCarey,
Robert Montgomery, Ewell D. Moore, Ralph Mor-
gan, Conrad Nagel, George Nicholls, Jr., Mary
Pickford. Basil Rathbone, Frederick Richards,
Charles G. Rosher, William Seiter, Robert Steph-
anoff, Norman Taurog, Mogran Wallace, Walter
Wanger, Billie Burke Ziegfeld.
Motion Picture Research
Council
National Headquarters
111 Sutter St., San Francisco, Calif.
EXbrook 0854
OFFICERS
President Dr. Ray Lyman Wilbur
Honorary Vice-President ... Stephen Perkins Cabot
Honorary Vice-President Mrs. Calvin Coolidge
Vice-President Mrs. William Cavalier
Vice-President Mrs. Alfred McLaughlin
Vice-President Mrs. Vernon Skewes-Cox
Honorary Secretary. . . .Mrs. Walter McNab Miller
Treasurer Allen W. Widenham
Executive Secretary lone Schlaifer
Motion Picture Studio
Mechanics
Local 52, IATSE
251 W. 52nd St., New York, N. Y.
Wisconsin 7-3490
OFFICERS
President William Callahan
Vice-President George Jason
Business Manager Sal J. Scoppa
General Secretary-Treasurer James A. Delaney
Recording Secretary William J. Doran
Sergeant-at-Arms H. Mulligan
Chairman of Trustees Ed Muller
Moving Picture Mttchine
Operators9 Union
Local 30G, I. A. T. S. E. & A. F. of L.
251 W. 42nd St., New York, N. Y.
Wisconsin 7-3808
OFFICERS
President Joseph D. Basson
Vice-President Morris Kravitz
Recording Secretary Herman Gelber
Financial Secretary Charles Beckman
Treasurer James Ambrosio
Business Representative (N. Y.) Bert Popkin
Business Representative 1 Brooklyn ).. Jack Teitler
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
George Magarian. Herman Boritz. Dave Garden.
EXECUTIVE BOARD
Dick Caneellare, Arthur Costigan, Wm. DeSena.
Steve D'Inzillo. Charles F. Eichhorn, Frank Inci-
ardi, Sam Kaplan, Ben Scher, Edgar T. Stewart,
Barry Storin.
Jfusic Publishers' Protective
Association, Inc.
45 Rockefeller Plaza, New York, N". Y.
Circle 6-3084
OFFICERS
President E. H. Morris
Vice-President Lester Santly
Secretary Jack Mills
Treasurer J. J. Bregman
Chairman of the Board Walter G. Douglas
General Manager Harry Fox
National Roard of Review of
Motion Pictures
AND AFFILIATED NATIONAL MOTION
PICTURE COUNCIL
70 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y.
ALgonquin 4-8344
OFFICERS
Chairman Dr. A. A. Brill
Chairman Emeritus Dr. George W. Kirchwey
Treasurer George J. Zehring
Executive Secretary James Shelley Hamilton
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
Dr. Frank Astor. Dr. A. A. Brill, Judge John
R. Davies, Mrs. H. G. Grover, J. K. Paulding,
Dr. Walter W. Pettit, Langdon Post. Mrs. Miriam
Sutro Price. Joseph M. Price. Mrs. Marguerite E.
Schwarzman, Dr. Frederic M. Thrasher, George
J. Zehrung.
Council Secretary Bettina Gunczy
National Film Carriers, Inc.
1228 Vine St., Philadelphia, Pa.
LOcust 4311
110 William St., New York, N. Y.
BEekman 3-7670
OFFICERS
President-Treasurer James P. Clark
Vice-President Thomas W. Gilboy
Secretary Clint Weyer
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
George F. Callahan, James P. Clark, E. E.
Jameson, Harold C. Robinson, John Vickers.
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
H. Keeker. Charles E. McCarthy. L. M. Miller.
F. E. Smith. Charles W. Trampe. H. E. McKin-
ney, W. A. Slater. M. G. Rogers, M. H. Brandon.
A. C. Arnsler, L. D. V. Benton.
National Poster Service
Association, Inc.
301 N. 13th St., Philadelphia, Pa.
LOcust 4245
OFFICERS
President Simon Libros
Vice-President Guy C. Packard
Secretary-Treasurer George P. Aarons
668
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Simon Libros. Chairman: F. H. Beddingfield,
William Bien, Guy C. Packard, J. Bylancik, B. R.
Wolf, J. R. Powers, I. Sokolf, Le Roy Kendis.
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
Simon Libros, E. R. Behrend, I. Sokolf, H.
Schlitt, L. Weinzimer.
National Variety Artists, Inc.
223 W. 46th St., New York, N. Y.
COlumbus 5-2638
OFFICERS
President Louis Handin
1st Vice-President Billy Glason
2nd Vice-President Leon E. Bendon
Treasurer William Marble
DIRECTORS
Harry Brooks, Nick Elliott, Wilbur Held,
Charles Johnson, Charles H. Preston, Lester Rose.
Joe Verdi. Al Edwards.
The New Yorh Film Critics
OFFICERS
Chairman Kate Cameron. Daily News
Secretary Leo Mishkin, Morning: Telegraph
Paramount-Pep Club, Inc.
1601 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
CHIckerlng 4-7040
OFFICERS
President Joseph R. Wood
Vice-President Clarence W. Alexander
Treasurer William Shelpark
Secretary Natalie Bindler
BOARD OF GOVERNORS
Eric H. Ericsson. William J. Clark, Robert M.
Weitman, Oscar A. Morgan. Carl H. Clausen, Eliz-
abeth Scheuer, Bessie Goldsmith, Gladys M.
Bernstein. Helen K. Mandeville.
Screen Actors Guild
7046 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
HOUywood 7311
OFFICERS
President Ralph Morgan
1st Vice-President James Cagney
2nd Vice-President Joan Crawford
3rd Vice-President Edward Arnold
Executive Secretary Kenneth Thomson
Recording Secretary Paul Harvey
Treasurer Porter Hall
Executive Assistants
John Dales, Jr., Pat Somerset
Counsel Laurence W. Beilenson
DIRECTORS
Walter Abel, Beulah Bondi, Ralph Byrd, Pedro
De Cordoba, Dudley Digges, Melvyn Douglas, John
Garfield, Lucile Gleason, Hugh Herbert, Jean Her-
sholt, Howard Hickman, Russell Hicks, Boris
Karloff, Claude King, Peter Lorre, Frank McHugh.
Noel Madison, Robert Montgomery, Jean Muir,
George Murphy, Erin O'Brien-Moore, Irving Pichel,
Elizabeth Risdon, Edwin Stanley, Gloria Stuart,
Franchot Tone. Dorothy Tree, Charles Trowbridge,
Morgan Wallace.
COUNCIL
Larry Steers. Chairman: Major Philip J. Kief-
fer, Vice-Chairman; Adabelle Driver, Secretary:
Sam Appel, Harry Arras, Louis J. Becker, Edward
F. Boyd. Roy Brent, Paul Cook, Eddie Cutler, Bob
Davis, Gordon Downs, Frankie Edmunds, Nellie
Farrell. Jesse Graves. Ed Heim, Jimmv Lonn.
Richard Loo, Theodore Loch, Dorcas McKim, Bill
O'Brien, Patrician Patrick, Max Pollock, Bud Rae
Capt. Fred C. Somers. Harry B. Stafford, Elliot
Sullivan, Florence Wix, Warren Dearborn, Peter
Du Rey, Capt. Charles E. Anderson, Kenneth Gib-
son. Frank Meredith.
ASSOCIATIONS
Screen Directors9 Guild
1525 Cross Roads of the World, Hollywood,
Calif.
Hillside 8165
OFFICERS
President Frank Capra
1st Vice-President W. S. Van Dyke
2nd Vice-President John Cromwell
Secretary Frank Tuttle
Treasurer Phil Rosen
Counsel Mable Walker Willebrandt
Executive Secretary J. P. McGowan
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Frank Capra, W. S. Van Dyke, John Cromwell.
Frank Tuttle, Phil Rosen, John Ford, Rowland
V. Lee, Frank Lloyd, Rouben Mamoulian, Lewis
Milestone, Leo McCarey, King Vidor, William
Wyler, George Marshall, Frank Strayer. Board
Junior Representatives: Joseph McDonough, Hal
Walker. Edward Woehler.
Screen Writers9 Guild, Inc.
Affiliated with the Authors' League of Amer-
ica, Inc.
1655 N. Cherokee Ave., Hollywood, Calif.
GLadstone 4181
OFFICERS
President Sheridan Gibney
Vice-President Sidney Buchman
Secretary Dwight Taylor
Treasurer Boris Ingster
EXECUTIVE BOARD
Ralph Block, Sidney Buchman, Charles Brackett.
Lester Cole. Philip Dunne. Sheridan Gibney, Boris
Ingster, Mary C. McCall. Jr., E. E. Paramore. Jr..
Gertrude Purcell, Wells Root, Dore Schary, Jo
Swerling. Dwight Taylor, Dalton Trumbo. Alter-
nates: Melville Baker. David Hertz, Gladys Leh-
man, Robert Rossen, Milton Sperling, John Wexley.
Counsel Leonard S. Janofsky
Assistant Secretary Ann Roth
Society of Motion Picture
Engineers
Hotel Pennsylvania, New York, N. Y.
PEnnsylvania 6-0620
OFFICERS
President E. A. Williford
Past President S. K. Wolf
Executive Vice-President N. Levineon
Engineering Vice-President D. E. Hyndman
Editorial Vice-President J. I. Crabtree
Financial Vice-President A. S. Dickinson
Convention Vice-President W. C. Kunzmanr.
Secretary J. Frank, Jr.
Treasurer R. O. Strock
GOVERNORS
M. C. Batsel, J. A. Dubray, A. N. Goldsmith,
H. Griffin, P. J. Larsen, L. L. Ryder, A. C. Hardy,
H. G. Tasker.
Studio Electricians and
Sound Technicians
Affiliated with A. F. of L.
Local No. 40, I. B. E. W.
Room 203, 1509 Vine St., Hollywood, Calif.
GRanite 5139
OFFICERS
President Frank McDonald
Treasurer Harold Foss
Business Manager-Recording Secretary .. Al Speede
Financial Secretary Earl Counter
669
ASSOCIATIONS
Theater Equipment Dealers
of America
546 Lincoln St., Denver, Colo.
TAbor 6467
OFFICERS
Secretary H. W. Graham
Asst. Secretary J. Eldon Peek
United Scenic Artists
Local 829, BPDPH of A
251 W. 42nd St., New York, N. Y.
Wisconsin ~-90.'f0
OFFICERS
President James Hotehkiss
Vice-President Howard Bay
Treasurer George Everett
Recording Secretary Arthur Romano
Financial Secretary Charles Roman
Business Representative Fred Marshall
W arner Club, Inc.
381 W. 44th St., New York, N. Y.
Circle 6-1000
OFFICERS
President Nat D. Fellman
Chairman Finance Committee ... Samuel Schneider
V P in chg. ot Membership W. V. Brooks
V-P in chg. of Entertainment Harry Mayer
V-P in chg. of Welfare Ruth Weisberr
V-P in chg. of Claims F. L. Gates
Treasurer Robert Solomons
Assistant Treasurer Sam Wolowiti
Secretary Stuart H. Aaroni
Administrative Secretary I. H. Blrnbaum
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
Stuart H. Aarons, Phil Abrahams. M. B. Black-
man. W. V. Brooks, R. W. Budd. H. M. Doherty.
Nat Fellman. F. L. Gates. E. E. Hinchy, J. T.
Holmes, Bernard Goodman, Jules Levey. T. J.
Martin. Harry Mayer, W. S. McDonald. Dave
Newman. George O'Keefe. Harold Rodner, Arthur
Sachson. R. Salomons. L. Schlesinger, S. Schneider.
A. W. Schwalberg, Miss M. Victorson, Ruth Wein-
berg, Sam Wolowitz.
Western Association of Mo-
tion Picture Advertisers
V. A. Bonesteel, Asst. Secretary
628 N. Vista St., Hollywood, Calif.
OFFICERS
President Oliver B. Garver
1st Vice-President Maxwell Shane
2nd Vice-President Joeeph Reddy
Secretary Lindsley Parson*
Treasurer Wilson B. Heller
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Sam W. B. Cohn. Phil Gersdorf, John LeRoy
Johnston, Mark Larkin, Al Parmenter, Thornton
Sargent. Fred E. Stanley.
EXHIBITOR
ORGANIZATIONS
Motion Picture Theater
Owners of America
1600 Broadway. New York, N. Y.
OFFICERS
President Ed Kuykendall
Vice President Frank C. Walker
Vice-President M. A. Lightman
Vice-President Mitchell Wolf son
Vice-President E. C. Beatty
Vice-President A. Julian Brylawski
Secretary Morris Loewenstein
Treasurer Walter Vincent
General Counsel Frank C. Walker
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Fred Wehrenberp. Chairman: William Benton.
Joseph Bernhard. Frank C. Cassil, E. M. Fay.
Leonard Goldenson. L. C. Griffith, H. V. Harvey,
A. C. Hayman, S. J. Hyman, O. C. Lam, Arthur
H. Lockwood, L. O. Lukan, Sidney B. Lust. Morris
Leonard, Samuel Pinanski. Benjamin Pitts. Lewen
Pizor, E. A. Schiller. Spyros P. Skouras, Lyle M.
Wilson, Major L. E. Thompson. Judge Roy L.
Walker. Charles E. Williams, Hon. R. X. Williams.
Jr.
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
Ed Kuykendall. Morris Loewenstein. Fred Wehr-
enberg, H. V. Harvey, O. C. Lam. Arthur H.
Lockwood, Lewen Pizor, Major L. E. Thompson.
Charles E. Williams.
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
Ed Kuykendall. Frank C. Walker. Walter Vin-
cent. Joseph Bernhard. L. C. Griffith, E. A.
Schiller, Major L. E. Thompson.
Allied States Association of
Motion Picture Exhibitors
Securities Bids., Washington, D. C.
MEtropolltan 5010
President's Address:
2009V-! Jackson St., Dallas, Tex.
OFFICERS
General Counsel and
Chairman of the Board Abram F. Myers
President H. A. Cole
Regional Vice-Presidents Frank C. Lydon.
M. A. Rosenberg, Jack Kirsch, W. Al Steffes
Secretary Charles H. Olive
Financial Secretary H. A. Blum
Treasurer Martin G. Smith
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
Nathan Yarning, H. A. Cole. W. A. Steffes. S. E.
Samuelson, Jack Kirsch, M. A. Rosenberg, Martin
G. Smith; Abram F. Myers — ex officio member.
670
REGIONAL GROUPS
CALIFORNIA
California Theaters
Association, Inc.
25 Taylor St., San Francisco, Calif.
PRospeet 1123
BOARD OF GOVERNORS
A. M. Bowles. Chairman: Herman Wobbsr,
R. A. MoNeill. M. Naify, George Nasser, George
Bole. Aaron Goldberg, Joseph Blumenfleld.
Secretary-Manager Hulda McGinn
Independent Theater Owners
of Northern California
713 Loew's Warfleld Bldg., San Francisco, Calif.
PRospect 6061
OFFICERS
President H. V. Harvey
Vice-President John Di Stasio
Secretary -Treasurer Ben Levin
Assistant Secretary B. E. Kragen
Legal Advisor L. S. Hamm
Regional Vice-President H. C. Oestler
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Morgan A. Walsh, Gerald Harvey. Lawrence
Borg, Sol Lesser, Aaron Goldberg, A. C. H. Cham-
berlin, C. V. Taylor.
Independent Theater Owners
of Southern California
1920 S. Vermont Ave., Los Angeles, Calif.
Rochester 1171
OFFICERS
Executive Director R. H. Poole
Assistant Secretary I. Schreiber
ADVISORY BOARD
Jack Y. Berman, H. W. Bruen, Mrs. Jenne Dodge,
C. A. Ferry. A. Galston, A. L. Gore. R. D. Whit-
son.
CONNECTICUT
Allied Theaters of
Connecticut, Inc.
902 Chapel St., New Haven, Conn.
OFFICERS
President Albert Schuman
1st Vice-President Charles Repas
2nd Vice-President Joseph Reed
Treasurer Barney Calechman
Executive Secretary Lawrence C. Caplan
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Dr. J. B. Fishman, Chairman; Maurice Schulman,
Vice-Chairman; Maurice Bailey, Harry Lavietes.
Sam Hadelman, Morris Jacobson, Charles Repas.
Jack Schwartz, George Comden, Leo Shapiro.
M.P.T.O. of Connecticut
152 Temple St., New Haven, Conn.
OFFICERS
President Arthur H. Lockwood
Vice-President Ted Jacocks
Vice-President Adolph Johnson
Treasurer George H. Wilkinson, Jr.
Executive Secretary Herman M. Levy
DISTRICT OF COLUMRIA
Allied Theater Owners of the
District of Columbia
1331 H St., N. E„ Washington, D. C.
OFFICERS
President C. H. Olive
Secretary W. R. Gingell
Treasurer John H. Hiser
Chairman of the Board. . . .Ashley M. Abendschein
Iff. P. T. O. of the District of
Columbia
702 Earle Bldg., Washington, D. C.
Republic 0800
OFFICERS
President A. Julian Brylawski
Vice-President Sidney Lust
Treasurer William P. Herbst
Secretary Nat B. Browne
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
J. J. Payette, Carter Barron, Hardie Meakin,
Louis Bernheimer, J. W. Cleveland, W. T. Moor,
Drey Hollingsworth, L. J. Wineland.
FLORIDA
Southeastern Theater Owners
Association
Riverside Theater, Jacksonville, Fla.
Telephone 7-3320
OFFICERS
President Milton C. Moore
M. P. T. 0. A. Representative Oscar C. Lam
Secretary Tom Brandon
Treasurer Col. Thomas E. Orr
Vice-President, Florida Harlow Merryday
Vice-President, Georgia J. H. Thompson
Vice-President, Tennessee Hugh Manning
Vice-President, Alabama William R. Griffin
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Alabama: T. E. Watson, Mack Jackson, L. J.
Duncan.
Georgia: Nat Williams, Hal Macon, J. C. H.
Wink, Roy E. Martin, R. B. Wilby, William
Karrh, Violet Edwards. Mrs. H. T. Woods. Mrs.
Louis Bach, Fred Weis, Col. Arthur Lucas.
Florida: Mitchell Wolfson, Fred Mullin, Mina
Manassa, E. J. Sparks.
Tennessee: Abe Borisky, Frank Dowler, Lee
Castelberry.
ILLINOIS
Allied Theaters of Illinois,
Inc.
1325 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago, 111.
Victory 0211
OFFICERS
President Jack Kirsch
Vice-President Van Nomikos
Secretary-Treasurer Joseph Stern
Recording Secretary Louis L. Abramson
Sergeant-at-Arms Harry Nepo
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Jack Kirsch. Van Nomikos, Joseph Stern, Charles
Nelson, Jack Rose, Benj. Lasker, Tippy Harrison,
Ludwig Sussman, Harry Reckas. Abe Gumbiner,
Richard Salkin, Verne Langdon, Sinuel Roberts,
Johnny Jones, Benj. Bartelstein.
Exhibitors9 Association of
Chicago
190 N. State St., Chicago, HI.
STAte 3377
OFFICERS
President-Business Manager. . . .Morris G. Leonard
671
EXHIBITOR GROl PS
INDIANA
Associated Theater Owners
of indiana, Inc.
444 N. Illinois St., Indianapolis, Ind.
LInroln 1130
OFFICERS
President Roy E. Harrold
1st Vice-President Ernest L. Miller
Vice-President, Dist. No. 1 Maurice Rubin
Vice-President. Dist. No. 2 Leonard Sowar
Vice-President, Dist. No. 3 Carl Niesse
Vice-President. Dist. No. 4. . . .Trueman Rembusch
Vice-President. Dist. No. 5 H. H. Johnson
Treasurer Harry Markun
Executive Secretary Don R. Rossiter
Recording Secretary Mrs. Norma C. Todd
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Maurice Rubin. Alex Manta. V. U. Young. H.
Lisle Kreighbaum. William Studebaker. Sam W.
Neall, Leonard Sowar. I. R. Holycross. Carl
Niesse. Harry Markun. E. L. Miller. A. C. Zaring.
Walter Easley, Roy E. Harrold. Trueman Rem-
busch. Joe Schilling. Sam J. Switlow. H. H. John-
son. Oscar Fine. Harry Vonderschmitt : Alternate
Directors: Pete Mailer, Percy Dickson, Frank
Sanders. Paul Meloy, Bruce Kixmiller.
Terre Haute Theaters
Association
Fountain Theater
Terre Baute, Ind.
OFFICER^
President A. H. Kaufman
Vice-President S. P. Katzenbaeh
Secretary Maurice Reinking
IOWA
Allied - Independent Theater
Owners of lowa-Xebraska,
Inc.
Kldora. Ia.
Telephone 249
OFFICERS
President Leo F. Wolcott
Secretary W. A. Dutton
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Leo F. Wolcott. Charles Peterson. Clifford Nile*.
E. M. Garbett. W. A. Dutton, Wesley Mansfield.
E. W. Mason. Phil March. W. B. Franke. W. P.
Grossman. Odes A. B. Hilton, H. E. Rehfield.
KENTUCKY
M. P. T. O. of Kentucky
Rialto Theater, 616 S. 4th St.. Louisville, Ky.
Jackson 8267
OFFICERS
President Fred J. Dolle
Secretary-Treasurer C. W. Krebe
LOUISIANA
Allied Theater Owners of
Louisiana. Inc.
90S Canal St., New Orleans, La,
OFFICERS
President Henry Lazar is
Secretary -Treasurer Joseph Alsina
MARYLAND
Itf. P. T. O. of Maryland
531 N. Howard St., Baltimore, Md.
Vernon 1861
0FF1( Kit-.
President Frank A. Hornig
Vice-President L. C. Garman
Treasurer Herman A. Blum
HOARD OF DIRECTORS
Walter D. Pacy. Arthur B. Price. J. Louis
Rome. Samuel Soltz. Eugene B. McCurdy. Oscar
B. Coblentz, Jr., Harry H. Silver. Julius Goodman.
MASSACHUSETTS
Allied Theaters of Massachu-
setts, Inc.
60 Scollay Square. Boston, Mass.
CApitol 0049
OFFICER^
President Samuel Pinanski
Vice-President John H. Devlin
Treasurer Stanley Sumner
Secretary Joseph H. Brennan
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Samuel Pinanski. M. J. Mullin. Edward A.
Cuddy, Benjamin Domingo. H. M. Addison. John
H. Devlin. B. E. Hoffman. Max Melincoff, Stanley
Sumner. John J. Ford. Col. Al Somerby. James H.
Doyle. John S. Giles. Walter Brown. Joseph H.
Brennan. Harry McDonald, Fred Greenway.
EXECUTIVE BOARD
Samuel Pinanski. John H. Devlin. Harry McDon-
ald. Max Mellincoff. M. J. Mullin, H. M. Addison.
John J. Ford. Stanley Summer. Joseph H. Brennan
Independent Exhibitors, Inc.
20 Shawmut St., Boston, Mass.
Liberty 6855
OFFICERS
President Frank C. Lydon
1st Vice-President Max L. Levenson
2nd Vice-President Wilbur M. Peterson
Secretary Francis M. Perry
Treasurer E. Harold Stoneman
Business Manager Arthur K. Howard
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
Nathan Yamins. Chairman: Massachusetts: Ed-
ward Ansin. Charles F. Hodgdon. Irving Isaacs.
Thomas J. McNulty, W. H. McLaughlin. Daniel
Murphy, Morris Pouzzner. George Ramsdell. Sam
Resnick. Richard B. Rubin. Philip Smith. William
A. Viano, Kenneth Forkey, Leslie Bendslev.
Maine: Richard Flora. New Hampshire: J. E.
Charboneau, Warren Nichols. Vermont : Allard
M. Graves. Rhode Island: John B. Findlay, Martin
Tuohey.
MICHIGAN
Allied Theaters of Michigan,
Inc.
607 Fox Bids.. Detroit. Mich.
CAdillac 3170
OFFICERS
President Ray Branch
Vice-President C. R. Beechler
Secretary-Treasurer Edgar E. Kirchner
Business Manager Pearl M. Sprott
.MINNESOTA
Allied Theater Owners of the
Northtcest, Inc.
World Theater Bldg., Minneapolis, Minn.
BRidgeport 5332
OFFICERS
President W. A. Stefle*
Vice-President E. L. Peaslee
Secretary Ben Ashe
Treasurer Sidney Volt
672
MISSISSIPPI
M. P. T. O. of Mississippi
President's Address:
1008 Van Buren Ave., Oxford, Miss.
Telephone 459
OFFICERS
President R. X. Williams
1st Vice-President W. S. Taylor
2nd Vice-President Grady Cook
Secretary-Treasurer W. S. Tyson
DIRECTORS
M. A. Lightman, W. H. Hurt. J. E. Alford.
H. J. Williams. H. Solomon. B. V. Sheffield, W. A.
Rush, C. E. Noble.
MISSOURI
Kansas- Missouri Theater
Association
221 W. 18th St., Kansas City, Mo.
OFFICERS
President Frank Cassil
Vice-President H. F. Strowig
Secretary Treasurer Fred Meyn
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
J. C. Stapel, Tom Edwards, R. R. Biechele, Gus
Diamond. Tom Wilhoit, Fred Meyn.
M. P. T. O. of St. Louis, East-
ern Missouri and Southern
Illinois
2735 Cherokee St., St. Louis, Mo.
OFFICERS
President Fred Wehrenberg
Vice-President S. E. Pirtle
Vice-President I. W. Rodgers
Vice-President R. C. Cluster
Vice-President Sam Komm
Secretary-Treasurer Louis C. Hehl
Sergeant-atArms Walther A. Thimmig
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Harold W. Evens, Louis J. Menges, L. A. Mer-
cier. H. E. Miller, A. Pappas, Thos. James, Clar-
ence Kaimann, Noah Bloomer, Fred Soutter, Jack
Seipker.
NEBRASKA
M. P. T. O. of Nebraska and
Western Iowa
Park Theater, 516 N. 16th St., Omaha, Neb.
OFFICERS
President C. E. Williams
1st Vice-President H. F. Kennedy
2nd Vice-President D. R. Goldie
3rd Vice-President R. E. Falkenberg
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
D. R. Goldie, R. F. Kehrberg, Walter Creal, R.
E. Falkenberg, Charles Prokop, Sam Epstein, A.
Burrus, Harold Schoonover, J. M. Reynolds, How-
ard Kennedy.
NEW JERSEY
Allied Theater Owners of
New Jersey, Inc.
234 W. 44th St., New York, N. V.
LAckawanna 4-1692
OFFICERS
President Lee Newbury
Vice-President Maury Miller
Vice-President Ralph Wilkini
Secretary Harry Lowenstein
Treasurer David Snaper
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Irving Dollinger, Louis Gold, Frank P. Gravatt.
Harry K. Hecht. Helen B. Hildinger, George Gold.
Harry Kridel, Jacob Unger. Sidney E. Samuelson.
EXHIBITOR GROUPS
NEW YORK
Allied Theater Owners of
New York, Inc.
214 W. 42nd St., New York, N. Y.
Wisconsin 7-0870
OFFICERS
President Max A. Cohen
1st Vice-President Ray Pashley
2nd Vice-President Charles Wilson
Treasurer Joseph Rosenzweig
Secretary Abe Levy
Legal Advisor Edmund Souhami
Assistant Treasurer Thomas De Lorenzo
Buffalo Vice-President Herman Lorence
Syracuse Vice-President R. P. Merriman
New York Vice-President Irving Sherman
Rochester Vice-President William Tishkoff
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Minna G. Rosen, Max Fogel, B. N. Pearlman,
Frank Allen, Sidney L. Grossman, John Gardner,
Walter Neithold, Abe Stone. Joseph G. Abramson.
Independent Theater Owners
Association, Inc.
Hotel Astor, New York, N. Y.
Circle 6-6460
OFFICERS
President Harry Brandt
1st Vice-President David Weinstock
2nd Vice-President Stanley W. Lawton
Treasurer Leon Rosenblatt
Secretary Maurice Brown
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Bernard Pear, Rudolph Sanders, Hyman Rach-
mil. Jack Hattem, Otto Cederer, Abraham Shenk.
Bernard S. Barr, J. Charnow, Arthur Mayer, Ber-
nard Brooks, F. Bregman, Ray Rhonheimer.
Long Island Theater Owners
Association
Hempstead, L. I., N. Y.
iff. P. T. O. of Northern New
York
Congress Theater, Saratoga, N, Y.
OFFICERS
President-Secretary William Benton
M . P. T. ©., State of New
York — Western Zone
505 Pearl St., Buffalo, N. Y.
WAshington 7772
OFFICERS
President and Chairman A. C. Hayman
Vice-President M. Kyser
Treasurer V. R. McFaul
Secretary Marian Gueth
Sergeant-at-Arms J. A. Read
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
V. R. McFaul, J. A. Read, M. Kyser, N. J.
Basil, M. J. Kallet, M. Carr, A. C. Hayman, G.
Gammel. J. Lavene, H. Dillemuth, W. Cadoret,
A. D. Gould.
NORTH CAROLINA
Theater Owners of North and
South Carolina, Inc.
Secretary-Treasurer's Office
216 W. Fourth St., Charlotte, N. C.
Telephone 3-131%
673
EXHIBITOR GROUPS
OFFICERS
President Lyle M. Wilson
Vice-President H. R. Berry
Vice-President F. H. Beddingfield
Secretary -Treasurer Mrs. Walter Griffith
DIRECTORS
Boyd Brown, Robert E. Bryant, H. E. Buchanan,
H. F. Kincey, J. E. Massie, J. F. Miller, George
W. Parr, Charles W. Picquet, Roy Rowe, A. F.
Sams, Jr., Albert Sottile. J. I. Sims, S. S. Steven-
son, C. A. Turnage.
NORTH DAKOTA
North Dakota Theater Own-
ers
Mandan, N. D.
OFFICERS
President F. E. Wetzsteln
Vice-President Maude Weaver
2nd Vice-President E. A. Moe
Secretary J. K. Kennelly
Treasurer Gus Wingreene
Auditor Frank Hollowell
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
G. A. Troyer, F. P. Aamoth, A. B. Cooper, John
Piller. Frank Hollowell, R. D. Joos, J. C. Snyder,
Mrs. M. Lehman, Don Tracy, Julius Overmoe.
OHIO
Cleveland Motion Picture Ex-
hihitors Association, Inc.
2108 Payne Ave., Cleveland, O.
Prospect 9684
OFFICERS
President Ernest Schwartz
Vice-President Albert E. Ptak
Secretary G. W. Erdmann
Treasurer L. G. Baldwin
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
L. G. Baldwin, J. D. Kalafat, Henry Greenberger.
Frank Porozynski, M. Berkowitz, P. E. Essick,
J. Shulman, M. S. Fine, M. Jacobs.
Independent Theater Owners
of Ohio
55 E. State St., Columbus, 0.
AD 8327
OFFICERS
President Martin G. Smith
Vice-President F. W. Huss, Jr.
Vice-President Robert C. Menches
Treasurer Hoy Simons
Secretary P. J. Wood
DIRECTORS
Henry Greenberger. John Kalafat. Nat Charnas.
Harold Bernstein, Max Stearn, Caldwell Brown.
L. F. Eick, Dwight Jones, J. W. Trunk, Joseph
Stern, Jerry Steel, Charles Deckman, Leo Kessel.
PENNSYLVANIA
Allied Independent Theater
Owners of Eastern Penn-
sylvania, Inc.
219 N. Broad St., Philadelphia, Fa.
OFFICERS
Business Manager Sidney E. Samuelson
Secretary E. B. Gregory
Treasurer Ben Fertel
BOARD OF GOVERNORS
Morris Wax, Milton Rogasner, Ben Fertel. Dave
Milgram, Columbus Stamper, E. B. Gregory.
Charles Stiefel. Harry Perelman. Al Fischer. Jo-
seph Conway. Harry Fried, Henry Sork. Thomas
Lazarick, George Ickes, Harry Chertcoff. Alter-
nates: Max Korr, David Segal, Norman Lewis.
M. P. T. O. of Western Penn-
sylvania, Inc.
84 Van Braain St., Pittsburgh, Pa.
Atlantic 1217
OFFICERS
President M. A. Rosenberg
Vice-President E. T. Beedle
Secretary Fred J. Herrington
Treasurer Joseph Gellman
Assistant Secretary Mathilda Kiel
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Dr. C. E. Herman. Chairman: Bennett Amdur.
Peter Antonoplos. Frank Panoplos, Carl A. Poke,
Israel Roth, M. N. Shapiro, William J. Walker.
William R. Wheat. Jr., George Corcoran, Charles
R. Blatt.
United Motion Picture Thea-
ter Owners of Pennsyl-
vania, Southern New
Jersey and Delaware, Inc.
301 N. 13th St., Philadelphia, Pa.
LOcust 4245
OFFICERS
President Lewen Pizor
1st Vice-President Edward A. Jeffries
2nd Vice-President William I. Greenfield
Treasurer Morris Spiers
Secretary George P. Aarons
Chairman of the Board Charles Segall
BOARD OF MANAGERS
Abe Sablosky, Lewen Pizor, Charles Segall.
Ray O'Rourke. Joseph S. Hebrew, Harry I. Wax-
man, Ed Connelly, Oscar Stiefel. Thomas Brislin.
Leon Posel, Ted Schlanger, Sam Shapiro, Her-
man Coane, Sam Stiefel. Henry Friedman, Wil-
liam I. Greenfield, R. J. Budd, Edward A. Jef-
fries. William M. Hissner. M. H. Egnal, Joseph
Wodock, Lew Segall, Ralph Sobelson, M. J.
O'Toole. John Monroe. Morris Spiers, Lewis Gold
smith.
RHODE ISLAND
Allied Theater Owners of
Rhode Island, Inc.
Secretary's Address:
United Theater, Westerly, R. I.
Telephone 2742
OFFICERS
President Martin R. Toohey
Vice-President Abe Spitz
Secretary John B. Findlay
Treasurer Charles William
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Anthony Ramono, Milton Bomes. Sr., A. Gould.
Peter Nelson.
M. P. T. O. of Rhode Island
60 Union St., Providence, R. I.
DExter 6500
OFFICER
President Edward M. Fay
SOUTH DAKOTA
South Dakota Theater Own-
ers Association
Canton, 8. D.
OFFICERS
President Dean Nash
674
Vice-President
Secretary-Treasurer. ,
... J. L. Anderioo
. .A. P. Sorenson
BOARD OF GOVERNORS
Ike Sorenson, Ralph Bloom, Charles Lee Hyde,
Robert Hippie, Bert Johnson.
TENNESSEE
iff. P. T. O. of Arkansas, Mis-
sissippi and Tennessee
President's Address:
Oxford, Miss.
OFFICERS
President R. W. Williams. Jr.
Regional Vice-Presidents R. B. Cox,
L. F. Haven. W. F. Ruffln
Secretary -Treasurer W. S. Tyson
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
M. A. Lightman, Chairman: W. L. Landers, Jr.,
K. K. King, J. F. Norman, M. S. McCord, Cecil
Cupp, Sidney Wharton, W Earl Elkin, W. S.
Taylor, Dave Flexer, Fred Ford, Cecil Vogel.
TEXAS
Allied Theater Owners of
Texas
2009H Jackson St., Dallas, Tex.
OFFICERS
President H. A. Cole
1st Vice-President Henry Hall
2d Vice-President Mrs. M. McSpadden
3rd Vice-President R. N. Smith
4th Vice-President Rubin Frels
Secretary-Treasurer A. W. Lilly
Office Manager J. M. Reynolds
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
T. W. Lewis, Will Dorbandt, P. V. Williams.
Homer Mulkey, L. C. Tidball, Lonny Legg, Roy
Howell, Will Chesher, Ray Jennings, Mrs. Tom
Donnell, C. M. Cooper, Henry Sparks.
UTAH
Intermountain Theaters
Association
Continental Bank Bldg., Salt Lake City, V.
WAsatch 4112
OFFICERS
President John Rugar
Vice-President George Smith
Counsel, Secretary-Treasurer. Beverly S. Clendenin
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
John Rugar, J. J. Gillete, I. H. Harris, E. H.
Harris. Joseph L. Lawrence, Paul DeMordaunt,
George Smith.
VIRGINIA
M . P. T. O. of Virginia, Inc.
P. O. Box 693, Richmond, V».
OFFICERS
President W. F. Crockett
Vice-President Benjamin T. Pitts
Secretary Harold E. Wood
Treasurer Sam Bendheim, Jr
DIRECTORS
C. L. Abercrombie, D. F. Aleshire, Sam Bend-
heim. Jr., A. Julian Brylawski, W. A. Byers, J. C.
Caldwell, W F. Crockett, J. Frank Falls, Sydney
Gates, Nat Glasser, Leonard Gordon, Elmore Heins,
Jeff Hofheimer, Robert Levine, A. E. Lichtman,
Elison Loth, H. M. Moody, A. Frank O'Brien, R.
C. Overbey, Hunter Perry, Benjamin T. Pitts, W.
H. Rippard, Charles Roth, Herman Rubin, Charles
A. Somma, Allen Sparrow, Frank B. Stover, Mor-
ton G. Thalhimer, E. T. Warner, Dan Weinberg,
William S. Wilder, Harold Wood.
EXHIBITOR GROUPS
WASHINGTON
Independent Theater Owners
of Washington, Northern
Idaho, and Alaska
2323 Second Ave., Seattle, Wash.
MAin 6554
Executive Secretary J. M. Hone
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
M. Kenworthy, H. D. McBride, Charley Grieme,
C. L. Gwinn, W. G. Ripley, Mike Barovic, S. P.
Dean, Gene Groesbeck, Ed Halberg, Fred Mercy,
Jr., B. F. Shearer, John Danz, Paul Westlund, L.
O. Lukan, Leroy V. Johnson (Treasurer).
WISCONSIN
Independent Theaters Pro-
tective Association of
Wisconsin and Upper
Michigan
709 N. Eleventh St., Milwaukee, Wise.
MArquette 6696
OFFICERS
President William L. Ainsworth
Vice-President A. C. Gutenberg
Secretary Max Krofta
Treasurer Harold Mirisch
Business Manager Harry Perlewitz
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
William L. Ainsworth, A. C. Gutenberg, Max
Krofta. Harold Mirisch, Ross Baldwin, William
Smith, A. C. Berkholtz, Ben Marcus, J. P. Adler.
CANADA
Allied Exhibitors of Nova
Scotia
Secretary-Treasurer's Address:
Casino Theater, Halifax, N. S.
OFFICERS
President W. H. Cuzner
Vice-President Fred Sobey
Secretary-Treasurer T. J. Courtney
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
A. J. Mason, Fred Gregor, N. W. Mason, A. A.
Fielding, E. R. Lynn.
Allied Exhibitors of Ontario
277 Victoria St., Toronto, Canada
Waverley 8621
OFFICERS
Secretary V. Simons
General Manager Oscar R. Hanson
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
A. Bailie, T. H. Moorehead, P. J. Greenlees,
G. Miller.
Associated Theaters, Ltd.
277 Victoria St., Toronto, Canada
Waverley 8621
OFFICERS
General Manager Oscar R. Hanson
Assistant General Manager H. T. Long
Independent Theaters
Association
21 Dundas Square, Toronto, Ont.
OFFICERS
President H. Alexander
Vice-President N. A. Taylor
Secretary M. L. Axler
Treasurer T. Walton
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
H. Alexander, N. A. Taylor, M. L. Axler, T.
Walton, H. Firestone, S. Ulster. B. Ulster, A.
Polakoff, H. Kay, J. O. Scott.
675
the
Matiaa Picture
with
STILLS
SLIDES
AD PHOTOS
and
COPIES
MASTER PHOTOGRAPHERS
INCORPORATED
Samuel Stern, President
443-445 West 41st Street
New York, N. Y.
BRyant 9-0690
676
677
Television Progress
During 1939
By
= THOMAS H. HUTCHINSON
Mgr. Television Program Division,
National Broadcasting Co.
(Reprinted from the 1940 Radio Annual)
WRITING of progress in television program production during 1939 is to
chronicle its beginning under the rigorous demands of public service tele-
casting. For it was in this year that all the experience gathered in three years of
experimental telecasting was put to test in the day-to-day operations of a going
television service.
With this backlog oi experience, which will
undoubtedly be of vast importance to other
telecasters when they decide to go on the air,
was inaugurated NBC's regular program ser-
vice on April 30, 1939. Four days later, on
May 3, American television's historic "First
Night" went out over the air through Station
W2XBS. Since that time many months have
passed.
Surveying these months, many errors in
both technique and choice of program material
must be admitted. That is the hard lot of the
trail blazer. Each fruitful experiment grows
from the failures of many other experiments.
But progress there has been. I am sure that
everyone who has followed NBC service from
its inception will agree that in December it
had a certain finesse that was absent in May.
In part this has been due to a closer coopera-
tion between director and technician, in part
to the facility that comes of handling cameras
and program materials five days a week.
Finally, we. have explored more thoroughly
than ever before the limitations and qualities
inherent in present-day television.
Our choice of material has likewise taken
a turn for the better. We realized as well as
the most critical viewer that the variety pro-
grams of May and June were not the answer
to television's problem. Straight vaudeville,
in fact, is unsuited to the new art, at least
within the technical framework of today's
television. The telecast drama, on the other
hand, has definitely proved itself. We have
accordingly concentrated much attention on it.
Our next problem is to bring other types of
program up to the quality of these drama-casts.
Looking to the immediate future, I believe
that we cannot too soon establish an experi-
mental laboratory series for the testing of all
sorts of program material prepared especially
for television. That, we believe, is the only
way we shall learn exactly what it is that
distinguishes television from radio, the theater
and motion pictures.
1939
Television Program
Highlights
Jan. 27, 1939— NBC-RCA gives first demonstration of
modern electronic television at Washington, D. C,
for members of the government, the diplomatic
corps and scientific societies.
Mar. 21 — After extensive alteration and improvement
of studio equipment and transmitter, NBC begins
final series of experimental telecasts before inaug-
urating regular public service.
Apr. 30 — Television broadcasting as a regular public
service launched by NBC with telecast of Presi-
dent Franklin D. Roosevelt, Governor Herbert H.
Lehman, Mayor Fiorello LaCuardia, Sir Lewis Beale
and Grover Whalen, formally opening the New
York World's Fair of 1939 from Flushing, L. I.
May 3 — Television First Night, first studio program
telecast from Radio City over Station W2XBS in
the regular public service. Fred Waring and
His Pennsylvanians; Marcy Wescott and Richard
Rodgers; "The Unexpected," with Marjorie Clarke,
Earle Larimore and David More; informal inter-
views from the New York World's Fair; "NBC
Tele-Topics" and Walt Disney's "Donald's Cousin
Gus."
May 17 — First telecast baseball game, Princeton Uni-
versity vs. Columbia University, at Baker Field.
Bill Stern, announcer.
— First telecast Fashion show, presented in coop-
eration with the Swiss Fabric Group.
May 20 — Six Day Bicycle Race telecast from Madison
Square Garden. First American television relay
over telephone wires.
May 26 — IC-AAAA track meet telecast from Tri-
borough Stadium, Randall's Island.
May 30 — Decoration Day Parade.
678
June 1 — First telecast professional boxing contest,
Lou Nova vs. Max Baer, at Yankee Stadium. Sam
Taub, announcer.
June 7 — First program in Television Debuts series
telecast over Station W2XBS.
June 10 — Visit of King George VI and Queen Elizabeth
telecast from World's Fair.
June 20 — NBC inaugurates 10-hour weekly schedule.
— First full hour production, "The Pirates of
Penzance," telecast over Station W2XBS.
June 29 — First full hour drama, "The Donovan Affair,"
by Owen Davis, telecast by NBC.
July 5 — NBC telecasts its first feature film, "The
Heart of New York," as a regular public service
telecast.
July 25 — "Topsy and Eva," starring the Duncan Sisters,
telecast as first full-hour musical comedy.
Aug. 9 — First tennis telecast. Eastern Crass Court
Championships, from Westchester Country Club,
Rye, N. Y.
Aug. 23 — First episode of "The Lost Jungle," film
serial, telecast over NBC.
Aug. 26 — First telecast of major league baseball, the
Brooklyn Dodgers vs. the Cincinnati Reds double-
header, from Ebbets Field, Brooklyn.
Sept. 19 — "As Others See Us," first original television
revue, by Norman Zeno and Lew Daly, telecast
by NBC.
Sept. 30 — First telecast football game, Fordham Uni-
versity vs. Waynesburg College, at Triborough
Stadium, Randall's Island.
Oct. 13 — "The Great Train Robbery," early motion
picture, telecast by NBC.
Oct. 17 — Program transmitted by NBC in New York
City received in an airplane over Washington,
D. C, at an altitude of 22,000 feet and a distance
of 200 miles.
Oct. 21 — Weekly boxing telecasts from the Ridgewood
Crove Sporting Club begin over NBC.
Oct. 22 — First telecast professional football, Brooklyn
Dodgers vs. Philadelphia Eagles, from Ebbett's
Field, Brooklyn.
Nov. 1 — Tony Canzoneri-AI Davis boxing bout telecast
by NBC from Madison Square Garden.
Nov. 4 — "Treasure Island," dramatized by Donald
Davis, telecast.
Nov. 23 — Macy's 15th annual Thanksgiving Day Parade
telecast for first time.
Dec. 11 — Finals of the New York Journal and Amer-
ican's Diamond Belt boxing bouts, television's first
amateur tournament, telecast by NBC from Madi-
son Square Garden.
CBS Television
Developments
By
ADRIAN MURPHY
Executive Director of Television
Columbia Broadcasting System
(Reprinted from the 1940 Radio Annual)
THE Columbia Broadcasting System will completely revise and to a large
extent replace its initial studio equipment in preparation for actual television
broadcasting. More sensitive studio cameras have been ordered, major revisions
will be made in the present studio facilities, and work is going forward on a new-
type mobile unit for covering outside events.
Since November, 1939 the CBS high power ,
television transmitter afop the Chrysler Build- physical flexibility required by Columbia s
ing has been sending test patterns, and con- approach to the program problem. The five
stant adjustments have been made, producing additional cameras when used for multiple
a marked improvement in the quality of P>ckuP wil1 Permif Production of highly corn-
transmission. Plex Programs.
Four of the new cameras to be installed will Work is now under way on a new-type
employ a new kind of electronic tube which mobile unit which, when completed in 1940,
is expected to require only a fraction of the CBS will use to cover outside events. Applica-
light needed for present cameras and which tion for a construction permit for this mobile
will have truer black and white response to unit, which will operate between 336.000-
the color spectrum. A fifth camera, developed 348,000 kilocycles, has been made to the Fed-
in the Columbia laboratories, is serving as a eral Communications Commission. The unit
test unit for new optical and physical controls will carry three new-type cameras of its own
later to be incorporated in the other four. and will be completely independent of outside
These special controls, according to Gilbert power sources, enabling it, while in motion,
Seldes, CBS director of television programs, to pick up and transmit both pictures and
have proved essential for the optical and sound.
679
TELEVISION
S TAT IONS
Group A — 2000 to 2100 kc; Group B — 42000 to 56000 kc; Group C — 60000 to 86000 kc.;
Group D — -Any 6000 kc. frequency band above 110000 kc. excluding 400000 to 401000 kc.
Call Frequency (kc) POWER
Licensee and Location Letters or Group Visual Aural
Columbia Broadcasting System
New York. N. Y W2XAB B. C 50 w (CP only)
Don Lee Broadcasting System CP. 7500 7500
Los Angeles, Calif W6XAO B, C (44000-50000) 1000 w 150 w
CP. T-Hollywood
Don Lee Broadcasting System
Portable-Area of Los Angeles. Calif .... W6XDD (321000-327000) 6.5 w (CP only)
Allen B. DuMont Laboratories, Inc.
New York, N. Y W10XKT D (156000-162000) 50 w (CP only)
Allen B. DuMont Laboratories, Inc.
Passaic, N. J W2XVT B 50 w 50 w
First National Television, Inc.
Kansas City, Mo W9XAL B, C 300 w 150 w
General Electric Co.
Albany, N. Y W2XB C 10000 w 3000 w
General Electric Co.
Bridgeport, Conn W1XA C 10000 w 3000 w
(CP only)
General Electric Co.
Schenectady, N. Y W2XH B 40 w (CP only)
General Television Corp.
Boston, Mass W1XG B, C 500 w
National Broadcasting Co., Inc.
New York, N. Y W2XBS B, C 12 kw 15 kw
National Broadcasting Co., Inc.
Portable — Camden, N. J.
New York, N. Y W2XBT D (92000, 175000-180000) 400 w 100 w
Philco Radio & Television Corp. S. A. (156000-162000)
Philadelphia, Pa W3XE B. C 10 kw 10 kw
Philco Radio & Television Corp.
Philadelphia, Pa W3XP D (204000 210000) 15 w
Purdue University
West Lafayette, Ind W9XG A 1500 w
Radio Pictures, Inc.
Long Island City, N. Y W2XDR B, C 1 kw 500 w
RCA Mfg. Co., Inc. (Portable)
Bldg. No. 8 of Camden Plant W3XAD (321000-327000) 500 w 500 w
RCA Mfg. Co., Inc.
Camden, N. J W3XEP B, C 30 kw .30 kw
University of Iowa
Iowa City, Iowa W9XK A 100 w
University of Iowa
Iowa City, Iowa W9XUI B, C 100 w
Zenith Radio Corp.
Chicago, 111 W9XZV B, C 1000 w 1000 w
Pending Applications
POWER
Licensee and Location Frequency Visual Aural
Earle C. Anthony. Inc 50000-56000 1000 w 1000 w
Los Angeles, Calif.
Bamberger Broadcasting Service 84000-90000 1000 w 1000 w
New York, N. Y.
Columbia Broadcasting System, Inc Visual: 336.000-346.000 25 w25 w
Portable-area of New York, N. Y. Aural: 180.000-186,000 25 w
Crosley Corp 44000-50000 1000 w 1000 w
Cincinnati, Ohio
Don Lee Broadcasting System 44000-50000 1000 w 1000 w
San Francisco, Calif.
Allen B. DuMont Laboratories, Inc 44000-50000 1000 w 1000 w
Washington, D. C.
Allen B. DuMont Laboratories, Inc 78000-84000 1000 w 1000 w
New York, N. Y.
680
100 w
Des Moines, la.
Aural: 49760
100 w
06000-72000
1000 w
Fort Wayne. Ind.
50000-56000
1000 w
1000 w
Sacramento. Calif.
50000-56000
1000 w
1000 w
Milwaukee W^sc.
Kansas State College of Agriculture and
42000-56000
100 w
100 w
Manhattan, Kans.
B. B. Shapiro. F. P. Shapiro & H. Shapiro.
50000-56000, 60000-72000
1000 w
1000 w
Los Angeles, Calif.
102000-108000
1000 w
1000 w
New York, N. Y.
. . .50000-56000
1000 w
500 w
Kansas City, Mo.
66000 72000
1000 w
1000 w
Los Angeles, Calif.
84000-90000
1000 w
1000 w
Avon, Conn.
1550
250 w
250 w
Springfield. Mass.
78000-84000
1000 w
1000 w
Philadelphia, Pa.
96000-102000
1000 w
1000 w
Meriden, Conn.
TELEVISION
ALLOCATION TABLE
The following table was proposed to the federal Communications Com-
mission by its Television Committee on Nov. 15, 1939. The material con-
tained herein is suggested as a guide for the Commission, but is by no means
to be a hard and fast distribution of facilities.
Metropolitan
District Population
Lowell-Lawrence 332,028
Boston 2,307,897
Providence 963,686
Worcester 305.293
Springfield 398.991
Hartford 471.185
Waterbury 140.676
New Haven 293.724
Bridgeport 203.969
New York 10,901.424
Trenton 190,219
Philadelphia 2,847,148
Wilmington 163,592
Atlantic City 102.024
Baltimore 949,247
Washington 621,059
Scranton 652,312
Reading 170.486
Harrisburg 161.672
Lancaster 123.156
Allentown 322.172
Albany 426.259
Buffalo 820.673
Area
Square
Miles
292
1023
818
400
519
565
207
249
169
2514
173
994
229
53
659
485
395
167
130
232
336
472
459
Channel
1
4
6
7
5
7
6
3
5
7
1
2
4
6
3
5
7
6
6
7
4
1
6
7
6
7
Power
kw.
0.1
10
1
0.1
1
0.1
1
1
1
1
10
10
1
0.1
10
10
1
0.1
1
1
10
1
1
0.1
0.1
1
1
10
1
(feet)
Antenna
Height
250
600
250
250*
250
250*
250
500
250
250
1000
1000
500
250
500
500
250
250
250
260
500
250
250
250
250
260
600
600
250
681
Detroit 2,104,764
Cleveland 1,194.989
Chicago 4,364,755
Pittsburgh 1,953.668
Utica 190.918
Binghamton 130,005
Rochester 398.591
Syracuse 245,015
Altoona 114.232
Johnstown 147.611
Erie 129.817
Youngstown 364,560
Akron 346.681
Canton 191.231
Wheeling 190.623
Columbus 340.400
Dayton 251,928
Cincinnati 759,464
Racine 133.463
Milwaukee 743,414
Rockford 103,204
Flint 179.939
Grand Rapids 207.154
South Bend 146.569
Ft. Wayne 126.558
Louisville 404,396
Charleston 108.160
Huntington 163.367
Richmond 220.513
Norfolk 273.233
Roanoke 103.120
Evansville 123.130
St. Louis 1.293,516
Indianapolis 417,685
Toledo 346,530
Peoria 144,732
Davenrfort 164.491
Kansas City 608,186
Omaha 372,851
Des Moines 160.963
Minneapolis, St. Paul 832.268
Duluth 155.390
Wichita 119.174
Tulsa 183.207
Oklahoma City 202.163
Dallas 309.658
Ft. Worth 174,575
Houston 339,216
San Antonio 279.271
Knoxville 135.714
Nashville 209.422
Chattanooga 168.589
Atlanta 370.920
Birmingham 382.792
Memphis 276.126
Jacksonville 148.713
Tampa 169.010
Miami 132,189
Savannah 105.431
Little Rock 113.137
New Orleans 494.877
Denver 330.761
Salt Lake City 184.451
El Paso 118.461
Spokane 128.798
Seattle 3=52*SS?
Tacoma 146.771
Portland 378.728
San Francisco 1.290,094
Sacramento 126,995
San Jose 103.428
Los Angeles 2,318,626
San Diego 181.020
747
310
1119
1626
358
183
304
140
133
180
89
363
243
238
399
219
180
520
185
242
139
141
136
154
139
464
277
264
335
469
231
149
822
312
204
106
127
455
205
203
525
444
143
391
181
504
171
799
467
193
323
490
221
308
221
218
266
112
370
109
287
305
451
291
270
210
191
277
826
462
210
1474
332
1
3
6
2
4
6
1
3
5
1
4
6
3
3
3
4
5
3
3
6
7
3
7
3
5
2
4
7
2
4
4
4
4
2
3
5
1
3
2
1
3
3
2
4
6
6
6
4
2
2
4
1
3
2
4
1
1
1
1
1
3
1
1
1
3
2
1
3
1
1
2
1
2
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
3
2
1
3
5
4
7
1
3
5
4
10
1
1
10
1
1
10
10
1
10
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
10
I
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
10
1
1
1
1
1
1
10
1
1
1
10
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
10
1
1
1
1
10
1
1
1
500
500
250
600
250
250
1000
500
500
500
500
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
500
250
250
500
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
500
250
250
260
250
250
250
500
250
250
250
500
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
250
500
500
250
250
250
500
500
250
250
682
MELEVISIOIV STANDARDS
SB
THE First Report of the Television Committee of the Federal Communications
Commission, issued on May 22, 1939, was the result of the request of the
Radio Manufacturers Association for approval of the technical standards pro-
posed by that association in September 1938. The report itself is a careful study
of the question of standards as made by the Committee in Washington and in
the field at various television laboratories.
While it commends the engineers of the
RMA for their "contribution and honest efforts
in the interests of orderly progress in the
development of the technical aspects of tele-
vision" and states that "it is entirely possible
that the technical quality of television produced
in accordance with the proposed standards
may be accepted by the public as a practical
beginning," the report contends that it would
be hazardous to both the best interests of the
industry and the public to attempt by adminis-
trative fiat to freeze the art at this stage of its
development.
The Committee declared that the proposed
standards do not contain a maximum degree
of flexibility and that additional research may
prove advantageous. Of the four definite
recommendations, the first specifically refers
to the RMA standards and is as follows:
"That the Federal Communications Commis-
sion neither approve or disapprove the stan-
dards proposed by the Radio Manufacturers
Association. This recommendation is made
first because the Commission by law is re-
quired to grant licenses to applicants for tele-
vision stations, who prove that the granting
of such applications would be in the public
interest, and, second, because it appears unde-
sirable to take any action which discourages
private enterprise or which decreases the
incentive for undertaking research to effect
further improvements.
"The Committee suggests that in taking this
action the public be informed that in failing
to approve the standards the Commission does
not believe the proposed standards to be ob-
jectionable as a phase of a rapidly developing
service. The public should also be informed
that the Commission desires to be free to
prescribe better performance for the trans-
mitters it may license in the future when and
if such improvements are proved to be in the
interest of the public.
"Also, in making this recommendation the
Committee suggests that it be made clear that
the proposed standards do not at this time
appear suitable for the 12 undeveloped higher
frequency channels reserved for television."
The proposed television transmission stan-
dards as presented to the FCC by the Radio
Manufacturers Association are as follows:
T-101 = Television Channel Width
The standard television channel shall not be less
than 6 megacycles in width.
T-102 = Television and Sound Carrier Spacing
It shall be standard to separate the sound and
picture carriers by approximately 4.5 Mc. This
standard shall go into effect just as soon as "single
side band" operation at the transmitter is prac-
ticable. (The previous standard of approximately
3.25 Mc. shall be superseded.)
T-103 = Sound Carrier and Television Carrier
Relation
It shall be standard in a television channel to
place the sound carrier at a higher frequency than
the television carrier.
T-104 = Position of Sound Carrier
It shall be standard to locate the sound carrier
for a television channel 0.25 Mc. lower than the
upper frequency limit of the channel.
T-105 = Polarity of Transmission
It shall be standard for a decrease in initial light
intensity to cause an increase in the radiated power.
(See Standard M9-121.)
T-106 = Frame Frequency
It shall be standard to use a frame frequency of
30 per second and a field frequency of 60 per
second, interlaced.
T-107 = Number of Lines per Frame
It shall be standard to use 441 lines per frame.
T-108 = Aspect Radio
The standard picture aspect ratio shall be 4:3.
T-109 = Percentage of Television Signal De-
voted to Synchronization
If the peak amplitude of the radio frequency
television signal is taken as 100 per cent, it shall
be standard to use not less than 20 per cent nor
more than 25 per cent of the total amplitude for
synchronizing pulses.
T-110 = Method of Transmission
It shall be standard in television transmission
that black shall be represented by a definite carrier
level independent of light and shade in the picture.
T-lll = Synchronizing
The standard synchronizing signals shall be as
shown on Drawing T-lll.
T-l 12 = Transmitter Modulation Capability
If the peak amplitude of the radio frequency
television signal is taken as 100 per cent, it shall
be standard for the signal amplitude to drop to
25 per cent or less of peak amplitude for maximum
white.
T-l 13 = Transmitter Output Rating
It shall be standard, in order to correspond as
nearly as possible to equivalent rating of sound
transmitters, that the power of television picture
transmitters be nominally rated at the output ter-
minals in peak power divided by four.
T-l 14 = Relative Radiated Power for Picture
and for Sound
It shall be standard to have the radiated power
for the picture approximately the same as for
sound.
683
elevision Headline:
The following headlines were taken from the files of RADIO DAILY.
JANUARY
Jan. 10 — Four Television Licenses Are Granted to
General Electric.
FEBRUARY
Feb. 8— NBC's Tele Scripts Ready for "Shooting-."
Feb. 23 — -Fort Wayne Expects Much Television
Activity.
Feb. 27 — Baird's Television Invasion: Important
English Firm to Establish Giant Screen Pro-
jection Suitable for Theater Audiences.
MARCH
Mar. 6 — Fort Wayne Television Center: Farns-
worth Moving Entire Facilities and Will Erect
Huge Transmitter: To Retain Philly Office.
Mar. 0 — -Advanced German Television Seeks Ex-
port Trade: Own Market Nil.
Mar. 10 — Baird Television (Will Raise) $2,000,000
for Further Expansion.
Mar. 14 — DuMont Television Opening Transmit-
ter April 1.
Mar. 22 — New Television Attachment for Radio
Receivers Announced by Wald Radio & Tele
vision Laboratories.
Mar. 23 — CBS Reveals Television Setup: Expects
to be Ready to Begin Active Television on a
Test Schedule, but Will Not Tie Dp With
Fair.
Mar. 30 — Still Larger Television Screens Predicted
by English Firm (Scophony).
Mar. 31 — Film Television Scanner Ironed Out bv
CBS.
APRIL
Apr. 5 — Baird Theater-Television Showing Will
Get Under Way May 15.
Apr. 7 — Stewart-Warner Television Reality This
Spring.
Apr. 10 — BBC New Television Budget Upped to
$2,500,000.
Apr. 11 — Zenith Tells Dealers Television Is Still
In Offing.
Apr. 13 — FCC Television Committee Opens Ac-
tive Survey.
Apr. 14 — FCC Television Committee Is Wary on
"Standards."
Apr. 17 — Reception Is No Problem, Says Philco
Television Head.
Apr. 18 — First U. S. Television Schedule Is Com-
pleted by NBC.
Apr. 21 — RCA Television Sets May 1; Prices $300
to $600.
Home Video Accepted Says BBC's Director.
Sarnoff Makes Urgent Plea for Radio-Tele-
vision-Picture Cooperation.
Apr. 24 — Picture Standards Okay for Television
Purposes.
McDonald Television Fight Carried to NAB.
Apr. 25 — Major Film Concerns to Refuse Tele-
vision Pictures.
Apr. 27 — Crosley Explains Television Setup; Has
Already Built Receivers.
Apr. 28 — Television Rounds the "Corner": Pro-
duction Cost Estimated by NBC at $2,500
per Hour; Advertisers Interested Unofficially.
MAT
May 1 — Television Stars at the Fair: Huge Crowds
Attracted to Television on Grounds While
Millions Hear Ceremonies on the Air. Baird
Television Co. Eyes U. S. Equipment Sales.
May 2 — Two Types of Television Programs Mulled
by RCA; Home and Theater.
May 6 — ASCAP Holds Television Rights: Reso-
lution by Board Says Society Will Administer
Such Licenses but Not in the Near Future.
Television Covering United States Possible
with New Technique: Boosters.
General Electric Television Begins in Two
Weeks: Other Manufacturers Set Plans.
May 9 — DuMont Planning to Install Penthouse
Television Transmitter.
May 10 — New Television Lighting System Devised
by NBC Engineer.
Waldorf-Astoria Hotel Installs Television Sets
for Its Guests.
May 11 — Fair Television Draws 300.000: Exhibit
of RCA-NBC Attracts Most of the Television-
Minded Visitors During First Nine Days.
May 15 — British Television Solved Two Major
Problems.
See New York as Television Mecca Due to
Big Population.
May 16 — Suggests Television Pool of U. S. Experi-
ments.
General Electric Merges Its Radio and Tele-
vision Activities.
May 17 — Asks Advertisers' Aid in Television Pres-
entations.
May 18 — Mutual Assistance Plans Proposed for
Television-Films.
May 19 — Don Lee Television Going to 441 Lines.
May 22 — Screen Actors Guild to Fight Equity on
Television Jurisdiction.
Concerted Rush on to Buy Television Talent.
May 23 — "Network Television" Hopes Rise: Fol-
lowing Success on One Mile Phone Wire
Engineers Plan New Tests in Seeking Cable
Substitute.
Radio-Script Writers Want Full Television
Rights.
May 25 — Hold Off Television Standards: in Ac-
cord with Industry Testimony FCC Commit-
tee Avoids "Freezing" Until Further Devel-
opments.
May 26 — Seek Interstate Law Change Due to
Television.
May 29 — Majestic Television License Issued by
DuMont Laboratories.
May 31 — Television Experimenting with 16 mm.
Films.
JUNE
June 1 — Dailies Near Record in Giving Television
Space.
June 2 — American Television Co. New Set to
Retail for $185.
June 5 — British Television Control Stays with
the British Broadcasting Corp.
June 8 — New RCA Television Tube Is Announced;
No Receiver Change.
June 9 — Television Status Today: Activity Preva-
lent in Key Centers as Public Evinces Keen
Interest Throughout the Country. (RADIO
DAILY'S Television Issue.)
June 13— See Commercial Television as Need to
Progress.
June 14 — Radio, Television and Facsimile to High-
light Army Maneuvers.
Large Television Screens Still Inveigle British.
June 16 — Two Television Improvements Are
Shown by Philco.
June 19 — Large Television Screen in First U. S.
Showing.
684
June 20 — AFM Seeks Remote Credits: Also Full
Television Disk Powers.
June 21 — RCA Bearing Brunt of Television Ex-
ploitation.
June 22 — Canada Holds Rule on Non-Profit Tele-
vision.
June 26 — Inter Store Television Pictures on Com-
mercial Basis.
June 27 — DuMont Speeds Television on 882-Line
Setup.
June 29 — NBC-RCA Television Schedule Revised
for Summer.
June 30 — First Television Network Links RCA
with General Electric.
JULY
July 6 — ASCAP Readies Talks for Television Li-
censes .
July 21 — NBC Television Talent Cost $115,000
During: First Year.
July 25 — Form Wired Television Group: Otterson
Heads New Film Planning- to Install Wired
Television System as Feasible Method.
AUGUST
Aug-. 8 — WOR Files Television Construction Per-
mit for Midtown Station.
Aug. 9 — Web Television Plans Proceed: RCA-NBC
Going Ahead with General Electric Tieup
with First Link Ready in Fall; G. E. Reports
185-Mile Pickup.
Aug. 15 — Newspapers Urged to Seek Television
Control (In Editor & Publisher Article).
Aug. 17 — Huge Television Drive: Greatest Tele-
vision Activity to Date Set for Fall Season:
Appropriations Lead All Other Nations.
Aug. 23 — Department Store Inaugurates Intra-
Store Wired Television.
SEPTEMBER
Sept. 1 — Television Gains Impetus with Today's
Schedule.
Sept. 12 — WCAU Application for Television Li-
cense Is Filed.
Sept. 21 — NBC Perfecting Television Commercial
Standards.
Sept. 22 — General Electric Patent Agreement Re-
vises Television Status.
Sept. 26 — Television Promotion Intensified by
RCA.
Sept. 28 — Femme Product Firms Lead on Televi-
sion Cooperation.
OCTOBER
Oct. 3 — RCA and Farnsworth in Patent Exchange.
Oct. 4 — Major Film Company Tieup Supplies
NBC's Television.
Oct. 17— CBS Engineers Using New Television
Methods.
Oct. 18— Television Airplane Reception 200 Miles
from Transmitter.
Oct. 19 — Settle Television Jurisdiction: AFRA-
Equity SAG Seen Near Accord on Joint Con-
trol Over Industry: Meeting with NBC Tues-
day.
Oct. 25 — Expect FCC Television Break: Concili-
atory Attitude in Second Report with "Lim-
ited Commercials" Seen; U. S. Subsidy a
Possibility.
Oct. 26 — General Electric's Television Sked Gets
Under Way in Two Weeks.
Oct. 27 — See Television Gaining Momentum; CBS
Pattern Experiments.
Oct. 31— Coast Television Market Looms: See
Hollywood as the Second Largest Potential
Video Center; Don Lee Boosts Televising
Sked.
NOVEMBER
Nov. 7 — AFM Television Committee Report Ad-
vises Local Supervision.
Nov. 8 — "Television In Education" To Be Shown
By KSTP.
Nov. 9 — Television Network Relay Being Built
By General Electric.
Nov. 10 — Plea For Television "Freedom"; Mc-
Donald Asks FCC For Continued Development
Unhampered By U. S. And Early Commercial
Okay.
Nov. 14 — Actor Unions Ponder Standard Tele-
vision Scale.
General Electric Appoints Gilmour Manager
Of Television Station.
Nov. 16 — FCC Gets Television Report: Committee
Favors Two Classifications Of Licenses To
Aid Development; Limited Commercial Aspect.
Television Requirements Strict; FCC To Avoid
"Promoters."
Nov. 16 — See Compromise In FCC Television Re-
port.
100 Television Sets Ordered After Coast
Activity.
Nov. 17 — Unions Renew Television Feud; Equity
Attacks Report That It Lost Field To AFRA
And Screen Union. Plans To Organize Talent.
Nov. 20 — See Lower Television Sets To Stimu-
late Market.
Nov. 21 — Television Draws 100.000 In Oklahoma
City And Chicago.
Nov. 24 — Actors Unions Discuss Wage Scales For
Television.
FCC Television Permit Sought In Spring-
field. Mass.
First "Return" Television Show Scheduled
By NBC On December 6.
Nov. 28 — Television-Purchase Survey Indicates
Huge Sales.
Nov. 29 — Television Networks Not Remote; See
Small "Booster" Units.
Nov. 30 — RCA's New Television Camera: Described
As Light And Easy To Use As Newsreel
Outfit; FCC To View Equipment In Capital.
DECEMBER
Dec. 1 — Actor Unions Considering Joint Report
On Television.
Dec. 4 — RCA New Television Camera Revealed
In Capital.
Dec. 5 — Television Sports Feasible; NBC Expand-
ing Plans.
Dec. 7 — Actor-Union Committee Lining Up Its
Television "Code."
Dec. 8 — "Premature" Move Avoided; Unions De-
lay Television Scale.
Dec. 11 — Television Chain Feasible Says Major
Armstrong.
Dec. 12 — DuMont Television Reveals Its New De-
velopments.
Mark Woods To Attend Actor's Television
Committee Meet.
To Televise Opening Of "Gone With The
Wind."
Dec. 14 — Tells Actor Unions Need For Television
Cooperation.
See Television Network Ready By Middle of
January.
Dec. 15 — -Television In San Francisco Soon As
Site Is Selected.
Dec. 18 — DuMont Television Receivers Marked
Down For Xmas.
Dec. 19 — Over 800 Television Receivers Now In
Los Angeles Area.
Baird U. S. Television Plans Are Still In-
definite.
Dec. 20 — Television Was 1939 High Spot: Viewed
As Pacing All Other Aspects During the Year.
CBS-Philco Agree To Share Time On Tele-
vision Wavelength.
Dec. 26 — Public Television Hearing Will Be Held
By FCC.
RCA Mfg. Co. President's Report Optimistic
Over Television.
Equity Reaffirms Stand On Television Juris-
diction.
Dec. 27 — More Tests For Television As Aviation
Medium.
Dec. 28 — Farnsworth Mobile Television Unit Re
suming Tour On January 8.
685
TELEVISION
S TAT I O X S
PERSONNEL
Columbia Broadcasting System
485 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y.
Wlckersham 2-2000
Operating W2XAB.
Executive Dir. of Television Adrian Murphy
Dir. of Tele. Programs Gilbert Seldes
Mgr. Television Operations Leonard Hole
Chief Tele. Engineer Dr. Peter C. Goldmark
Asst. Chief Tele. Engr John N. Dyer
Don Lee Broadcasting System
Don Lee Bldg., Los Angeles, Calif.
VAndike 7111
Operating W6XA0.
President Thomas S. Lee
Director of Television Harry R. Lubcke
Asst. Dir of Television Wilbur E. Thorp
Television Engineers William S. Klein.
Harold W. Jury, Robert L. Pitzer
Television Producer Thomas Conrad Sawyer
Public Relations Producer Ray Coffin
Assistant Directors Whit Waldgrave.
Estelle VanSooey
Cameramen M. C. Edwards,
K. Meade. J. Anderson, G. Landcaster
Makeup Men R. Navarro, L. Turner
Allen B. DuMont Laboratories,
Inc.
2 Main Ave., Passaic, N. J.
Operating W2XVT and W10XKT.
Farnsworth Television, Inc.
Fort Wayne, Ind.
First National Television, Inc.
Fidelity Bldg., Kansas City, Mo.
Operating W9XAL.
General Electric Co.
1 River Road, Schenectady, N. Y.
Operating W2XB (Schenectady) ; W2XD (Sche-
nectady) ; W2XH (Schenectady) ; W1XA (Bridge-
port Conn.).
Technical Supervisor W. J. Purcell
Program Director J. G. T. Gilmour
General Television Corp.
70 Brookline Ave., Boston, Mass.
Operating W1XG.
Kansas State College of Agricul-
ture and Applied Science
Department of Electrical Engineering,
Kansas State College, Manhattan, Kang.
Operating W9XAK.
Head Dept. of Elect. Engineering. . .R. G. Kloeffler
Chief Operator M. W. Horrell
National Broadcasting Co.
30 Rockefeller Plaza, New York, N. Y.
Operating W2XBS and W2XBT — portable.
V-P in Chg. of Television A. H. Morton
Television Coordinator Clarence Farrier
Genl. Production Dir. of Tele Max Gordon
Mgr. Television Programs Div.,
Thomas H. Hutchinson
Philco Radio & Television Corp.
Tioga and C Sts., Philadelphia, Pa.
Operating W3XE and W3XP.
Engineer in Charge William N. Parker
Purdue University
Electric Bldg., Purdue University
Lafayette, Ind.
Operating W9XG.
Head School Electrical Eng.. . .C. Francis Harding
Radio Pictures, Inc.
Long Island City, N. Y.
Operating W2XDR.
RCA Manufacturing Co.
RCA Frequency Bureau
30 Rockefeller Plaza, New York, N. Y.
Operating W3XAD (Camden, N. J.) ; W3XEF
(Camden, N. J.).
University of Iowa
Iowa City, la.
Operating W9XK and W9XUI.
Zenith Radio Corp.
6001 Dickens Ave., Chicago, 111.
BErkshire 7500
Operating W9XZV.
686
687
FOREWORD
I HE enthusiastic receptions to Louis
Nizcr's articles on Literary Piracy, An
Analysis of the National Labor Relations
Act, and The Right of Privacy, in the 1938
and 1939 Year Books, assures a similarly
receptive audience for the following analysis
of RECENT DEVELOPMENTS IN THE
LAW OF MOTION PICTURES.
We are pleased to present the work, know-
ing that it will become a valued reference
for both attorneys and lay-men who have
occasion to become involved in the complex
legal problems of the motion picture in-
dustry.
About the Author
LOUIS NIZER, a member of the law firm
of Phillips (3 Nizer, is a prominent member
of the New York Bar. He is an authority
on the law of screen, stage and radio. He is
the author of the book NEW COURTS OF
INDUSTRY and other legal works, includ-
ing: LITERARY PIRACY, AN ANALY-
SIS OF THE NATIONAL LABOR RELA-
TIONS ACT, PROPRIETARY INTER-
ESTS IN RADIO PROGRAMS, THE
LAW OF RECEIVERSHIPS, RADIO
PROGRAMS AND NEW RADIO CON-
CEPTS, THE LAW OF SUBSTITUTION
IN MOTION PICTURES, THE RIGHT
OF PRIVACY, and other articles.
—JACK ALICOATE
688
Recent Developments in
THE LAW OF MOTION PICTURES
Introduction
O the legal scholar the more difficult the decision, the more interesting the
litigation.
If the individual's rights are pitted against the larger public interest and must
therefore be sacrificed to it ; if the grievance is without recognized legal remedy and
inspires novel extensions; if a hitherto closed legal barrier is cautiously lifted with
a premonition of a new dangerous domain to be traversed ; if a new legislative
expression poses the difficult conflict between the public's will and the necessity of
restraining mob appetite ; — then the challenge is greater to clear thinking and judi-
cious moral balance.
Such legal problems have arisen in the past year. The relationships in the
motion picture industry are varied and difficult questions are presented by many
conflicts. ' i '
What is the extent of a theater owner's duty to patrons? May distributors
cooperate in dealing with an exhibitor or conversely may exhibitors collaborate in
their arrangements with a distributor? How can an author protect his copyrighted
novel or play? How may theater owners advertise legitimately? What is the
position of the inventors of processes valuable in the industry? What state or local
regulation of exhibition is permissible?
It is possible to divide the subject matter into two broad categories — common
law situations and statutory problems — but such a classification would involve a
strained arrangement of the legal issues. It seems more appropriate to consider the
problems in their various, diverse aspects — censorship, libel, trademarks, unfair
competition, restraint of trade, patents, disparagement and inducement of breach
of contract, copyrights, taxation, lotteries, and negligence.
Below follows an analysis of recent decisions in these fields of law.
Censorship
Ever since the decision of the Supreme
Court of the United States in Mutual Films
Corp. v. Industrial Comm. of Ohio in 1915
(236 U. S. 230), holding that the public
showing of moving pictures falls under the
exercise of the police to the extent of regu-
lation as well as prohibition and that cen-
sorship does not contravene the guaranties
of free speech and free press, there has been
a phenomenal increase in censorship. In
addition to active state censoring boards in
Connecticut, Kansas, Maryland, Massachu-
setts, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and
Virginia and less vital ones in Louisiana and
Florida, more than seventy municipal or
local boards have sprouted all over the coun-
try, all functioning to impose previous re-
straints. A natural consequence of the exist-
ence of such a large number of boards is
the divergence of opinion among them, some
banning, others permitting, the exhibition of
the same picture. Moreover deletions in the
limited number of available prints, differing
in the various jurisdictions, operates as an
automatic curtailment of what can be shown.
Although the results in the particular in-
stance vary, the raison d'etre of censorship
is primarily the same ; namely, fear of a
definite harmful effect upon the morals and
behavior of the public.
Generally, films dealing with social sex
problems, human biology or the procreative
689
function, even when not obscene or indecent,
may be banned as immoral. This test of im-
morality has recently been applied in two
New York cases. In Mayer v. Byrne, 256
App. Div. 431, 10 N.Y.S. (2d) 794 (3rd
Dept. 1939), the State Committee of Re-
gents denied a license for the motion picture
Remous (Whirlpool) as indecent and immoral
and tending to corrupt the morals. The peti-
tioner maintained that the picture dealt with
the effect on the lives of a married couple
of an accident crippling the husband and
showed the drift of the young wife to the
society of normal and physically fit persons,
her attraction to an athletic young man, her
resistance, the accidental incidents bringing
about a clandestine affair, her realization of
the wrongfulness of the situation and the
wife's determination to revere and respect
the memory of the man who sacrificed his
life to further her happiness. The censor
interpreted the story as dealing with a hus-
band's impotency and its effect upon his
wife's sex life resulting in adultery and her
husband's suicide, and considered the theme
not fit for screen portrayal and the wife's
action as immoral and tending to corrupt
morals.
The court, after viewing the picture, con-
firmed the denial of the license, stating the
picture was open to the censor's construction,
that his finding of immorality was not ar-
bitrary and that a portrayal of the nervous,
emotional and mental state of a wife due to
her husband's impotence and the consequent
unbalanced moral character and indiscre-
tions of the wife was not fit subject matter
for screen display. A concurring opinion
was based upon the theory that if the Board
acted in accordance with the law by affording
a hearing, taking evidence and giving its
judgment, the court would not interfere with
its conclusion. One judge dissenting con-
sidered the picture unobjectionable, maintain-
ing that deletions, which had been suggested,
were so trivial as not substantially to alter
the original, from the expurgated.
Again in American Committee on M. Wel-
fare v. Mangan, 257 App. Div. 570, 14
N.Y.S. (2d) 39 (3d Dept. 1939), the director
of the Motion Picture Division denied the
application for a license for the film, The
Birth of a Baby, on the ground that the film
was "indecent," and "immoral" and "would
tend to corrupt morals" within the meaning
of the law. On appeal, the Board of Regents,
after reviewing the picture and listening to
arguments in favor of licensing, sustained the
action of the Director. It refused to license
the picture for places of amusement but of-
fered to issue an educational permit for its
exhibition as an educational film. The ap-
plicant, however, desired a public showing
of the film in theaters generally rather than
an exhibition for clinical purposes. On cer-
tiorari, the Board's determination was af-
firmed. The court pointed out that although
a picture depicting the actual birth of a
baby might be shown for clinical purposes,
it became indecent when presented to patrons
of places of public entertainment in view of
the character of the audience. And aside from
all other considerations, the court refused to.
substitute its judgment for that of the Regents
of the State, since the action of the Director
or the Board, which had been taken after
hearing, evidence and argument, did not ap-
pear to be arbitrary, unlawful or capricious.
The fact that there might be a difference
of opinion as to whether the picture was
decent or indecent did not justify judicial
interference with the administrative deter
mination.
Two of the five judges dissented, recog-
nizing the presence of vital and needed in-
formation in the film, the clean, dignified and
reverent treatment of the theme and the defeat
of the worthy purpose of the sponsors by
limiting the exhibition to educational and
clinical groups.
Even more significant than this encroach-
ment on freedom on the basis of morality is
the censorship for political reasons. This
problem was strikingly brought to the fore
in the ban of the Russian made anti-Nazi
film, Professor Mamlock, in Providence, R.
I. (permitted in New York, but not Massa-
chusetts). Thayer Amusement Corp. v. Moid-
ton 7 A. (2d) 682 (R. I. 1939). There, after
a private exhibition, the police amusement
inspector refused a license for the public
showing of that picture in Providence on
the grounds that it was Communistic propa-
ganda; that it tended to provoke class and
race hatred ; and that it did not have ap-
proval of the National Board of Review of
Motion Pictures, as required by statute. The
bureau of police and fire, after a personal
view, confirmed the action of the inspector
and banned the picture, without granting the
granting the request for a hearing. The
statute gave the police bureau absolute dis-
cretion to grant or refuse a license for a film,
without requiring the formulation of rules
and regulations for such films or the holding
of hearings or the grant of an opportunity
to applicant to produce evidence in support
of the application. The petitioning theater
sought to review the determination on cer-
tiorari.
The matter in controversy raised several
question: (1) whether certiorari lay to re-
view the action of the bureau; (2) whether
the refusal of a formal hearing violated the
enabling statute and denied due process of
law; (3) whether the denial of the applica-
tion was without competent or substantial
evidence in the record to support its deci-
sion; and (4) whether the licensing statute
was constitutional.
As the bureau's denial of the application
was a final determination and as no statutory
method of appeal had been provided, certio-
rari, the only adequate remedy available,
according to the court, lay to review the
questions of law on the construction of the
statute and its conformity to the federal and
state constitution. In the absence of such
questions, however, certiorari is confined to
the review of "judicial" action of inferior
courts and of public officers or bodies and
is not appropriate for review of an "admin-
istrative" function.
The court held that the bureau did not
commit an error of law in refusing to grant
the petitioner's request for a hearing and
opportunity to present evidence and its fail-
ure to prescribe rules and regulations gov-
erning its action in such matters did not
vitiate its proceedings. As a license to show
motion pictures publicly for a price was a
mere privilege, subject to reasonable police
regulation, and not a "property right" and
the bureau's action, therefore, was necessarily
in its nature "administrative" rather than
"judicial," a hearing was not requisite to the
validity of the bureau's decision nor was a
hearing expressly or impliedly required un-
der the language of the statute, although such
requirement might perhaps lessen the danger
of arbitrary action. But that is a legisla-
tive, not a judicial matter.
The court, moreover, refused to view the
picture, since on certiorari it was confined to
the record. The record showed that the
bureau viewed the picture, that it had the
benefit of the report of its inspector and
expert comments and criticism, both favor-
able and unfavorable, and that from its knowl-
edge and in the exercise of its discretion,
without any indication of oppressive con-
duct toward the petition, the bureau con-
cluded that the showing of the picture would
be inimical to the public welfare. The court
refused to weigh the evidence or put itself
in the place of the bureau. The fact that it
might take an entirely different attitude as
to the possible effect of the picture upon the
public mind would not warrant a reversal
of the bureau's decision.
The statute under consideration was held
constitutional. It is distinguishable from the
imposition of restrictions on business not
requiring a license. Censorship does not
violate the state or federal constitutional
guaranties of freedom of speech and press.
691
The "privileges and immunities clause" of
the fourteenth amendment to the Constitu-
tion applies only to natural persons and does
not embrace artificial persons. The "due
process clause" of the fourteenth amendment
is not contravened by the statutory procedure
authorized for the bureau, since the right
to show a moving picture, as stated above,
is a mere privilege subject to reasonable po-
lice regulation. And manifestly the statute
in question does not delegate legislative
power in violation of the state constitution.
It is also interesting to note that, as a
matter of fact, the National Board of Review
had not approved the film because it had not
yet seen it, although the amusement in-
spector based his action on this one ground,
inter alia, of the absence of approval by the
Board. See Note, 39 Col. L. Rev. 1383,
1385 (1939).
The court's analysis of a license in terms
of a right-privilege, judicial-administrative,
and hearing-no hearing, conforms with well
accepted legal doctrine, but represents a
rather mechanical categorization of principles.
The court does not realize that its own de-
cision creates or fails to create a "property
right." Preferable to a dogmatic reliance
upon conceptualistic shibboleths would be
a realistic consideration of the desirability of
a hearing in view of the interests at stake —
in which event the factors of censorship, size
of investment, expense, potential arbitrari-
ness, benefits and detriments to the public,
might all be considered.
The instant court adhered to the doctrine
of the Mutual Film case, supra, that motion
picture censorship was not a violation of a
free press. It may be that this rule should
be reexamined in the light of the changed
conditions existing today. See Note, 39 Col.
L. Rev. 1383 (1939). Not only are news,
opinions and ideas now widely disseminated
on the screen to the growing exclusion of
the more familiar forms of communication,
but increasing popular reliance on news
gained from the screen has diminished the
importance of freedom of speech and press
in their traditional sense and increased it in
its extended sense. See Comment, 49 Yale
L. J. 87 (1939). The newsreel performs the
identical function of a newspaper and there-
fore should receive the same protection. An
almost equally strong case can be made for
documentary films. Furthermore, it has been
argued that motion picture censorship should
be abolished throughout the country, and if
this is not possible, film boards should be
removed from politics and should comprise
trained and competent reviewers, possibly
through civil service. See Book Review of
The Censor Marches On by Ernst and Lin-
dey (position taken by authors of book),
N. Y. Times January 13, 1940, p. 13, col.
4. It is apparent that a multiplicity of boards
is undesirable ; a more uniform method of
supervision, if at all, should be established.
Libel
The constitutional guaranty of free speech
and press, as uniformly interpreted, prohibits
the granting of a remedy for an expected
libel prior to its publication, but compels
resort to actions, civil or criminal or both,
after the act of publication. The philosophy
underlying this view is that a previous re-
straint on an individual's behavior is an un-
constitutional interference with his freedom
of expression ; and that the individual must be
free to say his piece, though subject to the
risk of subsequent punishment. This theory
of no "previous restraint" but "subsequent
punishment" is the rationale of cases denying
an injunction against the publication of
libels in newspapers and magazines, both
692
traditionally within the scope of the guaranty
of a free press. But does this principle apply
to the exhibition of motion pictures? Mo-
tion pictures, as stated above, have not his-
torically been protected under the constitu-
tional doctrine of a free speech and press.
Yet in Kuhn v. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.,
29 F. Supp. 800 (S.D.N.Y. 1939), a prelim-
inary injunction barring the further exhibi-
tion of a picture was denied. In that case
Fritz Kuhn, individually and on behalf of the
German American Bund, sought to enjoin the
publication, circulation, distribution, sale and
exhibition of the picture, Confessions of a
Nasi Spy, alleging that it was a libel against
plaintiff's organization, its president and
members in its portrayal of the Bund as a
disployal organization fostering a wide Ger-
man espionage system in America and in
charging the organization, its president and
members with the crime of treason.
The District Court adhered to the legal
principle, firmly established in New York and
federal decisions, to the effect that "no
injunction may issue to prevent or stop the
publication of a libel" and cited in support
of this proposition cases dealing with news-
papers and magazines. It also pointed out
that if the plaintiffs were libeled, they had
their remedies in a suit for money damages
or via prosecution of the defendants for
criminal libel.
This decision might therefore be interpreted
as an implicit recognition of the protection of
motion pictures under a broadened concept
of free speech and press, as indicated in dis-
cussion above, but that would run coun-
ter to the Mutual Films case, supra, in so
far as that case delimited the scope of the
constitutional guaranty as not embracing mo-
tion pictures. That case, however dealt
with the problem of censorship which may
be distinguished from libel : the former in-
volves a reasonable police regulation for the
benefit of society, whereas the latter con-
cerns only the protection of the individual.
Hence, the guaranty of free speech and press
may yield to the necessities of the police
power, but is effective as to potentially libel-
ous picture.
But what is the meaning of freedom from
"previous restraint" and "subsequent punish-
ment"? Suppose, for instance an injunction
against a libel is granted. The defendant
can still publish the libel in violation of the
injunction, but becomes subject to contempt
which will lead to imprisonment after a
summary hearing before a judge without a
jury and without regard for the common law
rules of evidence. In fact, the punishment
is chronologically subsequent to the act
of publication. Now compare the situation
where injunctive relief is refused and the
defendant then publishes the libelous state-
ment. The plaintiff has recourse to a civil
remedy for damages (which are also avail-
able in connection with equitable relief) and
criminal prosecution for libel. The latter re-
quires a regular jury trial and the ordinary
rules of evidence, including proof of guilt
beyond a reasonable doubt. Obviously, in
connection with both the injunctive and
criminal proceedings, the punishment does
not precede, but follows publication.
However, the imminency and probability
of punishment is greater in the former
than in the latter, in view of the summary
nature of the proceedings and the simple
decision of the factual issue on the violation
of a specific equitable order. Hence the for-
mer operates merely as a stronger deterrent
than the latter, the difference being one of
degree, since "previous restraint," in the
form of deterrence and "subsequent pun-
ishment" as evidenced by imprisonment are
present in the use of both remedies — in-
junctive and criminal.
Literary Property
It is a well settled rule that a court of
equity will not protect an idea as such. It
must be put in some concrete form of ex-
pression. (See author's article in 38 Columbia
Law Review 578). This principle was applied
in Tutelman v. Stokozvski (Ct. of Com. Pleas.
Cty. of Phila. 1939) (unreported). In this
case the plaintiff filed a bill praying for an
injunction against the violation of an al-
leged common law property right. He claimed
that in 1924 he conceived an idea or plan of
synchronizing symphonic music of classical
renown with animated motion picture car-
toons depicting a story which would com-
municate the theme of the particular musical
composition, and that in furtherance of that
he prepared scenarios of various famous
musical compositions. In 1937 he mailed
to Stokowski, one of the defendants, a let-
ter setting out his plan, and to it he attached
some notes which he called scenarios of the
Nutcracker Suite and Danse Macabre. Sto-
kowski did not answer his letter, but some-
time in 1938 is said to have disclosed the
plaintiff's plan to Disney, another defendant,
who thereupon began production of an ani-
mated motion picture called Fantasia, which
plaintiff claimed followed his idea or plan
of production. There was no allegation that
any part of Fantasia, either the story or
the music, was copied from anything the
plaintiff ever wrote.
Plaintiff based his case on the proposition
that irrespective of copying he had a com-
mon law property right in the mere idea
or plan of producing animated cartoons which
represented stories suggested by well known
compositions, which cartoons would be syn-
chronized compositions themselves. The
court explicitly rejected this contention, de-
claring that there is no such thing as a
property right in a mere barren idea and
equity cannot protect anything so nebulous,
unsubstantial and incorporeal.
The term "property right" is etiologically
meaningless, since it is the result of legal
protection, not the cause therefore. See 36
Col. L. Rev. 1375 (1936). The denial of
the existence of property rights in ideas
is generally attributed to the benefit to society
derived from their free dissemination and
the practical difficulty involved in determin-
ing the origin of the idea, since two persons
may independently conceive the same notion.
See 36 Col. L. Rev. 1375 (1936).
Trademarks
Descriptive terms may not be registered
as trademarks. A trademark is infringed
however only by merchandise of the same
descriptive properties as the original. Both
questions were raised in Time, Inc. v. Bar-
shay, 27 F. Supp. 870 (S.D. N.Y. 1939). It
appears that the plaintiff owns three regis-
tered trademarks — "Time," "Time" and "The
March of Time," the first two being for a
weekly magazine and the third for motion
and sound films. The plaintiff publishes and
distributes a news magazine and conducts
radio broadcast programs and motion pic-
ture features, both under the title of "The
March of Time." The broadcasts and news-
reels, carried on since 1931 and 1935 respec-
tively, have received much publicity and the
name "The March of Time" has been con-
tinuously used in this connection. The slogan
"The Voice of Time" has been invariably
applied to narrator for the radio and mo-
tion picture productions on being introduced
before addressing various groups. The "Time"
magazine has been published weekly since
694
1923. For the purpose of identifying its
trademarks in the mind of the public, the
plaintiff has expended for advertising ap-
proximately four and a half million dollars.
As to the defendant, it is alleged that he
filed a certificate to do business in Decem-
ber 1936 under the assumed name, "The
Voice of Time," and causes labels, business
cards and other advertising matter to be
printed upon which the assumed name is
prominently displayed. It is also charged
that the defendant sells phonograph records
reproducing famous speeches as broadcast
over the radio, in infringement not only of
plaintiff's trademarks, but also of its com-
mon law rights by applying to these records
the assumed name, thereby misleading the
public into believing that it is procuring
plaintiff's product when in fact it is not
doing so.
The court notes that plaintiff has built
up a well identified good will through the
use of its trademarks "Time" and "The
March of Time" and that these trademarks
are directly associated with its publica-
tions, its radio program and its newsreel
productions and likewise that the plaintiff
has built up a certain good will in connection
with the slogan or legend, "The Voice of
Time." It then concludes that the defend-
ant's use of the similar phrase — "The Voice
of Time" — is an infringement of the plain-
tiff's trademark "The March of Time," and
unfair competition with the plaintiff in con-
nection with all its trademarks and the
good will attending the plaintiff's slogan.
The court states that the trademark "The
March of Time" is valid and infringed. It
does not describe the motion picture nor
the radio broadcast and in consequence is
not excluded from registration as a descrip-
tive term. The general use of the name and
its identification with the business of the
plaintiff would be interfered with by the use
of an essentially similar trademark in a
closely affiliated art. Both motion picture
films and phonograph records involve the
reproduction of sound. In ordinary markets,
it is extremely likely that a phonograph
record stamped with the mark, "The Voice
of Time" would be associated with "The
March of Time" as generally used by the
plaintiff. There should be no effort, con-
scious or otherwise to invade plaintiff's good
will, in view of the wide variety of choice
available.
The court also declares that the marks,
"Time," as applied to prints and publications
are not infringed by the legend on the de-
fendant's phonograph records, since records
are not merchandise of the same descriptive
properties.
It is further pointed out the defendant's
use of the trademark "The Voice of Time"
is in unfair competition with all of the plain-
tiff's marks and slogan in view of the pos-
sibility of confusion. The field in which
confusion might operate is extensive, not be-
cause a phonograph record will be confused
with a sound motion picture but rather be-
cause of the confusion that may arise as to
the source or origin of the goods. The law
does not countenance the passing off of one's
goods as the goods of another, it being imma-
terial that phonograph records have not the
same descriptive properties as sound motion
pictures.
The instant court applies the well estab-
lished principles in the law of trademarks and
unfair competition (further discussed infra)
and reaches a proper conclusion. The con-
siderations of the length of use of the marks,
priority, the size of the investment, the
extent of publicity and promptness of action,
all weighs heavily in the plaintiff's favor.
The problem of merchandise of the same
descriptive properties (unimportant for un-
fair competition) is involved in registration
as well as the infringement of a trademark.
For instance, as a picture magazine and
motion picture films possess the same de-
scriptive properties, in that both are used
for the purpose of exhibiting photographs
to the public, and where the magazine is a
well known pictorial publication deriving
its photographs, inter alia, from films and
has a large circulation, and where the use
of the same trademark — -"Life" to both mag-
azine and motion picture is likely to cause
confusion of the public which may believe
they are connected, registration will be de-
nied to the later applicant of this word as
a trademark for the movies. Time, Inc. v.
Larson, 42 U.S.P.Q. 469 (Com'r. of Patents
1939). In this way the original user is
protected and the subsequent applicant de-
nied the benefit of the former's advertising.
Unfair (
The doctrine of "passing off," mentioned
in Time, Inc. v. Barshay supra, constitutes
a well recognized basis of relief for unfair
competition, but not the only one. The cele-
brated case of International News Service v.
Associated Press, 248 U.S. 215, accepted a
principle that any civil right of a pecuniary
nature is a property right, the misappropria-
tion of which supports an action for unfair
competition. Hence, good will and business
reputation may be protected when built up
in connection with a name. Misrepresenta-
tion is not an essential element. Misappro-
priation is sufficient. See 16 N. Y. U. L. Q.
Rev. 503 (1939).
These principles have been followed in
recent case of Madison Square Garden Corp.
v. Universal P. Co., 255 App. Div. 459, 7
N.Y.S. (2d) 845 (1st Dept. 1938). There
according to the allegations of the complaint,
the plaintiff corporation controlled the pro-
fessional hockey team, the Rangers, and
owned and operated the Garden, both of
which enjoyed a widespread reputation and
valuable good will. For many years plain-
tiff has granted licenses to take and repro-
duce photographs of "Garden" events for
use in motion picture newsreels only, but
not for use in feature pictures without plain-
tiffs express consent and upon payment to
the plaintiff of a valuable consideration.
Plaintiff has derived and now derives a sub-
stantial revenue therefrom. The defendant
producer and distributor, which had a license
to take pictures for newsreel purposes only,
incorporated into the feature film, Idol of the
petition
Croiuds, newsreel scenes of the "Rangers"
which had been taken in the Detroit arena,
not in the Garden. The sequence of events
in the motion picture and the repeated refer-
ences to Madison Square Garden in the ad-
vertising circulars publicizing the picture
led to the reasonable inference that the scenes
were actually enacted in the Garden.
The motion to dismiss which was granted
below was denied on appeal. The court stated
that not only were the defendants' acts likely
to deceive the public, but the defendants
intended and desired this effect. While the
absence of a deceitful intent is no defense
to an action of unfair competition, if the
plaintiff's rights were invaded, nevertheless
it cannot be said that allegations of fraud and
deceitful intent are not material.
The court also added that the complaint
sufficiently alleged a misappropriation of the
plaintiff's property rights in its good name,
its good will built up at considerable expense,
and its business of licensing genuine moving
picture photographs used in feature films
from which it had derived substantial revenue.
The defendants, by their indirect methods,
appropriated to themselves precisely the same
commercial advantages as if the feature was
in fact filmed in the "Garden" with plain-
tiff's approval, while plaintiff's team was en-
gaged therein in a championship hockey
contest.
And the defendants, according to the court,
were not immune, because the plot of the
picture was concededly fictional, for the melo-
dramatic interest in the story was increased
by the apparently authentic photographs of
the championship game and the defendants
utilized the reputation and good will of the
plaintiff and its recognizable players to
induce the public to see the picture, to plain-
tiff's loss and the defendants' gain. The de-
fendants should not be permitted by their
unfair practices to violate and appropriate
the plaintiff's valuable property rights. Real-
ism could be achieved by permission on pay-
ment for the use of plaintiff's commercially
valuable property rights.
The court concluded that the unfair com-
petition here arose from misappropriation as
well as misrepresentation.
The result in the principal case is clearly
sound on the facts set forth. The court is
interested in promoting honesty and fair
dealing as well as in protecting the purchas-
ing public and the property rights of indi-
viduals and is not deterred by the novelty
and ingenuity of the method employed by
the defendants.
Furthermore, protection is afforded through
an action of unfair competition, even though
the parties are not in direct competition,
emphasis being placed upon unfairness rather
than competition. See 10 Air L. Rev. 317
(1939). And it is stated in Prouty v.
N.B.C., 26 F. Supp. 265 (D. Mass. 1939),
that the absence of competition is not nec-
essarily fatal to the plaintiff's claim. The
facts in the case are interesting. Plaintiff,
the author of the novel Stella Dallas and the
owner of the copyright, complained that the
defendant broadcasted skits of poor artistic
quality depicting episodes in the life of the
character Stella Dallas who is portrayed in
that novel. Plaintiff maintained that the
defendant in this way is misappropriating her
title and rights therein and to the imaginative
character and her good will as established
by her successful authorship. This imperils
the further sale of her works both past
and contemplated.
The defendant's motion to dismiss the ac-
tion for unfair competition was denied. The
court states that a cause of action in equity
is stated when it appears that the defendant
appropriates without plaintiff's consent the
plot and principal characters of the novel
and that such use is made of her literary
production as to injure the reputation of the
work and of the author and amount to a
deception upon the public. It is immaterial
that there is no direct competition be-
tween the plaintiff and defendant, as it is
the injury to the author and the fraud upon
the reading public that constitute the real
offense alleged.
The court was correct in refusing to dismiss
the complaint. It is obvious that the defend-
ant's conduct although possibly short of
copyright infringement, may cause a loss
of revenue to the author.
Where the title of a book is a descriptive
term, which has not acquired secondary
meaning, relief against its use will not be
granted in an action for unfair competition.
See Collins v. Metro-Goldwyn Pictures Corp.,
25 F. Supp. 783 (S.D. N.Y. 1938).
Restraint
Concerted action on the part of distributors
in refusing to deal with any exhibitor is a
violation of the anti-trust laws. See Whitman,
"Anti-Trust Cases Affecting the Distribu-
tion of Motion Pictures," 7 Ford. L. Rev.
189 (1938). Accordingly, the standard ar-
bitration clause embodied in agreements be-
of Trade
tween distributors and exhibitors, under which
a refusal to arbitrate subjects the exhibitor
to the termination of all contracts by all dis-
tributors has been held invalid, thus making
the entire contract unenforceable or only
partially so under a theory of severability.
And so too, arbitrary and unreasonable
clearance provisions have been declared bad.
See 23 Minn. L. Rev. 689 (1939). Recent-
ly a clause prohibiting double billing
was found illegal. Vitagraph Inc. v. Pcrel-
man, 95 F. (2d) 142 (CCA. 3d, 1938). In
this case, plaintiffs, independent exhibitors
(unaffiliated) filed suit in equity, under sec-
tions 12 and 16 of the Clayton Act, to enjoin
a group of distributors who represent a large
majority of important producers from vio-
lations of the Sherman and Clayton Acts.
These defendants distribute more than half
the annual production in which artists com-
manding the largest audiences are displayed.
The plaintiff had agreed with them, under
"block booking" contracts, not to exhibit an-
other feature in conjunction with any film
leased.
The district court found that business ne-
cessity compelled the plaintiffs to sign the
contracts in the form offered by the defend-
ants and that these restrictive clauses tended
to reduce production and stifle competition,
and therefore concluded as a matter of law
that the clauses were the result of a com-
bination in restraint of interstate commerce
in violation of section one of the Sherman
Act and section three of the Clayton Act.
The Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the
judgment on the ground that the restrictive
clauses violated the anti-trust laws.
The Circuit Court reasons thus : first,
the unanimous action of the distributors, as
found by the district court, indicates the
presence of a combination or conspiracy to
prohibit the exhibition of double features.
Second, these restrictive clauses, resulting
from such combination or conspiracy among
the distributor-defendants, constitute an un-
reasonable restraint of interstate commerce
within meaning of section one of the Sherman
act, since they tend to reduce production.
Third, such provisions are inhibited by sec-
tion three of Clayton Act as they result in
contracts not to use joods of competitors,
cause a substantial decrease in competition
from independent distributors, and tend to
create a monopoly in the defendants.
As the plaintiffs acted because of business
necessity, and not because of a desire to
further a monopoly, the court does not con-
sider them in pari delicto. See 39 Col. L.
Rev. 524 (1939).
The difficulty with the case lies not in its
declared principles of law, once the facts are
assumed. The court's finding of conspiracy,
on the evidence before it, seems unwarranted.
In another case, restrictions on price ad-
missions and double billing, imposed by the
major distributors upon independent exhib-
itors at the instigation of chain exhibitors,
have been invalidated by the United States
Supreme Court in Interstate Circuit v. United
States, 306 U.S. 208, 59 Sup. Ct. 467 (1939).
There two defendant exhibitors (corpo-
rations headed by same officers) had a
virtual monopoly of first run theaters in a
district comprising several Texas cities, but
competed with independent exhibitors in the
matter of subsequent runs. Defendant dis-
tributors were the so-called "big eight" of
the motion picture industry, controlling the
supply of about 75 per cent of the first class
films exhibited in the United States. The
defendant exhibitors sent identical letters
to each of these distributors (each letter
naming all of them as addressees) demanding
as a condition of continued patronage an
agreement by the distributors not to lease
films to subsequent run houses which charged
less than 25c admission and indulged in
double features. Each distributor made a
separate contract with the defendant exhib-
itors, imposing the demanded restrictions
upon subsequent run licensees.
A suit was brought by the U. S. under
the Sherman Act to enjoin the carrying out
of the alleged conspiracy in restraint of in-
terstate commerce between the distributors
and exhibitors.
The trial court found as facts an agree-
ment and conspiracy to take uniform action
on the proposals among the distributors them-
selves and with the chain exhibitors as well ;
the execution of the agreement by the im-
position of the restrictions on the subse-
quent run theaters, causing an increase in
the admission or withholding the "best en-
tertainment furnished by the motion pic-
ture industry" ; and a decrease in the income
of independents and an increase by both dis-
tributors and chain exhibitors. It concluded
as a matter of law that the agreement of
the distributors with each other and those
with the chain exhibitors to impose restric-
tions on subsequent run licensees constituted
a combination or conspiracy in restraint of
trade and that each separate agreement be-
tween a defendant exhibitor and a disribu-
tor, subjecting all subsequent run houses
(even as to the chain exhibitor) to the re-
698
strictions was likewise a violation of the
Act. It enjoined the conspiracy and restrained
the distributors from enforcing the restric-
tions in the license agreements with the sub-
sequent run exhibitors (including the chains).
The Supreme Court, three judges dissenting,
affirmed the action of lower court.
The Supreme Court pointed out that the
District Court's finding of an agreement
among the distributors themselves was sup-
ported by the evidence of the unanimity and
uniformity of their actions.
Granted that each distributor, in the pro-
tection of his own copyright monopoly, was
free to impose restrictions upon his licensees,
the court declared that they were not free
to use their copyrights as implements for re-
straining commerce in order to protect the
chain's monopoly by suppressing competi-
tion with it. The exhibitors coerced the dis-
tributors into assisting them to control their
competitors. The contract both suppressed
competition and precluded its resumption.
Its illegality due to destruction of competi-
tion was not altered by the fact that the com-
petitive article was copyrighted.
The Court found that the restrictions, uni-
formly imposed on subsequent run exhib-
itors, were harsh and arbitrary. There were
wide differences in the location and char-
acter of the subsequent houses, which justi-
fied different prices and a policy of double
features. Nevertheless, business necessity
compelled acquiescence in the restrictions
by the independents, although their business
suffered while that of the distributors and
chains grew better. The effect was a drastic
suppression of competition and oppressive
price maintenance of benefit to all the defend-
ants, but injurious alike to subsequent run
competitors and to the public. The Supreme
Court stated:
"The benefit at such a cost does not justify
the restraint ... It does not appear that the
competition at which they were aimed was
unfair or abnormal . . . The consequence of
the price restrictions, though more oppres-
sive, is comparable with the effect of resale
price maintenance agreements, which have
been held to be unreasonable restraints in
violation of the Sherman Act (citations
omitted — Ed.)"
The instant court placed too much empha-
sis upon the unanimity of action by the dis-
tributors, since that might well be attributed
simply to the identical demands facing them
and the realization of possibly greater reve-
nue. See 38 Col. L. Rev. 696 (1938). And
the motive of the distributors in imposing
the restrictions should not be decisive, for the
economic consequences are the same regard-
less of the motivating factors. See 52 Harv.
L. Rev. 846 (1939). Nevertheless the case is
significant because it indicates that not only
may combinations among the "big eight" be
enjoined, but also that no powerful exhib-
itor circuit may join with any single dis-
tributor to the detriment of an independent
exhibitor, since each contract between a chain
exhibitor and a distributor is held a sepa-
rate and distinct violation of the Sherman
Act. See 23 Minn. L. Rev. 689 (1939).
The claimed discriminatory tactics of the
distributors and producers and their invasion
into the field of exhibition by the creation
of affiliates stimulated the independent ex-
hibitors to urge protective state legislation.
Though bills have been introduced in five
states, only North Dakota passed it. This
statute (N.D. Laws 1937, c. 165) which
prohibited the operation within the state of
motion picture theaters owned or controlled
by producers or distributors was litigated
in Paramount Pictures, Inc. v. Longer, 23 F.
Supp. 890 (D.N.D. 1938). Plaintiff producer
through subsidiary corporations owned and
controlled ten theaters in North Dakota.
Although the plaintiff could have given these
theaters great advantages over independ-
ent exhibitors in the allotment and control
of first run pictures, it had never, accord-
ing to the evidence, engaged in such monopo-
listic practices nor contemplated so doing.
The plaintiff brought a bill to enjoin the
enforcement of the statute as invalid for
burdening interstate commerce and violating
the "equal protection" and "due process"
clauses of the fourteenth amendment.
The statutory court of three judges, in a
per curiain opinion, dismissed the bill. It
held that the Act was a legitimate exercise
of the police power to protect the independent
exhibitors in particular and the public in gen-
eral, from possible monopoly. The existence
of unusual power in the producers and dis-
tributors to deal with competitors unfairly,
when coupled with the opportunity and temp-
tation to use that power toward effecting a
monopoly of theaters, was a sufficient basis
for legislative action.
699
Furthermore, it declared that the Act did
not affect interstate commerce. It related
only to the operation of motion picture thea-
ters within the confines of the state and could
not be construed as relating to the distribu-
tion or licensing of films. The possible remote
effect of the Act upon the distribution of
films in interstate commerce or on the rights
of producers and distributors under the
Copyright Law did not constitute an inva-
sion in a field exclusively reserved to Con-
gress.
Lastly, the distinction between affiliated
and independent exhibitors, according the
court justified a difference in treatment so
as not to contravene the "equal protection"
clause.
Evidently this North Dakota statute was
designed to prevent the alleged abuses inci-
dental to the distribution and licensing of
motion pictures, which could not be directly
controlled. The fact that the state regulation
touched interstate commerce did not auto-
matically render it invalid. The converse of
the principle that a threat to monopolize or
restrain interstate commerce justified federal
interference with intrastate trade was ap-
plied here to permit North Dakota legislation
to interfere indirectly with certain activities
in interstate commerce.
However, questions under the statute have
since become moot, since this measure was
repealed in 1939, on which basis the Supreme
Court granted a motion to reverse, remanding
with direction to dismiss. Paramount Pic-
tures, Inc. v. Longer, 306 U.S. 619 (1939).
Patents
The motion picture industry, just as other
industries, has established laboratories and
employed scientists and inventors for pur-
poses of research and the development of
new devices useful in the field. Inventors
may devote their entire time or only a part
thereof in investigation and may contract
away the patent rights to all the products of
their brain or only a portion of them. Just
what they have done primarily depends
upon the scope of their contracts of employ-
ment. In this respect the problem essen-
tially boils down to one of interpretation of
the agreement. For instance in Crites v.
Radtke, 29 F. Supp. 970 (S. D. N. Y., 1939),
the plaintiff employer claimed that the de-
fendant inventor had entered into a part
time employment contract at a salary of $300
per month and had agreed to assign to the
plaintiff all inventions and patents resulting
from his efforts to devise or improve photo-
cell apparatus and processes, both chemical,
physical, electrical and mechanical, relating to
the business, products, work and investiga-
tions of the plaintiff. On this basis the plaintiff
sought to demonstrate that this contract em-
braced a patent for optically reproducing
sound (now valuable in the motion picture
industry in connection with talking pic-
tures) for which a patent application had
been made five years after the termination
of the employment in question. The court dis-
missed a bill to enjoin the sale or assign-
ment of the patent application for failure
of proof. It found as facts that the defendant
had contracted to invent a cigar sorter
which used a photo electric cell, that he made
such a device and assigned his patent rights
thereto to the plaintiff and that the invention
for the reproduction of sound was never the
plaintiff's property. The defendant had mere-
ly contracted away products connected with
the plaintiff's business, but not all germane
intellectual products, such as the one in
dispute. The small salary of the defendant,
the original scope of the plaintiff's busi-
ness, the failure of the cigar sorter and the
success of the patent in issue, and the lapse
of a period of time before suit were fac-
tors considered by the court.
Instead of assigning away his patent rights,
an inventor may, under his contract of em-
ployment, permit his employer to "use" the
device. But what constitutes "use" of a
device such as a processing machine? It may
cover one, several or all of the follow-
ing possibilities: (1) the right to use the
machine to process film produced by the em-
ployer, or (2) owned by employer though
produced by others; (3) the right to process
films of other companies for hire (retention
of possession by employer), and (4) the
rental of the machine to others (surrender of
possession). These various suggestions were
considered in Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Corp.
v. Fear, 104 F. (24) 892 (C. C. A. 9th, 1939)
in which, inter alia, a declaratory judgment
as to the rights of the parties under a con-
tract for the development of a film proc-
essing machine was sought. Under the con-
tract in question, the defendant was em-
ployed to build and did build a developing
machine embodying his invention and granted
a license to the plaintiff to manufacture and
use such a machine throughout the world.
This permission, however, was limited by
the proviso that such machines could not be
manufactured or used "other than for our
(plaintiff's) use." The quoted phrase is the
subject of the controversy as it may include
the four possible uses listed above.
The Circuit Court of Appeals held that
the words limiting the right to use con-
stituted a promise or covenant by the plain-
tiff to confine its use of the machine to its
"own use," whether expressly or impliedly,
and rejected the contentions that the agree-
ment was solely a license and consequently
a release from any patent monopoly the de-
fendant might acquire, that the limitation on
use was not a contract on plaintiff's part to
limit its use and that the only remedy for
plaintiff's use outside the scope of the li-
cense would be suit for patent infringement,
not for breach of contract.
On the problem of construction the court
held that not only could the plaintiff process
films of its own production but also any
film that it "owned" as a result of purchase,
regardless of the fact that the film had been
produced by other companies. Thus, the
agreement as interpreted prohibited the use
of the machines to process films for other
companies for hire as well as the rental of
the machines to other parties for use by
them.
Although the right to process the films of
others for a fee has ben denied, the same
result may be accomplished through ficti-
tious purchases by M.G.M., as the latter
may legally process any films it oivns. The
natural effect of such an evasive procedure
would be a reduction of the inventor's po-
tential market — a consequence he probably
sought to avoid. And the fact that M.G.M.'s
machines could process more than the films
of its own production would not necessarily
justify the broader interpretation indulged
in by the court. For even with such wastage
the machines may have been desirable be-
cause they were more economical than the
old methods used by M.G.M.
Licenses as well as contracts provide for
the legitimate use of patented objects. They
are a source of income in the form of
royalties and at the same time afford a
basis for protecting the patentee's rights,
because use outside of their scope grounds
a suit for infringement. But what is the
position of a purchaser with notice from a
party who manufactures and sells beyond
the scope of a restricted license? Is he an
infringer along with the licensee or is he
outside the limits of the patent monopoly?
The former in its affirmative form has been
established in General Talking Pictures v.
Western Electric Inc., 305 U. S. 124 (1938).
It appears in the General Talking Pic-
tures case that certain patented amplifiers
are useful, inter alia, in (a) the commercial
fields of sound recording and reproducing,
which embraces talking picture equipment
for theaters and (b) in the private or home
field embracing various aspects of radio.
For the former, exclusive licenses had been
granted by the patent pool to X, and for the
latter, nonexclusive licenses had been granted
to about fifty manufacturers, including A.
A was licensed to manufacture and sell
solely for private use. Nevertheless, A,
manufactured and sold amplifiers to the
defendant for commercial use, both parties
knowing that A had no license to make or
sell them for use in connection with talking
picture equipment. It was stipulated that it
was common practice, where a patented in-
vention is applicable to different uses, to
grant written licenses to manufacture under
United States Letters Patents restricted to
one or more of several fields of use per-
mitting the exclusive or non-exclusive use
of the invention in one field and excluding
it in another field.
The Supreme Court stated that the re-
strictive license was legal, as it was a con-
dition the performance of which was rea-
sonably within the reward which the pat-
entee was entitled to secure ; that therefore
the effect of the manufacture and sale out-
side the scope of the license was the same
as if no license had been granted to A;
and as the defendant knew the facts it was
in no better position than if had manufac-
701
tured the amplifiers itself without a license.
Hence the defendant was liable because it
used the invention without license to do so.
Justice Black, dissenting, referred to the
traditional doctrine of the court, that when
a patented article "is sold and passes to the
hands of a purchaser, it is no longer within
the limits of the monopoly. It passes out-
side of it and is no longer under the pro-
tection of the act of Congress. . . . The
departure here permits the patentee by
virtue of his contract with the manufacturer
to restrict the uses to which this purchaser
and owner may put his tubes and amplifiers."
The dissent apparently feared the danger-
ous widening of the scope of the patent
monopoly. However the invalidation of
the restriction might have lead the patentee
to increase the selling price to the public
to compensate for the loss of revenue from
the reduction of his market or might have
caused him to refuse permission of any dis-
tribution of the patented device to the gen-
eral public. See 10 Air L. Rev. 112 (1939).
Disparagement and Inducement of Breach of Contract
One who without a privilege to do so
induces a third party not to perform a con-
tract with another is liable to the other for
the harm caused thereby. See 4 Restatement
Torts, sec. 766. The concept of ''inducement,"
however, is amorphous, since there is no tech-
nical requirement as to the kind of conduct
resulting in inducement. It may consist
of a request or persuasion (moral pressure),
a threat of physical or economic harm, a
promise of a benefit, and possibly a refusal
to deal or an offer of better terms.
Does the act of manufacture, distribution
and sale of an object, the purchase of which
contributes to a breach of contract by a
third party constitute such "inducement" as
to permit judicial relief? According to
Paramount Pictures, Inc. v. Leader Press,
106 F. (2d) 229 (CCA. 10th, 1939), it may
under certain circumstances. There plain-
tiff sought to enjoin the manufacture, sale
and distribution by the defendant of adver-
tising accessories intended for use in con-
nection with plaintiff's motion pictures, al-
leging that : the plaintiff, engaged in
the production and distribution of motion
pictures in Oklahoma and elsewhere under
the name "Paramount Pictures," has pro-
duced fifty pictures during each of the past
fifteen years and has gained for its pictures
and actors a valuable and enviable reputa-
tion for excellence, in the mind of the
general public ; plaintiff expends huge sums
of money annually for national advertising
and publicity ; plaintiff also permits exhibi-
tors to show its pictures under licenses, re-
quiring them to advertise and announce them
as "Paramount Pictures"; exhibitors may
also lease advertising accessories prepared
by the plaintiff ; and improper advertising
reduces the plaintiff's revenue from pictures.
The defendant with knowledge of the above
conditions, and without the consent of the
plaintiff or his stars, manufactures and
sells to licensed exhibitors artistically in-
ferior advertising accessories purporting to
relate to the plaintiff's pictures, but contain-
ing erroneous and deceptive information
and not identifying them as "A Paramount
Picture," thereby impairing its good will
and jeopardizing its business integrity.
On appeal, the motion to dismiss was
denied because the bill disclosed tortious
inducement of breaches of the exhibitor's
contracts and disparagement of the plaintiff's
property.
The court comments on the lawfulness ot
plaintiff's business, which serves the distinc-
tive wants of many, involves a large capital
investment and a large annual outlay for
advertising alone, and consists, in part, of
intangible property, that is, the popularity
of its pictures, and its good will and that
of its stars, all brought about in a large
measure by artistic and attractive advertis-
ing inducing attendance of theatres. The
right to carry on a lawful business is a
valuable right, which a court of equity will
protect against unwarranted interference or
undue destruction, whether consisting of
tangible or intangible property.
The court declares that the bill does not
state a cause of action for unfair competition
on the basis of International News Service v.
Associated Press, 248 U.S. 215, as the allega-
tions of fact do not indicate the misappro-
702
priation of the property of the plaintiff or
the passing off of the defendant's advertis-
ing merchandise as the plaintiff's.
It also states that the well established
rule that one may not knowingly and inten-
tionally induce another to breach his contract
with a third party is applicable. The act of
the defendant in manufacturing and distrib-
uting advertising accessories without the
legend "A Paramount Picture," among ex-
hibitors bound by contract to advertise the
by-line is a wrongful contribution or induce-
ment to the breach of the license contracts.
The fact that the defendant does not use
the advertising accessories, but rather the
exhibitors, is not material.
Furthermore, on the facts alleged and
admitted, the case in the view of the court
comes well within the ambit of the princi-
ples of tortious disparagement, namely, that
one "without a privilege so to do, has no right
to issue and publish an untrue or deceptive
statement of fact which has a disparaging
effect upon the quality of another's property
under circumstances which would lead a
reasonable person to foresee that it will have
such effect" (See 4 Restatement, Torts, sec.
626) and that if the statement is understood
as one of disparagement and the under-
standing is a reasonable construction of the
language, it is immaterial that the person
making it did not intend it to be understood
in that manner. (See Restatement, supra, sec.
629). Here the defendant is charged with
manufacturing, selling and distributing for
the intended purpose and design of adver-
tising plaintiff's motion pictures, cheap, in-
ferior and grotesque advertising accessories,
containing inaccurate and misleading infor-
mation, omitting plaintiff's by-line, and thus
discrediting plaintiff's pictures, impairing its
good will and injuring its reputation.
The court also maintains that the plaintiff
cannot complain as to the manner in which
an exhibitor advertises his theatre, but has
a right to be heard in respect to the way
the exhibitor advertises its pictures and
stars, especially if the advertising violates
the license agreement or wrongfully dis-
parages plaintiff's business so as to impair
its good will and reduce its value.
Despite the plaintiff's failure here to allege
in terms the inducement of breach of con-
tract, the court invoked the tort to make
available injunctive relief. And even com-
petition between the parties would not pro-
vide justification for an "intentional" induce-
ment. It may be doubted, however, whether
the supplying of advertising accessories
without the inscription of the producer's
name thereon was such persuasive conduct
as to "induce" the exhibitors to show them
in that form and hence in violation of their
contracts. Furthermore, it is arguable that
the defendant's acts were not the legal cause
of the subsequent breach, for compliance
with its request, if any, involved the pur-
chase, not the display of the accessories by
the exhibitors. See 52 Harv. L. Rev. 338
(1939). Yet the dissociation of the purchase
from the use would effect an absurd result :
i.e., a completely wasted expenditure of
money. It is true that the exhibitor could
easily have remedied the defective acces-
sories by inserting the identifying by-line.
Therefore, if the tortious inducement were
the sole basis of relief, an injunction of an
affirmative nature requiring the insertion
of the phrase would afford a complete rem-
edy, but not the full relief desired. See 52
Harv. L. Rev. 338 (1939). The second
ground, disparagement, which applies fa-
miliar doctrines to a novel situation, sup-
ports a broader injunction. However, the
difficulty of supervision may militate against
injunctive relief in the principal case. In
the event of the denial of the relief sought,
the plaintiff can exercise control over
advertising through contract or by supplying
its own accessories in conjunction with the
films and including the charge within in-
creased rental fees.
Remedies of Distributor Against Exhibitor
It is not entirely unexpected that during
the course of business dealings disputes
will arise between the distributor and ex-
hibitor as to what their respective rights
and duties are under their existing arrange-
ments. For instance, the distributor may
fail to deliver on the agreed date a picture
of especially valuable appeal. Would that
703
alone give the exhibitor the right to cancel
the entire contract or must he continue his
performance and recoup his damages? Such
was the issue posed in Paramount Pictures,
Inc. v. Maxon, 284 N.W. 119 (Iowa, 1939).
There, a defendant, an operator of a motion
picture theater, which was fully booked, ex-
cept for two days, sought to obtain from plain-
tiff's agency the picture Gilded Lily, a very
popular production. The defendant was
refused the rental of this film for the open
dates, unless he likewise contracted for other
productions the plaintiff had or would have
for distribution. Accordingly, in reliance
upon the express representation that the
particular film would be provided for the
time requested, the defendant entered into
a written contract with the plaintiff and
proceeded to publicize the film in various
ways. But it turned out that the defendant
was unable to obtain the film from the
plaintiff for the stipulated dates, since it
had been sent to another town at a consid-
erably higher rental. As the result of a
talk with the plaintiff's agent, the defendant
was to receive three free films, in addition
to those contracted for, by way of settle-
ment. Although approval from the head
office was necessary, (which procedure might
take time), plaintiff's agent told the defen-
dant to proceed and show the pictures —
which he did. It is true that films were
sometimes by mutual arrangement substi-
tuted for others. Subsequently, the defen-
dant exhibited the Gilded Lily. Thereafter,
the plaintiff having been told that the pro-
posed settlement with reference to the extra
films had been rejected, the defendant gave
written notice of cancellation of the con-
tract for failure to deliver the feature at the
agreed time and neither took nor exhibited
any more of the plaintiff's pictures. The
plaintiff brought suit under the provisions
of the contract which provided that in the
event of default the defaulting party "shall
pay the damage so caused, and, if such
damage cannot be definitely computed, shall
pay as liquidated damages the sum equal to"
the rental of each such picture. The de-
fendant claimed that the plaintiff's breach
of contract excused performance by him.
The Supreme Court of Iowa affirmed a
judgment on a directed verdict in favor of
the plaintiff. It stated that custom and usage
permitting the change of films after rental
for certain dates could not prevail against
an express contract to the contrary (if one
existed), thus rejecting one of plaintiff's
contentions. The rule expressed is the usual
one, although in the absence of explicit
contractual negation agreements are con-
strued in the light of customs of the trade.
On the question of the defendant's right
of cancellation, the court was of the opinion
that the defendant's remedy was by way
of recoupment of damages and not a com-
plete defense here, following the well estab-
lished doctrine that where contract is sever-
able or divisible, and the consideration justly
apportioned to the parts of the contract, a
breach does not destroy the contract in toto
but the defendant must recoup in damages.
A divisible contract is defined in 3 Williston
on Contracts (Rev. Ed.) section 860a as one
"under which the whole performance is
divided into two sets of partial perform-
ances, each part of each set being the agreed
exchange for a corresponding part of the
set of performance to be rendered by the
other promisor." The dependency of prom-
ises upon one another is determined by the
intent of the parties. (See 3 Williston,
supra, sec. 824) . This principle is well stated
by the famous Lord Mansfield in the early
case of Boone v. Eyre 1 H. Bl. 273, note 1,
in these words: "Where mutual covenants
go to the whole of the consideration on
both sides, they are mutual conditions, the
one precedent to the other; but where they
apply only to a part, where a breach may be
paid for in damages, there the defendant
has a remedy on his covenant, and shall not
plead it as a condition precedent."
The delivery of the films at the specified
times by the plaintiff and the payment of the
rental fees by the defendant were probably
considered by the court as constituting two
sets of partial performances, each being
the agreed exchange for the other. And
although the defendant here had evidently
intended to make the delivery of the par-
ticular film at the fixed time a very im-
portant element in the contract, this intention
was not effectuated, according to the court's
interpretation, in the contract. The delivery
of the particular film could probably have
been made a condition precedent to per-
formance on the part of the defendant by
mutual agreement of the parties.
The provision for payment of a stipulated
sum in the event of breach will be enforced
as one for "liquidated damages," where the
damages anticipated are uncertain in amount
or difficult to prove, where it is intention
of the parties to liquidate them in advance,
and the amount stipulated is a reasonable
one, i.e., not greatly disproportionate to the
presumable loss or injury. On the other
hand if the sum fixed is not a pre-estimate
of probable, actual damages, but is a pun-
ishment, then the clause is a "penalty," and
unenforceable, only actual damages being
recoverable. The clause in the instant case
is evidently one of the former type.
In Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp. v.
Peoples Theatre, 24 F. Supp. 793 (W.D. Ala.
1938), the question was raised as to whether
the showing of films at a time not authorized
in the contract between the exhibitor and
distributor constituted a violation of the
proprietor's copyright or merely a breach
of contract. The defendant exhibitor, mov-
ing to dismiss an infringement action, con-
tended that the plaintiff distributor, by in-
trusting his films to the defendant pursuant
to the contract waived his right to sue in
tort under the Copyright Act and was rele-
gated to a suit on the contract. The court
rejected this contention as unsound and
stated that there had been no election of
remedies as an election presupposed a choice
of one remedy to the exclusion of another
and required pursuit of one or some decisive
action by the party with knowledge of the
facts and his rights. The mere creation
of a contract right was not such an election
and did not eliminate the plaintiff's copy-
right remedy. The exhibition at a different
time without license constituted both a
breach of contract and a trespass on plain-
tiff's copyright monopoly. The latter remedy-
was selected by the plaintiff.
It was correctly settled in previous cases
that in such a situation two remedies are
available — contractual and statutory. A
party should not be precluded from one
unless he has made a clear choice of the
other. This accords with usual rules ap-
plied under the doctrine of election of rem-
edies.
It has also been held that the borrowing
of copyrighted motion picture "shorts" from
a licensed exhibitor and their exhibition
without authority from the copyright owner
constitutes an actionable infringement. Vita-
phone Corp. v. Hutchinson Amusement Co.,
28 F. Supp. 526 (D. Mass. 1939). In that
case, several other interesting problems were
raised : first, whether "shorts" are copy-
rightable since they are trivial, vulgar and
of little artistic value. It was pointed out
that "shorts," the subject of which were
comedy, also had a story, possessing origi-
nality. Although not of great intellectual
value they were entitled to protection under
the Copyright Laws. The least pretentious
picture has, according to court, more origi-
nality than copyrightable directories. The
court refused to be a final judge of pictorial
values.
Second, it was argued that the copyright
is invalid because a corporation cannot own
a copyright as author, for it is incapable of
exercising intellectual labor and does not
possess the mental endowment necessary to
produce plays. Section 8 of the Copyright
Law entitles the author or proprietor, among
others, to copyrights and section 62 defines
"author" as including "an employer in the
case of works made for hire." The court
declared that although a corporation is
incapable of exercising intellect so as to be
primarily entitled to secure a copyright, it
can be an "employer" within the terms of
the statute and is entitled to a copyright.
Third, whether the present suit should
be abated for reasons concerning the part
played by the Copyright Protection Bureau,
in suing on behalf of the plaintiff : It seems
that this non-profit agency, maintained by
the eight major producers and distributors,
investigates unauthorized exhibitions of
copyrighted photoplays and engages in edu-
cational activities concerning the same
among exhibitors throughout the country.
It protects exhibitors in their contract rights
of priority and against unauthorized free
showings. It also checks on unauthorized
loans. The distributors contribute to a fund
for the payment of the Bureau's expenses
(salaries and expenses of legal department)
on a certain basis. Settlements are made
by the Bureau without specific communica-
tion with the distributors. In the absence
of a settlement, an infringement suit is
brought, its cost being charged to a par-
ticular distributor and paid from the fund.
Proceeds obtained thereby are credited to
the distributor, whose copyright has been
infringed, and are applied to diminish the
/OS
amount of his contribution. Annual audit
and reports are made to the distributors.
In answer to the argument of abatement
of the suit as brought without the specific
authority of the plaintiff, the court pointed
out that the facts were to the contrary, the
plaintiff having communicated information
of the violation to the Bureau and having
requested further details. In accordance with
its practice, the Bureau apprised the plain-
tiff of the suit and received assistance from
it as requested. Hence there was specific
authorization.
Furthermore, the court denied that the
Bureau was engaged in barratrous practice,
even assuming barratry as a basis for abate-
ment. The Bureau was formed to protect
the distributors and producers from illegal
trespasses involving the loss of substantial
revenue. There was no purpose on the part
of the distributors or the Bureau to foment
suits in order to oppress people — known as
barratry. Nor did they disturb the repose
of their neighbors nor officiously interfere
in other men's quarrels. They were merely
engaged in protecting their legitimate busi-
ness enterprises, such an organization being
necessitated by the large number of thea-
ters.
Lastly, the Bureau, according to the court,
was not engaged in the unlawful practice
of law, if such be assumed to be a cause of
abatement. It did not sell legal services.
There was no solicitation of employment in
legal matters by the Bureau or any of its
lawyers. The plaintiff had a right to main-
tain its own investigative department to
discover infringements and a legal depart-
ment to prosecute them, in the protection
of its lawful business. The Bureau had a
direct relation to the latter.
This Bureau has functions somewhat simi-
lar to those of ASCAP, in the field of
music, except that the latter in addition
is the assignee of all the copyrights, serves
as the licensing body, collects the royalties
and distributes them. The court was sound
in upholding the legality of the Bureau
and in considering the unauthorized borrow-
ing and exhibition an infringement. The
latter is particularly necessary, if the copy-
right is to be valuable property for its
owner.
Author versus Producer
Today more than ever before motion pic-
tures are based upon copyrighted novels
and plays, the motion picture rights to which
have been purchased by producers. At times,
however, in the absence of such purchases,
complaints have been directed at the simi-
larities between a picture and a novel or
play ; charges of plagiarism made ; and suits
for infringement brought. It may be desir-
able on occasion to dispose summarily of a
suit by a comparison of the continuity
(synopsis) of the picture with the book or
play. But the continuity must be a "fair
representation" of the film. So held Collins
v. Metro-Goldivyn Pictures Corp., 106 F.
(2d) 33 (CCA. 2d, 1939), where the plain-
tiff alleged in her complaint two causes of
action : ( 1 ) for infringement by the defen-
dants of a copyrighted book Test Pilot
by a motion picture of the same name and
(2) for unfair competition in the deceptive
use of the title of the book as the title of
the picture. A motion to dismiss the
first cause of action was granted, the second
cause of action not having been brought to
trial. At the outset, the Circuit Court of
Appeal determined a procedural question
— that an appeal lay from an order dismis-
sing a claim for infringement at a time when
the court had not disposed of a claim joined
with it for unfair competition, since the
decree upon the former was final, thus over-
ruling a prior contrary case in the same
circuit and following decisions in other
circuits and the policy implicit in the new
Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. It would
be inconvenient to defer the review of the
disposition of a claim, though finally dis-
posed, until other separable claims had been
adjudicated.
On the merits, the court stated that a
comparison of the defendant's "cutting con-
tinuity" with the plaintiff's book (a series of
flying stories based upon facts) did not
indicate infringement of the book by the
motion picture despite the similarity of cer-
tain incidents in both and the assumption
of copying the parts common to both on a
motion to dismiss ; that the language of the
book was not used in the continuity ; and that
the series of events portrayed therein purported
to represent real occurrences, which aside
from the form of expression were not pro-
tected under the Copyright Act. The court,
however, was not satisfied that the parties
had ever agreed that the continuity was a
fair representation of the film. Therefore,
the plaintiff had not had her day in court.
The court pointed out that the complaint
should be dismissed if after a new hearing
the judge should determine the continuity
is a fair representation of the film, a view
of the picture being the best means for
reaching a satisfactory conclusion.
Similarly in Dellar v. Samuel Goldwyn,
Inc. 104 F. (2d) 661 (CCA. 2d, 1939), it
was held that at some stage in the pro-
ceedings, the plaintiffs, suing for infringe-
ment of the play Oh Shah by the picture
Roman Scandals, were entitled to try out
the vital issue of whether the continuity
faithfully represented the film. There the
district judge had granted a motion to dis-
miss on the basis of a comparison of the
defendant's continuity with the plaintiff's
play, although the latter had protested that
the judge had never seen the film and that
there was no proof that the continuity
correctly represented it. The Circuit Court
supported the plaintiff's claim for a trial on
the issue of a faithful representation of the
film by the continuity — which single issue
was held entitled to a separate trial in
Eisman v. Samuel Goldwyn, Inc. (S.D.N.Y.
1939) (unreported, but subsequent in
time to principal case). Furthermore,
the Circuit Court pointed out that the dis-
trict judge need not see film (though direct
view may facilitate his task), if the con-
tinuity is a fair synopsis of the film in
words and that if it is a faithful represen-
tation, the bill should be dismissed for the
defendants took no more than they had a
right to take.
Evidently the following procedure seems
to be developing in such cases in the South-
ern District of New York: on the defen-
dant's motion to dismiss, the district judge
compares a continuity (supposedly a fair
representation of the film) with the book
or play, at the same time assuming not only
that the defendant had "access" to the book
or play, but also that he actually copied parts
common to it and the film. And the deci-
sion does not dispose of the case unless
it goes against the plaintiff ; if the latter
wins, the issue of copying remains to be
tried. The court in Dellar v. Samuel Gold-
wyn, Inc., supra, doubted the convenience
of this division of the trial, as the issue of
fair use, alone decided, is the most trouble-
some in the law of copyright and ought not
to be resolved in cases where it may turn
out moot, unless the advantage is very plain;
and it regretted to see this procedure be-
come customary as it apparently tended to
be in this district. Moreover, in a previous
case, Shipman v. R.K.O. Pictures, Inc., 100
F. (2d) 533 (CCA. 2d, 1939), Judge Man-
ton criticized this recently formulated prac-
tice as putting the defendant in a dangerous
position since the admission of access might
eventually facilitate the success of an un-
meritorius claim of a plaintiff.
In Shipman v. R.K.O. Pictures, Inc., supra,
suit for infringement of the copyright of
plaintiff's play Depends on the Woman by
the motion picture / Dream Too Much was
brought. On motion, the bill of complaint
was dismissed by the district court for
failure to state a cause of action, after a
reading of the play and a view of the
motion picture. This decision was affirmed
on appeal. Judge Manton declared that
from a comparison, the works were shown
to be so different as to locale, characters,
devices, motives and emotions expressed,
that no literary piracy could be charged.
Judge Learned Hand, in an opinion in
which Judge Swann concurred, agreed in
the result and followed the reasoning in
Nichols v. Universal Picture Co. 45 F (2d)
119 (CCA. 2d) namely, that "there is a
point where the similarities are so little
concrete (are therefore so abstract) that
they become only 'theme,' 'idea,' or skeleton
of the plot and these are always in the
public domain ; no copyright can protect
them."
Judge Hand's opinion represents the view
of the majority of the court and hence is
the rule of this case. The test that he set
forth is vague but provides some guidance.
In short, a similarity in theme is
permissible, whereas similarity in locale,
characters, devices, etc., that is, the various
"concrete' matters, is not. The practical
operation of this standard requires resort
to factors considered significant by Judge
Manton.
Two other recent cases have turned upon
whether or not there were such vital simi-
larities as to convince the court of infringe-
ment. In Bein v. Warner Bros., 105 F. (2d)
969 (CCA. 2d, 1939), it appears that the
plaintiff wrote a novel and a play (both
copyrighted), which dealt with life in a
reform school. In 1931 he came to an agree-
ment with a producer for the production
of his play and early in 1932 was assisted
in its revision for the stage by one named
Chorodov, an employee of the producer.
The option to produce the play lapsed. Sev-
eral months later during the same year,
Chorodov wrote a screen play about life
in a reformatory for the defendant who
made it into the motion picture, Mayor of
Hell. The plaintiff claimed that the defen-
dant's motion picture infringed his copy-
rights. Chorodov, however, maintained that
his screen play was based on a story written
by one Auster and purchased by the de-
fendant. The Auster story was proved to
have been an original work.
The Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the
dismissal of the suit, stating that a com-
parison of the outline of the productions
indicated no correspondence in plot, char-
acters or impression and that the touch
of similarity in a few incidents and a few
points of dialogue were of trifling impor-
tance and were only coincidences that one
would expect in productions set against the
same background. Moreover, the court
noted a close similarity between the Chor-
odov screen play and the Auster story and
an only very slight resemblance between
the defendant's motion picture and the
plaintiff's novel.
The court's approach fits in very well with
the test expounded by Judge Hand and
relies on factors deemed important by Judge
Manton.
And likewise in Barry v. Hughes 103 F.
(2d) 427 (CCA. 2d, 1939), affirming 41
U.S.P.Q. 340 (S.D.N.Y. 1938) the court also
dismissed a suit for infringement, pointing
out that certain similarities between the
story and picture were based upon a very
obvious dramatic device, which could
scarcely have been monopolized and that the
two dialogues had no resemblance, except
in so far as their outlines, which were
independently arrived at, made that inevi-
table. The facts as eventually determined by
the court made possible its avoidance of
the difficult problem of the liability of one
who copies from a plagiarist. The court
noted that the wrong is copying, that is,
using the author's work as a source — which
is just what a copy of copy does, and rec-
ognized that such a party has been held
a plagiarist, however innocent he may be.
This view, according to the court, is unduly
harsh and contrary to the general doctrine
of torts that one is ordinarily liable only
for those consequences of one's acts which
a reasonable person would anticipate. The
court indicates a willingness to permit an ac-
tion for unjust enrichment or for an injunc-
tion after discovery, but hesitance to subject
the user to damages, unless something put
him on actual notice.
When the court decrees a dismissal of
the suit, the matter ends at that point. But
once the court finds an infringement, then
the question of the measure of the plain-
tiff's recovery becomes important. The Copy-
right Act provides that the infringer shall
be liable for "such damages as the copy-
right proprietor may have suffered from
such infringement as well as all the profits
which the infringer shall haze made from
such infringements, ... or in lieu of actual
damages and profits, such damages as to
the court shall appear to be just . . ." (17
U.S.C.A., sec. 25b) (Italics added— Ed.).
What is the meaning of the italicized lan-
guage? Is the owner entitled to all profits
made by the infringer or only such profits as
are attributable to the infringement. Toward
what situation is the "in lieu" clause di-
rected? In Sheldon v. Metro-Goldzvyn Pic-
tures Corp., as an infringement had already
been established (81 F. (2d) 49 (CCA. 2d.
1936), the district judge granted all profit^
to the copyright owner, admitting that the
award was unjust and punitive, but main-
taining that he was bound to reach that
result under the interpretation of the itali-
cized expression by appellate court decisions.
The judge declared that the "in lieu" pro-
vision is applicable only when the plaintiff
cannot prove his own damages or the de-
fendant's profits, since it is intended to give
the copyright owner some recompense when
the rules of law render such proof diffi-
cult or impossible. In a landmark decision
(102 F. (2d) 45 (CCA. 2d, 1939), Judge
Learned Hand, speaking for the Circuit Court
of Appeals brushed aside the doctrine that
"by no hook or crook can an infringer be
relieved of so manifestly unjust a result"
and established a rule of apportionment, find-
ing analogy in the field of patent account-
ings and pointing to the common practice
of man in making quantitative judgments
and acting upon them in matters which
logically admitted them as little as the
instant one.
In fixing the plaintiff's share of the net
profits at one-fifth the court refused to
accept the expert testimony of producers
and exhibitors at its face value, recognized
that the fact that the plot or general skele-
ton of the plaintiff's play was already in
the public domain was a consideration for
a lower percentage of the profits, refused
to allow the defendants to count the effect
of their standing and reputation in the in-
dustry, a very important factor, as they
were deliberate plagiarists, and concluded
that it was not its best guess that had to
prevail, but a figure which would favor the
plaintiff in every reasonable chance of error.
The complexity of the problem of appor-
tionment may be indicated by reference to
some of the matters that the court had to
decide in the accounting: (1) The distribu-
tion cost of the picture was determined
by dividing the total cost by the number
of pictures distributed by the defendants
during the year, and not on the proportion
of the gross receipts of the infringing pic-
ture to the total gross receipts. (2) Profits
made from the exhibition of the infringing
picture outside the United States were in-
cluded, as the statute gives the author the
exclusive right to make records for repro-
duction and negatives made here and shipped
abroad are such "records." The plaintiffs
acquired an equitable interest in these rec-
ords as soon as they were made — which
attached to the profits from their exploita-
tion. The plaintiffs could only obtain net
profits and hence were chargeable with the
losses, for the various exhibitions of the
positives abroad were not shown to have
been separate torts. But the plaintiffs were
not charged with losses from exhibitions in
the United States, since each exhibition was
a separate tort, for which the plaintiff might
elect to sue or not to sue. (3) The profits
of the defendant, Loew's theater-subsidi-
aries, were chargeable, for the exhibitions
were torts and the profits were benefits
arising from them and reaching the hands of
volunteers, and in this case the subsidiaries
clearly were dominated by the officers of the
principal corporation. (4) "Overhead ex-
penses" were allocated in proportion to the
cost of production, not cost of distribution.
An allowance in overhead for scrapped con-
tinuities and discarded completed pictures
was proper as such charges were inevitable
wastage. Similarly idle time (or waste due
to employment on annual rather than per
picture basis) had to be considered. (5)
No allowance for income taxes paid by the
defendants should be made, as they were
deliberate plagiarists.
In a collateral suit [Sheldon v. Moredall
Realty Corp., 29 F. Supp. 729 (S.D.N.Y.
1939)] concerning the same infringement,
but committed by an innocent party, a motion
picture exhibitor, the district court ordered
an apportionment of the net profits of the
picture, allowing the plaintiffs one-fifth as
in Sheldon v. Metro-Goldwyn Pictures Corp.,
supra. The court took into account, inter
alia, the proportion of the profits attributable
to the infringing picture and the other fea-
tures and allowed a deduction for payment of
federal income tax as the instant defendant
was an innocent infringer.
The acceptance of the principle of appor-
tionment of profits in the field of copy-
right infringement accords with the language
of the statute and at the same time removes
the vicious penalty of wholesale confiscation
of profits. The policy underlying appor-
tionment is the prevention of unjust enrich-
ment, each party securing the fruits of his
labor. The basic concept in the law of dam-
ages is that of compensation — restitution to
the plaintiff for the harm he has suffered. But
the award of profits and damages was not
intended primarily for deterrence, although
that may be the indirect effect. See 39
Col. L. Rev. 869 (1939).
Taxation
The state and federal governments in their
effort to obtain revenue and/or to regulate
business have imposed taxes affecting vari-
ous aspects of the motion picture industry
— exhibitor, distributors and authors. An
interesting measure of the regulatory type
is the Pennsylvania "Store and Theater Act"
(P.L. 1656, 1937), which is directed at chain
exhibitors as well as chain stores. Anti-
chain store statutes, themselves of relatively
recent existence, some of which have already
been pronounced valid by the Supreme
Court of the United States, have spread
rapidly all over the country ; but this act
aimed at chain-theaters seems to be the first
of its kind that has come to light to date.
Its validity was Contested in American Stores
Co. v. Boardman, 6A. (2d) 826 (Pa. 1939).
There, plaintiff corporations operated, main-
tained and controlled a large chain of stores
and theaters respectively throughout the
state. The Pennsylvania statute (mentioned
above), imposed a license tax on every per-
son "operating, maintaining and controlling
one or more stores or theaters" within the
state "under the same general management,
supervision, or ownership," the tax being
per unit for a fixed number, and a higher
tax for additional units (the tax ranged
from $1 for the first store or theater to
$500 for each one in excess of 500). Section
1 of Article IX of the Pennsylvania Constitu-
tion provides that "all taxes shall be uniform
upon the same class of subjects." Plaintiffs
filed bills in equity to enjoin the enforcement
of the Act as violative of the article IX, sec-
tion 1 of Pennsylvania Constitution and the
fourteenth amendment of the Federal Con-
stitution.
The Chancellor, upholding the plaintiff's
contention that the legislative graduation of
the tax per store or theater according to
their respective numbers offended article IX,
section 1, granted a permanent injunction.
On appeal this decree was affirmed. The
court's reasoning was as follows : apart
from the fact that the modern methods of
retail merchandising and theater operation
and control indicate the absence of differ-
ence between chains or other stores or
theaters (as shown in the record and the
findings of the chancellor), a reading of the
statute unquestionably reveals a legislative
attempt to establish a classification based
solely upon a difference in quantity of pre-
cisely the same tax base, for the classifica-
tion rests on the number of stores or thea-
ters, and nothing else. The graduation is
according to numbers without any relation
to any other consideration except that the
number of stores or theaters is under the
same ownership, management or supervi-
sion. The statutory imposition of a progres-
sively graduated tax on the operation of
stores or theaters, just as on income, lacks
uniformity, since different rates are estab-
lished on varying amounts or quantities of
the same tax base, i.e., the number of stores
or theaters, and is therefore unconstitutional
(under article IX, section 1).
The court disagrees with the contention
that the uniformity clause of the state con-
stitution has no applicability to an excise
or privilege tax imposed by the contested
legislation. The tax whether excise, prop-
erty or something else has to be uniform,
it states, in view of the unambiguous decla-
ration on the state constitution that "all
taxes shall be uniform."
The instant court, if it had considered
the question, would have held that the chain
store and theater act also violated the "equal
protection" clause of the fourteenth amend-
ment, as an unreasonable classification, in
view of the absence of difference between
chain and other stores or theaters in respect
to retail merchandising and theater opera-
tion and control as found by the chancellor.
Yet the hurdles of "uniformity" and "equal
protection" did not prove unsurpassable, in
the eyes of the Supreme Court of the United
States, in so far simple anti-chain store
legislation (Indiana), graduating the tax in
the same manner as the Pennsylvania statute,
was concerned. In fact, an even more severe
Florida statute, under which the tax was
higher as the number of units increased, was
upheld as containing a reasonable classifica-
tion, on the ground that the addition of new
stores made possible greater utilization of
chain store merchandising methods. See 36
Col. L. Rev. 1366 (1936). The recognition of
such economic data would have enabled the
instant court to distinguish the income
710
tax cases and would have provided an
adequate basis for holding the tax uniform
and the classification reasonable, within the
meaning of the state constitution and federal
"equal protection" clause respectively. These
economic facts are not reconcilable with
the chancellor's findings in the principal
case.
Another tax, also affecting the exhibitor,
but designed primarily for revenue pur-
poses, was attacked in Saenger Realty Corp.
v. Grosjean (La. 19th Ind. Dist. Ct. 1939)
(unreported). The plaintiff exhibitor paid,
under protest, a tax based on the aggregate
amount paid by him to motion picture dis-
tributors and producers for licensing the
exhibition of copyrighted motion pictures
publicly for profit (usually known as a rental
fee) in the state of Louisiana. Under the
usual licensing agreement between exhibitors
and producers and distributors, celluloid
prints (films) of motion photoplays were
delivered to the plaintiff. The Collector
contended that this contract was a lease or
rental of tangible personal property, namely,
a moving picture film, which was taxable
under a Louisiana statute defining tangible
personal property as follows : " 'Tangible per-
sonal property' means and includes personal
property which may be seen, weighed, meas-
ured, felt or touched, or is in any other man-
ner perceptible to the senses. The tern
'tangible personal property' shall not include
stocks, bonds, notes, or other obligations or
securities."
Section 41 of the Copyright Act provides :
"The copyright is distinct from the property
in the material object copyrighted, and the
sale or conveyance, by gift or otherwise of
the material object shall not by itself con-
stitute a transfer of the copyright, nor shall
the assignment of the copyright constitute
a transfer of the title to the material ob-
ject." (Italics added— Ed.)
The court granted recovery of the tax
by the plaintiff on the ground that the
amount paid by the exhibitor under the con-
tract was for royalties for an intangible
right, that is, for the limited copyrighted
license and hence was not taxable under
the statute.
The court reasons in the following man-
ner. The contract between the distributor
and exhibitor is merely a contract wherein
"the distributor grants and the exhibitor
accepts a limited license under respective
copyrights." The copyright is undoubtedly an
intangible and so the limited license there-
under is likewise an intangible. "The mere
possession of a motion picture film without
the right to exhibit it would avail one
nothing, zvhereas, the privilege of exercising
the right conferred by the copyright is the
thing of value." (Court's italics.) Hence
payment is made for the license to use a
copyright, since it is the only thing from
which the exhibitor could derive benefit.
The exhibitor pays, not for the use of the
tangible, material object, the film, but for
the privilege of exhibiting something that
is copyrighted, the film being accessory or
incidental to that exercise.
The use of language and clauses usually
found in leases, for instance, the obligation
of the exhibitor to return the prints as re-
ceived, reasonable wear and tear excepted,
the obligation to replace the same in case
of loss or destruction, etc., according to the
court, does not necessarily stamp this con-
tract as a contract of lease, especially in
view of the fact that the so-called object
of the lease — the film — would be valueless
without the privilege of exhibiting it.
The question of whether a distributor
comes within the meaning of a state statute,
laying a tax measured by gross receipts
upon "every person (including corporation)
. . . engaging . . . within the state in the
business of collecting incomes from the real
or personal property" (W. Va. Laws 1935,
c. 862 i.) is considered in James v. United
States, 59 Sup. Ct. 272 (U.S. 1939). The
plaintiff Delaware Corporation with its
principal place of business in New York City
is engaged in the distribution of motion
picture films for exhibition in various states,
including West Virginia, has no office or
place of business in West Virginia, but
branch offices in various other states ; has
no agents or employees in the state other
than a traveling representative to solicit
contracts for exhibition ; and owns no prop-
erty in West Virginia except films sent
there temporarily and afterward returned
to it at points without the state.
Theater owners or managers send their
application for licenses to exhibit certain
films to the New York office for acceptance
or rejection. The acceptance, if given, is
attached to the application and sent back
to the exhibitor. The contract provides for
delivery of films, exhibition, payment of a
fixed sum or a percentage of receipts from
exhibition and return to another exhibitor
or to plaintiff's exchange. The license on
the percentage basis provides for segregation
of the percentage to be held "in trust" and
to be paid over daily. All payments due
from West Virginia exhibitors are sent to
plaintiff at points without the state. The
exhibitors admittedly are subject to and
pay the tax imposed on operators of movie
houses under another section of the West
Virginia statute.
Plaintiff sued to restrain collection of the
tax on the ground that the tax was an
unconstitutional burden on interstate com-
merce. The lower court enjoined the en-
forcement of the statute and its decree was
affirmed on appeal.
The Supreme Court stated that as the
plaintiff carried on no business within the
state except in the solicitation of contracts
and had no collection agents there and as
the exhibitors there were bound to, and
did, pay all sums due under their contracts
to plaintiff at points outside the state, there
was no basis to say that plaintiff was engaged
in collecting income within the state, either
as a business or otherwise. The "in trust"
provision in percentage licenses, according
to the court, was a familiar device for secur-
ing payment to the plaintiff in the event of
the exhibitor's financial embarrassment, but
did not make the exhibitor the plaintiff's
agent nor dispense with payments to plain-
tiff without the state. The emphasis in the
statute on the carrying-on of business or
some other activities within the state as a
requisite condition and the taxing of the
exhibitor's receipts in his hands indicated
the absence of a legislative purpose to tax
gross receipts apart from the business or
activity of collecting them carried on with-
out the state.
The court in the principal case was not
bound by any contrary interpretation in
state decisions, which included the distribu-
tors within the meaning of statute. In any
event, the attempted tax would have con-
stituted an unconstitutional burden on inter-
state commerce (so the lower court held),
for the business of distribution of films was
clearly of interstate character.
Another interesting problem is the taxa-
bility of the income of alien author derived
in part from payment for his granting the
exclusive, world wide right to produce mo-
tion pictures based on certain of his works
for a stated period. Sabatini v. Commissioner
of Internal Revenue, 98 F. (2d) 753 (CCA.
2d, 1938). The contract under consideration
was made in England where the author re-
sided. Under section 212 of the Revenue
Law of 1928 (26 U.S.C.A. 211), in the case
of a non-resident alien individual gross in-
come includes only income from sources
within the United States.
The question at issue, inter alia, was
whether the income received from the above
mentioned contract came from sources within
the country within the meaning of the statu-
tory language. As the contract was made
in England, the Board of Tax Appeals
treated it as a sale of property there and
held the income derived from the sale non-
taxable. The Circuit Court of Appeals, dis-
agreed, stating that the contract did not
constitute a sale, but was a granting of the
right to produce certain motion pictures
from the works for a limited time, the author
remaining the owner of the works and
merely licensing their use for a particular
object for a period and there being no trans-
fer of title necessary to a completed sale. Al-
though the author received a lump sum instead
of a series of payments, that lump payment
was for the use of his literary property for
the purpose named, and that part of the
payment apportioned for the use in the
United States was taxable as a royalty paid
in advance and received for the granting
of that privilege.
This view is apparently correct, although
there is no direct authority for this inter-
pretation.
Lotteries
Theater owners, always interested in ad-
vertising and revenue-raising devices, fell
easy prey to the promoters of "Bank Night."
The scheme spread like wild fire throughout
the entire country, and in its wake followed
a mass of civil and criminal litigation. See
37 Col. L. Rev. 877 (1937). Its legality
was questioned in actions for declarator}1
712
judgment and for injunction against state
officers by theater owners, actions for recov-
ery in contract by winners and by the in-
ventors of the scheme, suits to abate the
practice as a nuisance and criminal prosecu-
tions.
The essential elements of the plan are:
first, a registration book, kept in the lobby
of the theater, enrollment being free and
giving the signer a chance for a sum of money
that is offered weekly to a ticket holder
chosen by chance from all those who signed
the registration book ; second, presence in-
side the theater on the night of the draw-
ing is not required since winning number is
announced outside the theater as well as from
the stage. The holder of the lucky ticket must,
however, present himself in the theater
within a few minutes (2 or 3) or else the
prize is added to the next week's offering.
This plan has been litigated under the
lottery laws. Whether by explicit statutory
definition or by judicial construction on
analogy to statutes, a lottery is usually stated
to consist of three elements — chance, prize
and consideration. The inquiry into the legal-
ity of the "Bank Night" scheme necessarily
has centered around the third requirement,
namely, consideration, inasmuch as the other
two — chance and prize are clearly present.
Where the plan is limited in operation only
to patrons of theaters, the courts will uni-
formly find the requisite consideration in
increased patronage or in the admission
price, part being intended for entrance and
part for the chance at prize, and will there-
fore, hold the scheme illegal — whether for
civil or criminal purposes. See Robb and
Rowley United v. State, 127 S.W. (2d) 221
(Tex. Ct. of Civ. App. 1939). But where, as
in the plan outlined above, opportunity is
given to non-patrons as well as patrons,
the courts are hopelessly divided. Yet,
especially in civil suits has this plan proved
quite vulnerable.
The courts, invalidating the "Bank Night"
plan, have found consideration present in
a variety of ways. For instance, in Mc-
Fadden v. Bain, 91 P. (2d) 292 (Ore. 1939)
(distribution of coupons instead of registra-
tion) the court stated that the payment for
admission was for both the ticket of ad-
mission and for a chance at the prize, that
the transaction was an attempt to evade the
law, and that since it was a lottery as to those
who paid, it was necessarily a lottery as to
those who did not pay for their chances.
And in State v. La Crosse Theaters Co. 286
N.W. 707 (Wis. 1939), it was held that the
increased patronage, which resulted from
the practice and made it profitable to thea-
ters, furnished the consideration. This same
reasoning was applied in Little River Thea-
ters Corp. v. State, 185 So. 855 (Fla. 1939)
(suit to suppress a "public nuisance"), where
it appeared that the majority of the winners
paid admission and attendance at the theater
on bank night was several times more than
on a succesive night on which the same picture
was shown. It would seem that in Florida
(and New Hampshire too) the reality of
free participation by all patrons and out-
siders in the operation of the plan might
take the plan outside the ban of the lottery
law. See Dorman v. Publix — Saenger — Sparks
Theaters, 184 So. 886 (Fla. 1938) (suit by
winner, in which court considers acts of regis-
tration and attendance as "legal detriment"
and as constituting ample consideration). A
broader view of the nature of "considera-
tion" was taken in Affiliated Enterprises v.
Waller, 5 A. (2d) 257 (Del. Super. Ct. 1939),
the court applying the usual rules of the
law of contracts. After a penetrating analy-
sis, the court stated that the requirements of
registration and attendance in the lobby of
the theater at a fixed time were not merely
incidental or friendly detriments not in-
tended as ingredients for a bargain, nor
only a condition for a gratuitous promise,
but were acts essentially bargained for, with
the well-founded expectancy of profit to
the user of the scheme ; and that as related
to a scheme in the nature of a lottery, the
consideration need not consist of money or
something of actual, pecuniary value, but
might consist in an act done at the request
of the proprietor of the scheme, if upon a
reasonable and realistic view the act was
bargained for. A contrary view was adopted
in Darlington Theaters v. Cober, 2 S.E. (2d)
783 (S.C. 1939). This court erroneously
concluded, that even if voluntary attendance
without obligation were assumed to be legal
consideration for participation in the draw-
ing, that element was absent, since under
the particular scheme actual attendance at
the drawing was not a requirement for win-
ning; the court did not realize that the re-
quirement of advance notice by an absentee
to the theater owner to preserve his rights
could, under the principles of contract law,
have been held to be "legal detriment," suffi-
cient as consideration.
The preceding cases indicate the type of
consideration bringing the plan within the
lottery statutes-benefit to the owner in the
form of increased attendance and detriment
in registration, waiting in lobby, and notice
on absence. The "Bank Night" scheme
should, under a realistic approach, be con-
sidered a "lottery," and this uniform con-
clusion has been reached by slightly different
reasoning.
Negligence of Theatre-Owner
The usual run of cases in which a theater
owner is sued by a patron for negligence
involve allegedly inadequate lights and de-
fective seats and stairways, raised platforms,
etc. The ordinary rules developed in the
law of torts are applied : duty, its breach,
proximate cause, absence of contributory
negligence and legal damage. The courts,
however, are split on the nature of the
owner's duty : that is, whether he owes the
ordinary duty of reasonable care to a patron
or whether he is bound to exercise a higher
degree of care. The latter, which repre-
sents the minority view, was applied in
Standard Theaters Corp. v. Hughes, 91 P.
(2d) 1059 (Okla. 1939). There the plain-
tiff, a patron, sat in a row of seats raised
about four inches above the level of the
aisle. As the "step-oflf" was not made visible
by an aisle light, the plaintiff caught her
foot on it, fell and sustained injuries. The
plaintiff based her claim upon the defendant's
negligence in maintaining such a condition
in a theater, to which place the general
public was invited.
The court, inter alia, upheld a charge to
the jury, to the effect, that the defendant
was under a duty to exercise a high degree
of care. It followed the doctrine that the pro-
prietor of a place of amusement to which the
public is invited owes a high degree of care
to his patrons in view of their admission only
upon payment of a price.
The overwhelming weight of authority,
however, has adopted the rule of ordinary
due care, and has refused to put the theater
owner practically in the position of an in-
surer. In Miller v. Poll's New England Thea-
ters, 125 Conn. 610, 7 A. (2d) 845 (1939),
the facts of which were quite similar to the
Oklahoma case, supra, the court said :
"One operating a theater is not an insurer
of the absolute safety of its patrons ; the
duty assumed is to use reasonable care in
the construction, equipment and manage-
ment of it, having regard to the character
of the entertainment given and the cus-
tomary conduct of the persons attending."
This doctrine has been followed in Pennsyl-
vania, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Maryland,
Illinois and Ohio. For instance, see Trame
V. Orpheum Theater Co. 60 Ohio App." 323,
21 N.E. (2d) 177 (1939) ; Keenan v. E. M.
Loews, Inc. 19 N.E. (2d) 37 (Mass. 1939) ;
Raffeto v. Warner Bros., 121 N.J. L. 333,
2A. (2d) 595 (1938).
Conclusion
This survey of recent cases indicates the
changing content of the law as it develops
to meet novel situations. For instance, the
remedy of inducement of breach of contract
has been made available to the distributor
against the manufacturer of advertising ac-
cessories. Old rules have been changed to
conform with present ideas of justice.
Witness the recognition of the theory of
apportionment in cases of recoveries for
infringements. And old doctrines have con-
tinued to be vital : the rules of negligence
are applied to the theater owner ; ideas, as
such, are not protected as literary property
and are not copyrightable; and trademarks
consist of nondescriptive terms.
Philosophy is an imposing word. But we
are not conscious of it when we live it. Each
day the right and wrong of an issue presses
upon us for selection. We turn to the law to
make the decision. The rules so established
become standards for conduct. We forget
that actually it is our standards which cre-
ated the rules and not the reverse.
I hope this review of recent legal develop-
ments has not only clarified the rules, but
given some insight into the standards which
motivated them.
714
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change Bldg., Main 8401, Minneapolis, Minn.
Publisher: T. E. Mortensen. Editor: Charles F.
Hynes. Advertising Manager: H. C. Mortensen.
Circulation Manager: O. F. McCracken.
HARRISON'S FORECASTER
National, trade, sesaonable (June to August).
Analyzing (story material. 1270 Sixth Ave..
Circle 7-4622. New York. N. Y. Editor: P. S.
Harrison.
HARRISON'S REPORTS
National, trade, weekly on ^Saturday. 1270
Sixth Ave., Circle 7-4622. New York, N. Y.
Editor: P. S. Harrison.
HOLLYWOOD LOW-DOWN
Trade, fan monthly. Official magazine of Fan
Club Federation. 6303 Yucca St., GRanite 6346.
Hollywood, Calif. Editor and Publisher: Jimmy
Valentine.
HOLLYWOOD MAGAZINE
National fan, monthly on or about the 10th of
the month preceding date of issue. Fawcett Pub-
lications, Inc., Greenwich. Conn. Editorial Office:
1501 Broadway. New York, N. Y. Branches: 610
N. Michigan Ave.. Chicago, 111.: 6331 Hollywood
Blvd., Hollywood, Calif. Editor: Llewellyn Mil
ler.
HOLLYWOOD REPORTER
Trade, daily except Sunday, 6713 Sunset Blvd..
Hollywood, Calif. Editor and Publisher: W. R.
Wilkerson. Business Manager: Thomas F. Seward.
Assistant to Publisher: George H. Kennedy.
Branches: 229 W. 42nd St., New York. N. Y.:
540 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, 111.: 43 Norfolk
Square. London, England; 21 Rue de Berri, Paris.
France: San Martin, 501, Buenos Aires; 198 Pitt
St., Sydney. Australia; Erzsebet Korut, 7. Buda-
pest VII. Hungary: Biblioteksgatan, 11, Stock-
holm, Sweden; Bucarelli, 17, Mexico City, Mexico.
HOLLYWOOD SCREEN WORLD
West coast trade, bi-weekly, 6303 Yucca St..
GRanite 63*6, Hollywood, Calif. Editor and
Publisher: Louis Jacobino.
HOLLYWOOD SPECTATOR
National, trade, bi-weekly. (Reviews of pictures
and comment only). 6513 Hollywood Blvd.. Hol-
lywood, Calif. Editor: Welford Beaton.
INDEPENDENT, THE
Official organ of the Independent Theater
Owners Ass'n. Inc., 6emi-monthly on 2nd and
4th Saturdays, Hotel Astor, Circle 6-6460, New
York, N. Y. Managing Editor: Lionel Toll.
Advertising Manager: Bernard Levy. Branch:
Marty Schwartz, 510 Hollywood Professional
Bldg., Hollywood, Calif.
INTERNATIONAL PHOTOGRAPHER
Technical arts and crafts and nose, monthly
on the 5th by International Photographers, I.
A. T. S. E., Local 659. 6461 Sunset Blvd., Hillside
9189. Hollywood, Calif. Managing Editor: Her-
bert Aller. Editor: Edward H. Gibbons. Busi-
ness Manager: Helen Boyce.
INTERNATIONAL PROJECTIONIST
Technical and craft monthly on the 15th, by
James J. Finn Publishing Corp., 580 Fifth Ave..
BRyant 9-6176, New York, N. Y. Editor:
James J. Finn.
JAPANESE MOVIE MAGAZINE
(Published in Japan), fan-trade, monthly on
1st. Correspondent: Yukio Aoyama, 5663 San-
to Monica Blvd., HEmpstead 0404, Hollywood.
Calif.
JAY EMANUEL PUBLICATIONS, INC.
1225 Vine St., Spruce 7520, Philadelphia. Pa.
Publications: (Also listed separately). The Ex-
hibitor and the Exhibitor Catalogue. Personnel
and Branches: See The Exhibitor.
MINIATURE MOVIES
Eight and 16 mm. movies and television, of-
ficial organ Miniature Movies Institute and 16
mm. Board of Trade, monthly. 1944 Coney
Island Ave., Brooklyn. N. Y. Editor and Pub-
lisher: A. D. V. Storey.
MODERN SCREEN MAGAZINE
Monthly, fan, 149 Madison Ave., MUrray
Hill 4-7100. New York. N. Y. Publisher: George
T. Delacorte, Jr. Editor: Regina Cannon. Ad-
vertising Manager: Fred Henry.
717
Film Folh Can Keep
Informed Daily on
What's Going on in
the Radio Indus-
try By Reading —
RADIO DAILY
A PUBLICATION DEVOTED
TO THE BETTER INTER-
ESTS OE COMMERCIAL
RADIO AND TELEVISION
Subscription $5.00, Foreign $10.00
Includes
RADIO DAILY * RADIO ANNUAL
Published by
THE RADIO DAILY
1501 BROADWAY NEW YORK CITY
718
MOTION PICTURE
National, (an, monthly on 25th. 1601 Broad-
way, LOtigacre 3-2801, New York, N. Y. Editor:
Laurence Reid. Branches: Editorial, 6331 Holly-
wood Blvd., Hollywood, Calif., Advertising.
Simpson Reilly, Los Angeles and San Francisco.
Calif.: Chicago, 360 N. Michigan Ave., General
Offices: Fawcett Bldg., Greenwich, Conn.
MOTION PICTURE DAILY
(See Quigley Publishing Co., Inc.) National,
trade, daily except Saturday and Sunday, Rocke-
feller Center, Circle 7-3100, New York, N. Y. Edi-
tor-in-Chief and Publisher: Martin Quigley. Gen-
eral Manager: Colvin Brown. Editor: Sam Shain.
Advertising Manager: James A. Cron. Branches:
624 S. Michigan Ave., Harrison 7651, Chicago, 111.,
C. B. O'Neill, Manager; 6305 Yucca St., Hollywood,
Calif., GRanite 2145, Manager. Boone Mancall:
4 Golden Square, London W. 1, England, Hope
Williams, Manager.
MOTION PICTURE HERALD
(See Quigley Publishing Co., Inc.) National,
trade, weekly on Friday, Rockefeller Center,
Circle 7-3100, New York, N. Y. Editor-in-Chief
and Publisher: Martin Quigley. General Manager:
Colvin Brown. Editor: Terry Ramsaye. Manag-
ing Editor: Ernest A. Rovelstad. News Editor:
James P. Cunningham. Advertising Representa-
tives: Herbert V. Fecke, Ray Gallagher. Branches:
624 S. Michigan Ave., Harrison 7651. Chicago,
111., C. B. O'Neill. Manager: 6305 Yucca St..
Hollywood, Calif., Boone Mancall, Manager: 4
Golden Square, London, W. 1, England, Hope
Williams, Manager. Member Audit Bureau of
Circulations.
MOTION PICTURE LAW REVIEW
Monthly. Dennis Hartman, 501 Landfair Ave.,
Los Angeles, Calif.
MOTION PICTURE REVIEW DIGEST
Digest of reviews and pre-views from 40
trade, fan and general publications. Published
weekly by H. W. Wilson Co., 950 University
Ave., New York, N. Y.
MOVIE HUMOR
Monthly, fan, 381 Fourth Ave., MUrray Hill
3-8040, New York, N. Y. Editor: M. R. Reese.
Advertising Director: F. Z. Temerson.
MOVIE LIFE
Picture monthly, fan. Ideal Publishing Corp.,
122 E. 42nd St., MUrray Hill 3-4445, New York,
N. Y. Executive Editor: May C. Kelley. Editor:
Elizabeth Lockwood.
MOVIE MAKERS
(Non theatrical), monthly on 1st, by Ama-
teur Cinema League, Inc., 420 Lexington Ave.,
MOhawk 4-0270. New York, N. Y. Editor:
Arthur L. Gale. Advertising Manager: Russell
C. Holslag.
MOVIE MIRROR
National, fan, monthly. Editorial Office: 7751
Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, Calif. Executive Editor:
Ernest V. Heyn. Associate Editor: Helen Gilmore.
Executive Office: 122 E. 42nd St., New York,
N. Y. Publisher: Macfadden Publications, Inc.
Advertising Manager: Walter Hanlon.
MOVIE STORY MAGAZINE
Fan. monthly, 1501 Broadway, LOngacre 3-
2800. New York, N. Y. Publisher: W. H. Faw-
cett. Editor: Dorothy Hosking. Business Man-
ager: Roger Fawcett. Advertising Director: El-
liot Odell.
MOVIES
Fan. monthly. Ideal Publishing Corp., 122 E.
42nd St., MUrray Hill 3-4445, New York, N. Y.
Editor: May C. Kelley
NATIONAL BOARD OF REVIEW MAGAZINE
Monthly, except July, August and September,
by the National Board of Review of Motion
Pictures, 70 Fifth Ave., New York. N. Y.
Managing Editor: Bettina Gunczy. Editorial Staff:
James Shelley Hamilton, Nigel Dennis, Frances
C. Barrett.
PHOTOPLAY MAGAZINE
National, fan, monthly on 10th. Editorial
Office: Macfadden Publications, 122 E. 42nd
St., New York, N. Y. Publisher: Bernarr Mac-
fadden. Executive Editor: Ernest V. Heyn. Ed-
itor: Ruth Waterbury. Advertising Manager:
Curtis Harrison. Branch: 7751 Sunset Blvd..
Hollywood. Calif.
PICTURE PLAY MAGAZINE
National, fan, monthly on the 15th of month.
79 Seventh Ave., WAtkins 9-8070. New York,
N. Y. Editor: Muriel Babcock. Branches: Chi-
cago, 410 N. Michigan Ave.; Beverly Hills, Calif..
Fox-Wilshire Bldg.
QUIGLEY PUBLISHING COMPANY, INC.
Publishers of Motion Picture Herald, Motion
Picture Daily. Better Theaters, Fame, Internation-
al Motion Picture Almanac and Teatro Al Dia.
For branches and personnel see individual pub-
lications.
REAL SCREEN FUN
Fan, monthly. Tilsam Publications, Inc.. 114
E. 47th Et., PLaza 3-0741, New York. N. Y.
Editor: Frnnklyn Lippmcott.
REVIEW OF REVIEWS
Weekly. Motion Picture Review of Reviews,
Inc., 8576 Wilshire Blvd., Beverly Hills, Calif..
CRestview 6-3632. President: Paul K. Devoe;
Vice-President: Bud Joseph. New York: Grace
Holmes, 853 Seventh Ave., COlumbus 5-9229.
Editor: Stanley Morris.
SCREEN BOOK
(Combined with Screen Play) National, fan,
monthly on 1st preceding date of issue. Faw-
cett Publications, Inc., Greenwich, Conn. Edit-
orial Office: 1501 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
Branches: 6331 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood.
Calif.. 360 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago), III.
Editor: William Hartley. Managing Editor: Ralph
Daigh.
SCREEN GUIDE
Picture fan, monthly. Editorial Office: 9059
Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, Calif. Executive Office:
731 Plymouth Court, WABash 5050. Chicago,
111. Chairman of the Board: M. L. Annenberg.
Editor: Carl A. Schroeder. Circulation Manager:
Ed Zoty.
SCREEN ROMANCES
National, fan, monthly, 149 Madison Ave..
New York, N. Y. Editors: Albert Delacorte.
Evelyn Van Home. Branches: 360 N. Michigan
Ave., Chicago. 111.; Petroleum Securities Bldg..
Los Angeles. Calif.
SCREENLAND MAGAZINE
National, fan, monthly on 3rd of month pre-
ceding day of issue. 45 W. 45th St., BRyant 9-
6160, New York. N. Y. Editor: Delight Evans.
Advertising Offices: 45 W. 45th St., New York.
N. Y.: 410 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, 111.: Loyd
B. Chappell, 530 W. Sixth St., Los Angeles, Calif.
SHOWMEN'S TRADE REVIEW
National trade, weekly on Fridays, 1501 Broad-
way, BRyant 9-5606, New York. N. Y. Editor
and Publisher: Charles E. "Chick" Lewis. As-
sociate Editor: Tom Kennedy. Managing Editor:
Motion Picture Advertising Manager: J. H. Gal-
lagher. Equipment Adut. Manager: Harold F.
Rendall. Business Manager: M. R. Winston. Holly
719
OP
QUIGLEY
MARTIN QUIGLE>
.OMPLETELY
COVERING AND SERVING
THE AMUSEMENT WORLD
DAILY, WEEKLY, MONTHLY
AND ANNUALLY
• • • •
ROCKEFELLER CENTER
NEW YORK
720
PUBLICATIONS
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF and PUBLISHER
MOTION PICTURE HERALD
International weekly. Member A. B. C. Edited by
Terry Ramsaye
MOTION PICTURE DAILY
Spot news every business day. Edited by Sam Shain
BETTER THEATRES
Devoted to maintenance, equipment, construction and
operation
FAME, The Audit of Personalities
International talent reference. Edited by Terry
Ramsaye
MOTION PICTURE ALMANAC
Annual statistical reference. Edited by Terry Ramsaye
OP
HOLLYWOOD CHICAGO LONDON
721
24 Years Specializing in Books
Pertaining to the Making and
Showing of Motion Pictures
Cameron is no "arm chair" writer, he has been active in the motion picture industry
practically from its start, having started as an "operator" away back in 1903. Over the
past 37 years he has had practical working experience in every field of the industry.
He owned and operated two theaters. For eight years owned and operated the Theater
Supply Company of New York. He has had film exchange and studio experience under
William Fox, and for several years prior to the producer-owned theaters, he had
charge of all "Premiere" film showings in and around New York.
During the World War, he had charge of the motion picture projection departments of
the American Red Cross and the Y.M.C.A. He has several years of trade paper
experience, having been technical editor of the Motion Picture News, Exhibitors
Trade Journal and Projection Engineering.
He has published 24 books pertaining to motion pictures. His Motion Picture Projec-
tion going into its 7th edition and 24th year, is used throughout the world as the
Standard Authority on the subject. He published the first book on sound projection.
He originated the "trouble-shooting charts" now so widely copied, these first being
published in 1923. His first book on radio was published in 1922, and since then
five other books on radio and two on television have been published.
Cameron is a Fellow of the Society of Motion Picture Engineers, having been a
member of this society practically since its inception. He is a member of the
Institute of Radio Engineers, the Acoustical Society of America and the American
Photographic Society. He is an honorary member of Eugene Field Society of Authors
and Journalists.
I Third edition Published 1939
» SOUND MOTION PICTURES, RECORDING AND
REPRODUCING
«^ \ -114 poges 250 illustrations
PR,CE *7-50
■ ^ Now in 24th Year
HX MOTION PICTURE PROJECTION
Py\W*VTJTt . 354 pages 105 illustrations
r\\TYrfVjf«U PRICE $5.00
Published 1940 Fourth Edition
3^V\CWSW3!C SERVICING SOUND EQUIPMENT
504 pages 310 illustrations
PRICE $7.50
TELEVISION FOR BEGINNERS, THEATER
TELEVISION
96 pages Fully illustrated
L^^^^^^ Publshed 1940 Price $2.00
L PUBLIC ADDRESS SYSTEMS
^ — SECOND EDITION 354 pages
. PRICE $5.00
1 SOUND PICTURES TROUBLE-SHOOTERS' MANUAL
'^^^ by Cameron and Rider
''"^^^^L 1280 pages 560 illustrations
'^Hk I PRICE $7.50
h^. XNV_
^ k CINEMATOGRAPHY AND TALKIES
by Cameron and Dubray
A book for the amateur cinematographist
PRICE $4.00
THE STANDARD AUTHORITY
The Cameron books carry the endorsement of the entire motion picture industry and
the trade press throughout the country. They are offered as the best books on their
respective subjects, they are comprehensive, authentic and right up-to-date. A com-
plete list of our publications gladly sent on request. The Cameron books are
stocked by dealers in every country throughout the civilized world.
CAMERON PUBLISHING GO., Woodmqnt, Conn., U.S.A.
ESTABLISHED 1915
722
Ann Lewis. Chicago Representative: Marshall
Reinig, 612 N. Michigan Ave., SUPerior 7646.
London Representative: Jock MacGregor, 37/9
Oxford St., London, W. 1.
SILVER SCREEN MAGAZINE
National, fan, monthly on 27th of second pre-
ceding month. 45 W. 45th St., BRyant 9-6160,
New York, N. Y. Editor: Lester C. Grady. Ad-
vertising Offices: 45 W. 45th St., New York, N. Y.;
410 N. Michigan Ave.. Chicago, 111.: Loyd B.
Chappell. 530 W. Sixth St., Los Angeles. Calif.
STUDIO NEWS
Trade, weekly on Thursday, 5730 Melrose Ave..
GRanite 5730, Hollywood, Calif. Editor: Sam
Black.
TEATRO AL DIA.
(See Quigley Publishing Company, Inc.) In-
ternational, printed in Spanish, quarterly. Rocke-
feller Center, Circle 7-3100, New York, N. Y.
Editor-in-Chief and Publisher: Martin Quigley.
Editor: Horacio Mestanza. Branches: 624 South
Michigan Avenue, Harrison 7651, Chicago, 111.,
C. B. O'Neill, Manager; 6305 Yucca Street, Holly-
wood, Calif., Granite 2145. Boone Mancall, Man-
ager: 4 Golden Square, London, W. 1., England,
Hope Williams, Manager.
VARIETY
National, semi-trade (pictures, radio, vaude-
ville, dramatic, etc.), weekly on Wednesday. 154
W. 46th St., BRyant 9-8153. New York, N. Y.
Editor: Sid Silverman. Branches in key cities.
BOOKS
ON MOTION PICTURE SUBJECTS
Alice in Movieland by Alice Wil-
liamson— Appleton Publishing
Co., 1928.
Amateur Movie Craft, by James
R. Cameron — Cameron Pub-
lishing Co., 1927.
Amateur Movie Making, by Her-
bert C. McKay — Falk Publish-
ing Co., 1928.
Amateur Movies and How to
Make Them, by Alex Strasser
— The Studio, New York,
1937.
America At the Movies, by Mar-
garet Thorp — Yale University
Press, New Haven, 1939.
American Film, The, by Eric H.
Rideout — Metre, London,
1937.
An Hour With the Movies and
the Talkies, by Gilbert Seldes
— J. B. Lippincott Co., Phila-
delphia.
Are We Movie Made?, by Ray-
mond Moley — Macy Masius,
1938.
Art and Prudence, by Mortimer
J. Adler — Longmans, Green &
Co., New York, 1937.
Art and the Actor, by Constant
Coquelin- — Published in 1915
(Copy is in the Dramatic Mu-
seum of Columbia University,
New York) .
Art of Cineplastics, by Eli Faure
— The Four Seas Co., Boston,
1923. Translated from the
French by Walter Pach.
Art of Photoplay Making, by
V. O. Freeburg — MacMillan
Publishing Co., 1918.
Art of the Moving Picture, by
Vachel Lindsay — MacMillan,
New York, 1922.
Art of Sound Pictures, by Walter
B. Pitkin and William M.
Marston — D. Appleton & Co.,
New York.
Art of the Theater, by Sarah
Bernhardt — Bles Publishing
Co., London, 1924.
As I Remember, by Arnold Gen-
the — John Day and Reynal &
Hitchcock, N. Y., 1936.
Behind the Motion Picture
Screen, by Austin C. Lescabora
— Scientific American Publish-
ing Co., 1921.
Behind the Screen, by Samuel
Goldwyn — Doran & Co., 1923.
Breaking Into the Movies, by
Charles Reed Jones — Unicorn
Press, 1928.
Breaking Into the Movies, by
John Emerson and Anita Loos
— James McCann Publishing
Co.,1921.
Building Theater Patronage, by
Barry & Sargent — Chalmers
Publishing Co., 1928.
Camera Secrets of Hollywood,
by Robert C. Bruce and Pat
Dowling — Camera Secrets
Publishing Co., Hollywood,
1932.
Cameron's Encyclopedia o n
Sound Pictures, by James R.
Cameron — Cameron Pub. Co.,
1932.
Cameron's Television, by James
R. Cameron — Cameron Pub.
Co., 1932.
Censorship of the Theater and
Moving Pictures, by Lamar T.
Beman — H. W. Wilson Co.
Charlie Chaplin, His Life and
Art, by W. Dogson Bowman,
— John Day Co., New York.
Cine Camera, The, by Herbert
C. McKay — Falk Publishing
Co., New York, 1930.
Cine Titling and Editing, by
Herbert C. McKay — Falk Pub-
lishing Co., New York, 1932.
Cinema as a Graphic Art, The,
by Bladimir Nilsen — George
Newnes, Ltd., London, 1937.
Cinematographic Annual, Ameri-
can Society of Cinematograph-
ers, Hollywood.
Cinematograph Book, by B. E.
Jones — Funk & Wagnalls
1921.
Cinema Craftsmanship, by F. T.
Patterson — Harcourt Brace &
Co., 1921.
Cinema Handbook, by Austin C.
Lescaboura — Scientific Ameri-
can Publishing Co., 1921.
Cinema, Its Present Position and
Future Possibilities, by Cinema
Commission of Inquiry — Wil-
liam & Norgate, London, 1921.
Cinematic Design, by Leonard
Hacker — American Photo-
graphic Publishing Co., Bos-
ton.
Cinematography and Talkies, by
James R. Cameron — Cameron
Pub. Co.. 1932.
Condensed Course in Motion Pic-
ture Photography, A, New
York Institute of Photog-
raphy, 1920.
Costume Throughout the Ages,
by Mary Evans — J. B. Lippin-
cott Co., Philadelphia.
Cyclopedia of Motion Picture
Work, American School of
Correspondence, Chicago,
1911.
Documentary Film, by Paul
Rotha — W. W. Norton & Co.,
N. Y., 1939.
Educational Talking Picture,
The, by Frederick L. Dev-
ereux — University of Chicago
Press.
Electricity for Operators, by
James R. Cameron — Cameron
Publishing Co., 1927.
Elementary Text-Book of M. P.
Projection, by James R. Cam-
eron— American Red Cross
Institute.
723
The Qompteti
Covering Every Phase of the
Motion Picture Business —
Every Place in the Industry!
i
National in Scope, Yet Intensive in
ALL Territories— BOXOFFICE is the
Most Welcomed, the Most Thorough-
ly Read Trade Paper in Our Great
Industry.
•
BEN SHLYEN
Publisher
MAURICE KANN
Edit or -in -Chief
ASSOCIATED PUBLICATIONS
NEW YORK CHICAGO HOLLYWOOD
9 Rockefeller Plaza 332 S. Michigan Ave. 6404 Hollywood Blvd.
Louis Rydell, Adv. Mgr. J Harry Toler, Mgr. Ivan Spear, Mgr.
724
irade Paper Service of the Industry!
BOXOFFICE
The only trade paper in the industry providing national or local coverage . . . either
or both. Its circulation . . . attested by the Audit Bureau of Circulation ... is
read every week in every part of the United States and Canada ... in every
phase of the Motion Picture Industry . . . production, distribution and exhibition.
THE MODERN THEATRE
Published every four weeks as an integral section of BOXOFFICE, it reports and
illustrates every phase of theatre construction, improvement and mechanical
operation and maintenance. The outstanding advertising medium for equipment
manufacturers.
BOXOFFICE BAROMETER
Published in January . . . the middle of the season . . . BOXOFFICE Barometer
reports on all that has happened during the first half of the season and definitely,
authoritatively, tells about what is to come during the rest of the picture year.
The only annual published expressly for service to theatre owners and managers . . .
the only annual that completely blankets the industry.
BOXOFFICE PICTURE GUIDE
A pocket-size, loose-leaf book for filing reviews, with a section for picture booking
and recording operating costs. Exhibitors hail it as the most valuable and practical
innovation in years.
BOXOFFICE RECORDS
Published once a year. RECORDS reports the value at the boxoffice demonstrated
by every picture released during the previous season . . . how the public received
the efforts of producer, writer, star, director and all others concerned in picture-
making. An exact measure of the past and a potent guide for future plans.
Five Great BOXOFFICE Services.
725
How to get more people
into your theatre
• If a book entitled "How To Get More
People Into Your Theatre" were written
it would have to embody the latest im-
portant developments not only in the pic-
ture industry, but in all of show business.
• You know better than we that im-
portant developments in all branches of the
show business can be and often are im-
portant to you as an exhibitor.
• And The Billboard is the only trade
paper which covers all the show business It
is virtually a book which tells you how to
get more people into your theatre. It is
a book with an interesting, factful and
helpful supplement published each and
every week in the year. It is the trade
paper read by the wise exhibitor.
The World's Foremost Amusement Weekly
Elias E. Sugarman A. C. Hartmann
Editor, Indoor Departments Editor, Outdoor Departments
New York Office: Palace Theatre Building, 1564 Broadway.
Publication Office: The Billboard Building, Cincinnati, Ohio.
CHICAGO LONDON ST. LOUIS
BOSTON PARIS KANSAS CITY
PHILADELPHIA SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA HOLLYWOOD
726
Encyclopedia of Exploitation, by
Bill Hendricks and Howard
Waugh — Showmen's Trade Re-
view. N. Y., 1937.
Encyclopedia of Music for Pic-
tures, by Erno Rapee — Bel-
win, 1925.
Experimental Television, by A.
Frederick Collins — Lithrop,
Lee and Shepard Co., Boston,
1933.
Famous Film Folk, by Charles
Donald Fox — Doran & Co.,
1925.
Famous Stars of Filmdom (Men)
by Elinor Hughes — L. C. Page
& Co., Boston, 1932.
Feature Photoplay, The, by
Henry Albert Phillips — Home
Correspondence School, Spring-
field. 111.
Film and Theater, by Allardyce
Nicoll — Thomas T. Crowell &
Co.. New York, 1936.
Film Acting, by I. V. Podovkin,
translated by Ivor Montagu —
George Newnes. Ltd., London.
1935.
Film Daily Year Book, published
about January 1, yearly, by
The Film Daily, 1501 Broad-
way, New York City.
Film Facts and Forecasts, by
L'Estrange — Fawcett Co.,
1927.
Film Industry, by Boughey —
Pitman & Sons. 1921.
Film Making from Script to
Screen, by Andrew Buchanan
— Faber & Faber, London,
1937.
Film Production, by Adrian
Brunei — Newnes, London,
1936.
First 100 Noted Men and Wo-
men on the Screen, by Carolyn
Lowery — Moffat Yard Pub-
lishing Co., 1920.
Footnotes to the Film, Edited by
Charles Davy — Oxford Uni-
versity Press, New York.
1937.
For the Sake of Shadows, by
Max Miller — E. P. Dutton,
1936.
Foremost Films of 1938, by
Frank Vreeland — Pitman Pub-
lishing Co.. N. Y„ 1939.
Fundamentals of Television, by
T. W. Benson — Mancall Pub-
lishing Corp., 1930.
Grammar of the Film, by Ray-
mond Spottiswoode — Faber &
Faber, London, 1935.
Handbook of Motion Picture
Photography, by H. C. Mac-
Kay, Falk Publishing Co.,
1927.
Handbook on Projection, by F.
H. Richardson — Chalmer Pub-
lishing Co., 1927.
Harvard Business Reports (Vol.
8), McGraw-Hill Book Co.,
1930.
Heraclitus of the Future of
Films, by Ernest Betts — E. P.
Dutton & Co., New York.
High Intensity Arcs, by James
R. Cameron — Cameron Pub-
lishing Co., 1927.
History of the Motion Pictures,
translated by Iris Barry from
"Histoire du Cinema" by
Maurice Bardeche and Robert
Brasillach — W. W. Morton.
New York, 1938.
History of the Movies, by Ben-
jamin B. Hampton — Confici
Friede, N. Y., 1931.
Hollywood's Movie Command-
ments, by Olga J. Martin —
W. H. Wilson Co.. N. Y.,
1937.
House That Shadows Built (Bi-
ography of Adolph Zukor) ,
by Will Lrwin — Doubleday-
Doran Co., 1928.
How to Appreciate Motion Pic-
tures, by Edgar Dale — the
Macmillan Co., New York,
1933.
How to Make and Operate Mov-
ing Pictures, by B. E. Jones —
Funk & Wagnalls Co., 1916.
How Motion Pictures Are Made,
by Homer Croy — Harper &
Bros., 1918.
How to Write and Sell Screen
Stories, by Frances Marion —
Covici Friede, N. Y„ 1937.
How They Make a Motion Pic-
ture, by Ray Hoadley and
Roman Freulich — Thomas Y.
Crowell Co., N. Y.. 1939.
Illusion of the First Time in
Acting, by William H. Gil-
lette— Gift edition only, 1915
(Copy in the Dramatic Mu-
seum of Columbia University,
New York) .
Inside Secrets of Photoplay Writ-
ing, by Willard King Bradley
— Funk & Wagnalls Co., New
York.
Kineinatograph Studio Tech-
nique, by L. C. MacBean —
Pitman & Sons. 1922.
Know Your Movies, by Welford
Beaton, Published by Howard
Hill, Hollywood. 1932.
The Last Word in Make-Up, by
Dr. Rudolph G. Liszt — Con-
temporary Play Publications,
N. Y„ 1939.
Law of Stage, Screen and Radio,
by Roger Marchetti — Sutton-
House, Ltd., San Francisco.
1936.
Let's Go to the Movies, by Iris
Barry — Payson. 1926.
Life and Adventures of Carl
Laemmle, by John Drinkwater
— G. P. Putnam's Sons, New
York, 1928.
Life and Lillian Gish, by Albert
Bigelow Paine — MacMillan
Co., 1932.
Making Better Movies, by Arthur
L. Gale and Russell C. Hol-
s 1 a g — Amateur Cinema
League, Inc.. New York.
Management of Motion Picture
Theaters, by Frank H. Rickot-
son, 1938.
Million and One Nights, by
Terry Ramsaye — Simon &
Schuster, 1926.
Mirrors of Hollywood, by Chas.
Donald Fox — Charles Renard
Corp., 1925.
Motion Picture Almanao, pub-
lished yearly by Quigley Pub-
lishing Co., Rockefeller Cen-
ter, N. Y. C.
Motion Picture Continuities, by
Frances Taylor Patterson —
Columbia University Press.
Motion Picture Directing, by
Peter Milne — Faulk Publishing
Co., New York, 1922.
Modern Communications, chap-
ters by John E. Otterson and
Herbert E. Ives — Houghton
Miflin Co., 1933.
Motion Picture Accounting, by
W. F. Morris — M.P.V. Pub-
lishing Co., 1924.
Motion Picture Cameraman, by
E. G. Lutz, Scribner, 1927.
Motion Picture Directing, by
Peter Milne — Falk Publishing
Co., 1922.
Motion Picture Industry, by W.
A. Johnson — American Acad-
emy of Political & Social
Science, Philadelphia, 1926.
Motion Picture Industry, by
Howard T. Lewis — D. Van
Nostrand Co., 1933.
Motion Picture Making and Ex-
hibiting, by Terry Ramsaye —
C. C. Thompson Co., Chicago,
1914.
Motion Picture Moods for Or-
ganists and Pianists, by Erno
Rapee.
Motion Picture Optics, by James
R. Cameron — Cameron Pub-
lishing Co., 1926.
Motion Picture Photography, by
Carl L. Gregory — Falk Pub-
lishing Co., 1921.
Motion Picture Photography —
Eastman Kodak Co.. 1924.
Motion Picture Photography, by
Herbert C. McKay — Falk
Publishing Co., 1924.
Motion Picture Projection, by
James R. Cameron — Cameron
Publishing Co., 1928.
Motion Picture Projection and
Sound Pictures, 5th edition,
by James R. Cameron — Cam-
eron Publishing Co., Wood-
mont. Conn., 1933.
Motion Picture Projection Text-
hook — New York Technical
Book Co., 1922.
Motion Picture Theater Manage-
ment, by Harold B. Franklin
— Doran & Co., 1927.
Motion Picture Work, by D. S.
Hulfish — American School of
Correspondence, Chicago,
1913.
Motion Pictures and Radio, by
Elizabeth Laine — McGraw
Hill, N. Y., 1939.
Motion Pictures and Youth,
Payne Fund Studies — Macmil-
lan, New York, 1933-1935.
Motion Pictures as an Aid in
Teaching American History,
by Harry Arthur Wise — Yale
University Press. New Haven,
1940.
Motion Pictures for Instruction,
by A. P. Hollis — The Century
Co., New York.
Motion Pictures in Education,
by D. C. Ellis — T. Y. Crowell
Publishing Co., 1923.
Motion Pictures with Sound, by
James R. Cameron — Cameron
Publishing Co.. 1929.
Motors and Generators, by James
R. Cameron — Cameron Pub-
lishing Co., 1927.
Movies Come from America,
The, by Gilbert Seldes — Scrib-
ner's. New York, 1937.
Movies' Five Qualifications, by
E. R. Winstrom — Universal
Publishing Co., Hollywood,
1926.
727
y\n Innovation
IN MOTION PICTURE PUBLICATIONS
This ANNUAL stifkbacked library
and desk volume is, without ques«
tion, mechanically the finest and the
most expensive one ever published
in this industry. It has been designed
to serve the men who are important
to the plan, construction, mainte*
nance, management and progress of
the Physical Theatre.. .namely the.**
CIRCUIT EXECUTIVES
OWNERS OF THEATRE CHAINS
MAINTENANCE ENGINEERS
PURCHASING AGENTS
ARCHITECTS
SUPPLY DEALERS
MANUFACTURERS
Completely divorced from produc»
tion and distribution, its entire atten*
tion is devoted to the NEW in the
Modern Theatre... and to a pictorial
an J factual recording and index-
ing of the products applicable to it.
JAY EMANUEL PUBLICATIONS, INC.
728
A RESTRICTED EDITION OF 2500 NUMBERED COPIES, EACH OF A
STANDARD OF EXCELLENCE THAT MERITS RETENTION AND USE
BY THE 2500 EXECUTIVES, REPRESENTING 80% OF THE INDUSTRY'S
PURCHASING POWER, WHO RECEIVE THEM. NOT A SINGLE COPY WILL
BE SOLD. PROOF OF CIRCULATION BY DUPLICATE PRINTED LISTS,
Presented with Pride by the Publishers of
THE EXHIBITOR
— the A B.C. Publication that DOMINATES the East!
1225 VINE STREET, PHILADELPHIA
729
SHOWMEN'S
MOTION PICTURE
TRADE REVIEW
CHARLES E. ("CHICK") LEWIS
Editor and Publisher
The Theatreman's
Practical Guide to Profitable
Buying, Booking and Show Selling
Published Weekly
1501 BROADWAY • NEW YORK CITY
6331 Hollywood Boulevard 612 N. Michigan Avenue
Hollywood, Calif. Chicago, III.
730
Movies on Trial, The, compiled
and edited by William J. Perl-
man — Macmillan, N. Y.,
1936.
Moving Pictures — How They
Are Made and Worked, by
Frederick A. Talbot — J. B.
Lippincott Publishing Co.,
1923.
Moving Pictures in Education.
by Frank U. Freeman — Uni-
versity of Chicago Press,
1924.
Musical Presentation of Motion
Pictures, by George W. Bey-
non — O. Shirmer, 1921.
National Comm.'s Motion Pic-
ture Study Clubs — National
Commission for Better Films,
1925.
New Courts of Industry, by
Louis Nizer — The Longacre
Press, Inc., New York, 1935.
New Technique of Screen Writ-
ing, by Tamar Lane — Whittle-
sey House, New York, 1936.
New Theater and Cinema of
Soviet Russia, by Huntley
Carter — Chapman & Dodd,
Ltd., London, 1924.
Newer Aspects of the Citizens'
Solution of the M. P. Prob-
lem, by C. C. Gilman — C. C.
Gilman. Minneapolis. 1926.
Newsreel Man, by Charles Pegen,
Doubleday, Doran & Co.,
1932.
On Film Technique, by V. I,
Pudovkin. Translated by Ivor
Montagu — Victor Gollancz,
Ltd.. London, 1929.
Our Movie-Made Children, by
Henry James Forman — Mac-
millan Co., N. Y., 1933.
Outlook For Television, by Or-
rin E. Dunlap, Jr. — Harper &
Bros., 1932.
Photoplay, The, by Hugo Muen-
sterberg — D. Appleton & Co.,
New York, 1916.
Photoplay Synopsis, The, by A.
Van Buren Powell — Home
Correspondence School, Spring-
field, Mass.
Photoplay Writing, by W. L.
Wright — Falk Publishing Co.,
1922.
Photoplays, A Psychological
Study, by Hugo Munsterberg
— Appleton & Co., 1916.
Pictorial Beauty on the Screen,
by V. O. Freeburg — Macmil-
lan Co., 1923.
Plan for Cinema, by Dallas Bow-
el^— Dent, London, 1936.
Pocket Reference Book of Man-
agers and Operators, by James
R. Cameron — Cameron Pub-
lishing Co., 1927.
Practical Hints on Acting for
the Cinema, by Agnes E.
Pratt — E. P. Dutton Publish-
ing Co., 1923.
Profitable Showmanship, by
Kenneth Goode. Zenn Kauf-
man— Prentice Hall, N. Y.,
1939.
Projectionists Guide Book —
Mancall Publishing Corp.,
1932.
Projectionists Guide For Main-
tenance of Sound Reproducing
Equipment, by James R. Cam-
eron — Cameron Publishing
Company, 1940. Woodmont.
Conn.
Projection Sound Pictures, by
Aaron Nadell — McGraw-Hill
Book Co., Inc.. 1931.
Public Address Systems, Sound
Equipment, 2nd edition, by
James R. Cameron — Cameron
Publishing Co., 1936.
Questions and Answers on M.
P. Projection, by James R.
Cameron — Cameron Publish-
ing Co., 1927.
Questions and Answers on Sound
Motion Pictures, by James R.
Cameron — Cameron Publish-
ing Co., 1932.
Radio and Television for Pro-
jectionists, by James R. Cam-
eron— Cameron Publishing Co.,
Woodmont, Conn., 1933.
Recording and Reproducing of
Sound Motion Pictures, 3rd
edition, by James R. Camer-n
— Cameron Publishing Co.,
1939.
Recording Sound for Motion
Pictures — Edited by the Acad-
emy of Motion Picture Arts
and Sciences. McGraw-Hill
Book Co., Inc., N. Y. C,
1930. .
Richardson's Handbook of Pro-
jection, by F. H. Richardson
— Chalmers Publishing Co.,
1927.
Rise of the American Film, by
Lewis Jacobs — Harcourt.
Brace & Co., N. Y., 1939.
Scenario Writing, by Marion
Norris Gleason — American
Photographic Publishing Co.,
Boston.
Screen Acting, by Mae Marsh —
Fred Stokes Publishing Co..
1921.
Screen Acting, by Inez and
Helen Klumph — Falk Publish-
ing Co.. 1922.
See and Hear, by Will H. Hays
— Motion Picture Producers
and Distributors of America,
1929.
Servicing Sound Equipment, 4th
edition, by James R. Cameron
— ■ Cameron Publishing Co..
1940.
Servicing and Trouble Shooting
Charts for Motion Picture Re-
producing Equipment, b y
James R. Cameron — Cameron
Publishing Co.. 1936.
Sound Equipment, Motion Pic-
ture Production, by James R.
Cameron — Cameron Publishing
Co., 1936.
Sound Motion Picture in Science
Teaching, by Phillip Justin
Rulon — Harvard University
Press.
Sound Motion Pictures, by
Harold B. Franklin — Double-
day Doran.
Sound Pictures and Trouble
Shooters Manual, by James R.
Cameron — Cameron Pub. Co.,
1931.
Sound Projection, by R. Miehl-
ing — Mancall Publishing
Corp., 1930.
Sound Trouble Tracer, by A.
Van Buren Powell — Mancall
Publishing Corp., 1931.
Soul of the Moving Picture,
translated from the German
by Allen W. Porterfield — E.
P. Dutton Co.. 1921.
Sound Recording — Society of
Motion Picture Engineers,
1930.
State Censorship of Motion Pic-
tures, by J. R. Rutland — H.
W. Wilson Publishing Co.,
1923.
Story of the Films, by J. P.
Kennedy — A. W. Shaw. 1927.
Story of the Motion Picture, by
B. J. Lubschez — Reeland Pub-
lishing Co.. 1920.
Successful Film Writing, by
Steon Margrave — Methuen,
London, 1936.
Talkies, The, by Arthur Edwin
Krows — Henry Holt & Co.,
Tew York.
Taking and Showing of Motion
Pictures for Amateurs, by
James R. Cameron — Cameron
Publishing Co., 1927.
Talking Movies, by James R.
Cameron — Cameron Publish-
ing Co., 1927.
Talking Pictures: How They
Are Made, How to Appreciate
Them, by Barrett C. Kiesling
— Johnson Publishing Co.,
1937.
Tali Tales from Hollywood, by
Tay Garnett — Liveright, Inc.,
New York.
Technical Digest of Motion Pic-
ure Arts and Sciences —
Academy of Motion Picture
Arts & Sciences, Hollywood.
Technique of the Photoplay.
by E. W. Sargent — M. P.
World, 1913.
Technique of the Photoplay, by
Epes W. Sargent — Moving
Picture World.
That Marvel — the Movie, by E.
S. Van Zile — G. P. Putnam's
Sons, 1923.
Theater and Motion Pictures —
Encyclopedia Britannica, Inc.,
1933.
Theater Management, by Harold
B. Franklin — Doran & Co.,
1927.
Theater Television, by James
Cameron — -Cameron Publishing
Co., 1940.
This Film Business, by R. P.
Messel, London, Benn., 1928.
Twinkle, Twinkle, Movie Star!,
by Henry T. Brundidge — E.
P. Dutton & Co., New York.
Up the Years from Bloomsbury,
by George Arliss — ■ Little.
Brown & Co.. Boston.
Upton Sinclair Presents William
Fox — Upton Sinclair, 1933.
Visual Fatigue of Motion Pic-
tures, by Aaron E. Singer —
Amusement Age Publishing
Co., 1933.
Visual Instruction in the Public
Schools, by Anna Vernona- —
Dorris, Ginn & Co.
We Make the Movies, Edited by
Nancy Naumberg — W. W.
Norton & Co., New York,
1937.
What's Wrong with the Movies?
by Tamar Lane — Waverly
Co., 1923.
When the Movies Were Young,
by Linda A. Griffith (Mrs. D.
W. Griffith) — Dutton & Co.,
1925.
Wild Animals in the Films, by
Joseph Delmont — Metheun &
Co., Ltd., London. 1925.
With the Movie Makers, by
John Amid — Othrop & Shep-
hard. Boston. 1923.
Writing the Photoplay, by J. B.
Esenwein and Arthur Leeds — ■
Writer's Monthly Publishing
Co., 1919.
Year Book, Film Daily — Pub.
lished about January 1, yearly,
by the Film Daily. 1601
Broadway. New York City.
731
FOR THE EIGHTH
SUCCESSIVE YEAR
LEADS ALL NATIONAL
DAILY TRADE PAPERS IN
PAID ADVERTISING FOR 1939
THERE MUST BE A REASON!
732
Motion Picture Producers
and Distributors of America
Activities in 1939
a
Principal office: 28 West 44th St.. New York City. Other offices at 5504 Hollywood Boulevard,
Hollywood. Calif.; 709 Albee Building, Washington. D. C; 21 Rue de Berri, Paris, France.
■yHE Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America, Inc., was organized
in March, 1922, under the presidency of Will H. Hays.
From the first, Mr. Hays emphasized that the support of the public is
essential to the production of better motion pictures. Improvement of films has
been a continuing process in which both the producers and the public have
shared.
In all that the Association has done in its
eighteen years of existence, self-regulation has
been the constant purpose. Always the aim
has been to maintain the integrity of the
screen. This is in line with the American
tradition of self-discipline, as exemplified in
freedom of the press.
After eight years of progressive improve-
ment in film standards, the self-regulative prin-
ciple was bulwarked by the Production Code,
adopted in March, 1930, and the Advertising
Code, adopted in June of the same year, both
of which continue in force.
Through his Open Door policy, Mr. Hays
has interested thousands of community leaders
in the industry's efforts at self-improvement.
He has given assistance to public groups
trying to encourage audience demand for the
best entertainment.
Better films councils and committees are
operating independently in thousands of com-
munities all over the country. These groups
act as leaders in their localities in efforts in
behalf of better pictures.
The activities of the Association cover a
wide area and include the self-regulation of
advertising, community service, conservation,
foreign markets, public information, theater
service and title registration.
Production Code Administration
Self-regulation of motion picture production
evolved gradually from early beginnings in
1922 when the Motion Picture Producers and
Distributors of America was founded.
Several progressive steps to establish higher
standards of production culminated in the
adoption on March 31, 1930, of the Production
Code, which is still in force.
This Code, a voluntary agreement entered
into by the member companies, acknowledges
the producers' responsibility to the public and
asks in return "a sympathetic understanding
of their purposes and problems and a spirit
of cooperation that will allow them the free-
dom and opportunity necessary to bring the
motion picture to a still higher level of whole-
some entertainment for all the people."
The Code machinery of self-regulation oper-
ates at four points:
1. The original story or play is submitted to
the Production Code Administration for
suggestion and criticism before the first
screen adaptation is written.
2. When the script is completed, it is sub-
mitted for a check with Code requirements.
3. In the early stages of production, members
of the Production Code Administration staff
are often called in to discuss sequences
that present problems.
4. After this careful reviewing all along the
way. the finished picture is reviewed and,
if it meets Code requirements, a certificate
of approval is issued.
The Code machinery is available to all pro-
ducers, foreign or domestic, whether or not
they are members of the Association.
In the course of the year 1939, 1311 pictures
were approved by the Production Code Admin-
istration as follows:
733
The greatest circulation in its field of any trade paper.
F
1 or 25 years now, Greater Amuse-
ments has been THE trade paper
of the Minneapolis, Milwaukee,
Des Moines and Omaha terri-
tories.
Ninety per cent of its readers sub-
scribe to it exclusively and can be
reached through no other trade
medium.
GREATER AMUSEMENTS
LUMBER EXCHANGE MINNEAPOLIS, MINN.
Telephone: Main 8401
734
Features approved by West Coast office . . 523
Features approved by East Coast office . . 73
Total features approved 596
Of these 12 were reissues.
Shorts approved by West Coast office. .. .436
Shorts approved by East Coast office. .. .279
Total shorts approved 715
How well the Production Code Administra-
tion has performed its function in maintaining
both Code standards and the integrity and
vigor of the screen as a medium of entertain-
ment is evidenced by the steady stream of
high quality pictures that continues to flow
from the studios.
Advertising Advisory Council
The effort sponsored by the member com-
panies of the Association to promote clean
advertising is guided by the provisions of the
Advertising Code (adopted June 6, 1930). and
administered by the Advertising Advisory
Council. This cooperative effort places in
conformity with the forms of good taste all
press books, newspaper advertising, trailers,
outdoor displays, novelties and other forms of
publicity and exploitation issued by member
companies.
The Council, organized in 1933, numbers
among its members the company advertising
directors, each of whom is directly responsible
for his own advertising.
To secure uniform interpretation of the Code,
all advertising material is submitted in ad-
vance to the Council at the Hays office in New
York or its branch in Hollywood.
The 1939 record shows a minimum of un-
suitable material submitted. Out of 109,083
stills submitted in the past year, only 787
were discarded or retouched to meet Code
standards. Of 10,554 exploitation ideas, none
was found unsuitable. Only 47 posters out
of 2,013 submitted had to be changed and
there were but 9 in 981 trailers. Of 12,386
advertisements, only 198 were rejected or
revised. No revisions were necessary in
the 15,709 publicity stories submitted. A total
of 6,960 miscellaneous advertising accessories
cleared through the council without change.
Title Registration Bureau
For many years the Association has main-
tained a system of registration of motion pic-
ture titles. The purpose is to avoid the use
of objectionable titles and to prevent the use
of identical and harmfully similar titles, thus
eliminating confusion on the part of producers
and public.
A voluntary system of arbitration is pro-
vided within the industry for the settlement of
disputes as to conflict or as to priority of titles
and the method of registration has become an
important part of the industry's system of
self-regulation.
Theater Service
The broad field of trade relations, trade
practices, improved methods of theater opera-
tion and the structure of industrial organiza-
tion in the exhibition and distribution of motion
pictures is continuously studied by the Theater
Service Department. Effort is constantly made
to bring about better and broader understand-
ing of industry problems that arise between
widely separated units of operation in the
motion picture business.
In various ways the exhibitor is encouraged
to develop a better appreciation and under-
standing of the problems of distribution and
production and of the economic principles
involved in the operation of the business of
At the present time, there are more than 30
producing or distributing companies which
regularly register titles with the Association.
New registrations range from a dozen to as
many as 40 per day with an average of
approximately 18 daily.
The Association has established a compre-
hensive card index of titles of released pic-
tures. This index now contains approximately
40.000 titles and is believed to be the most
comprehensive index of released pictures in
existence.
Department
distribution, which is noted for the speed and
precision with which it functions. Every effort
is made to assist trade associations of theater
owners in developing in constructive ways
their own usefulness and service to the local
theater owners in their own state and zone, to
improve the standards of theater management
and operation, and to build good will for the
local motion picture theater.
Information and statistics on the business
development of the industry are assembled,
checked and supplied to units in the industry
for various uses. Surveys and studies are
made of exhibitor problems for the information
of those concerned with such developments.
Foreign Department
Through the medium of the Foreign Depart-
ment, the Motion Picture Producers and Dis-
tributors of America assist members in securing
fair treatment in the distribution of American
films abroad. In the past eighteen years.
the Association has taken a leading part in
successful negotiations to solve difficulties due
to restrictive legislation.
The department keeps member companies
closely informed on legislative and economic
developments in foreign markets.
735
HOLLYWOOD SPECTATOR
PUBLISHED BI-WEEKLY
Edited by
WELFORD BEATON
The oldest Film paper published
in the world's greatest center of
motion picture production.
America's only publication de-
voted solely to the screen as an art.
ALL COMMENT
NO GOSSIP
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
In the United States $5 a year
All Foreign Countries $6 a year
Sample copy free upon request to
HOLLYWOOD SPECTATOR
6513 Hollywood Blvd. Hollywood, California
736
Conservation
The success of fire prevention work in the
motion picture industry illustrates the outstand-
ing value of its system of self-regulation.
The result of the conservation activities
clearly shows in the fire loss record: From
January 1, 1926 to December 31, 1939 (13
years) there has been a total of only eleven
fires in member distributing company ex-
changes, with a total monetary loss of
$4,547.00. Because of this record, motion pic-
ture exchanges are ranked first among all
industries of the country from the standpoint
of public safety.
Department
Another phase of the protective activities
of the Conservation Department is its con-
tinued survey of all non-theatrical institutions
to obtain information on:
(a) Type of equipment used for the exhibi-
tion of motion pictures.
(b) Type and construction of projection
booths.
(c) Experience of projectionists.
Further, in the interest of safety all such
places wherein motion picture films are ex-
hibited were required to have approval given
by a recognized public or state fire official.
Community Service Department
This department functions in New York
under the direction of Carl E. Milliken, Secre-
tary of the Association, and in Hollywood
under the direction of Mrs. Thomas G.- Winter.
Its purpose is to provide information and
assistance to civic, cultural and educational
community leaders who are interested in
directing the attention of the public to the
finest current motion pictures presented in the
theatres, and in assisting theatre managers to
adjust their entertainment programs to the
needs of the entire family including children.
HOLLYWOOD OFFICE
The fundamental purpose of the Department
of Community Service is to bring about honest
understanding between the motion picture in-
dustry and the general public, to the end that: (2)
(1) The studios shall be upheld by public
support in their willingness to provide fine
fare for cinema audiences.
(2) The public shall be encouraged to lend
this support to the best product and shall
be given a better understanding of the
problems that confront the makers and
distributors of pictures.
The activities through which this department (3)
operate are a previewing service, monthly
surveys carrying material to key people, radio
series, library contacts, constant supplying of
material usable in clubs, church bulletins,
schools. Briefly outlined, they are as follows:
(1) PREVIEW SERVICE. Large committees
chosen by eleven leading women's organ- (4)
izations are, through studio courtesies,
given early showings of pictures on which
they pronounce unbiased opinions which
in turn they send to their membership.
These reviews cover the entertainment
values, production values, social values
and audience suitability of all the pictures
that they see. Supplementing the lists
prepared by each of the above groups (5)
for their own membership, the department
holds a weekly session of all these chair-
men at which they unite on joint estimates
which are printed on sheets that are used
as posters by all the public groups that
the department contracts. The organizations
(giving their services without remunera-
tion) are as follows: (6)
General Federation of Women's Clubs
737
National Society Daughters of the Amer-
ican Revolution
National Society of New England Women
American Legion Auxiliary, Department
of California
California Congress of Parents & Teachers
National Federation of Music Clubs
California Federation of Business & Pro-
fessional Women's Clubs
American Association of University Wo-
men, California State Division
National Council of Jewish Women, Los
Angeles, Section
Southern California Council of Church
Women
International Federation of Catholic
Alumnae
MONTHLY BULLETINS called "Out From
The Studios" are prepared in the office,
which tries to visit monthly every studio
to catch the flavor and secure material of
interest concerning pictures in process of
production. Four mimeographed pages car-
rying this go to some thousands of special
correspondents, heads of Better Picture
Councils, lecturers, eminent teachers, etc.
THE RADIO SERVICE called "What's Hap-
pening in Hollywood" involves a weekly
bulletin which can be used exactly as it is,
or can be modified to suit local interests.
It goes (only by request) to nearly five
hundred people who give regular broad-
casts.
LIBRARIES all over the country have dis-
covered that the choice of books is much
influenced by current pictures. Therefore,
at their request, this department supplies
the "Library Journal" weekly with lists of
books, plays or important periods that are
to be filmed. Again, more than 1500
libraries are supplied with the "Joint
Estimates" mentioned above.
HIGH SCHOOLS all over the country are
more and more offering courses in Motion
Picture Appreciation. This department is
constantly preparing mimeographed articles
that supply teachers with up-to-date infor-
mation on pictures and technical matters
such as music in the pictures, personalities
of directors, artistry in pictures, etc.
BETTER FILMS COUNCILS and committees
and picture departments in clubs exist by
. . . . the mark of a technical and craft
publication devoted to better visual and
sound reproduction. Excellence of editorial
content, an outstanding feature of which is
the very latest news of and views upon
reproducing equipment and technique.
Extremely opinionated, with a definitely
constructive editorial policy that delights
its readers . . . and advertisers.
1 year — $2 2 years — $3
Foreign: Add 50c a year
#>
INTERNATIONAL
PRO JECTIONIST
Edited by James J. Finn
580 Fifth Ave. New York City
738
the thousands all over the country. All
departmental printed matter and personal
correspondence goes in great quantities to
such groups. Many churches also ask for
the material and embody it in their bulletins.
(7) STUDY CLUBS by hundreds ask for mate-
rial on motion pictures. For them, special
outlines for work and many types of special
bulletins must be prepared. Their myriad
questions concerning their local problems
must be answered.
(8) The department also maintains lists of
people over the country to whom the in-
dividual bulletins should be sent by the
studios concerning films with definite in-
terest. It also provides speakers for some
hundreds of meetings every year.
New York Previewing Committees
Previewing facilities are maintained in New
York with the cooperation of the member com-
panies of the Association for the benefit of
organizations and publications whose repre-
sentatives can see films more conveniently
in New York than in California. A representa-
tive of the Boy Scouts of America previews
pictures to secure material for the monthly
movie page in the magazine, "Boys' Life."
Communications regarding this service should
be addressed to Boy Scouts of America, Inc.,
2 Park Avenue, New York, N. Y.
Under the leadership of Mrs. LeRoy Mont-
gomery of South Norwalk, Connecticut, Chair-
man of the Better Films Committee, National
Society of the Daughters of the American
Revolution, a committee reviews motion pic-
tures regularly for publication in the national
historical magazine. Reviews are also cir-
culated monthly to several thousand D.A.R.
chapters scattered all over the United States.
Under the leadership of the National Council
of Women, a special preview committee for
musical films reviews motion pictures that are
of particular interest to music teachers and
music lovers, and sends the reviews to the
nineteen other organizations of the National
Council of Women.
Films with a social work theme are pre-
viewed by representatives of the Social Work
Publicity Council with headquarters in New
York City, and the Council's evaluations of
these films are circulated to more than 900
social work agencies in cities and towns
throughout the United States.
Photoplay Appreciation
It is estimated that not less than 5.000,000
students in elementary and secondary schools,
colleges and universities receive more or less
detailed guidance from their teachers in the
appreciative study of appropriate motion pic-
ture features and short subjects currently of-
fered in the theaters. This technique is rapidly
spreading, especially in high schools and
junior high schools. These progressive teachers
use the local motion picture theater for illus-
trative material just as they use the public
library for collateral reading. Also, they have
found it practical to mould the taste of their
pupils toward the development of discriminat-
ing habits of choice in the selection of motion
picture entertainment. In these activities teach-
ers use study guides of which 25 or 30 are
published during each school year in New
York and in California, classroom bulletins
mailed by the Community Service Department,
selected still pictures chosen with special ref-
erence to their educational value and research
photograph exhibits which are regularly dis-
played in about 4,000 public libraries and
school libraries. Interested teachers are usually
able to obtain this material through local ex-
hibitors who secure it from the distributors
of the pictures.
Exhibits Available to Schools and Libraries Without Cost
Displays of various types, research exhibits,
and brochures featuring the historical back-
ground, literary antecedents and technical data
concerning production are available from the
Department of Community Service without cost.
The poster displays usually feature some event
as "Children's Book Week." The research ex-
hibits— approximating 20" x 30" and including
from 3 to 12 posters — present source materials
utilized in designing costumes, sets, properties,
story sources and other collaterals used in the
process of translating fiction, biography, his-
tory, etc., to motion pictures. The brochures,
covering much the same field, are usable for
intimate classroom study as well as display.
Schools and libraries desiring to have their
addresses placed on the mailing list should
send with their request a statement of their
facilities for use and indicate the departments
or divisions to which the exhibits will be
made available. Where more than one copy
is required, arrangement should be made with
local exhibitors to supply additional copies.
The Community Service Department, in co-
operation with educational groups and librar-
ians, selects the pictures to receive this treat-
ment. The cultural, social and educational
as well as entertainment values of the pic-
tures are the determining factors. The interest
in and desire for mutual collaboration on the
part of the producer-members of the Associa-
tion makes this service possible.
Exhibitors, where it is known that these
materials are not locally used, should feel
no hesitancy in approaching school adminis-
trators or librarians concerning their value.
They are now regularly in use by more than
6,000 high schools and 4.000 libraries. While
many schools and libraries have limitations
and conventions inherent in the public char-
739
acter of their institutions, once they have
realized that these display materials have
been designed with a knowledge of their
proprieties, they welcome them. Only mutual
respect can grow from the realization that
many current photoplays have great educa-
tional value and that filming of the classics
greatly extends the public's reading of them.
These materials enhance the value of both
and attract the public to those photoplays
that entertain and should be seen by all.
stills
Sets of stills have been assembled, suitably
selected for school and library display from
about 50 photoplays which are based on
standard works of literature and other simi-
larly important productions. These stills are
provided at SI. 00 per set on request of li-
brarians and teachers of photoplay apprecia-
tion classes. A list of pictures on which sets
of stills are available will be mailed on
request.
A further distribution of stills is affected
in many other communities where librarians
cooperate with local exhibitors who obtain
stills from branch and sales managers. This
is a very valuable arrangement both to the
exhibitors and to the libraries, since it stimu-
lates circulation of the library books and
interests the patrons of the libraries in photo-
plays before they are shown in local theaters.
Yoh-C Current Theatrical Short Subjects Available for Classrooms
Activities of the MPPDA looking toward the
use of films in classroom teaching developed
coincidentally with the photoplay appreciation
movement but antedated it in time. "Develop-
ing the educational as well as the entertain-
ment value and the general usefulness of
the motion picture" was included in the
statement of the purposes for which the
Association was formed in 1922. Will H. Hays
has consistently pursued this policy both as
regards research and production.
At the 77th Annual Convention of the
National Education Association in San Fran-
cisco on July 6, 1939, Hays announced the
completion of the plan by which about 500
non-current theatrical short subjects selected
by a committee of educators out of about
15,000 in the vaults of the member companies
may be used by educational institutions in
strictly classroom work for a period of three
years without compensation to the owners of
the copyrighted films.
These pictures were selected by the Advis-
ory Committee on the Use of Motion Pictures
in Education consisting of the following mem-
bers: Frederick H. Bair, Superintendent of
Schools, Bronxville, N. Y.; Isaiah Bowman,
President of the Johns Hopkins University;
Karl T. Compton, President of Massachusetts
Institute of Technology; Edmund E. Day, Presi-
dent of Cornell University; Royal B. Famum,
Executive Vice-President of the Rhode Island
School of Design; Willard E. Givens, Executive
Secretary of the National Education Associa-
tion; Jay B. Nash, Professor of Education in
New York University; Mark A. May (Chair-
man), Professor of Educational Psychology,
and Director of the Institute of Human Rela-
tions, Yale University.
For the purpose of handling the physical
distribution of the films, the educators who are
members of this Advisory Committee formed
themselves into a corporation known as Teach-
ing Film Custodians, Inc. This corporation in
turn appointed three Trustees — Dr. James R.
Angell, President Emeritus of Yale University;
Dr. Willard E. Givens, Executive Secretary of
the National Education Association; and Carl
E. Milliken, Secretary of MPPDA.
Under the terms and conditions of the con-
tracts with the producing companies, these
trustees are permitted to license non-current
short subjects to schools for limited periods
not to exceed three years with stated limita-
tions as follows:
"Prints will be furnished only to bona fide
educational institutions; the exhibitions shall
be before classroom or kindred groups com-
posed only of bona fide students or enrolled
members of such educational institutions,
and such exhibitions shall be an integral
factor of class or group study.
"Admission fees, directly or indirectly,
shall never be charged or permitted to be
paid for admission at the door or otherwise
in advance or afterwards, for the right to
attend either single exhibitions, or a series
of such exhibitions."
Under the contract, these pictures must be
projected without change or alteration. The
unauthorized copying of these films is a viola-
tion of the United States Copyright Law. Any
unauthorized exhibition of these pictures would
also be a violation of the Copyright Law.
The Advisory Committee has prepared and
published a 320-page catalog listing and de-
scribing the short subjects which, under this
plan, are made available to schools for class-
room use. This catalog is organized in three
main parts. The first is a classification and
description of all pictures according to the
outline shown below; the second is an alpha-
betical index of titles; and the third is an
index of topics of subject maatter covered by
one or more of the films.
A description of each of the films will be
found in the main body of the catalog. Each
description contains, first, an account of the
visual and sound elements of the films; and
second, a brief resume of the panel's appraisal.
This usually includes a statement of the grade
level and the school subject in which the
picture is judged by the panel probably to
have its greatest usefulness. The panel's esti-
mate of the film as a whole, or of its educa-
tional promise is expressed by such phrases
as "highly recommended," "recommended,"
"should have value or be useful for," or "sug-
740
gesled by panel as having limited value, or
some degree of value for . . ."
The panel appraisals oi these films are, of
course, quite subjective and preliminary. The
ultimate test oi their educational usefulness
is in the classroom. The Advisory Committee
wishes to emphasize the experimental nature
of this work and invites the cooperation of all
teachers who use these films. It is hoped that
records of the responses of pupils will be kept
and that copies will be sent to the office of the
trustees. These reports will be used as guides
to the selection of additional pictures which
are not now available. Schools of education
and other research agencies are invited to
send in the results of any investigations that
they may make on the educational values of
these films.
Classification of Pictures
A. ART AND MUSIC
I. Art appreciation
II. Architecture and design
III. Painting and sculpture
IV. Animated cartoons
V. Music
B. LITERATURE AND BIOGRAPHY
C. THE SCIENCES
I. Biology and nature study
a. Animals — Domestic and trained
b. Animals — wild
c. Birds
d. Insects
e. Marine life
f. Plants
II. Chemistry, physics, and astronomy
III. Geology, physical geography, and
meteorology
IV. General science
D. THE SOCIAL STUDIES
I. Anthropology and psychology
II. Economics and government (civics)
III. Geography (travel)
a. Africa
b. America — Central and West Indies
c. America — North
d. America — South
Character E
The development of the new discussion tech-
nique with the Secrets of Success films and the
establishment of a broad basis of general
knowledge of the problems of adolescents by
the Commission on Human Relations of the
Progressive Education Association were both
necessary preliminaries to the Character Edu-
cation film project which the Commission is
now carrying on.
The general studies indicate that American
youth passing from childhood through adoles-
cence to adult development is likely to en-
counter as many as 175 difficult human rela-
tions situations. These transitions are required
by the culture into which the youth is born. It
is an educational responsibility to aid him in
making these adaptations. It is an educational
opportunity to give him an understanding of
e. Asia
f. Australia and Islands of the Pacific
g. Europe
h. Miscellaneous
IV. History
a. United States
b. European
c. General
V. Sociology
VI. Religion
E. HEALTH. PHYSICAL EDUCATION, AND
RECREATION
I. Scholastic major sports
a. Baseball
b. Basketball
c. Crew
d. Football
e. Track and field
II. Scholastic minor sports
a. Archery
b. Badminton
c. Fencing
d. Gymnastics
e. Hockey
f. Swimming and diving
g. Table tennis
h. Tennis
III. General Sports and Recreation
a. Boating, yachting, and water sports
b. Dancing
c. Fishing and hunting
d. Golfing
e. Horses, riding and polo
f. Playgrounds and resorts
g. Skiing
h. Miscellaneous
IV. Health and hygiene
F. THE PRACTICAL ARTS AND VOCATIONS
I. Agriculture
II. Home economics
III. Industrial arts
IV. Vocations
Address all communications to Teaching Film
Trustees, 21st floor, 25 West 43rd Street, New
York City.
a I ion Films
why the adaptations are required. The Com-
mission believes that approximately 100 of
these situations can best be approached and
understood through the distinctive film discus-
sion method originated by the Committee on
Social Values in Motion Pictures under the
leadership of Dr. Howard M. LeSourd and
further developed by the Commission on
Human Relations with the cooperation of the
member companies of the MPPDA.
Up to the termination of the first contract with
the film companies on July 1, 1939, approxi-
mately 75 of these situations had been covered
by excerpts from non-current feature pictures
edited and prepared by the Commission and
used in 20 experimental schools.
Before the expiration of the contract, the
producing companies agreed to extend its
terms for a further period of two years. It
741
was agreed also that the Commission be per-
mitted to distribute the films to educational
institutions which would agree to use the film
discussion technique undler the general direc-
tion of the Commission.
Information regarding the details of this
experiment and the terms on which films may
be secured can be obtained from Dr. Alice V.
Keliher, Chairman, Commission on Human Re-
lations, 45 Rockefeller Plaza, New York City.
PRODUCTION
CODE OF ETHICS
Formulated by the Association of Motion Pic-
ture Producers, Inc., and The Motion Picture
Producers and Distributors of America, Inc.
Motion picture producers recognize the high
trust and confidence which have been placed
in them by the people of the world and which
have made motion pictures a universal form
of entertainment.
They recognize their responsibility to (he
public because of this trust and because en-
tertainment and art are important influences
in the life of a nation.
Hence, though regarding motion pictures
primarily as entertainment without any ex-
plicit purpose of teaching or propaganda, they
know that the motion picture within its own
field of entertainment may be directly respon-
sible for spiritual or moral progress, for
higher types of social life, and for much cor-
rect thinking.
During the rapid transition from silent to
talking pictures they have realized the neces-
sity and the opportunity of subscribing to a
Code to govern the production of talking pic-
tures and of reacknowledging this respon-
sibility.
On their part, they ask from the public and
from public leaders a sympathetic understand-
ing of their purposes and problems and a
spirit of cooperation that will allow them the
freedom and opportunity necessary to bring
the motion picture to a still higher level of
wholesome entertainment for all the people.
General Principles
1. No picture shall be produced which will
lower the moral standards of those who see
it. Hence the sympathy of the audience shall
never be thrown to the side of crime, wrong-
doing, evil or sin.
2. Correct standards of life, subject only
to the requirements of drama and entertain-
ment, shall be presented.
3. Law, natural or human, shall not be
ridiculed, nor shall sympathy be created for
its violation.
Particular Applications
L CRIMES AGAINST THE LAW
These shall never be presented in such a
way as to throw sympathy with the crime as
against law and justice or to inspire others
with a desire for imitation.
1. Murder.
a. The technique of murder must be pre-
sented in a way that will not inspire
imitation.
b. Brutal killings are not to be presented
in detail.
c. Revenge in modern times shall not be
justified.
2. Methods of Crime should not be explicitly
presented.
a. Theft, robbery, safe-cracking, and dy-
namiting of trains, mines, buildings,
etc., should not be detailed in method.
b. Arson must be subject to the same safe-
guards.
c. The use of firearms should be restricted
to essentials.
d. Methods of smuggling should not be
presented.
3. Illegal Drug Traffic must never be pre-
sented.
4. The use of liquor in American life, when
not required by the plot or for proper
characterization, will not be shown.
II. SEX
The sanctity of the institution of marriage
and the home shall be upheld. Pictures shall
not infer that low forms of sex relationship
are the accepted or common thing.
742
1. Adultery, sometimes necessary plot ma-
terial, must not be explicitly treated, or
justified, or presented attractively.
2. Scenes of Passion.
a. They should not be introduced when
not essential to the plot.
b. Excessive and lustful kissing, lustful
embraces, suggestive postures and ges-
tures, are not to be shown.
c. In general, passion should so be
treated that these scenes do not stimu-
late the lower and baser element.
3. Seduction or Rape.
a. They should never be more than sug-
gested, and only when essential for
the plot, and even then never shown
by explicit method.
b. They are never the proper subject for
comedy.
4. Sex perversion or any inference to it is
forbidden.
5. White slavery shall not be treated.
6. Miscegenation (sex relationship between
the white and black races) is forbidden.
7. Sex hygiene and venereal diseases are
not subjects for motion pictures.
8. Scenes of actual child birth, in fact or in
silhouette, are never to be presented.
9. Children's sex organs are never to be
exposed.
III. VULGARITY
The treatment of low, disgusting, unpleasant,
though not necessarily evil, subjects should
be subject always to the dictate of good
taste and a regard for the sensibilities of the
audience.
IV. OBSCENITY
Obscenity in word, gesture, reference, song,
joke, or by suggestion (even when likely to
be understood only by part of the audience)
is forbidden.
V. PROFANITY
Pointed profanity (this includes the words,
God, Lord, Jesus, Christ — unless used rever-
ently— Hell, S.O.B., damn. Gawd), or every
other profane or vulgar expression however
used, is forbidden.
VI. COSTUME
1. Complete nudity is never permitted. This
includes nudity in fact or in silhouette, or
any lecherous or licentious notice thereof
by other characters in the picture.
2. Undressing scenes should be avoided and
never used save where essential to the
plot.
3. Indecent or undue exposure is forbidden.
4. Dancing costumes intended to permit un-
due exposure or indecent movements in
the dance are forbidden.
VII. DANCES
1. Dances suggesting or representing sexual
actions or indecent passion are forbidden.
2. Dances which emphasize indecent move-
ments are to be regarded as obscene.
Vni. RELIGION
1. No film or episode may throw ridicule on
any religious faith.
2. Ministers of Religion in their character as
ministers of religion should not be used as
comic characters or as villains.
3. Ceremonies of any definite religion should
be carefully and respectfully handled.
IX. LOCATIONS
The treatment of bedrooms must be gov-
erned by good taste and delicacy.
X. NATIONAL FEELINGS
1. The use of the flag shall be consistently
respectful.
2. The history, institutions, prominent people
and citizenry of other nations shall be
represented fairly.
XI. TITLES
Salacious, indecent, or obscene titles shall
not be used.
XII. REPELLENT SUBJECTS
The following subjects must be treated with-
in the careful limits of good taste:
1. Actual hangings or electrocutions as legal
punishments for crime.
2. Third degree methods.
3. Brutality and possible gruesomeness.
4. Branding of people or animals.
5. Apparent cruelty to children or animals.
6. The sale of women, or a woman selling
her virtue.
7. Surgical operations.
Resolution for Uniform
Interpretation
(Adopted June 13, 1934)
1. When requested by production man-
agers, the Motion Picture Producers & Dis-
tributors of America, Incorporated, shall se-
cure any facts, information or suggestions
concerning the probable reception of stories
or the manner in which in its opinion they
may best be treated.
2. That each production manager shall sub-
mit in confidence a copy of each or any
script to the Production Code Administration
of the Motion Picture Producers & Distributors
of America, Incorporated (and of the Associa-
tion of Motion Picture Producers, Inc., Cali-
fornia). Such Production Code Administration
will give the production manager for his
guidance such confidential advice and sug-
gestions as experience, research, and infor-
mation indicate, designating wherein in its
judgment the script departs from the provi-
sions of the Code, or wherein from experience
or knowledge it is believed that exception will
be taken to the story or treatment.
3. Each production manager of a company
belonging to the Motion Picture Producers &
Distributors of America, Incorporated, and any
producer proposing to distribute and/ or dis-
tributing his picture through the facilities of
any member of the Motion Picture Producers
& Distributors of America, Incorporated, shall
743
submit to such Production Code Administra-
tion every picture he produces before the
negative goes to the laboratory for printing.
Said Production Code Administration, having
seen the picture, shall inform the production
manager in writing whether in its opinion
the picture conforms or does not conform to
the Code, stating specifically wherein either by
theme, treatment or incident, the picture vio-
lates the provisions of the Code. In such latter
event, the picture shall not be released until
the changes indicated by the Production Code
Administration have been made; provided,
however, that the production manager may
appeal from such opinion of said Production
Code Administration, so indicated in writing,
to the Board of Directors of the Motion Picture
Producers & Distributors of America, Incorpo-
rated, whose finding shall be final, and such
production manager and company shall be
governed accordingly.
CENSOR BOARDS
CENSOR RULES
STATE CENSOR BOARDS AND RULES
Kansas
State Board of Review, Sixth and Armstrong Streets,
Kansas City, Kansas; Miss Mae Clausen, Chairman.
The board "shall approve such films, reels, in-
cluding subtitles, spoken dialogue, songs, other words
or sounds, folders, posters and advertising matter
which are moral and proper; and shall disapprove such
]S are cruel, obscene, indecent, or immoral, or such as
tend to debase or corrupt morals."
In addition to the quotation from the statute, this
board has adopted the following rules:
A. Pictures should be clean and wholesome, and
all features that tend to debase morals or influence
the mind to improper conduct should be eliminated.
B. Ridicule of any religious sect or peculiar
characteristics of any race of people will not be
approved.
C. Evil suggestion in the dress of comedy char-
acters will be eliminated.
D. Loose conduct between men and women will
be eliminated, and whenever possible, barroom
scenes and social drinking.
E. A display of nude human figues will be
eliminated.
F. Crimes and criminal methods, such
instruction in crime through suggestion,
eliminated or abbreviated.
G. Prolonged and passionate love scenes, when
suggestive of immorality will be eliminated.
as give
will be
Maryland
State Board of Motion Picture Censors, 211 North
Calvert Street, Baltimore, Maryland; Ceorge R.
Mitchell. Chairman.
No film to be licensed which is in the judgment
of the board ". . . obscene, indecent, immoral, in-
human, sacrilegious or of such character that its
exhibition would tend to corrupt morals or incite to
crime."
JVeic Yorfe
Board of Education, Motion Picture Division, 80
Center Street. New York, N. Y. Also: Albany, N. Y.;
Irwin Esmond, Director.
No motion picture will be licensed or a permit
granted for its exhibition within the State of New
York, which may be classified or any part thereof,
as obscene, indecent, immoral, inhuman, sacrilegious,
or which is of such a character that its exhibition
would tend to corrupt morals or incite to crime."
Newsreels not subject to review.
Ohio
Department of Education, Division of Film Censor-
ship, State Office Building, Columbus, Ohio; E. N.
Dietrich, Director.
"Only such films as are in the judgment and dis-
cretion of the board of censors of a moral, educational
or amusing and harmless character shall be passed and
approved by such board."
Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania State Board of Censors, 1225 Vine
Street, Philadelphia, Pa.; Mrs. Edna R. Carroll, Chair-
man.
"The board shall . . . approve such films, reels
or views which are moral and proper; and also
disapprove such as are sacrilegious, obscene, inde-
cent, or immoral, or such as tend, in the judgment
of the board, to debase or corrupt morals."
Virginia
State Division of Motion Picture Censorship, Room
312, State Office Building, Richmond, Va.; Col. Peter
Saunders, Director.
The board shall issue a license "unless such film
or a part thereof is obscene, indecent, immoral,
inhuman, or is of such a character that its ex-
hibition would tend to corrupt morals or incite to
crime ..."
744
LOCAL CENSOR BOARDS
Arranged by Key City Territories
Atlanta
Atlanta, Ca. — Sherwood Astin, Chairman; Birming-
ham. Ala. — E. L. Hollums. Chief of Police; Valdosta,
Ca. — Mrs. C. R. Hawk; Tampa, Fla. — Chief of Police
Censor.
Boston
Boston, Mass. — Herbert J. McNary; Lynn, Mass. —
Wil.iam Wal.ace; Providence, R. I. — Lieut, J. Cowan,
Amusement Inspector.
Charlotte
Durham, N. C. — A. H. Borland, Chairman.
Chicago
Chicago, III. — Lieut. Harry M. Costello of Police
Dept. in charge of Board; Evansfon, III. — Mayor, Chief
of Police, and one police officer; Geneva, III. — Mrs.
Lucas Maher. Chairman; Highland Park, III. — Edward
Morney, Chief of Police; Lake Forest, III. — Mayor
head of Board; Oak Park, 1. 1. —Ray S. Clark, Chair-
man; Wilmette. III. — President of village and three
trustees. Following have censorship ordinances: Syca-
more, Glen Ellyn, Waukegan, Winnetka, LaGrange,
Des Plaines, Cary, Ind., mayor acts as censor.
Dallas
Abilene, Texas — Two men and two women; San
Angelo, Texas — Sam Crowthers; San Antonio — Mrs. S.
A. Vincins classifies pictures for adults, young people,
and family entertainment.
Des Moines
Council Bluffs, Iowa — Board of fifteen members ap-
pointed by Mayor.
Detroit
Detroit, Mich. — Sgt. Joseph Kollar, Police Dept.
Kansas City
Kansas City, Mo. — Cuy Holmes, Chairman- St.
Joseph, Mo. — Regina Garvey, Chairman; Springfield —
Police department has authority to censor pictures.
Los Angeles
Pasadena, Cal. — Mrs. Aria Neale, Chairman.
Memphis
Memphis, Tenn. — Lloyd T. Bindford, Chairman; Pine
Bluff, Ark. — Four members appointed by Mayor.
Milwaukee
Milwaukee, Wis. — Motion Picture Commission, Leroy
Steller, President.
Oklahoma City
Oklahoma City, Okla. — Mayor Frank Martin.
O mafia
Omaha, Nebr. — Two women, three men appointed
by Mayor.
Portland
Portland, Ore. — Mrs. Thomas Joyce, Chairman.
San Francisco
San Jose, Calif. — Mrs. Charles R. Williams, Chair-
man; Palo A. to, Calif.— Mrs. Warren A. Littlefield,
Chairman; Sacramento, Calif. — Mrs. Josephine Haug,
Chairman.
Seattle
Seattle, Wash. — Mrs. Eileen Baumgarten: Belling-
ham, Wash. — Ralph R. Reed, Chief of Police; Spo-
kane, Wash. — Mrs. 0. W. Young, Chairman.
A Summary of
SUNDAY CLOSINGS
Alabama
Legalized by local option. Sunday shows in An-
niston, Ensley, Montgomery, Auburn, Demopolis,
Dothan, Selma, Troy, Bessemer, Cullman, Jasper, Tus-
caloosa. Bill passed in 1937 legalizing Sunday shows
in Jefferson County (Leeds, Tarrant, Birmingham).
Sunday clcsing in Camden, Greenville, Linden, Living-
stone, York.
Arizona
No state legislation.
Arkansas
Legislature of 1931 passed law legalizing Sunday
shows by local option. 1939 legislature passed bill
legalizing Sunday motion pictures.
California
No state legislation against Sunday amusements.
Colorado
Legalized by local option — law on statute books
interpreted as prohibiting Sunday shows, passed in
1871, but some years ago case was appealed to Su-
preme Court of State and decision rendered that
law did not prevent operation of motion picture thea-
ters on Sunday. No towns forbid shows by local
ordinance, although some of smaller towns do not have
Sunday shows.
Connecticut
Local option throughout the state. Hartford and
Danbury do not allow Sunday matinees, but theaters
open at five p.m. State passed bill in 1937 permit-
ting theaters to remain open Sunday night until 11
p.m. instead of 10:30.
Delaware
Legislature defeated bill in 1937 for statewide Sun-
day films instead of local option. 1939 — Sunday open-
ing after 2 P.M. for cities of more than 25,000 (Wil-
mington) passed both houses — vetoed by governor.
District of Columbia
Theaters open on Sunday.
745
Florida
Legalized by local option. All large towns have
Sunday shows.
Georgia
Does not permit motion pictures on Sunday. In
spite of blue laws, however, Atlanta, Albany. Colum-
bus, and Thomasville do show pictures.
Idaho
State law prohibits Sunday shows, but upon signed
petition of the majority of voters, presented to City
Council, question is submitted to voters of com-
munity and popular vote governs action of council.
Practically every sizeable town in state operates on
Sunday.
Illinois
No state law legalizing or making illegal showing
of pictures on Sunday. This is controlled by munici-
palities. No Sunday shows in Sparta and Waverly.
Indiana
Not legalized, but Sunday motion pictures are
shown in every principal city in State. No Sunday
shows in Oakland City.
Iowa
Legalized by local option.
Kansas
Has Sunday labor laws which include motion pic-
tures for Sunday showing. Law has never been en-
forced and all towns operate except White Cloud,
Smith Center, Lindsborg, Scott City, Clifton, Baldwin,
Greenleaf, Lincoln, Jetmore, Spearville, Oskaloosa.
Kentucky
Bill legalizing Sunday performances passed 1934.
The following have Sunday showings by local ordi-
nance: Falmouth, Harrodsburg, Russell, Vanceburg,
Williamsburg, Campbellsville, Livermore, Munfords-
ville. Beaver Dam, Columbia, Elizabethtown, Green-
ville, Hodgenville.
Louisiana
Legalized by local option.
Maine
1939 law permits Sunday movies between 3 and 11
P.M.
Maryland
Legislature in 1931 enacted law providing referen-
dum for city of Baltimore which was voted on and
passed. Theaters open in following counties: Balti-
more, Montgomery, Prince George, St. Mary's, Howard,
Oakland, and Anne Arundel. Incorporated towns in
Allegheny County may have Sunday showings provided
that they obtain permit from municipal authorities.
Other counties have not passed laws permitting Sun-
day shows.
Massachusetts
Legalized for Sunday showing. A large number of
cities and towns are forbidden showings on Sundays.
Michigan
Has old blue law statute prohibiting showing of
pictures on Sunday but statute is not enforced. Hol-
land is only city which has Sunday closing law by
city ordinance.
Minnesota
Sunday closing law of 1905 amended 1909 legalizing
outdoor sports. In a decision of 1910 motion pictures
classed same as sports and allowed to operate on
Sundays.
Mississippi
Not legalized. One town, Shaw, operates — they
open on Sunday, pay the fine and continue to operate.
Missouri
Have Sunday labor laws which include motion pic-
tures for Sunday showing. Law was never enforced
and all towns operate except Marshall, Fairfax, Fulton.
Montana
No state statute prohibiting showing of motion
pictures on Sunday and no law legalizing such show-
ing, but all towns run shows on Sunday.
Nebraska
Legalized by local option. Sunday shows forbidden
in Beatrice, Stromsberg. Town council opened Ar-
nold for Sunday shows Jan. 18, 1937.
Nevada
No state legislation against Sunday amusements.
New Hampshire
State passed Sunday sports and entertainment bill in
1931 and individual cities and towns vote on it. The
entire state is now open.
New Jersey
Blue laws repealed in 1933. Towns which have lo-
cal ordinance prohibiting Sunday shows: Belvedere,
Blairstown, Frenchtown, Highbridge, Jamesburg,
Metuchen, Ocean Crove, Peapack, Princeton, Ridg-
wood, Upper Montclair, Westfield.
New Mexico
Bill passed 1931 legislature legalizing Sunday show-
ings and prohibiting local option measures from closing
theaters.
New Yorh
Home rule law by which towns and cities are
legalized to show motion pictures on Sunday after
2 p.m., provided local ordinance is enacted to this
effect by local legislative body and ratified by di-
rect vote of people at special election. Under this
law leading towns and cities show pictures on Sun-
day. The following towns have local ordinances pro-
hibiting Sunday shows: Bronxville, Carmel, Middle-
town, New Paltz, Hancock, Cazenovia. 1939 law
provides referendum by villages on Sunday shows.
North Carolina
Not legalized. State law, city ordinances and pub-
lic opinion opposed to Sunday pictures. The follow-
ing towns do have Sunday shows Asheville, Benson.
Chapel Hill, Dunn, Durham, Elizabeth City, Hender-
son, High Point, Louisburg, Plymouth, Raleigh, Robcr-
sonville, Scotland Neck, Tarboro, Williamston. Sun-
day films legalized for Cherokee County in 1937.
Number of towns have Sunday shows and a per cent
of the proceeds is given to charity. 1939 Sunday
closing law repealed in Johnston and Hyde counties.
Law also passed 1939 prohibiting Sunday shows in
Yadkin county and Sunday movies in Northampton
between 1 and 6 p.m.
North Dakota
Sunday shows legalized by referendum in 1933.
Ohio
Legalized showing on Sunday. Forbidden in Bayes-
ville and Cambridge.
Oklahoma
Legalized by local option. No state law against
operation of Sunday shows. No towns of any conse-
quence have Sunday closing ordinances.
Oregon
Legalized by local option to run shows on Sunday.
No closed situation known.
Pennsylvania
Sunday opening law passed in 1935. Legalized by
local option.
716
Rhode island
Legalized by local option.
South Carolina
Not legalized. Same statute as North Carolina.
South Dakota
Has state law prohibiting Sunday pictures. Local
option has over-ruled this law, however, and pic-
tures are shown on Sunday in all principal towns.
Tennessee
Governor signed bill repealing blue laws in 1935.
Sunday opening by local option. However, not many
operate. Nashville, Memphis, Dresden, Savannah and
Knoxville have Sunday shows. 1939 law passed pro-
viding majority vote of municipality should decide for
Sunday movies. Previous law 4/5 majority.
Texas
Governor signed bill legalizing Sunday pictures
which became effective in 1931, subject to local op-
tion. Prior to passage of law, majority of principal
towns were open. Most towns now have Sunday
shows.
Utah
No law preventing showing of pictures on Sundays.
Former state statute made it illegal to operate a thea-
ter on Sunday, but this statute was repealed in 1925.
Local option bill was subsequently introduced, but
failed to pass.
Vermont
Law permitting Sunday movies after 6 p.m. passed
in 1939.
Virginia
Not legalized. Norfolk shows motion pictures on
Sunday by virtue of test case where court held motion
pictures were works of necessity. In Richmond mo-
tion pictures were shown on Sunday by making con-
tribution to city for charitable works. Court upheld
Sunday opening in Richmond. Decision taken as al-
lowing all theaters to operate on Sunday. Roanoke
operated for a few Sundays but court held it was in
violation of law. Legalized in Arlington county
May, 1938 by court decision.
Washington
Sunday opening not legalized except in Colfax
where old statute providing Sunday closing was at-
tempted to be enforced, but was defeated. Theaters
close in Pullman on Sunday evenings as result of
friendly arrangement with people of Normal School of
Pullman. Theaters throughout state operate without
interference. There are no Sunday closing ordinances.
West Virginia
Not legalized, but all principal cities show pictures
on Sunday which include Charleston, Bluefield, Hunt-
ington, Williamson (theaters in last city open after
closing of church in morning and close prior to
evening service). Forbidden by local ordinance in
Lewisburg, Milton, and Ronceverte.
Wisconsin
Blue laws repealed in 1933.
Wyoming
No state law concerning motion pictures.
NATIONAL BOARD
OF REVIEW
Activities in 1939
THE National Board of Review of Motion Pictures is a group of men and
women of all ages, representing a wide variety of professions and callings,
who serve without remuneration as a body whose aim is to express the reactions
of the intelligent public to motion pictures, and to spread appreciation of the
best that the motion picture produces both as entertainment and as a cultural
and educational force.
It was organized in 1909 by the People's In-
stitute of New York City. It reviews films and
distributes information about them to indi-
viduals and affiliated citizen groups in various
parts of the country who do local work in
conducting the constructive program of com-
munity cooperation in the advancement and
uses of the motion picture. The National
Board of Review is opposed to all forms of
censorship, and believes firmly in selection
and classification — a plan it was the first to
evolve — as the most effective and constructive
method of creating a public appreciation and
demand for good films. The National Board of
Review is carried on through various com-
mittees:
GENERAL COMMITTEE— The General Com-
mittee is the group developed out of the origi-
nal group organized in 1909. Matters of gen-
eral policy may be referred to it and it acts
regularly in an advisory capacity.
747
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE — The Executive
Committee is composed of members of the
General Committee and is charged with the
formation of policies, election of members, ex-
penditure of funds and supervision of all
administrative affairs. The chairman of the
National Board of Review is elected from
among the membership of the Executive Com-
mittee, and ratified by the General Committee.
The present chairman is Dr. A. A. Brill. The
personnel of the Executive Committee is listed
elsewhere in this book.
MEMBERSHIP COMMITTEE — The Member-
ship Committee is the supervising gToup of
the Review Committee personnel. It meets
regularly to act upon applications and quali-
fications of prospective members, continues or
terminates the service terms of regular mem-
bers, and makes recommendations to the
Executive Committee for the election of new
review members. This is a rotating Commit-
tee with members added each year.
REVIEW COMMITTEE— The review work is
conducted in New York City and performed by
trained review groups of men and women,
who combine to constitute the membership of
the Review Committee, numbering over 300
persons and representing a great variety of
professions, activities and interest. Through
this committee personnel, in its work of film
review, selection, classification and recom-
mendation, a constant endeavor is made to
reflect the intelligent public opinion of the
country. These members, like all other mem-
bers of the National Board of Review, serve
entirely without pay. The decisions of the
committees regarding pictures under review
rest upon a majority ballot. A number of
members, following the usual probationary
period of study, have been added to this
Committee during 1939.
COMMITTEE ON EXCEPTIONAL PHOTO-
PLAYS— This committee, composed of critics
and students of the art of the motion picture,
is particularly interested in whatever esthetic
values can be found in films, as distinguished
from mere popular entertainment. It looks at
all the better films and publishes criticisms
of those thought worthy of discussion. It se-
lects, annually, the ten films considered to be
artistically the best of the year, and through
the agency of little theaters and motion picture
councils and forums seeks to encourage the
showing of films that will create a more gen-
eral appreciation of the motion picture as an
important medium of artistic expression. Their
selection of the ten best films for 1939 appears
in another section of this publication. This is
a rotating Committee and new members are
added each year.
NATIONAL ADVISORY COMMITTEE— Early
in 1915, when the Board had passed through
its experimental stages and had become estab-
lished as a nation-wide influence in regard
to the motion picture with resultant connec-
tions throughout the entire country, there was
propcssd a comnrttee national in scope and
personnel to be known as the National Ad-
visory Committee. The committee formed was
an enlargement of the already existing local
Advisory Committee. The personnel has
changed frcm time to time in this period of
years but it has remained country-wide In
representation and opinion and at present
numbers 53 members from 37 cities.
NATIONAL MOTION PICTURE COUNCIL—
The community or field work of the National
Board of Review is conducted under a Na-
tional Council. This department of the Na-
tional Board has had, since its organization in
1916, several designations in line with its
ever-changing and developing program. It
was first known as the Committee on Children's
Pictures and Programs, having its beginning
in the classification and lisling of films for
youth. As this program of selection grew to
cover the need of selective information for
the adult as well, the name National Com-
mittee fcr Better Films was assumed. Out-
growing a commi'tee activity, it became the
Better Films Council, and in 1935, the more de-
scriptive name of National Motion Picture
Council was adopted. The designation better
films was properly descriptive in 1916, but
the intervening years has brought about a
marked improvement in fi'ms and a resulting
change in approach and attitude toward them.
It is the belief of the Board that the present
work of a community organization is to unite
effectively in a cons'ructive program for the
support, study and use both recreationally and
educationally of the finer motion pictures now
available. Thus the change to the present
National Motion Picture Council was made.
The Council program is carried out through
affilia'ed memberships, both group and indi-
vidual, service contact groups and correspon-
dents throughout the country. The National
Council assists in the organization and pro-
gram of work of the local groups.
The local councils follow the plan initiated
by the National Board in 1916 of having a
membership composed of representatives from
many organizations, cultural, educational,
recreational, religious and civic, so that they
typify the original movement for organized
community participation in the best uses of
the motion picture and the support of the best
pictures in the community. They provide a
means of unifying and making articulate the
wishes of the public in regard to the motion
picture, and offer a plan which avoids dupli-
cation of effort and most effectively integrates
the varied and various community interests.
The objectives of such organizations are:
To demonstrate through the education of
public opinion, the effectiveness of selection
and classification, instead of censorship, as a
means of forwarding the development of the
motion picture and its best uses.
748
To encourage through open meetings, for-
ums, classes and other means, the study of
the motion picture as a medium of entertain-
ment, education and artistic expression.
To concentrate the attention of the public
on specific worthwhile films through the pub-
lication of a Photoplay Guide to the Selected
Pictures currently showing at local theaters.
To arrange family Friday night or week-end
programs of selected films and junior mati-
nees of pictures particularly suited to the
tastes of children, through cooperation with
local exhibitors.
To endorse and further the use of visual
education through motion pictures in the
schools.
To arrange and promote occasional exhibi-
tions of exceptional and cultural films that
would not ordinarily be shown in the com-
mercial theaters.
Through its publications the National Board
makes available advance information on the
selected pictures, with their audience classi-
fication, and on the exceptional pictures so
that community groups can be prepared to
publish local Photoplay Guides to the Selected
Pictures, sponsor special showings and in
other ways give community support to the
best pictures.
The Board and the Council have sent, in
answer to invitation, speakers from the vari-
ous Committees and the staff personnel to
many communities, to aid in the formation
and development of community organizations
and to present various phases of motion pic-
ture interest and activity on council, club,
school and other programs.
THE JUNIOR ACTIVITY— In 1931 the Na-
tional Board organized a group of boys and
girls ranging in age from 8 to 17 years, to re-
view and discuss motion pictures in order to
learn directly from them what the young peo-
ple themselves think about this art form. The
opinions of the Young Reviewers, as this
group is called, have been of great educational
value in making larger and larger numbers
of young people critically conscious of what
they see in motion pictures and creating a
larger future discerning audience, as well as
being an invaluable check for adults to apply
to their own ideas of juvenile reactions.
The 4-Star Clubs, young people's motion
picture study and activity organization, de-
veloped as an outgrowth of the Young Re-
viewers. These motion picture clubs are func-
tioning in various parts of the country and
the number is constantly growing. Their pro-
gram of activities is divided into four parts —
appreciation, projection, production and com-
munity service. Each year these boys and
girls join in a pell to determine the Juniors'
Ten Best Pictures. The selections for 1939
appear elsewhere in the Year Book. Every
year also a "Make Your Own Movies" con-
test is held and the prize-winning films shown
at the morning session of the 4 Star Club
Spring Conference. The afternoon session of
the junior Conference is devoted to addresses
by club delegates on their motion picture in-
terests. The juniors have charge of one of
the sessions of the Annual Conference of the
adult Councils of the Board.
The 4 Star Clubs have their own publication
known as the 4-Star Final, which contains
news of club activities, reviews of current
films, general articles on the motion picture,
etc.
PUBLICATIONS— The National Board of Re-
view Magazine is a periodical containing
articles of general interest on motion pictures
and motion picture activities, and reviews of
exceptional and selected features and short
subjects. Various topics are suggested peri-
odically for group discussion and a comment
and correspondence column carried view-
points submitted on the topics and reports of
activities. It is published monthly, except
July, August, and September. The Weekly
Guide to Selected Pictures, giving the most up-
to-date information on the pictures selected by
the Review Committee, and the Weekly Of-
ficial Bulletin are compiled regularly through-
out the year. The 24th annual Selected Pic-
tures Catalog and the 1 8th annual list of Se-
lected Book-films were published this year.
Special lists such as Books on the Motion Pic-
ture, Exceptional Photoplays and Foreign Films
are compiled each year. Two pamphlets de-
scriptive of the Board's organization and func-
ticning are available, entitled: The National
Board of Review: Its Background, Growth and
Present Status; and The National Board of
Review: How It Works.
The publications prepared for community
motion picture groups ixclude. Outline of
Activity for Community Motion Picture Coun-
cils and Films Study Groups, A Plan and a
Program for Community Motion Picture Coun-
cils, Constitution and By-law Forms for Com-
munity Motion Picture Councils, Objectives of
Community Motion Picture Councils, Organiza-
tions Represented on Community Motion Pic-
ture Councils, Committees or Chairmen Con-
ducting Motion Picture Council Activity, How
to Prepare a Photoplay Guide and Suggestions
for a Council Publication, Suggested Special
Activities for Community Motion Picture Coun-
cils. This year One Hundred Questions and
Answers on the Motion Picture was prepared
as study material.
UNIVERSITY STUDY COURSES— The Motion
Picture: Its Artistic, Educational and Social
Aspects, the first general course, begun in
1934-35, on motion pictures as a part of the
accredited work of a university given under
the joint auspices of the National Board and
the School of Education. New York University,
under the direction of Dr. Frederic M. Thrasher,
was repeated during the school year 1938-39.
Many prominent speakers gave of their time
and interest to make the course both compre-
749
hensive and authoritative. The National Board
of Review Magazine is used as text material
for the students.
RADIO — The National Board continued the
radio activities begun in the Spring of 1938.
time being generously provided for weekly
broadcasts by New York City's Station WNYC.
and a series of programs delivered known as
the Film Forum. The aim of the broadcasts
has been to bring the average listener en-
tertaining and instructive talks about the mak-
ing and study of motion pictures. For this
reason the National Board has chosen as its
speakers persons who were actually engaged
in the making cf films, or in critical study of
film productions.
Radio activity is not confined to New York.
Motion Picture Councils and groups affiliated
with the National Board in many parts of the
country have also become increasingly inter-
ested in using the radio and broadcast regular
programs for their community listeners. These
consist mainly of announcements of the se-
lected pictures, talks on current productions
and educational subjects. Detailed instruc-
tions and advice regarding such programs
have been issued by the National Board and
have met with considerable interest and ap-
preciation throughout the country. Once in
a while it is possible for the Board and its
Councils to share in a major broadcast; at
Ihe 1939 Conference, for example, some two
hundred delegates attended a broadcast by
Stanton Griff is and Allen B. DuMont on the
future of television in relation to the motion
picture. Representatives of community Coun-
cils visiting New York have at different times
taken part in the Film Forum broadcasts.
NEELY BILL— The National Board reiterated
its opposition to the Neely Bill in 1939. Previ-
ously it had sent a statement to group and
individual members of the BoaTd, members of
Congress, the press, etc., opposing passage
of the bill.
ANNUAL CONFERENCE — The National
Beard held its 24th annual gathering in New
York, Feb. 2 to 4, 1939, at the Hotel Pennsyl-
vania. These annual meetings began as
luncheons more than 24 years ago, but so
gTeat was the response and the demand for
lengthier program and discussion periods, that
in 1925 a conference of three days' duration
was planned, terminating with the annual
luncheon, and they have been continued since
that date, with an increasing representation
of delegates coming from many parts of the
country for this interchange of ideas and
plans. Community representation this year
included such cities as: Cleveland, Dallas,
Jacksonville, Knoxville, Macon, Nashville, Phil-
adelphia, Pittsburgh, Wilmington, Burlington.
The 1939 Conference had as its subject The
Making of a Motion Picture, the aim being to
present as clearly as possible the main ele-
ments involved in the building up of a feature
length film. At the same time the problems
surrounding these elements were fully brought
out both in the addresses and in subsequent
question periods. The speakers and their
topics were: "The Making of a Scenario," Dud-
ley Nichols, President of the Screen Writers'
Guild; "Research in the Motion Picture," Har-
old Hendee, Director of Research, RKO Radio
Pictures, Inc.; "The Problem of Casting,"
Marian Robertson, Eastern Talent Scout for
RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; "Music in the Mo-
tion Picture," David Mendoza, Musical Director,
Vitaphone Studios; "The Director's Work,"
Dudley Murphy; "Sound in the Motion Picture,"
Reeve O. Strock, Sound Director, Eastern Serv-
ice Studios; "The Actor's Angle," Franchot
Tone; "Montage and Editing," Slavko Vorka-
pich of MGM.
The first evening session was spent with the
motion picture course at New York University,
where an address was presented by Professor
Sawyer Falk of Syracuse University, entitled
"The Motion Picture as Popular Entertainment."
Dr. Frederic M. Thrasher presided. The sec-
ond evening session was held at the Chanin
Little Theater, where there was a showing of
the French film "Grand Illusion," the National
Board's chcice as the Best Picture of 1938.
J. K. Paulding, Chairman of the Committee on
Exceptional Photoplays, presided and intro-
duced the film, after which an analysis of
the film was presented by Jean Lenauer, di-
rector of the Filmarte Theater.
One morning session was spent at New
York City's station WNYC where delegates
observed a demonstration of television and
listened to accounts of the present status and
development of television in relation to the
motion picture, presented by Stanton Griffis,
Chairman of the Executive Board of Paramount
Pictures, Inc. and Allen B. DuMont of the
Allen B. DuMont Laboratories.
A Junior Session was held, at which there
was a demonstration of 4-Star Club activity,
ta'ks by Juniors and Club Advisors and
showing of club films.
There was a panel session on "Community
Motion Picture Activities," with many dele-
gates taking part in the addresses and dis-
cussions.
The Conference concluded with the 24th An-
nual Luncheon. The following guests and
speakers were among those present: Langdon
W. Post, of the Executive Committee of the
National Board of Review (Toastmaster); Mrs.
Oliver Harriman, member. Board's National
Motion Picture Council (Hostess); Howard
Dietz, Director of Publicity, MGM; Padraic
Colum, poet; Robert Morley, actor; Gladys
Cooper, actress; Louis de Rochemont, director
of The March of Time; Dudley Murphy, di-
rector; Edgard Lee Masters, poet; Vincent
Price, actor; Hal Hode, Assistant to the Vice-
President of Columbia Pictures; John Abbott
of the Museum of Modern Art Film Library;
Allen B. DuMont.
750
S.M.P.E.inl939
By E. ALLAN WILLIFORD
President
■yHE Society of Motion Picture Engineers, in one respect, seems to be dis-
^ tinguished in a remarkable sense from the rest of the motion picture industry.
Whenever one thinks of motion pictures or the motion picture industry, he is
inclined to think of brilliant lights, fanfares, ultra-superlative adjectives, and
other forms of ballyhoo and high pressure advertising of the theatrical world,
the lack of uniformity that would be found in
equipment, in production, and in the picture
and sound in the theater, if he had to operate
The Society is distinctive in this respect,
that it pursues its way in its scientific and
engineering endeavors in a calm, quiet, and
orderly fashion, throughout the years. Its
influence upon the industry consists of a
steady pressure of engineering facts, gathered
in an engineering manner and evaluated with
engineering precision and logic. The Society
does not rely upon any one outstanding
achievement to prove its worth to the indus-
try. Its projects are generally long-term
projects, and in many instances these projects
are actually in advance of the practice of
the art.
The standards of the Society afford the
best example of the way in which the Society
functions. Organized in 1916 by a handful of
men interested in the motion picture art and
practice, a few standards of design and con-
struction were set up for the purpose of render-
ing uniform the equipment that then existed,
and of paving the way for any new equip-
ment that might be designed in the future.
The pioneers in the motion picture standardiza-
tion hardly realized in 1916 what distance this
industry would travel in the next 25 years —
with the addition of sound and color and
other vast improvements made in projection
of pictures. However, the far-reaching effect
of these standards can well be appreciated
when it is realized that the design of the mo-
tion picture equipment used in every theater
of the country today is based upon those
standards started 25 years ago.
Throughout the years, the Society has added
continually to these standards, until, at the
present time, the entire collection is as im-
posing to those who are versed in the engi-
neering of the art as the brightlights and fan-
fare of Broadway are to the theatrical
profession.
Unfortunately, technical standards do not
make good reading for the public — or, for
that matter, for most large business executives.
It is difficult to get non-technical executives to
realize the enormous value of these standards
and of other similar work that the Society has
done and is doing. However, one can easily
realize the great confusion that would exist.
without such engineering standards in the
industry. It is 100 per cent safe to say, with-
out qualification, that the motion picture in-
dustry today would still be in the nickelodeon
stage were it not for the standards that have
been set up by and through the Society of
Motion Picture Engineers.
The Society is the only organization in the
world that has such a long history of standard-
ization in the motion picture industry. Other
organizations have done some valuable work
in the field of motion picture standardization
during the past few years, and some of the
European countries have recently shown great
interest in the subject. However, it is gratify-
ing to note that practically all the motion pic-
ture standards widely employed internation-
ally are SMPE standards or modifications
thereof. In regions where those standards are
not followed closely, as, for example, in cer-
tain parts of Europe, a great multiplicity of
designs exists and a considerable lack of
uniformity in product and of quality in the
theater is found.
The Society is the balance-wheel of the in-
dustry, as regards standardization, acting as
a check against the promulgation of inept
standards, such as were proposed in Europe
in the 16 mm. field several years ago, and in
the field of screen illumination only recently.
Work on a great number of projects is con-
tinually in progress, and it is hoped that those
who read this article will come to realize the
importance of assisting the Society in its work
and of contributing to these endeavors in
any way possible.
The year 1939 has been a very successful
one for the Society. The conventions held in
Detroit the latter part of 1938, and in Holly-
wood and New York in 1939 were outstanding
ones in the history of the Society with re-
spect to the quality of the technical papers
and presentations made at the meetings. The
convention at Hollywood, especially, was note-
worthy in respect to the wide scope of the
751
subjects covered at the meetings, showing
the close affiliation of all the various branches
of the industry — film makers, equipment
makers, producers, distributors, and exhibitors.
There is no phase of the art of making and
showing motion pictures — aside from the dra-
matic and theatrical aspects — that cannot be
helped by the Society.
Each President of the Society has, in turn,
written his contribution to this Year Book,
and each time has described the activities of
the Society in different ways. To describe the
Society's activities completely would require
much more space than is available, but refer-
ence should be made to the fact that the
standardization activities of the Society are
the culminations of all the labors of 15 or 20
technical committees, composed of outstand-
ing experts in the particular phase of the art
!o which each committee is assigned. Thus
we have the Sound Committee, the Theater
Engineering Committee, the Projection Screens
Committee, the Laboratory Practice Committee,
the Studio Lighting Committee, the Color Com-
mittee, and a number of others. All these
committees diligently pursue their work
through the year under the leadership of
competent chairmen.
A remarkable fact in connection with all
this is that all the chairmen and members of
these committees, as well as the officers of
the Society and the Board of Governors, give
of their time and efforts in this work for no
remuneration. The rewards they expect lie
only in the general improvement of the mo-
tion picture art and the resulting benefits to
all those associated with the industry. It is
our hope that any portion of the industry not
yet materially assisting the Society in all
these endeavors will realize the importance
of the work and will thoroughly appreciate
all that I have attempted to say in this very
brief article.
The Society maintains a general office at
the Hotel Pennsylvania, New York, N. Y„
which is open at all times to those who are
making studies in motion picture technology,
or who require technical assistance in any
way — regardless of whether they are mem-
bers of the Society. In addition, the Society
maintains a West Coast office in Hollywood.
The publications of the Society extend back
to 1916, and embrace some 30,000 pages of
technical material devoted solely to motion
picture technology. The membership of the
Society is open to anyone who is interested
in the art.
M.P.T.O.A. in 1930
By
-^=^^^=^ ED KUYKENDALL,
President
UPON the completion of its 19th consecutive year of activities as a voluntary
national trade association of motion picture exhibitors, the Motion Pictur*
Theater Owners of America finds itself greatly strengthened by the largest
active membership of responsible theater owners in the many years of its
existence. During 1939 several of the state and regional exhibitor associations,
represented as active members on the MPTOA Boca-d of Directors by exhibitor
representatives of their own choosing, reorganized and expanded their mem-
bership and activities in their own region.
The MPTOA national organization in the
past year developed closer cooperation be-
tween the member regional associations, re-
tained the allegiance and support of all of its
active members, and received the valued co-
operation of several active state and local
exhibitor associations not attached to any
national organization. There was also added
to the ranks of MPTOA the well established
West Virginia Theater Managers Association.
Fair Trade Practice Program
The demonstrated and enduring strength of
MPTOA, in the face of discouraging setbacks
and ill-advised opposition in our fight to
remove abuses and prevent injustices in our
752
business, is based upon a sound, reasonable
and effective set of proposals with which few,
if any, independent exhibitors seriously con-
cerned with improving the business could
disagree, and upon a democratic, representa-
tive national organization structure in which
all theater owners throughout the United
States can speak for themselves on national
issues. That this national organization of
exhibitors is built upon the right principles of
democratic representation, and of a sound,
practical program that will provide genuine,
effective solutions to the most difficult and
troublesome problems and abuses of our
business, few will dispute.
The Trade Practice Code
As the year began the attention of exhib-
itors was centered upon the trade practice
code proposed by the distributors in December.
1938, as an outgrowth of the MPTOA trade
practice proposals and complaints presented
in 1936. This proposed code was a disap-
pointment to MPTOA members in many re-
spects. The numerous restrictions, qualifica-
tions and conditions imposed upon the pro-
posals we presented, the omission of import-
ant matters altogether, the substitution of a
vague and uncertain arbitration scheme for
practical, locally organized mediation of com-
plaints and disputes over clearance, overbuy-
ing, cut-throat competition, etc., and the condi-
tion imposed by the distributors that approval
of the proposed code by the Department of
Justice must be secured before it can become
effective, all were imposed over the protests
of MPTOA.
During the year several revisions of the
proposed code were presented by the distrib-
utors. MPTOA, after long and careful consid-
eration of what was offered, urged its adoption
under the circumstances as a step in the right
direction and as a foundation on which to
build a better code by further negotiation.
This proposed code was definitely rejected
by the U. S. Department of Justice on August
17, 1939. Shortly thereafter, it became appar-
ent that the distributors who submitted the
proposed code to the Department had now
abandoned it. We thereupon strongly urged
each of the distributors to modify their sales
policies and contract terms substantially in
accordance with the code proposals, particu-
larly to afford an adequate minimum option
to cancel pictures in every contract, and to
abolish the separate score charge on all pic-
tures. Two of the leading distributing com-
panies courageously responded with a public
pledge of a definite right to cancel pictures,
and the score charge was generally abolished.
Beyond this it was obvious that there was no
prospect of securing any voluntary coopera-
tion of the distributors on an effective trade
practice program until decisions were handed
down on the numerous anti-trust suits now
awaiting trial in 1940.
Round Table Conference of
MPTOA Directors
The annual meeting of the MPTOA Board
of Directors and officers was held at White
Sulphur Springs, West Virginia, on October
23-26. 1939. Eighteen state and regional mem-
ber associations were represented by local
exhibitors whom each had designated as
their Director on the MPTOA Board (three
Directors were unable to attend), representing,
according to a trade paper tabulation, 4,254
independent theaters. Affiliated circuit thea-
ters, totaling 1,823, are also included in the
membership of MPTOA.
This round table conference on exhibitor
problems was devoted to a careful, thorough
re-examination of the MPTOA program, activi-
ties and policies, and a realistic analysis of
the important problems and menacing devel-
opments that threaten exhibitors today. MPTOA
is not deceived by the inevitable limitations
of a national exhibitor organization, but we
are unalterably opposed to rigid adherence to
a dictated party line. We are determined to
advance our cause, which we believe is fair
and just, by negotiation and rationalization,
rather than by bluff, intimidation and threats
of organized reprisals.
Therefore, the directors, who control the
policies and activities of MPTOA, gave long
and penetrating consideration to the problems
and proposals presented, which include unfair
trade practices in distribution and exhibition,
state and federal taxation and legislation,
the Neely Bill, labor relations, the deluge of
enormously expensive anti-trust litigation
brought on by the industry's failure or refusal
to establish effective self-regulation of com-
mercial practices, unfair non-theatrical com-
petition, the spreading effects of double fea-
turing, radio competition of screen talent and
material, television, effects of the European
war on production, public and press relations
of the theaters, overseating, the music tax
extortion, and many others.
The effective solution of many of these
troublesome problems, grievances and abuses
are now blocked by obstacles beyond our
control, much of it by destructive litigation
that will probably have to run its course
before a constructive program can be launched
with any prospect of success. No one deplores
this situation any more than MPTOA. Never-
theless, organized exhibitors must be alert
and prepared to undertake the defense of their
business and the development of a practical
753
program to improve their business when these
obstacles are ultimately removed.
Many plans were laid at this meeting for
future activities in both the state and national
organizations, and for effective defense of
the best interests of theater owners. These
will be carried out by the officers, committees
and leaders of the local associations aligned
with us.
The Neely Block Booking Bill
For the past eight years MPTOA has stead-
fastly opposed the Neely Bill and its pre-
decessors as destructive, deceptive legislation,
certain to damage small exhibitors. In April,
1939, this bill was again given a public hear-
ing by the Senate Interstate Commerce Com-
mittee. MPTOA members presented the prin-
cipal exhibitor opposition to the bill at the
hearings, ably abetted by representatives of
two unattached local independent exhibitor
associations. The bill passed the Senate, but
with more opposition than heretofore.
This action by the Senate aroused many
exhibitors to examine the actual provisions
of the Neely Bill, and forced them to realize
that they had been completely fooled by its
deceptive promotion. Thus our long fight
against this legislation has acquired many
new adherents among exhibitors. The MPTOA
Directors at the annual meeting again unani-
mously went on record as opposed to the
Neely Bill.
And As to the Future
To the age-old question, what's the matter
with the motion picture business, our answer
is — nothing. There may be people in the
business who are short-sighted, self-centered,
incompetent and unworthy, but it is a business
of bringing pleasure, happiness and intellec-
tual recreation to millions of people of all
classes, a business of golden opportunity to
many thousands engaged in its commercial
operations, a business of glamour and imagi-
nation, with no sweat shops, no government
subsidies, and no limit to its possibilities.
There will always be millions who like and
want good screen entertainment, there will
always be individuals with imagination and
brains who can make great pictures if given
the opportunity to do so. And it is the profit-
able responsibility of the motion picture indus-
try to supply the one with the work of the
others. MPTOA invites responsible exhibitors
everywhere regardless of affiliations or size
of their investments to participate with us in
a program for the common good which no one
has denied was right. If those now engaged
in the business can't do it, someone else will,
but the business will go on and on to even
greater achievements. Thus we enter 1940
with the immediate future dark and foreboding,
but with the firm conviction that sooner or
later the storms will pass and we can again
be on our way.
ALLIED in 1939
By
^=^=^= ABRAM F. MYERS '
Board Chairman and General Counsel
■yHE YEAR opened auspiciously with appropriate observance of the Tenth
* anniversary of the organization of Allied States Association. The annual
meeting of the Board of Directors was unusually well attended, a majority of the
signers of the original underwriting agreement being present. A dinner in honor
of the founders was held at the Carlton Hotel, Washington, on January 17. at
which Senator M. M. Neely was the principal speaker.
The annual meeting of the Board was ad-
dressed by William F. Rodgers. representing
the distributors, who urged approval of the
proposed code of fair competition, a second
revision of which was presented at that time.
Because the draft was incomplete, the board
directed its negotiating committee to continue
its efforts to obtain an acceptable code and
to make a final report not later than MaTch 1.
The resolution expressly re-affirmed the
board's determination to seek a fuller measure
of relief than the distributors had indicated
754
would be forthcoming, employing whatever
means were necessary, including legislation.
On the date fixed the distributors were still
engaged in lurther revising the code and the
authority of Allied's committee lapsed.
Early in February the major companies by
a sudden coup d' etat secured the repeal of
the North Dakota theater divorcement law,
the constitutionality of which had been upheld
by a three-judge Federal Court in Fargo. The
case was then pending on appeal in the
Supreme Court of the United States and the
major companies, by their stratagem, pre-
vented what Allied believed would be a cer-
tain affirmance of the lower court and an
authoritative precedent in subsequent, cases.
In April a subcommittee of the Senate Com-
mittee on Interstate Commerce held extended
hearings on the Neely Bill. Proponents and
opponents were given full opportunity to
submit their views and arguments. Allied
took an active part in supporting the measure
and the general counsel summed up for the
proponents at the conclusion of the hearings.
The bill was favorably reported by the com-
mittee and was passed by a record vote of
46 to 28 on July 17.
During the hearings Allied's Executive Com-
mittee and the representatives of the public
groups supporting the bill registered their
views that the proposed cancellation privilege
as drafted by the distributors was not a fair
substitute for the bill. The Senate Committee
in its report took the same view, as did
Senator Neely on the floor of the Senate.
The annual convention at Minneapolis on
June 13, 14 and 15 was one of the greatest
exhibitor meetings ever held from the stand-
point of attendance, interest and importance
to the exhibitors of the United States. For this
credit goes to Al Steffes and his local com-
mittee who had charge of the arrangements.
There was a three-day open forum on the
proposed code during which acceptance
thereof was urged by such industry figures as
William F. Rodgers, Gradwell Sears, Austin
C. Keough, A. Montague and Ed Kuykendall.
The board directed the members of the defunct
Negotiating Committee, as being best qualified,
to render a report on the proposal. The report,
which was adverse, was approved by the
board on the last day of the convention after
all of the more important proponents of the
code had been heard. This led to regrettable
and unfounded charges of bad faith which
were completely refuted by a comprehensive
and thoroughly documented bulletin entitled
"Allied Answers."
It is noteworthy that the two exhibitors who
spoke in favor of the code have since taken
occasion to condemn it for its evasiveness and
inadequacy and that, so far as we have been
able to ascertain, no exhibitor organization,
national or regional, has ever approved the
code in its entirety. Complete vindication of
Allied's position is to be found in the action
of the Department of Justice disapproving
the proposal.
The Allied board in all its resolutions in-
sisted upon a complete and fair arbitration
system, especially for major items of dispute,
such as unreasonable clearance and over-
buying. The general counsel in his speech
at the convention approved the proposed arbi-
tration system except as to a few details. The
criticisms of the Negotiating Committee were
directed more to the substantive provisions of
the code than to the provisions for arbitration.
However, the distributors made it plain that
their proposal was a final one and that
Allied must take it or leave it. And they have
not, either directly or through their affiliated
chains, left the door open for the adjustment
of such disputes by fair arbitration.
Allied knows of no legal impediment to
individual action by the major companies in
putting many of the proposed code reforms
into effect, if there is a genuine purpose to
remedy conditions. Other matters on which
Allied hopes for voluntary remedial action by
the majors are the curbing of 16 m.m. com-
petition and film star broadcasting. These
are serious leaks, costly and menacing to dis-
tributors and exhibitors alike, which only the
majors can stop.
The year saw the accession to membership
of small but growing regional associations in
West Virginia, Oklahoma and California. The
Allied organization in New York was ex-
pelled from membership for reasons made
public at the time.
Allied looks forward with confidence to
the New Year. While much turmoil exists in
the industry, the position of the independent
exhibitors is stronger than ever before. A
bold attempt is now being made to divert
the attention of the exhibitors from the forest
to the trees. Opponents of exhibitor progress
would have them believe that each outpost
skirmish is a decisive battle. But the pre-
diction made two years ago that monopolistic
and oppressive trade practices in the picture
business are doomed, still holds good. Only
a few moles, with their eyes unused to the
light, can not see the handwriting on the wall.
And the new day will not merely be a better
day for the exhibitors, but also for everyone
engaged in or dependent upon the motion
picture business.
755
U.S. GOVERNMENT
FILM ACTIVITIES
A LL Government films are obtainable without charge. Requesting organ-
/X izations must pay transportation costs to and from the point of
exhibition. A number of agencies authorize purchase of prints for
school film libraries. This compilation does not include titles of all available
films but a complete directory of U. S. films is available from the United
States Film Service, Division of the National Emergency Council, Commercial
Bldg., Washington, D. C.
Department of Agriculture
A library of educational pictures, 16 mm. and 35
mm., sound and silent, on various phases of agricul-
ture, including crops, livestock, poultry, dairying,
forestry, rural engineering, home economics and re-
lated subjects is maintained by the Department.
Most of these films are made for specialized use to
assist the Department in its extension, regulatory,
and administrative work, and available prints have
been provided primarily for this purpose. Thus
relatively few films can be loaned to other organiza-
tions. However, prints of most of the Department
films may be obtained from the following State in-
stitutions on payment of a small service charge.
Department employees and State extension workers
may obtain prints free for use in their work.
Arizona: Extension Division, University of Ari-
zona, Tucson; California: Dept. of Visual Instruc-
tion, Extension Division, University of California,
Berkeley and Los Angeles (also serves Arizona,
Nevada, and Utah); Colorado: Bureau of Visual
Instruction, University of Colorado, Boulder; Illi-
nois: Visual Aids Service, University of Illinois,
Urbana; Indiana: Bureau of Visual Instruction,
Extension Division, Indiana University, Blooming-
ton; Kentucky: Dept. of Visual Aids, University of
Kentucky, Lexington; Michigan: Extension Service,
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor; Nezv Hamp-
shire: Extension Service, University of New Hamp-
shire, Durham; New Jersey: New Jersey State
Museum, State House Annex, Trenton; Noth
Carolina: Bureau of Visual Instruction, University
of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; Oregon: Dept. of
Visual Instruction, Oregon Agricultural College,
Corvallis (also serves Idaho, Montana, Washington,
and Wyoming); South Carolina: Extension Divi-
sion, University of South Carolina, Columbia;
South Dakota: Extension Division, University of
South Dakota, Vermillion; Texas: Visual Instruc-
tion Bureau, University of Texas, Austin.
The following State institutions maintain collec-
tions of Department films for rental: Kansas: Bu-
reau of Visual Instruction, University Extension
Division, Lawrence; Iowa: Visual Instruction Serv-
ice, Iowa State College, Ames; Washington: Ex-
tension Service, State College of Washington, Pull-
man; Wisconsin : Bureau of Visual Instruction,
University of Wisconsin. Madison.
Applications for the films from all of the above
mentioned states should be addressed to the dis-
tributor serving them. Applications from other
states may be addressed to Motion Pictures, Exten-
sion Service, U. S. Department of Agriculture,
Washington, D. C.
Department of Commerce
Motion Picture Division
The Motion Picture Division is an informational
unit only and has for distribution one film, "Com-
merce Around the Coffee Cup," in 16 or 35 mm.
sound. Data as to sources of films on various
subjects or statistical information concerning the
motion picture industry throughout the world, may
be secured from this division. Address, Motion
Picture Division, Bureau of Foreign and Domestic
Commerce, Washington, D. C.
Department of the Interior
U. S. Bureau of Mines, Bureau oi Reclamation,
Indian Bureau, National Park Service
Work of the Department of the Interior Is de-
picted through motion pictures which are available
for exhibition through the office of the Secretary,
Washington, D. C. Prints are loaned at no cost
except transportation charges to and from Wash-
ington, D. C, or to and from Pittsburgn, Pa., for
films of the Bureau of Mines.
The films of the U. S. Bureau of Mines, cover-
ing 48 subjects pertaining to the mineral and allied
industries, are widely used. These pictures visu-
alize the Nation's great mineral industries. They
tell the stories of petroleum, silver, iron, copper,
lead, abrasives, sulphur, asbestos and many other
mineral substances.
Bureau of Mines films are produced and circu-
lated under the direction of John A. Davis, chief
engineer, information division, U. S. Bureau of
Mines, Washington, D. C. Cost of production it
paid by co-operating industrial concerns, but the
pictures are free from trade marks, trade names,
or other direct advertising material. Production is
in charge of M. F. Leopold, supervising engineer,
motion picture section, U. S. Bureau of Mines.
Washington, D. C, to whom inquiries concerning
production and revision should be addressed. The
Bureau's main distributing center is at 4800 Forbes
St., Pittsburgh, Pa., in charge of Louis F. Perry,
supervising engineer, graphic section.
Department of the Xavy
Has about 25 films on scenes of life in the
Navy, travelogues, etc. Address, Recruiting Sec-
tion, Bureau of Navigation, Navy Dept., Wash-
ington, D. C.
Department of Justice
Bureau oi Prisons
Has one film, "Protecting the Public," 16 mm.
sound only, produced for the Great Lakes Exposi-
tion, 1936. Address, Bureau of Prisons, Dept. of
Justice, Washington, D. C.
756
Department of Labor
Children's Bureau
Has 16 mm. silent films on prenatal care, posture
and a series on the routine of a child from six
months to two years. In addition the Department
has several subjects which can be borrowed by
physicians only. Address, Children's Bureau, Dept.
of Labor, Washington, D. C.
Division of Labor Standards
Has a one-reel picture, "Stop Silicosis," 16 and
35 mm. sound. Address, Division of Labor Stand-
ards, Dept. of Labor, Washington, D. C.
Women's Bureau
Engages in production and is now distributing
three pictures on problems and conditions pertain-
ing to women workers. Address, Women's Bu-
reau, U. S. Dept. of Labor, Washington, D. C.
Inland Waterways Corp.
The Inland Waterways Corp. has sound films, in
35 and 16 mm., describing the Corporation's activi-
ties on the rivers of the country. Address, O. S.
Wilkin, Director of Public Relations Inland Water-
ways Corp., 211 Camp St., New Orleans, La.
National Youth
Administration
Has seven 16 mm. silent pictures including two
in color. Address, National Youth Administration,
Washington Bldg., Washington, D. C.
Pan-American Union
Has nine films. Address, Section of Motion Pic-
tures, Pan American Union, Washington, D. C.
Social Security Board
Has two 16 mm. sound subjects. Address, In-
formation Service, Social Security Board, Washing-
ton, D. C, or the following regional offices: Alabama:
First Ave. & 19th St., Birmingham; California:
785 Market St., San Francisco; Colorado: 1706
Welton St.. Denver; District of Columbia: New
York Ave. & 14th St., N. W., Washington; Illinois:
U. S. Court House Bldg., Chicago; Kansas: 1006
Grand Ave., Kansas City; Massachusetts: 116 Boyl-
ston St., Boston; Minnesota: Federal Office Bldg.,
Minneapolis; New York: 11 W. 42nd St., New
York; Ohio: Euclid Ave. & E. 9th St., Cleveland;
Pennsylvania: Juniper & Chestnut Sts., Philadelphia;
Texas: North Presa & East Houston Sts., San
Antonio.
Tennessee Valley Authority
Has from time to time made engineering and
progress motion pictures of the development. These
center chiefly about the construction program and
the conservation work and parts of these progress
pictures have been assembled into subjects. Ad-
dress, Film Circulation Unit, Information Division,
Tennessee Valley Authority, Knoxville, Tenn.
Treasury Department
Coast Guard
Has three one-reel 16 mm. sound subjects, "The
Story of the Coast Guard," "The U. S. Coast
Guard Academy," and "Communications-U. S.
Coast Guard." Address, Office of Public Relations,
Coast Guard, Washington, D. C.
U. S. Public Health Service
Hag two 16 mm. silent films each running 30
minutes. "Syphilis: Its Nature, Prevention and
Treatment" is intended for the general public
"Syphilis of the Central Nervous System: A Pre-
ventable Disease" is intended for informative pro-
grams among physicians and health officers. There
are also available two sound films, in both 16 and
35 mm. "Syphilis — A Motion Picture Clinic" runs
90 minutes and is intended for the information of
physicians. "Three Counties Against Syphilis"
runs 20 minutes and is designed to stimulate the
interest of health authorities in the institution of
rural syphilis control programs. Address, Division
of Venereal Diseases, Public Health Service, Treas-
ury Dept., Washington, D. C.
V. S. Maritime Commission
Has one sound film in 16 and 35 mm. Address,
Division of Maritime Promotion, U. S. Maritime
Commission, Washington, D. C.
United States Film Service
The U. S. Film Service, a division of the Na-
tional Emergency Council, has charge of distribu-
tion of the two documentary musical films, "The
Plow That Broke the Plains" and "The River,"
both written and directed by Pare Lorentz, and
produced by the Farm Security Administration
(successor to the Resettlement Administration).
Both subjects are available in 16 and 35 _ mm.
sound prints. The Service also acts as an infor-
mation clearing organization for Government films;
operates a consultation and film advisory service
for Federal agencies, foundations and schools; pre-
pares visual education materials; and is a produc-
tion agency for requesting Government depart-
ments. Address, United States Film Service, Na-
tional Emergency Council, Washington, D. C, or
347 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y.
War Department
The Photographic Division of the Office of the
Chief Signal Officer of the Army handles the pro-
duction and distribution of all military instruc-
tional films, and all historical and general interest
pictures of the Army except the post war pictures
of aviation activities. The Signal Corps produces
approximately 20 reels per year of instructional
motion pictures on military subjects designed spe-
cffically for class use. A number _ of silent and
sound training films on military subjects are avail-
able to the Regular Army, National Guard, Organ-
ized Reserves, Reserve Officers Training Corps,
and other similar patriotic organizations interested
specifically in military training. Lists of avail-
able films will be supplied upon request to the
Chief Signal Officer.
In addition to the training films, the Signal Corps
distributes a limited number of general interest
pictures on the Army which are available for loan
to recognized patriotic societies, schools, organiza-
tions, etc., upon payment of transportation costs.
The Signal Corps, is the custodian of the his-
torical motion pictures of the War Dent, and has
available for loan a number ot subjects of the
World War period. These are available for loan
to patriotic societies, schools, organizations, etc.
War Dept. policy does not permit the loan of any
of these pictures for showing where an admission
charge is made. Lists of all classifications arc
available upon application to the Chief Signal Of-
ficer of the Army, Munitions Bldg., Washington,
D. C. Prints are available in 16 and 35 mm.
sound and silent versions. Because of the limited
number of prints available, their use is restricted to
organizations and groups.
Worhs Progress
Administration
WPA has available five films, "Work Pays
America," 40 mins., sound; "Hands," six mins.,
sound; "We Work Again," 15 mins., sound; "Man
Against the River," 10 mins., sound, and "Rain
for the Earth," 18 mins., sound. Address, Motion
Picture Section, WPA Information Service, 625
Madison Ave., New York, N- Y-.
DISTRIBUTION
PERCENTAGES
Sales expectancies in percentages, of national and independent distributors as supplied
_by a major organization and by a leading state-right authority. While all companies do^
"not use these exact figures, they are average. Also, every company does not have the same"
boundaries for territories but these are average.
National Distributors
Territory Percentage
Albany I.75
Upper New York, Western Vermont and Western Massachusetts.
Atlanta 3.50
Alabama, Florida, Georgia, part of South Carolina and Tennessee east of the Tennessee River.
Boston 6.75
Maine, Massachusetts, except extreme western part, New Hampshire, Rhode Island and all but
extreme section of Vermont.
Buffalo 2.50
Western New York State.
Charlotte 1.75
North Carolina, most of South Carolina and Tennessee west of the Tennessee River.
Chicago 6.75
Northern Illinois, part of Indiana and upper Michigan.
Cincinnati 2.75
Southern Ohio, parts of Kentucky, West Virginia and Indiana.
Cleveland 3.50
Northern half of Ohio.
Dallas 3.75
Texas, parts of Oklahoma, New Mexico, Louisiana, Arkansas and Arizona.
Denver 1.40
Colorado, Western Nebraska, part of New Mexico and Wyoming and Black Hills of South Dakota.
Des Moines 1-75
Parts of Iowa, Missouri, Minnesota and Illinois.
Detroit 4.00
Lower peninsula of Michigan and part of Indiana.
Indianapolis 2.25
Most of Indiana and Western half of Kentucky.
Kansas City 2.25
Kansas, Western Missouri, parts of Nebraska, Oklahoma, Arkansas and Louisiana.
Los Angeles 3.75
Southern California, Parts of Arizona, New Mexico and Nevada.
Memphis 1-25
Arkansas, Northern Mississippi, Western Tennessee, parts of Alabama, Kentucky and Missouri.
Milwaukee : 1-0°
Upper Peninsula of Michigan and most of Wisconsin.
Minneapolis 2.75
Parts of Iowa, Minnesota, Montana, North Dakota, Wisconsin and South Dakota except Black-
Hills section.
New Haven l*7S
Connecticut.
New Orleans
Louisiana, parts of Mississippi, Alabama, Arkansas and Florida-
758
New York 16-50
Long Island, Greater New York City, New York State as far as Poughkeepsie and Northern
New Jersey.
Oklahoma City 1-50
Oklahoma, parts of Arkansas and Texas.
Omaha 1-00
Western Iowa, most of Nehraska and part of Minnesota.
Philadelphia 6-25
Most of Delaware, Southern New Jersey and Eastern Pennsylvania.
Pittsburgh 3.50
Western Pennsylvania and West Virginia.
Portland 1-00
Parts of Idaho, California and Washington.
St. Louis 2-25
Northern Arkansas, small section of Kentucky, Southern Illinois and Eastern Missouri.
Salt Lake City 1.35
Parts of Arizona, Idaho, Nevada, Wyoming, Oiegon, Montana and Utah.
San Francisco 3.75
Northern California, Nevada and Southern Oregon.
Seattle 1.50
Washington, Alaska and part of Idaho.
Washington, D. C 3.75
District of Columbia, small section of Delaware, Maryland, Virginia and part of West Virginia.
100%
State Right Percentages
Percentage
Territory Features Westerns
New York 12.50 7.50
Albany and Buffalo 3.75 3.25
Boston 8.50 5.75
Philadelphia 6.00 4.75
Washington, D. C 3.50 5.25
Dallas 4.50 6.75
Oklahoma City 1.75 4.00
Atlanta, Charlotte, New Orleans, Memphis 9.25 19.00
Cleveland 4.00 2.25
Cincinnati 4.00 3.50
Detroit 4.00 4.50
Pittsburgh 4.00 4.50
Chicago and Indianapolis 8.50 6.50
Milwaukee 2.50 1.25
St. Louis 2.25 1.75
Kansas City 3.00 3.50
Omaha 1-00 1.25
Des Moines 1.75 2.00
Minneapolis 1-75 2.00
Denver and Salt Lake City 2.75 1.75
Seattle and Portland 2.75 3.00
California and Hawaiian Islands 8.00 6J)0
100% 100%
759
MOTION PICTURE
CRITICS and EDITORS
OF U. S. NEWSPAPERS
Alabama
Vincent Townsend — News & Age Herald, Birm-
ingham.
Ray E. Glenn — Post, Birmingham.
Barrett C. Shelton — Daily, Decatur.
Harry P. Hall — Journal. Dothan.
Louis A. Eckl — Times & Tri Cities Daily, Flor-
ence.
Clara C. Seay — Times-Journal. Selma.
Arizona
lames Logie — Daily Dispatch, Douglas.
Elsa Gerrells — Arizona Republic, Phoenix.
Bernice Consulich — Arizona Daily Star, Tucson.
Betty Bandel — Arizona Daily Star, Tucson.
Emily Brown — Arizona Daily Star, Tucson.
Arkansas
Alfred W. Rose — News, Camden.
Martha Mayer — Times Record, Fort Smith.
Clarence Bruce — East Arkansas Record,
Helena.
Mrs. Edna Elliott — Southern Newspapers, Inc..
Hot Springs.
Lynn Liske — Arkansas Democrat, Little Rock.
I. Benedict — Arkansas Gazette, Little Rock.
Nell Cotnam — Arkansas Gazette, Little Rock.
Bobbie Foster — Arkansas Gazette, Little Rock.
California
Clayton Ward — Post Advocate, Alhambra.
Floyd McCracken — Bulletin, Anaheim.
Mae Saunders — Caliiornian, Bakersiield.
Hal Johnson — Daily Gazette, Berkeley.
Vida Hills Shepard — Record, Chico.
Zerrel Bransford — Times, Colusa.
Marion Nevin — Star News, Culver City, and
Venice Vanguard.
Don H. O'Kane — Humboldt Standard, Eureka.
Will N. Speegle— Humboldt Times, Eureka.
Charles C. Hushaw — News-Press, Glendale.
W. E. Lockwood — Bee, Fresno.
W. L. Dufrain — Review, Hayward.
Ralph Ryan — Caliiornian, Inglewood.
Vera Kackley — Press-Telegram, Long Beach.
Harry Mines — Daily & Evening News, Los An-
geles.
Virginia Wright — Daily & Evening News, Los
Angeles.
Louella O. Parsons, Examiner, Los Angeles.
Jimmy Starr — Herald & Express, Los Angeles.
Edwin Schallert — Times, Los Angeles.
Philip K. Scheuer — Times, Los Angeles.
Winsor Josselyn — Peninsula Herald, Monterey.
Howard Waldorf — Post-Enquirer, Oakland.
Wood Soanes — Tribune, Oakland.
Elinor V. Cogswell — Times, Palo Alto.
Alice Haines Baskin — Star-News, Pasadena.
O. H. (Okey) King — Progress-Bulletin, Pomona.
Earl W. Porter — Daily Express, Riverside.
Ronald D. Scofield, Bee, Sacramento.
Don H. Short — Tribune-Sun, San Diego.
Maurice Savage — Union, San Diego.
John Hobart — Chronicle, San Francisco.
Paul Speegle — Chronicle, San Francisco.
Ada Hanifan — Examiner, San Francisco.
Claude A. La Belle — News, San Francisco.
Stanley J. Waldorf — Evening News, San Jose.
Pearce Davies — Mercury Herald, San Jose.
Pete Bostwick-— Register, Santa Ana.
Litti Paulding — News-Press, Santa Barbara.
Rossi Reynold — Record, Stockton.
Virginia Ray — Daily Democrat, Woodland.
Colorado
Robert C. Looney — Daily Camera, Boulder.
Mrs. Tor Hylbom — Gazette & Telegraph, Col-
orado Springs.
A. Bernardi, Jr. — Post, Denver.
Betty Craig — Post, Denver.
James H. Briggs — Rocky Mountain News, Den-
ver.
Charlotte Fisher — Daily Sentinel, Grand Junc-
tion.
F. E. Merrill — Tribune, Greeley.
Bernard A. Falier — Times-Call, LongmonL
Connecticut
Leo Miller — Herald, Bridgeport.
Fred H. Russell — Post and Telegram, Bridge-
port.
James E. Hague — Times-Star, Bridgeport.
Curtiss Wilson — News Times, Danbury.
Julian B. Tuthill — Daily Times, Hartford.
Ronald H. Ferguson — Herald, Manchester.
Julia L. Hull — Record, Meriden.
Stanley J. Zabroski — Journal, Meriden.
Jack W. Schaefer — Journal-Courier, New
Haven.
Arthur J. Sloane — Journal-Courier, New Haven.
Roger Connolly — Register, New Haven.
Arthur Smith — Register, Torrington.
Dean Hunt — Advocate, Stamford.
760
John H. Thompson — Register, Torrington.
George T. Dillon — Democrat, Waterbury.
Delaware
Helen Barrett — News-Iournal, Wilmington.
Joseph G. O'Keefe — Sunday Star, Wilmington.
District of Columbia
Don Craig — News, Washington.
lay Carmody — Star, Washington.
Nelson B. Bell — Post, Washington.
Andrew R. Kelley — Times-Herald, Washington.
Derek Fox — United States News, Washington.
Florida
Cleone F. Hawkins— Polk County Record, Bar-
tow.
Herbert M. Davidson — News Journal, Daytona
Beach.
Elizabeth Eastman — News Journal, Daytona
Beach.
Pat Patterson — Sun Record, Daytona Beach.
Mrs. Leone K. Ross — News, Fort Lauderdale.
Richard G. Moffett — Florida Times-Union, Jack-
sonville.
Charles Richards — Journal, Jacksonville.
Charles E. Ward — Herald, Miami.
E. Hemphill — Herald, Miami.
E. Cohen — News, Miami.
Antoinette Veverka — News-Herald, Panama
City.
Jane Quinn — Record, St. Augustine.
A. R. Dunlap — Evening Independent, St. Peters-
burg.
Mrs. Marion Aitchison — Times, St. Petersburg.
H. E. Schaden — Tribune, Tampa.
Joseph Grotegut — Times, Tampa.
L. O. Robertson — Evening News, Tampa.
E. D. Lambright — Morning Tribune, Tampa.
Vernon L. Smith — Palm Beach Sun, West Palm
Beach.
Beryl Lewis — Post-Times, West Palm Beach.
Georgia
Jimmy M. Robinson — Herald, Albany.
Lee Rogers — Constitution, Atlanta.
D. Glass — Georgian, Atlanta.
Mrs. B. B. Page — Courier-Herald, Dublin.
Frank Daniel — Journal, Atlanta.
Eleanor H. Orr — Daily News, LaGrange.
Paul M. Conway — Evening News, Macon.
Ernestine Hornady — News-Tribune, Rome.
Emily R. Jerger — Times Enterprise, Thomas
ville.
Jack Williams, Jr. — Journal-Herald, Waycross.
Idaho
William Wheeler — Capitol News, Boise.
W. B. McEwen — Morning Tribune, Lewiston.
Porter Ward — Daily Idahoian, Moscow.
L. A. Boas — News-Review & Star Mirror, Mos-
cow.
Harold J. Wood — Idaho Evening Times, Twin
Falls.
Illinois
P. S. Cousley — Telegraph, Alton.
R. W. Richards — Beacon, Aurora.
Mrs. Robert L. Kern — News-Democrat, Belle-
ville.
Charles C. Lane — Daily Pantograph, Blooming-
ton.
Lloyd Lewis — News, Chicago.
Clarence Bulliet — News, Chicago.
Eugene Stinson — News, Chicago.
Doris Arden — Times, Chicago.
Cecil Smith — Tribune. Chicago.
Mae Tinee — Tribune, Chicago.
W. H. Hackman — Commercial-News, Danville.
Miss Layah Riggs — Herald & Review, Decatur.
Janet Meechtle — Daily News-Index, Evanston.
Grace Leone Barnett — Journal-Standard, Free-
port.
Alta Givens — Daily Register, Harrisburg.
Geraldine Daly — Herald-News, Joliet.
Oldham Paisley — Daily Republican, Marion.
Russell Gingles — Daily Dispatch, Moline.
Ralph Eckley — Review Atlas, Monmouth.
Marian Walters — Daily Times, Pekin.
Evabeth Miller — Evening Star, Peoria.
R. M. Shepherdson — Journal-Transcript, Peoria.
David Tuffli — Herald-Whig, Quincy.
William V. Kinney — Argus, Rock Island.
C. H. Nelson — Morning Star, Rockford.
W. F. Dugan — Illinois State Journal, Springfield.
Dorothy Finen — Illinois State Register, Spring-
field.
Miss Eolene Watson — Evening Courier, Ur-
bana.
E. J. Macklin — News-Sun, Waukegan.
Indiana
Charles Timothy Jewett — Herald, Anderson.
Camille Utter Meno — Daily Mail, Bedford.
Alice Riley — Ledger-Tribune, Attica.
Ruth Fishback Rainbolt — Daily Times, Bedford.
W. C. Miller — Evening World, Bloomington.
V. H. Wiseman — World, Bloomington.
Dan Albrecht— Daily Truth, Elkhart.
Don W. Carlson — Call-Leader, Elwood.
Ed Klinger — Press & Courier Press, Evansville.
Charles R. Brouwer — Journal-Gazette, Fort
Wayne.
Vivian Crates Logan — News Sentinel, Fort
Wayne.
Nelly L. Claybaugh — Morning Times, Frank-
fort.
Kenneth Parks — Post-Tribune, Gary.
Belle Weinstein — News-Democrat, Goshen.
Frank E. Johnson — Daily Reporter, Greenfield.
Jean Craig Cunningham — Times, Hammond.
Mark R. Gray — Commercial, Indianapolis.
Herbert Kenney, Jr. — News, Indianapolis.
Corbin Patrick — Star, Indianapolis.
Robert C. Tucker — Star, Indianapolis.
James Thrasher — Times, Indianapolis.
Maurice Carter Tull — Tribune-Dispatch, Ko-
komo.
Allen Sauers — Pharos-Tribune, Logansport.
C. Gayle Wamock — Chronicle-Tribune, Marion.
Mrs. Louise A. Baldwin — Daily Democrat,
Mount Vernon.
Nell Brown — Tribune, New Albany.
Helen M. Taylor — Courier-Times, New Castle.
W. W. Dunkle — Tribune. South Bend.
Mabel McKee — Star, Terre Haute.
Marcee Cox — Tribune & Star, Terre Haute.
761
Iowa
Robert Murray — Tribune, Ames.
Irma I. Maslerson — News-Republican, Boone.
Walter E. Kohrs — Daily Hawk-Eye Gazette.
Wanda Montz — Gazette, Cedar Rapids.
L. A. Wallace — Nonpareil, Council Bluffs.
Rex J. Ballard — Daily Times, Davenport.
John E. O'Donnell — Democrat, Davenport.
Don H. Allen — Democrat Davenport.
Virginia Donovan — Daily Tribune, Dubuque.
S. W. Mitchell— Evening Democrat, Fort Mad-
ison.
Edwin B. Green — Press Citizen, Iowa City.
Dale E. Carrell — Daily Gate City, Keokuk.
D. K. Lamont — Daily Gate City, Keokuk.
David B. Kaufman — Globe-Gazette, Mason City.
C. D. Foehlinger — Herald, Oskaloosa.
Emmett I. Mowery — Courier, Ottumwa.
Willis F. Forbes — Journal, Sioux City.
L. E. Wood — Daily Courier, Waterloo.
Kansas
Clement O'Neill — Globe, Atchinson.
R. A. Van Camp — Messenger & News, Cald-
well.
Charles R. Vandergrift — Republican, Cherry-
vale.
Hugh G. Powell— Journal, Coffeyville.
Marian Ellet — Blade-Empire, Concordia.
Jay B. Baugh — Daily Globe, Dodge City.
Winnie Montgomery — Times, El Dorado.
Bill Kelley — rimes. El Dorado.
Frank C. Clough — Daily Gazette, Emporia.
E. Lawson May — Herald, Hutchinson.
Dorothy Greve — News-Herald, Hutchinson.
Whitley Austin— News-Herald, Hutchinson.
Reed Porter — Daily Reporter, Independence.
F. C. Sands — Daily Reporter, Independence.
I. E. Kirkland — Kansan, Kansas City.
Bob Busby — Journal- World, Lawrence.
B. A. Martin — Times, Leavenworth.
E. D. Keilmann — Daily Capital, Topeka.
Lovenia Lindberg — Eagle, Wichita.
Kentucky
Sol Bernstein — Evening Journal, Henderson.
Dudley Hilton Taylor— Kentucky New Era, Hop-
kinsville.
Edwards Templin — Herald, Lexington.
Boyd Martin — Courier Journal, Louisville.
A. A. Dougherty — Times, Louisville.
William C. Caywood — Sun, Winchester.
Louisiana
A. Hunter Jarreau — Daily Town Talk, Alexan-
dria.
Harris Jackson — Morning Advocate, Baton
Rouge.
George V. Lofton — Morning World, Monroe.
Ted R. Liuzza — Item-Tribune, New Orleans.
T. E. Dabney — States, New Orleans.
J. W. Dailey — Item-Tribune, New Orleans.
Cleveland Sessums — Times-Picayune, New Or-
leans.
Frank Grosjean — Journal, Shreveport.
Robert K. Butcher — Times, Shreveport.
Maine
Oscar A. Shepard — News, Bangor.
E. B. Whitney — Evening Journal, Lewiston.
Kenneth W. Berry— Evening Express, Portland.
Alice E. Modes— Press Herald, Portland.
Richard H. Woodbury — Sunday Telegram,
Portland.
Maryland
Elmer M. Jackson, Jr. — Evening Capital, An-
napolis.
Donald Kh-kley — Sun & Sunday Sun, Baltimore.
Carroll Dulaney — Sunday American, Baltimore.
J. William Hunt — Evening & Sunday Times,
Cumberland.
W. Henry Decker — News-Post, Frederick.
J. Richard Rauth — Daily Mail, Hagerstown.
L. S. McWilliams — Morning Herald, Hagers-
town.
Imogene Caruthers — Times, Salisbury.
Massachusetts
C. S. Sherman — Daily Sun, Attleboro.
Lawrence P. Stanton — Evening Times, Beverly.
John D. Beaufort — Christian Science Monitor,
Boston.
Marjory Adams — Globe, Boston.
Elinor L. Hughes — Herald, Boston.
Lester Smith — News Bureau, Boston.
John K. Hutchens — Transcript, Boston.
Helen Eager — Traveler, Boston.
Rita M. Naughton — Daily Item, Clinton.
Henry O'Keefe — Sentinel, Fitchburg.
E. V. P. Dudley — News, Framingham.
Wayne A. Smith— Recorder-Gazette, Green-
field.
Tom Burke — Record, Haverhill.
Anabel Burkhardt— Transcript-Telegram, Holy-
oke.
Timothy F. O'Hearn — Eagle-Tribune, Lawrence.
Kent Knowlton — Courier-Citizen, LowelL
Ethel K. Billings — Evening Leader, Lowell.
Charles Sampas — Sun, Lowell.
Harold Day Valpey — Daily Evening Item,
Lynn.
John Dakin, Jr. — Standard-Times, New Bed-
ford.
Charles J. Martin — Evening Chronicle, North
Attleboro.
Thomas F. Bresnahan — Daily Messenger, Nor-
wood.
Kingsley R. Fall — Berkshire Evening Eagle,
Pittsiield.
Chester W. Hutchings, Jr. — Evening News,
Salem.
Steve Dermady — Evening News, Southbridge.
Louise Mace — Republican, Springfield.
A. L. S. Wood — Union, Springfield.
William Hale Reed — Daily Gazette, Taunton.
Gardner Campbell — Daily Item, Wakefield.
Thomas J. Murphy — News-Tribune, Waltham.
Clarence L. Moody — Evening Gazette, Worces-
ter.
A. Alfred Marcello — Telegram, Worcester.
Leslie Moore — Telegram, Worcester.
Michigan
Madge A. Milliken — Daily Telegram, Adrian.
Willis Player — News, Ann Arbor.
762
John C. F. Healey — Enquirer and News, Battle
Creek.
Helen M. Bradley — Times, Bay City.
Earl F. Pangborn — News-Palladium, Benton
Harbor.
T. O. Huckle — News, Cadillac.
Myrton M. Riggs — Daily Tribune, Cheboygan.
Mrs. Ella H. McCormick — Free Press, Detroit.
James S. Pooler — Free Press. Detroit.
A. L. Weitschat — News, Detroit.
Charles Gentry — Times, Detroit.
Dick Shappell — Journal, Flint.
Alta Lawson Littel — Herald. Grand Rapids.
DuBarry Campau — Press, Grand Rapids.
H. R. Palmer — State Journal, Lansing.
Walter H. Hackett — State Journal, Lansing.
Mary Rose Barons — News, Ludington.
Thomas Fallon — Chronicle, Muskegon.
Frank G. Schmidt — News, Saginaw.
Clarence A. Liebelt — News, Wyandotte.
T. Jane Duus — News, Wyandotte.
Minnesota
James T. Watts — Herald-News Tribune, Duluth.
Nathan Cohen — Herald-News Tribune, Duluth.
Mrs. W. L. Robertson — Daily Journal, Fergus
Falls.
George M. Fisher — Tribune, Hibbing.
Harriet Lloyd — Journal, International Falls.
Merrie Cornwell — Transcript. Little Falls.
Robert E. Murphy — Star-Journal. Minneapolis.
Merle Potter — Times Tribune, Minneapolis.
Earl N. Pomeroy — Tribune, Minneapolis.
Marguerite Schnorr — Post-Bulletin, Rochester.
Mrs. Fred Schilplin — Daily Times-Journal, St.
Cloud.
Jules L. Steele — Dispatch-Pioneer Press, St.
Paul.
F. L. Hancock — Daily Enterprise, Virginia, y
O. B. Augustson — Tribune. Willimar.
Mississippi
Cosman H. Eisendralh — Daily Herald. Biloxi.
Johanna Serio — Register, Clarksdale.
Ernest Smith — Democrat Times, Greenville.
Sumter Gillespie — Commonwealth, Greenwood.
Katie Lou Keahey — American, Hattiesburg.
Purser Hewitt — Clarion-Ledger, Jackson.
Earl C. Magee — Daily News, Jackson.
W. Louie Ellison — Star, Meridan.
Missouri
Jack R. Deck — Daily News, Boonville.
Edward W. Sowers — Standard, Excelsior
Springs.
Paul Clarkson — Courier-Post. Hannibal.
Lowell Lawrance — Journal, Kansas City.
J. C. Moffitt — Star, Kansas City.
Edward S. Mitchell — News, Lebanon.
Goetze Jeter — Moberly Monitor-Index, Moberly.
Mrs. Harold Crabill — Banner-News, St. Charles.
Frederic M. Pumphrey — News-Press. St. Joseph.
Ann Rutt — News-Press & Gazette. St. Joseph.
Herbert L. Monk — Globe-Democrat, St. Louis.
Colvin McPherson — Post Dispatch, St. Louis.
Marion Boone — Star-Times, St. Louis.
Dickson Terry — Springfield Newspapers.
Springfield.
Montana
Al Gaskill — Independent, Helena.
L. E. Flint — Independent. Helena.
L. E. Flint — Enterprise, Livingston.
Thomas E. Mooney — Record-Herald, Helena.
Nebraska
Walter H. Rowley — Daily Sun, Beatrice.
Lawrence Strouse — Guide, Fremont.
Florence Swihart — Daily Tribune, Fremont.
Arch W. Jarrell — Daily Independent, Grand
Island.
Barney Oldfield — Sunday Journal & Star, Lin-
coln.
Anne E. Wary — News-Press, Nebraska City.
S. H. McCaw— Norfolk.
Victoria Speers — Bulletin, North Platte.
Keith Wilson— World-Herald. Omaha.
New Hampshire
Alma Gallagher — Citizen, Laconia.
Marge deLong — Telegraph. Nashua.
New Jersey
J. R. Conroy — Daily World, Atlantic City.
Howard P. Dimon — Press-Union Newspapers,
Atlantic City.
Orlando Stringile — Times, Bayonne.
Ralph A. Brandt — Evening News, Bridgeton.
Ida Hermann, Courier-Post, Camden.
Firman R. Loree — Daily Journal, Elizabeth.
Kenneth L. Demarest — Bergen Record, Hacken-
sack.
Elsie Yeutter — Jersey Observer, Hoboken.
Arthur D. Mackie — Jersey Journal, Jersey City.
Norman B. Tomlinson — Daily Record, Morris-
town.
Will Baltin — Daily Home News-The Sunday
Times, New Brunswick.
Charles Haufler — News, Newark.
Sylvia Smith — Star-Ledger, Newark.
Carl Elk — Herald-News, Passaic.
Harold W. Gras — Herald-News, Passaic.
Milton G. Levine — News, Patterson.
Max L. Simon — Sunday Eagle, Passaic.
Catherine Turcic — Sunday Eagle, Paterson.
Wallace Gray — Courier-News, Plainfield.
Alex Y. Burslem — State Gazette, Trenton.
A. B. Thompson — Sunday Times-Advertiser,
Trenton.
Fred W. Burgner — Times, Trenton.
Channing R. Pollock — Hudson Dispatch, Union
City.
Gordon J. Hart — Evening Journal, Vineland.
New Mexico
Paul McEvoy — Morning Dispatch, Roswell.
New York
C. R. Roseberry — Knickerbocker News, Albany.
Albert J. Bearup — Times-Union, Albany.
Edgar S. Van Olinda — Times-Union, Albany.
Hugh P. Doulon — Evening Recorder, Amster-
dam.
Victor J. Callanan — Citizen Advertiser. Auburn.
P. Walter Hanan — Press, Binghamton.
Letitia Lyon — Sun, Binghamton.
W. E. J. Martin — Courier-Express, Buffalo.
William R. Higgins — American. Cohoes.
Margaret L. Toomey — Evening Observer, Dun-
kirk.
W. C. Barber — Advertiser, Elmira.
George E. McCann — Star-Gazette. Elmira.
Edward L. Van Dyke — Sunday Telegram, El-
mira.
J. Maxwell Beers — Reporter, Elmira.
Robert Eckert — Bulletin, Endicott.
Richard Watts— Herald Tribune, N. Y. C.
Howard Barnes — Herald Tribune, N. Y. C.
Irene Thirer — Post, N. Y. C.
Eileen Creelman — Sun, N. Y. C.
William Boehnel— World-Telegram, N. Y. C.
John A. Hall — Evening Journal, Jamestown.
Waite Forsyth — Post, Jamestown.
Thomas E. Brundage, M. E. — Union-Sun and
Journal, Lockport.
Maynard Lemen — Wall Street Journal. N. Y. C.
Arthur Winsten^Post, N. Y. C.
Leo Mishkin — Morning Telegraph, N. Y. C.
Robert W. Dana— Herald Tribune. N. Y. C.
Ted Friend— Mirror, N. Y. C.
Kate Cameron — Daily News, N. Y. C.
Wanda Hale — Daily News, N. Y. C.
Frank Sherkel — Queens Evening News, Ja-
maica, N. Y.
Chris Graham — Home News, Bronx, N. Y.
Herbert Cohn — Eagle, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Larry Mason — Home Talk, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Edgar Price — Citizen. Brooklyn, N. Y.
Frank Lesourd — Advance, Staten Island, N. Y.
Donald Walker — Times-Herald, Olean.
Francis R. Lee — Palladium-Times. Oswego.
Joe Albertson — Evening Star, Peekskill.
Thomas H. Weldon — Press, Plattsburg.
Joseph W. Emsley — Evening Star & Enterprise,
Poughkeepsie.
Frank Frazer — Long Island Advocate, Ridge-
wood, L. I.
George L. David — Democrat and Chronicle,
Rochester.
Amy H. Croughton — Times-Union, Rochester.
Fritz S. Updike — Sentinel, Rome.
John Alden — Republican-Press, Salamanca.
Helen Clinton — Gazette, Schenectady.
Susan Henyan — Gazette, Schenectady.
M. L. Rowe — Gazette, Schenectady.
Everett L. Finch — Union Star, Schenectady.
Hayden Hickok — Herald-Journal, Syracuse.
Mrs. Helen Tait Walker — Post Standard, Syra-
cuse.
Charles E. Hewitt — Evening News, Tonawanda
& N. Tonowanda.
C. Alice Armstrong — Observer-Budget, Troy.
Vincent Jones — Observer-Dispatch, Utica.
Em Evans — Press, Utica.
Dominic Pepp — Daily Times, Watertown.
Norton Mockridge — Daily Reporter, White
Plains.
North Carolina
J. S. Coleman, Jr. — Citizen, Asheville.
Thomas G. Fesperman — News. Charlotte.
Mary Brooks Parham — Observer, Charlotte.
Dick Pitts — Observer, Charlotte.
W. M. Sherrill — Tribune, Concord.
Fred Haney — Morning Herald, Durham.
John Peele — Advance. Elizabeth City.
Henry Belk — News-Argus, Goldsboro.
Lester Clark Gilford — Daily Record, Hickory.
William Workman — Sndependent, Kannapolis.
R. T. Montague — Post, Salisbury.
C. T. Brumfield — Tribune, Thomasville.
John G. Thomas — Daily Times, Wilson.
Charles Trueblood — Journal-Sentinel, Winston-
Salem.
North Dakota
Roy P. Johnson — Forum, Fargo.
Ohio
Ed E. Gloss — Beacon Journal. Akron.
Marceil Houston — Times Gazette, Ashland.
G. E. Mitchell — Messenger, Athens.
Dennis R. Smith — Repository. Canton.
Alvin C. Zurcher — News-Advertiser. Chilli-
cothe.
Gilbert A. Chandler — Scioto Gazette, Chili-
cothe.
E. B. Radcliiie — Enquirer, Cincinnati.
Edward CarberTy — Post, Cincinnati.
Groverman Blake — Times Star, Cincinnati.
Arthur F. Spaeth — News, Cleveland.
W. Ward Marsh — Plain Dealer, Cleveland.
Winsor French — Press, Cleveland.
W. S. Cunningham — Citizen, Columbus.
Samuel T. Wilson — Columbus Dispatch, Co-
lumbus.
H. C. Eckert — Ohio State Journal, Columbus.
Lester S. Byrd — Tribune, Coshochton.
Virginia D. Sturm — Daily News, Dayton.
Charles Gay — Daily News, Dayton.
A. S. Kany — Herald, Dayton.
Ben David — Crescent-News, Defiance.
Bennie David — Gazette, Delaware.
Cleveland Lane — Review, East Liverpool.
Stanton Carle — Daily Times, Fostoria.
E. M. Hopkins — Review, Fostoria.
Harriet Cummins — Inquirer, Galion.
Clayton A. Leiter — Journal-News. Hamilton.
Richard Mattox — Eagle-Gazette, Lancaster.
Richard Moffat — News, Lima.
Ruby Nelle Rochester — Daily News, Logan.
Ralph Neumeyer — Lorain Journal, Lorain.
Jane Williams — News-Journal, Mansfield.
Halles Houck — Star, Marion.
Marie Kreiger — Independent, Massillon.
Fred Lorey — News, Mount Vernon.
Dean G. Warner — Daily Times, New Philadel-
phia.
Hazel Kirk — Advocate, Newark.
Clint McKnight — Telegraph, Painesville.
Mrs. Lola Hill — Daily Call, Piqua.
Nancy Grimes — Times, Portsmouth.
Ruth M. Obenoor — News. Salem.
Kathryn Geiger — Leader, St. Marys.
Margaret Graham — News, Sidney.
Ina Karson — Daily News, Springfield.
Mary Berger — Herald Star, Steubenville.
Mitchell Woodbury — Blade, Toledo.
Kenneth Mills — Tribune Chronicle, Warren.
Nellie Cook — Record-Herald, Washington C. H.
E. H. Hauenstein — Daily Record, Wooster.
R. A. Higgins — Gazette, Xenia.
764
Charles A. Leedy — Vindicator, Youngstown.
Charles J. Mulcahy — Vindicator, Youngstown.
Earl Brannon — Times Signal, Zanesville.
Oklahoma
Frances Townsend — Examiner-Enterprise, Bar-
tlesville.
G. W. Van Wie — Times-Tribune, Clinton.
I. Allen Thomas — Morning News, Enid.
Brunce B. Palmer — Daily Oklahoman & Times,
Oklahoma City.
Ruth Robinson — News, Ponca City.
Ted Olson — News, Ponca City.
Ted Clifford — Producer, Seminole.
Harry LaFerte — Daily World, Tulsa.
Irene Gay — Press, Woodward.
Oregon
Ianthe Smith — Democrat-Herald, Albany.
Ivan Smith — News, Eugene.
Ann Connell — Goos Bay Times, Marshfield.
Herb Grey — Mail Tribune, Medford.
Harold Hunt — Journal, Portland.
June von der Hellen — Daily Journal of Com-
merce, Portland.
Herbert L- Larson — Oregonian, Portland.
Maynard Bell — News-Review, Roseburg.
Paul H. Hauser — Oregon Statesman, Salem.
Pennsylvania
Dean C. Miller — Gazette, Aliquippa.
RichaTd L. Ampre — Gazette, Aliquippa.
John Y. Kohl — Call & Chronicle, Allentown.
Marion Allen — Era, Bradford.
Fred Totten— Herald, Bradford.
Peggy Lindsey — Star 4 Record, Bradford.
Virginia Straub — Press, Easton.
William Gorman — Press Easton.
Howard Parsons — Times, Erie.
H. B. Hostetter — Sun, Hanover.
Mary Yvo Flanigan — Era, Bradford.
Lewis W. Hays — Telegraph, Brownsville.
Isaac Singer — Leader, Carbondale.
James A. F. Glenney — Times, Chester.
Edwin Larsson — Express, Easton.
J. A. Wurzbach — Dispatch-Herald, Erie.
Ralph E. Wallis — Patriot, Harrisburg.
Richard H. Steinmetz — Sunday Courier, Harris-
burg.
Paul Walker — Telegraph, Harrisburg.
William F. Blithers — Telegraph, Harrisburg.
Ruth K. Holstein — Daily Messenger, Home-
stead.
Harry Hesselbein — Tribune, Johnstown.
Ethelyn E. Young — Daily Leader-Times, Kit-
tanning.
Herbert B. Krone — New Era, Lancaster.
Arkaya — Bulletin, Latrobe.
Preston Rittenhouse — Daily Sentinel, Lewis-
town.
Robert S. Bates — Tribune-Republican, Meade-
ville.
Suzanne S. Fisher — Times Herald, Norristown.
Richard H. Amberg — Blizzard, Oil City.
Joan L. Bolles — Blizzard, Oil City.
E. P. Boyle— Derrick, Oil City.
Henry T. Murdock — Evening Public Ledger.
Philadelphia.
Gerard Gaghan — Evening Public Ledger, Phil-
adelphia.
Arthur B. Waters — Gazette-Democrat, Philadel-
phia.
Mildred Martin — Inquirer, Philadelphia.
Jeff Keen — News, Philadelphia.
Elsie Finn — Record, Philadelphia.
Harold Cohen — Post-Gazette, Pittsburgh.
Kasper Monohan — Press, Pitssburgh.
William J. Lewis — Sun-Telegraph, Pittsburgh.
Karl Krug — Sun-Telegraph, Pittsburg.
Shandy Hill — Mercury, Pottstown.
Herrwood R. Hobbs — Journal, Pottsville.
Shandy Hill — Mercury, Pottsville.
Marion Clifford — Republican, Pottsville.
Mathew Romanski — Eagle, Reading.
E. M. Schoffstall — Times. Reading.
Betty Reynolds — Scrantonian-Tribune, Scran-
ton.
Thomas F. Connor — Scrantonian - Tribune,
Scranton.
Clyde F. Ketner — News-Dispatch, Shamokin.
Margaret T. Riley — Centre Daily Times, State
College.
Julia Rishel — Valley News, Tarentum.
O'Neil Kennedy — Daily News Standard, Union-
town.
Julia Rishel — Valley Daily News, Tarentum.
James F. Abell — Obesrver & Reporter, Wash-
ington.
John M. Moore — Record, Wilkes-Barre.
Paul J. Walter — Sunday Independent, Wilkes-
Barre.
Madeline J. Keatley — Times Leader, Evening
News, Wilkes-Barre.
Wilbert L. Haare— York Dispatch, York.
Richard G. Runk — Gazette & Daily. York.
Rhode Island
F. T. Peckham, Jr. — Herald, Newport.
C. T. Holman, Jr. — News, Newport.
Garret D. Byrnes — Journal & Evening Bulletin,
Providence.
Paul B. Howland — Sunday Journal, Providence.
Wilton P. Hudson — Times, West Warwick.
Edward J. Butler — Daily Sun, Westerly.
Aileen M. Kelley — Call, Woonsocket.
South Carolina
T. F. Acker — Independent, Anderson.
Henry Cauthen — Record, Columbia.
Willis H. Harper — Morning News, Florence.
Yancey Gilkerson, Jr. — Piedmont, Greenville.
Bob M. Ward— Evening Herald, Rock Hill.
Vernon Foster — Herald, Spartanburg.
Ernest K. Hall — Herald-Journal, Spartanburg.
John E. McKnight — Daily Item, Sumter.
South Dakota
Francis C. Patten — American & News, Aber-
deen.
James B. Hippie — Capital Journal, Pierre.
Redford H. Dibble — Daily Journal, Rapid City.
Roger S. Brown — Argus-Leader, Sioux Falls.
Walter A. Simmons — Daily Argus-Leader, Sioux
Falls.
Tennessee
Thomas Brahan — Times, Chattanooga.
Guy Windrom — Press & Chronicle, Johnson
City.
Malcolm Miller — Journal, Knoxville.
Richard Davis Golden — News-Sentinel, Knox-
ville.
Lucy Templeton — News-Sentinel, Knoxville.
Harry Martin — -Commercial Appeal, Memphis.
Robert Johnson — Press Scimitar, Memphis.
Milton Randolph — Banner, Nashville.
Marion Dresner — Tennessean, Nashville.
Texas
C. M. Ellis — Reporter-News, Abilene.
William Wilson — Globe News, Amarillo.
Kit T. Kay — Times, AmaTillo.
Ruth Davis — American-Statesman, Austin.
Jack Dolph— Daily Texas, Austin.
R. W. Whipskey — Daily Herald, Big Spring.
Jim Vinson — Index, Childress.
Jack Hickerson — Journal, Commerce.
James T. Moore — Caller-Times, Corpus Christi.
William J. Light — Chronicle, Corpus Christi.
Joe Linz — Journal, Dallas.
Margaret Cahn — Journal, Dallas.
James Lovell — Times Herald, Dallas.
E. Hinrichs — Telegram, Eastland.
Bess Stephenson — Star-Telegram, Fort Worth.
Katherine Howard — Star-Telegram, Fort Worth.
E. Zierlein — Sun, Goose Creek.
Hubert Roussel — Post, Houston.
Brownie Emerson — News, Pampa.
F. W. Buerger — Press, Taylor.
Louise Herring — Courier-Times Telegraph,
Tyler.
Georgia Nowlin Armstrong — News-Tribune &
Times Herald, Waco.
Jack Gordon — Press, Fort Worth.
Tommie Randolph — Daily Times - Tribune,
Gladewater.
Maurine Currin — Evening Banner, Greenville.
Mildred Stockard — Chronicle, Houston.
Paul Hochuli — Press, Houston.
Clavin Staines — Daily News, Kilgore.
Pericles Alexander — Gladewater Record, Kil-
gore Herald.
Chas. C. Watson — Avalanche-Journal, Lub-
bock.
Mary Louise Walliser — Evening News, San
Antonio.
Sam Woolford — Light, San Antonio.
Ted Bomar — Democrat, Sherman.
Constance Matula — Courier-Times Telegraph,
Tyler.
J. A. Wray — Daily Times, Wichita Falls.
Utah
Alice Pardoe West — Standard Examiner, Og-
den.
Ray Nelson — Herald-Journal, Logan.
Gail Martin — Desert News, Salt Lake City.
Waide M. Condon — Tribune, Salt Lake City.
Vermont
Agnes R. Webster — Daily Times, Barre.
Marion Beecher — Banner, Bennington.
Virginia
Andrew A. Farley — Register & The Bee, Dan-
ville.
Wilbur Jennings — Free Lance-Star, Fredericks-
burg.
David Wagner Wright — Advance, Lynchburg.
Ralph K. T. Larson — Virginian-Pilot, Norfolk.
W. F. Duunbar, Jr. — Daily Record, Richmond.
Elizabeth Copeland — News Leader, Richmond.
Edith Lindeman — Times-Dispatch, Richmond.
E. Lewis Knowles — Evening Leader, Staunton.
E. W. Opie — News-Leader, Staunton.
R. S. Fansler — Evening Star, Winchester.
Washington
H. L. Plumb — Daily World, Aberdeen.
Hal Reeves — Herald, Bellingham.
Monte Snow — Searchlight, Bremerton.
Carlton Moore — Kelsonian-Tribune, Kelso.
J. Willis Sayre — Post-Intelligencer, Seattle.
E. R. Busselle — Star, Seattle.
Gilbert Brown — Star, Seattle.
Richard E. Hays — Times, Seattle.
Margaret Bean — Spokesman-Review, Spokane.
Waiard Conrad, Daily Chronicle, Spokane.
Hal S. Nelson — Times, Tacoma.
James R. Morris — Union-Bulletin, Walla Walla.
Mrs. Iris L. Myers — Union-Bulletin, Walla
Walla.
Roland Miller— Union-Bulletin, Walla Walla.
Norman M. Kelly — Union-Bulletin, Walla Walla.
West Virginia
Ted McDowell — Post-Herald, Beckley.
Mrs. Wilma Higginbotham — Gazette, Charles-
ton.
Frank E. Carpenter — Telegram, Clarksburg.
Walton M. Rock — Times, Fairmont.
H. J. Gatrell — Sentinel, Grafton.
Eleanor W. Faulconer — News, Hinton.
Odetta Keyser — Banner, Logan.
Brooks Cottle — Post, Morgantown.
Mary Sawinski — Journal, Moundsville.
Charles L. Long — Intelligencer, Wheeling.
Ribert T. Beans — Intelligencer, Wheeling.
Thelma D. Hughes — News-Register, Wheeling.
Wisconsin
John P. Hogan — Daily Press, Ashland.
Mason H. Dobson — News, Beloit.
Betty L. McKelvey — Press-Gazette, Green Bay.
Peg O'Brien — Daily Gazette, Janesville.
Chester M. Zeff — Evening News, Kenosha.
Sterling Dorenson — Capital-Times, Madison.
William L. Doudna — Wisconsin State Journal,
Madison.
George J. MacFarlane — Herald-Times, Mani-
towoc.
Carla Foster — Herald, Merrill.
Marcella Fisher — Journal, Milwaukee.
Buck Herzog — Sentinel, Milwaukee.
Dorothy Lawton — Journal-Times, Racine.
Jack McBride — Evening Telegram, Superior.
Clarence H. Witter — Daily Times, Watertown.
Wyoming
Jack Seller — Tribune Herald, Casper.
Billee Wheelock — Wyoming State Tribune,
Cheyenne.
Larry Birleffi— Bulletin, Laramie.
Walter Hetler — Rocket, Rock Springs.
766
SAG in 1939
By
KENNETH THOMSON
Executive Secretary of Screen Actors' Guild
AN a shifting scene — now Hollywood and now New York — the Screen Actors
Guild in 1939 left a record of real accomplishment in fulfilling its double
purpose: first, to maintain and improve the working conditions of motion picture
actors; second, to help give the American public better entertainment.
In rapid review, the Guild's year was high-
lighted by:
— An agreement between Screen Actors
Guild and Artists Managers Guild, under
which all agents are franchised by the Guild
under regulations intended to assure fair-
dealing and stability in matters of contracts,
commissions, services.
— Substantial progress toward bettering the
situation of film extras. With the number of
extras reduced from more than 20,000 to ap-
proximately 6,700 since establishment of the
Guild, 1939 saw their Central Casting earn-
ing's report rise to $3,124,671.24. (Central
Casting Reports on extra earnings are not
all-inclusive. They cover only the first day's
employment. There are other smaller casting
agencies.) Further stabilization of the precari-
ous position of extras was promised through
the new Extra Code, submitted by the Guild
to the Association of Motion Picture Producers
and seeking reclassifications emphasizing $11-
a-day work and minimizing $5.50 and $8.25
work. Meanwhile, the Guild and producers,
through their joint Standing Committee, con-
tinued a long range study with a two-fold
objective: Economic security for extras; assur-
ance to the industry of an adequate supply of
competent extra players.
— Successful defense, with other performers
unions, of the right of actors to govern them-
selves. Joining Equity, AFRA, AGMA and
the other branches of the 4-A, the Guild won
American Federation of Labor affirmation of
4-A jurisdiction over all performers. The
IATSE, claiming variety actors, withdrew and
AGVA was organized as a 4-A unit. This strug-
gle drew actors together, gave impetus to
their movement for closer cooperation among
performer unions.
—A Screen Actors Guild campaign in the
defense of "honest unionism," calling for elim-
ination of all racketeering elements. SAG
withdrew from the Los Angeles Central Labor
Council, retaining affiliation with the State
Federation of Labor and the American Federa-
tion of Labor. Extending its cooperative rela-
tionship with other unions, the Guild created
a new Labor Contact Committee.
— For the motion picture industry, the SAG
joined with other guilds in fighting the Neely
Bill, which would wreck industry production
and employment by prohibiting block booking.
— For workers in the industry, the SAG con-
tinued its leadership in the Motion Picture
Relief Fund. From the Gulf-Guild Radio Thea-
ter, to which SAG stars donated their services,
$10,000 a week was earned in a series of
broadcasts for the benefit of MPRF.
In 1939, the Guild had the able leadership
of President Ralph Morgan. Mr. Morgan unan-
imously was reelected to head the Guild in
1940, assisted by these officers and directors:
First vice-president, James Cagney; second
vice-president, Joan Crawford; third vice-presi-
dent, Edward Arnold; recording secretary, Paul
Harvey; treasurer. Porter Hall.
Directors: Walter Abel, Beulah Bondi, Ralph
Byrd, Pedro de Cordoba, Dudley Digges, Mel-
vyn Douglas, John Garfield, Lucile Gleason,
William Henry (alternate), Hugh Herbert, Jean
Hersholt, Howard Hickman, Russell Hicks,
Boris Karloff. Claude King, Peter Lorre, Noel
Madison, Frank McHugh, Robert Montgomery,
Jean Muir, George Murphy, Erin O'Brien-Moore,
Irving Pichel, Elizabeth Risdon, Rosalind Rus-
sell (alternate), Edwin Stanley, Gloria Stuart,
Franchot Tone, Dorothy Tree, Charles Trow-
bridge, and Morgan Wallace.
768
SIM. ill 1939
By
J. P. McGOWAN
Executive Secretary
THE year 1939 was vital in the history of the Screen. Directors' Guild. A two-
year struggle for recognition was climaxed by a trial before the National
Labor Relations Board in Los Angeles, during the fall of 1938, but, before a
decision was handed down by the trial examiner, the Motion Picture Producers'
Association entered into an agreement with the Guild adjusting all differences.
This agreement went into effect on March 13, 1939 and, under its provisions, the
Unit Managers set up their own organization and withdrew from the Screen
Directors' Guild.
At the annual meeting in June, 1939, Frank
Capra was re-elected president, heading an
executive board composed of W. S. Van Dyke,
first vice-president; John Cromwell, second
vice-president; Frank Tuttle, secretary; Philip
Rosen, treasurer; and John Ford, Rowland V.
Lee, Frank Lloyd, Rouben Mamoulian, George
Marshall, Lewis Milestone, Leo McCarey, Frank
Strayer, King Vidor, Ernst Lubitsch, William K.
Howard, William Wellman, Garson Kanin,
William Wyler and Norman Taurog. Mrs.
Mabel Walker Willebrandt was retained as
counsel and J. P. McGowan, executive secre-
tary.
Frank Capra left Columbia to set up his
own producing organization to be replaced by
Wesley Ruggles and Frank Lloyd as producing-
directors. Sydney Franklin, Robert Z. Leonard
and Ernst Lubitsch were given similar berths
at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, while Mervyn LeRoy
voluntarily gave up his responsibilities as an
executive, to become a producing-director.
RKO signed Leo McCarey to a similar spot
and Universal followed suit by upping Dave
Butler, Rowland V. Lee, George Marshall and
Frank Tuttle.
Republic started shooting for the big time
by contracting Raoul Walsh and also made
Joe Kane a producing-director. Herbert Wil-
cox, Alfred Hitchcock and Tim Whelan came
across from England to make pictures ^in
Hollywood when the war practically closed
down British studios.
The market for the lesser priced pictures
dwindled away to almost nothing, but' the
optimistic stale-righters are hoping that - if
the Neely Bill is passed, this market will be
stimulated to its former capacity of over 200
pictures a year. >
■ ■ • 1
SWU in I939
THE Screen Writers' Guild, sometimes referred to as the "most recognized" ol
the unrecognized guilds, has gone through one of the most active and
important years in its history. Following an election under the Wagner Act, the
Guild was designated by the National Labor Relations Board as the sole and
exclusive bargaining agent for all screen writers at all studios in Hollywood.
Producers and the Guild have not, however, as yet come to any agreement.
Despite the absence of a contract between
the Guild and the producers, the Guild during
the past year arbitrated 90 per cent of the
credit cases that came up in film production
in Hollywood. The tacit agreement by which
the producers permitted this procedure in ac-
cepting as final the Guild's decisions, definitely
demonstrates the position.
During the year the Guild brought a com-
plaint before the Labor Board of producer
violations of the Wagner Act during 1936. This
complaint resulted in hearings in Los An-
geles and considerable evidence was offered
by the Guild in support of its allegations.
Decision by the Labor Board on this complaint
is still pending.
The Guild undertook considerable activity
in various other fields during the past year.
Among other things, it co-sponsored the Fed-
eral Writers' Project in Southern California
and thereby prevented the project from folding.
The Guild actively participated with the
769
Screen Actors and Screen Directors Guilds in
the operation of the Motion Picture Relief
Fuad and cooperated in the operation of the
Fund's radio program, the Screen Guild
Theater.
The Guild also, with the other guilds, as-
sumed some of the responsibility for raising
funds for the Community Chest.
The Guild participated in the 1939 Academy
elections and sent representatives to the Com-
mittee on Awards for 1940.
The Guild also participated actively in the
deliberations of the Inter-talent Council, which
is an advisory forum for matters common
to the three top guilds. It also has been closely
associated with the founding and formation
of the Hollywood Guild Council, which is
intended as a central deliberation and discus-
sion group involving the mutual problems of
all guilds and autonomous unions in Holly-
wood.
The Guild has carried on an intensive survey
of the economic status of screen writers, the
results of which will be made public at some
date in the near future.
In April 1939, the Guild sent a representa
five to Washington to present the Guild's
point of view on the Neely Bill.
The Screen Writers' Guild has kept busy
and active, not only in the economic fields of
its members, but in the problems of the motion
picture industry generally, and has attempted
at all times to keep its fingers on the pulse
of Hollywood.
The Guild now numbers over 700 members.
ASC in 1939
By
JOHN ARNOLD
President of the American Society of Cinemato grapbers
$TEADY, if unpublicized, progress characterized the activities of the American
Society of Cinematographers during 1939. The A.S.C. serves its members —
the industry's directors of photography — in two fields: it is their duly selected
bargaining agent in their collective relations with the studios, and it is their
professional club, in which cinematographers from all studios may gather
socially or to discuss their professional problems. The activities of the A.S.C.
ai e therefore twofold.
During the past year the previous agreement
bejween the Society and the producers ex-
pired, and a new five-year agreement was
negotiate dand put into effect. While this new
agreement was based on the previous ones
which for several years had prescribed mini-
mum salaries, working conditions, etc., for
directors of photography, the new contract is
a considerable improvement on the old. Not
only were salary increases provided for, but
a number of improvements in working condi-
tions were obtained, while other conditions
which had previously been subject to misin-
terpretation or abuse were clarified and cor-
rected. Being negotiated and put into effect
at a time when box-office returns were dis-
tinctly off, and foreign restrictions and fears
of war exerted a further, unfavorable effect,
this agreement stands as a remarkable tribute
to the industry's confidence in the men who
photograph its pictures and in their organ-
ization.
The social and cultural activities of the A.S.C.
were dealt with at the regular monthly meet-
ings of the organization. At these meetings
have been discussed, often in informal, round-
table fashion with members of the research,
designing or engineering staffs of the leading
manufacturers of motion picture materials and
equipment participating, such topics of cur-
770
rent technical interest as the new, super-fast
film types; lighting methods and equipment for
both black-and-white and Technicolor; photo-
electric light-meters and their use; art-direction
and set painting in relation to cinematography:
and silent (blimpless) cameras.
In passing, it may be remarked that 1939
marked the A.S.C.'s 21st year. The Society
was organized in 1918, and was the direct
outgrowth of two successive previous organ-
izations— the Motion Picture Camera Club
and the Static Club — whose history goes back
nearly a decade farther. It is far, indeed,
from those early days when the cameramen
of one studio often literally did not know those
from the other lots (or, if they did, regarded
them with suspicion!) and technical advance-
ment was an individual — and usually highly
accidental — matter. But it is in direct ratio
to the opportunity given the industry's cine-
matographers for such frank discussion of their
technical and professional problems that cine-
matographic technique has advanced. From
"flickers" like "The Great Train Robbery" to
a modern production like "Gone With the
Wind" is a vast technical and artistic stride
— but the industry's cinematographers, pool-
ing problems and experience through the
A.S.C, have not only spanned it, but made
much of it possible.
A Breakdown of
Labor Organizations
Active in Motion Pictures
Production
Craft
Unions and Affiliations
Cinematographers
Sound Men
Cable Men
Mixers
Electricians
Painters
Decorators
Paper Hangers
Carpenters
Musicians
Chauffeurs
Grips
Makeup Artists
Props
Projectionists
Laborers
Utility Workers
Laboratory
Technicians
Players
Writers
Directors
Office Workers
Unit Managers
Publicity
Scenic Artists
International Photographers of the Motion Picture Industry (IATSE,
Locals: 659. Hollywood; 644, New York: 666. Chicago).
International Sound Technicians (IATSE, Local 696, Hollywood).
Motion Picture Set Electricians (IATSE, Local 728. Hollywood).
International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (AFL).
International Brotherhood of Painters, Decorators, and Paper Hangers
(AFL) .
United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners (AFL).
American Federation of Musicians (AFL).
International Brotherhood of Teamsters and Chauffeurs (AFL).
Motion Picture Studios Grips (IATSE, Local 80, Hollywood).
Makeup Artists (IATSE, Local 706, Hollywood).
Affiliated Property Craftsmen (IATSE, Local 44, Hollywood).
Motion Picture Studio Projectionists (IATSE, Local 165, Hollywood).
Class "B" Laborers and Utility Workers (IATSE. Local 727, Hollywood)
Film Technicians of the Motion Picture Industry (IATSE, Locals 683,
Hollywood; 702. New York).
Screen Actors Guild (AAAA).
Screen Writers Guild ( Independent ) .
Screen Playwrights Guild (Independent).
Screen Directors Guild (Independent).
Bookkeepers, Stenographers and Accountants Union (AFL).
Unit Managers Guild (Independent).
Screen Publicists Guild (Independent).
Sign, Scenic and Painters Union (Local 831, Hollywood — has applied
for AFL membership) .
Craft
Exhibition
Unions and Affiliations
Projectionists
Moving Picture Machine Operators (IATSE. Locals: ALABAMA — 236.
Birmingham; 519, Mobile. CALIFORNIA — 150, Los Angeles; 162,
San Francisco: 169. Oakland: 252. Sacramento: 297, San Diego: 428,
Stockton; 431, San Jose: 521, Long Beach: 577, San Bernardino;
599. Fresno. COLORADO — 230. Denver: 448, Pueblo. CONNECTI-
CUT— 273, New Haven: 277, Bridgeport: 304, Waterbury; 486, Hart-
ford. DELAWARE — 473. Wilmington. DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA —
224, Washington. FLORIDA— 316, Miami; 611, Jacksonville.
GEORGIA — 225, Atlanta. ILLINOIS — 110. Chicago: 288, East St.
Louis: 323. Springfield: 374, Joliet: 433 Rock Island-Moline; 434.
Peoria. INDIANA — 194, Indianapolis; 367, Evansville: 373. Terre
Haute: 466, Fort Wayne. IOWA — 286, Des Moines; 355, Sioux City;
404. Topeka: 414, Wichita. KENTUCKY — 163. Louisville. LOUISI-
ANA— 222. Shreveport; 293, New Orleans. MAINE — 458, Portland
MARYLAND — 181, Baltimore. MASSACHUSETTS — 182. Boston: 186;
Springfield: 245, Salem: 256. Lawrence; 334, New Bedford; 382.
Holyoke: 397, Haverhill: 424. Fall River: 437. Brockton: 452. Pitts-
field; 546, Lowell. MICHIGAN — 199, Detroit: 291, Grand Rapids:
472, Flint. MINNESOTA — 219, Minneapolis: 356. St. Paul: 509.
Duluth. MISSOURI — 143, St. Louis; 170, Kansas City: 447, Spring-
field: 465. Joplin: 559, St. Joseph. NEBRASKA — 343. Omaha.
NEW JERSEY — 244, Essex County: 310, Atlantic City; 359. Mercer
County: 384, Hudson County; 418, Camden. NEW YORK — 233.
Buffalo: 253, Rochester; 285. Troy; 306. New York; 314, Schenec-
771
Stagehands
Musicians
Stage Performers
Ushers
Cashiers
Doormen
Ticket Takers
Matrons
Managers
Assistant Managers
Janitors
Porters
Firemen
Refrigeration Men
mS ' Alb,1nJ:ft3,?,7\TUtl?a: 376' Sy^use: .396. Binghamton;
n£r. T ^d Suffolk (L. I.) Counties: 650. Westchester County
?."IO"r1(i°'«Creo^d: 2?8' ToIedo: 248- Da>'ton: 327. Cincinnati
HI- SPrln~field: 364 Akron; 386- Columbus: 388. Youngstown-
SiS' yiaT ;fieId:„5'1' Canton OKLAHOMA— .380. Oklahoma Citv
513, Tulsa. OREGON — 1 59, Portland. PENNSYLVANIA— 171 '
Pittsburgh: 307, Philadelphia: 325. Wilkes-Barre • .329 Scranton-'
411 Wilhamsport: 451, Sharon-New Castle: 488. Harrisburg- 566'
MeKeesport: 585. Allentown: 621, Erie: 661. Reading- 682 Lan-
caster. RHODE ISLAND — 22.3. Providence. SOUTH DAKOTA— 556
Sioux Falls. TENNESSEE— 144. Memphis; 259. Chattanooga- 405'
Knoxville: 626, Nashville. TEXAS — 249. Dallas- 279 Houston-'
305. Galveston: .330. Fort Worth: 407. San Antonio: 597 Waco'
UTAH — 250. Salt Lake City. VIRGINIA — .370. Richmond- 550'
Norfolk; 619. Alexandria. WASHINGTON — 154 Seattle- 175*
Tacoma: 185. Spokane. WEST VIRGINIA — 500. Charleston ' WIS-
CONSIN— 164. Milwaukee: 460. Racine. CANADA — 17.3. Toronto-
257, Ottawa: 262. Montreal: 299. Winnipeg; 302. Calgary; 303
Hamilton: 348, Vancouver.
Note: Locals not listed above are designated by IATSE as "mixed" as
they are not strictly operators locals.
IATSE. Locals: ALABAMA — 78. Birmingham: 142. Mobile. CALI-
FORNIA— 16. San Francisco: .33, Los Angeles: 50. Sacramento: 90.
Stockton: 107. Alameda County: 122. San Diego: 134. San Jose:
158, Fresno; 614, San Bernardino. Riverside. Pomona. Redlands.
COLORADO — 7. Denver; 47, Pueblo. CONNECTICUT — 74. New
Haven; 84, Hartford: 83. Waterbury: 109. Bridgeport. DELAWARE —
284. Wilmington. DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA — 22. Washington.
FLORIDA — -115. Jacksonville; 545, Miami. GEORGIA — 41, Atlanta.
ILLINOIS — 2, Chicago: 75. Peoria: 124. Joliet : 138. Springfield:
147. East St. Louis. INDIANA — .30. Indianapolis: 49. Terre Haute:
102, Evansville; 146. Fort Wayne. IOWA — 40. Sioux City; 67. Des
Moines: 85. Davenport: .336, Council Bluffs. KANSAS — 190, Wichita:
206, Topeka. KENTUCKY — 17. Louisville. LOUISIANA — .39. New
Orleans. MAINE — 114. Portland. MARYLAND — 19. Baltimore.
MASSACHUSETTS — 11. Boston: 36. Lowell: 5.3, Springfield: 57.
Fall River; 73, Lynn: 89. Holyoke: 111, Lawrence; 131. New Bed-
ford: 149. Brockton: 196. Salem: 275, Pittsfield: 381. Haverhill.
MICHIGAN — 26. Grand Rapids: 38. Detroit; 201. Flint. MINNE-
SOTA— 13. Minneapolis: 20. St. Paul: 32. Duluth. MISSOURI —
6, St. Louis: 31, Kansas City; 43, St. Joseph: 137. Springfield: 176,
Jopliu. NEBRASKA 42. Omaha-Fremont. NEW JERSEY — 21.
Newark: 59, Jersey City: 77, Atlantic City; 116. Trenton-Princeton:
408. Camden. NEW YORK- — 1, New York: 4. Brooklyn; 9. Syracuse:
10, Buffalo: 14, Albany: 25, Rochester: 29, Troy: 54. Binghamton:
128. Utica: 1.39. Schenectady: 340, Nassau and Suffolk Counties: 366.
Westchester County: 5.35. Johnstown. RHODE ISLAND — 23. Provi-
dence. SOUTH DAKOTA — 220, Sioux Falls. TENNESSEE 46.
Nashville: 69. Memphis: 140, Chattanooga: 197, Knoxville. TEXAS —
51, Houston; 65. Galveston: 76. San Antonio; 126. Fort Worth; 127,
Dallas: 226. Waco. UTAH — 99. Salt Lake City. VIRGINIA — 72.
Norfolk: 87. Richmond. WASHINGTON — 15. Seattle: 81. Tacoma;
93. Spokane. WEST VIRGINIA — 271. Charleston. WISCONSIN—
18, Milwaukee: 237. Racine. CANADA — 56, Montreal: 58. Toronto:
63. Winnipeg; 95. Ottawa; 118, Vancouver: 129. Hamilton; 212,
Calgary.
American Federation of Musicians (AFL).
American Guild of Variety Artists (AAAA).
Actors Equity Association (AAAA).
American Guild ol Musical Artists (AAAA).
American Federation of Radio Artists (AAAA).
Theater Employees (IATSE. local numbers not available).
Theatrical Managers. Agents and Treasurers Union (AFL).
Building Service Employes Union (AFL).
Operating and Stationary Engineers Union (AFL).
Distribution
Craft
Unions and Affiliations
Exchange Employes
Projectionists
Office Workers
Building Employes
Chauffeurs
Film Exchange Employes Union (IATSE).
Moving Picture Machine Operators (IATSE, Locals listed above, under
exhibition ) .
Bookkeepers, Stenographers and Accountants Union (AFL).
Building Service Employes Union (AFL).
International Brotherhood of Teamsters and Chauffeurs (AFL^
772
Producer -Screen Actors Guild
BASIC MINIMUM AGREEMENT OF 1937
(Also see Modification Agreement of 1938 on Page 779)
AGREEMENT executed at Los Angeles, California, May 15, 1937, between the SCREEN
ACTORS G1ULD, INC., a California non-profit membership corporation, hereinafter called the
"Guild," and such parties who are engaged in the production of motion pictures as may concur-
rently or hereafter become signatories hereto, hereinafter called the "Producers," (As amended
and supplemented by the report of the committee appointed under paragraph 14 of the agreement).
WITNESSETH:
In consideration of the mutual agreements herein
contained the parties agree as follows:
1. The Guild is recognized by the Producers,
and each of them, as the exclusive collective bar-
gaining agent for all actors in the motion picture
industry. The Guild agrees that the producers may
terminate this contract at any time that the Guild
is determined not to be the exclusive collective
bargaining agent for actors by the National Labor
Relations Board or by any court of competent juris-
diction. If the National Labor Relations Act is
repealed and a substitute Act is enacted, the pre-
ceding sentence will apply to the substitute Act
and to the substitute agency under such Act.
2. Every actor hereafter employed by any Pro-
ducer, whether by contract or otherwise, or who
acts before the camera for any Producer, except as
may be hereinafter provided, shall be a member of
the Guild in good standing, subject to the follow-
ing qualifications:
(a) If any actor now under contract to any
Producer is not a member of the Guild and re-
fuses to join the Guild, such actor shall be ex-
empted from this paragraph 2 during the term
of his existing contract as the same may be ex-
tended according to the existing terms thereof.
Each Producer shall forthwith furnish the Guild
with a list of all contracts and stock players
under contract to the Producer at the date of this
contract. The Guild will then notify the Producer
as to the names of such of said players as are not
members of the Guild, whereupon the Producers
will promptly furnish to the Guild the approxi-
mate expiration dates of the contracts of such
non-Guild member players.
(b) Stars and featured players may be ex-
empted from this paragraph 2 during the first
five years of this contract, and during the first
five years only, to the extent of ten per cent of
the principal players in the cast of each picture
produced by each Producer. Principal players
means actors whose base rate of pay is $200.00
a week or more, but extras, stunt men and day
players shall not be counted as principal players.
Actors under qualification (a) shall be included
in the calculation in computing the ten per cent
of the cast who do not have to be Guild mem-
bers in good standing under qualification (b).
For example, if there are twenty principal players
in the cast and two are not Guild members in
good standing and come within qualification (a),
the Producer is entitled to no additional non-
members under qualification (b).
(c) During the first five years of this contract,
and during the first five years only, if the cast
of principal players is less than ten, one star or
one featured player need not be a member of the
Guild. If the star or featured player comes un-
der qualification (a) no additional non-member
is allowed under this qualification (c).
(d) In case of the exigencies of casting and
as an extraordinary circumstance that shall not
happen more than two times a contract year in
the case of any Producer who produces forty
pictures a year or more, and not more than once
a year in the case of any Producer who produces
less than forty pictures a year, the Guild will
give a waiver that will allow stars and featured
players to the extent of three in a cast to be
non-members. This qualification only applies
during the first five years of this contract.
Each Producer shall give the Guild full oppor-
tunity to check the performance of this paragraph,
including access to sets, but the Guild's checking
shall be done in such a manner as not to interfere
with production. The Guild agrees that (I) it
will accept as a member of the Guild any actor
the Producer wishes to employ, subject to the
imposition of reasonable terms in the case of mem-
bers suspended by the Guild, or Actors' Equity
Association, or the British Actors' Equity Asso-
ciation; (II) it will not impose unreasonable ini-
tiation fees, dues or assessments (exclusive of fines
and penalties), and if the Producers claim a viola-
tion by the Guild of the provisions of this sentence,
such question shall be determined by the com-
mittees provided for in paragraph 14 hereof and
if such committees cannot agree the matter shall
be settled by arbitration in accordance with the
arbitration provisions of said paragraph 14. It is
the intention hereof to prevent the Guild from
closing its books so as to prevent any person who
wishes to act in motion pictures from joining the
Guild. Nothing in the preceding sentence shall
limit the right of the Guild to discipline or suspend
or expel a member or to refuse to re-admit him.
The Guild agrees, however, that if it suspends or
expels a member who is under contract to a Pro-
ducer, or if a member resigns, the suspension, ex-
pulsion or resignation shall not affect the player's
obligation to perform any existing contract or con-
tracts with any producer or producers or such
producer's or producers' right to demand perform-
ance, except with the producers' consent. Subject
to the qualifications hereinbefore in all of this
paragraph 2 set forth, the Producer agrees that in
every future contract it enters into with an actor
the actor shall agree that the actor shall be a
member of the Guild in good standing and shall
remain so for the duration of the contract ; it being
the intent hereof that any Producer may, without
including such agreement, sign a star or fea-
tured player during such five-year period who
refuses to become a member of the Guild, provided
that in no event shall a Producer have in its
employ stars or featured players not belonging to
the Guild to the extent of more than ten per cent
of the total number of stars and featured players
in its employ ; and provided, further, that a greater
number of stars and featured players may not
appear in any production than is provided for in
subdivisions (b), (c) and (d) of this paragraph 2.
No breach by a member of the Guild of his obliga
tions to the Guild shall give such member a defense
to any Producer's right to enforce an existing
contract against such member.
3. Each Producer agrees that the following con-
ditions shall govern the employment of all extra
players employed by the Producer and shall become
a part of the contract with the extra player,
namely :
(a) The rules governing extras contained in the
Motion Picture Code under the National Recov
ery Act and the rules enacted pursuant thereto
and the rules under California Industrial Welfare
Commission Order No. 16-A shall become and
are a part of this contract except as specifically
to the contrary herein provided. The rules in
said Order No. 16-A shall be extended so far
as this contract is concerned to cover men.
(b) The $3.20 check for extras is abolished.
(c) The minimum pay per day for any extra
played shall be $5.50. The minimum weekly
rate for extras employed on a weekly basis shall
be five times the daily rate for a six-day week.
This applies to all extras and not merely the
extras receiving $5.50 per day.
(d) The wage scale in force contained in the
Motion Picture Code under the National Re-
covery Act and in the rules enacted pursuant
thereto shall be increased ten per cent for all
classes of extra players receiving thereunder up
to and including $15.00 per day.
(e) The minimum compensation for stand-ins
shall be $33.00 per week (six working days), or
$6.50 per day.
(f) Time spent in traveling to location when
the extra renders services on the same day shal!
be included in the extra's work day for all pur
poses. If the time is at the beginning of the
day, then the day shall begin when the extra is
checked in and continue for eight hours there
after, excluding an allowable meal period. If
the travel time occurs during the progress of the
day, it shall be computed on the same basis. For
time spent in traveling from location, the extra
shall be paid one-thirty-second of his daily wage
(as the same may be adjusted pursuant to this
contract) for each fifteen minutes or fraction
thereof consumed in such traveling.
Travel time which occurs during the period
for which the extra is compensated may be de-
ducted from travel time.
Compensation for traveling time in any event
shall not exceed one day's pay in any twenty-
four hours.
Any time in excess of the thirty minutes allowed
for the checking in of wardrobe and paying the
extra after dismissal shall be added to travel
time and not to work time.
If extras are transported to or from location
on any day on which they do not render services,
their minimum travel pay shall be as follows:
(a) If traveling is commenced before 12
o'clock noon, a full check ;
(b) If traveling is commenced between 12
o'clock noon and 6 o'clock P. M., a half check,
unless the travel time exceeds four hours, in
which event actual traveling time shall be paid ;
(c) If traveling is commenced after 6 o'clock
P, M., actual traveling time shall be paid.
(g) The Guild asked for the abolition of
"weather permitting" calls. The Producers have
refused this, and the parties have agreed that
the committees hereinafter in paragraph 14 pro
vided for shall work out rules governing such
calls which shall correct any present inequities
in the situation which may exist. Likewise such
committee shall work out clarifications and ad-
justments of the National Recovery Act rules for
extras.
(h) The term "extra player" or "extras" in
eludes stand-ins, dancers, cowboys and all other
classifications included under the term as used
in the motion picture code under the National
Industrial Recovery Act and the rules enacted
pursuant thereto or under Industrial Order No.
16-A hereinbefore referred to, except stunt men
who are specially treated in this agreement. In
the case of locations three hundred miles or more
from Los Angeles or from the studio base of
operation of the picture, the Guild agrees to
issue permits exempting persons who would other
wise be classified as "extras" hereunder from
this agreement. The committees referred to in
paragraph 14 shall immediately work out other
proper exemptions such as the armed forces of
the United States, and a case of a military
academy used as a background, for which the
Guild will also agree to issue like permits. In
the case that the committees cannot agree, the
matter will be settled by arbitration and the deci-
sion of the arbitrators when rendered shall be
incorporated in this agreement and become a part
hereof. The Guild will also issue permits ex
empting persons who would otherwise be "extras"
under this agreement from this agreement for all
shots made in the Republic of Mexico or the City
or Port of San Diego. In the event that children
of tender years are unable legally to join the
Guild, the Guild will issue the necessary permits
so that any Producer will not be hampered in
using children in any production. The com-
mittees shall also determine what shall be done
in regard to extras of the types of freaks, dwarfs,
fire-eaters and similar types.
(i) All compensation paid to extras employed
by the Producers through any agency shall be
net to the extra except for such deductions or
withholdings as may from time to time be pro-
vided by law ; it being agreed that the Producers
and not the extra shall bear the agency fee for
obtaining employment and that the extra shall not
be required by the Producers to pay such agency
fee, directly or indirectly.
(j) Weather permitting calls are allowable for
extras subject to the limitations now in force
under this agreement nad the following additional
limiations and conditions:
(I) Weather permitting calls shall not be
issued for stages in studios.
(II) The extra shall be paid a quarter check
upon the cancellation of any weather permitting
call. This check shall entitle the producer to
hold the extra for not exceeding two hours.
The extra shall receive a quarter check for
each additional two hours, or fraction thereof,
during which he is held by the producer.
During this waiting period, the producer has
the privilege of putting extras into costumes,
rehearsing or making other use of their ser-
vices. If, however, any recording or photo
graphing is done, whether still pictures or other
wise, the extra shall be paid the agreed dail>
wage.
(III) The extra may cancel, by notice to the
agency through which he was engaged, a
weather permitting call previously accepted
prior to 7 :30 P. M. of the day preceding the
day for which the call has been issued, unless
he has been established in the picture.
774
4. The Producers agree that reasonable access to
the records of Central Casting Corporation or any
agency used by the Producers, or any of them,
for the employment of extras shall be afforded to
(he Guild. The agency referred to in the preceding
sentence means only an agency used regularly or
customarily by one or more Producers performing
for such Producer or Producers substantially the
same function as Central Casting Corporation, and
does not mean agencies used casually and not gen-
erally. Records do not include the financial records
of the agency.
5. Each Producer agrees that the following con-
ditions shall govern the employment of all day
players employed by the Producer and shall become
a part of the contract with the day player, namely :
(a) Sections 1 to 12, inclusive, of the present
rules governing day players adopted by the Acad-
emy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences printed
on pages 8 and 9 of The Academy Bulletin of
February 11, 1935, shall become and are a part
of this contract except as specifically to the con-
trary herein provided.
(b) The arbitration provision in the Academy
rules shall not govern, and the general arbitration
clause hereinafter set forth shall apply.
(c) The minimum pay for day players shall be
$25.00 per day.
(d) Time spent in traveling to location when
the day player renders services on the same day
shall be included in the day player's work day
for all purposes. If the time is at the beginning
of the day, then the day shall begin when the
travel time begins, and continue for eight hours
thereafter, excluding an allowable meal period.
If the travel time occurs during the progress of
the day, it shall be computed on the same basis.
For time spent in traveling from location, the
day player shall be paid one-thirty-second of his
daily wage (as the same may be adjusted pur-
suant to this contract) for each fifteen minutes
or fraction thereof consumed in such traveling.
Travel time which occurs during the period for
which the day player is compensated may be de-
ducted from travel time.
Compensation for traveling time in any event
shall not exceed one day's pay in any twenty-four
hours.
If day players are transported to or from loca-
tion on any day on which they do not render
services, their minimum travel pay shall be as
follows :
(a) If traveling is commenced before 12
o'clock noon, a full check;
(b) If traveling is commenced between 12
o'clock noon and 6 o'clock P. M., a half check,
unless the travel time exceeds four hours, in
which event actual travel time shall be paid ;
(c) If traveling is commenced after 6 o'clock
P. M., actual traveling time shall be paid.
(e) The day player shall receive one-half of the
daily pay agreed upon if he makes, or reports
pursuant to call for, costume fittings or photo-
graphic or sound recording tests, and is not
offered employment in the picture for which the
fitting or test is made.
(f) The rule now in force in the industry that
day players definitely engaged and not used re-
ceive a day's pay shall continue in force.
(g) Meal periods shall not be less than one-
half hour nor more than one hour.
(h) Weather permitting calls. Same provision
applies as under the paragraph on the subject
concerning extras.
(i) Conversion to a weekly basis as specified in
Kule 7 of the Academy Bulletin of February 11,
1935, shall be the same except it shall be on the
minimum terms for free lance players hereinafter
set forth, and under the free lance contract here-
inafter described.
(j) Stunt men shall receive a minimum pay
of Thirty-Five Dollars ($35.00) per day, but the
conditions concerning day players shall not apply
to stunt men. The Committees hereinafter re-
ferred to in paragraph 14 shall work out rules
covering the working conditions of stunt men and
if said committees cannot agree, the matter shall
be settled by arbitration and the determination
of said committees or said arbitration from the
date thereof shall become a part of this contract.
Stunt men shall only be classified as such on
the days when they are performing stunts.
(k) Weather permitting calls are allowable for
day players subject to the limitations now in force
under this agreement and the following additional
limitations and conditio»s:
(I) Weather permitting calls to day players
receiving less than $100.00 per day shall not
be issued for stages in studios.
(II) A day player receiving less than $100.00
per day shall be paid a quarter check upon the
cancellation of any weather permitting call.
This check shall entitle the producer to hold
the day player for not exceeding two hours.
The day player shall receive a quarter check
for each additional two hours, or portion there-
of, during which he is held by the Producer.
During this waiting period the Producer has
the privilege of putting day players into cos-
tumes, rehearsing or making other use of their
services. If, however, any recording or photo-
graphing is done, whether still pictures or
otherwise, the day player shall be paid the
agreed daily wage.
(III) Weather permitting calls may not be
issued to day players after the commencemen'
of photographing, and the fact that a weather
permitting call or calls have been issued before
the commencement of photographing shall not
cause the continuous employment provisions
of day player rules to come into effect. 'Photo
graphing,' as used herein, does not refer to such
photographing as is referred to in paragraph
6 of the Day Player Conditions.
6. The term "free lance players' as used herein
shall mean players employed for a specific picture,
on a weekly basis and at a weekly salary in excess
of $65.00 per week. The Producers agree that the
following conditions shall govern the employment of
all free lance players employed by the Producers
and shall become a part of the contract of the free
lance player, namely :
(a) One picture employment for free lance
players shall be at a weekly rate of compensa-
tion with a guaranty of at least one week's
employment under the minimum contract here-
inafter specified. The purpose of the foregoing
is to entirely eliminate the so-called "deal con-
tract," except that a "deal contract" may be
made with any free lance player who receives
$20,000.00 or more per picture.
(b) If the contract referred to in (c) hereafter
is delivered by any Producer to any player and
if the same is executed without alteration by
the player and is so returned to the Producer by
noon of the next succeeding business day after
its delivery to the player, it shall thereupon con-
stitute a contract binding on both parties even
though not executed by the Producer, but the
Producer on demand shall deliver a signed copy
to the player.
(c) The Producer shall execute with the
player a written contract containing the terms
of the contract printed on pages 4-7, inclusive,
of the Bulletin of The Academy of Motion Pic-
ture Arts and Sciences of February 11, 1935,
except said contract shall be changed as follows :
I. Paragraph 15 concerning arbitration shall bo
omitted, and the substance of the Guild arbitra-
tion clause hereinafter in this contract set forth
shall be substituted.
775
II. In respect to paragraph 27 concerning gen-
eral right of termination, in every case of ter-
mination of the contract prior to the commence-
ment of the term, the Producer shall be liable for
compensation during the minimum guaranteed
period, but if the player receives other em-
ployment during such period, the compensation
received by the player from such other em-
ployment shall be applied in reduction of the
Producer's liability. Said contract shall be
changed accordingly.
III. With respect to paragraph 31, the rules
of the Academy therein specified shall not apply,
but the corresponding rules of this contract with
respect to day players shall apply. Said con-
tract shall be modified accordingly.
IV. With respect to free lance players receiv-
ing less than $200.00 per week, the player shall
receive straight pay for overtime in excess of
fifty-four hours worked in any week, beginning
with the commencement of the contract, and con-
tinuing from week to week, and prorated in case
of a pro rata week. The overtime shall be paid
on the basis of l/48th of the weekly salary for
each hour or fraction of an hour worked in any
week in excess of 54 hours, and in case of a pro
rata week the 54 hours shall be prorated accord-
inly. Hours of work shall be computed in ac-
cordance with Rule 2(a) on page 8 of the
Academy Bulletin of February 11, 1935, which
rule has been previously incorporated herein for
day players. Nothing herein, however, shall
limit the free lance player's right to a twelve-
hour rest period and to holidays as granted by
paragraphs 18 and 19 of page 6 of said Academy
Bulletin of February 11, 1935, and incorporated
herein. The rights granted hereunder are addi-
tional and cumulative. Said contract shall be
modified accordingly.
V. The heading of said contract shall be
changed to read as follows: "Screen Actors Guild
Minimum Contract for Free Lance Players — Con-
tinuous Employment — Weekly Basis — Weekly
Salary — One Week Minimum Employment." In
bold face type at the top of the contract shall
be printed the following: "The actor may not
waive any provision of this contract without the
written consent of the Screen Actors Guild."
1. Reasonable access shall be afforded the Guild
to the records of the Call Bureau or to any simi-
larly constituted substitute owned or controlled by
any Producer therefor.
8. The Producer agrees that every contract here-
after entered into with a stock player shall con-
form to the following rules and contain in sub-
stance the following terms, which shall be a part
of such contract whether or not contained therein :
(a) The minimum rate of salary for stock play-
ers shall be $50.00 per week.
(b) Return transportation shall be furnished
the stock player, if brought to California from
outside the stater, if his salary is less than $75.00
a week, if he does not secure other employment
in or about Los Angeles, California, and if his
return trip is commenced within fifteen days after
the termination of his employment by the Pro-
ducer.
(c) Where a contract to employ a stock player
has been executed, the player shall not be required
to work without compensation after the date of
the execution of the contract or after the com-
mencement of employment thereunder. This in-
cludes a prohibition against free tests for stock
players after the date of the execution of such
contract or after the commencement of employ-
ment thereunder. Option test agreements are not
to be construed as contracts to employ.
(d) The suspension period specified in the
"Acts of God" clause of stock player contracts
shall be limited to four weeks; provided, however,
that Producers shall have the right to continue
such suspension from week to week not exceeding
eight additional weeks at one-half salary.
(e) The cancellation period specified in the
illness clause shall not be less than a period or
aggregate of periods of three weeks per year.
(f) Lay-offs shall be for at least one con-
secutive week, subject to recall for retakes and
added scenes. Any lay-off period falling at the
end of a contract period may be for a shorter
time.
9. Every contract hereafter entered into by a
Producer with a contract player shall embody the
substance of subparagraphs (e) and (f) of para-
graph 8 hereof, and such terms shall be deemed to
be contained therein whether so specifically incor-
porated therein or not.
10. No Producer shall after the termination of
the player's employment prevent such player from
continuing the use of any stage or screen name
used by such player. The name of a role owned
or created by the Producer, such as Tarzan or
Charlie Chan, belongs to the Producer and not to
the actor.
11. Stock players and term contract players, if
required to render services on New Year's Day.
Decoration Day, July Fourth, Labor Day, Thanks-
giving Day or Christmas, or if required to render
services on either the Sunday immediately pre-
ceding or the Sunday immediately succeeding any
usch holiday shall be entitled to an additional one-
sixth of the weekly rate. The foregoing, however,
shall not apply to stock players or contract players
whose compensation is paid to them on a picture
basis, or whose contract provides the maximum
number of pictures in which such actor can be
employed per year or other specified period.
12. The Producers agree that no waiver by any
actor of any term of this contract shall be re-
quested of the actor or effective unless the consent
of the Guild to the making of such request and
such waiver is first had and obtained. Such con-
sent may be oral but the Guild agrees that all oral
waivers will be confirmed by it in writing. The
Guild further agrees that upon being notified by
any Producer that a company is going on location,
it will appoint a deputy to be with the company
on location, with full power to grant such waivers.
The Guild further agrees that it will maintain a
twenty-four hour service at Los Angeles, Cali-
fornia, for the giving of waivers in accordance with
the provisions of this paragraph.
13. The term of this contract shall be ten years
from the date hereof. On April 1st of each calendar
year during this contract, commencing in 1938, a
meeting will be held at Los Angeles, California,
between a committee to be appointed by the Guild
and a committee to be appointed by the Producers.
The said committees shall at said meeting discuss
such modifications of this agreement as may be
suggested by either committee, and submit recom-
mendations to the Guild and to the Producers, and
if such recommendations are concurred in by the
Guild and the Producers, they shall become a part
of this contract. If the committees cannot reach
an agreement, either committee may demand arbi-
tration on the following subjects, and on the follow-
ing subjects only, namely:
(a) Minimum salaries for extras, day players,
stunt men and stock players.
(b) Hours of labor for actors receiving $500.00
a week or under. This includes actors employed
by the day receiving $83.33 per day or under.
The arbitration shall be by a Board of three arbi-
trators, one chosen by the Guild, one by the Pro-
ducers and the third jointly chosen, and in default
of agreement the third arbitrator shall be chosen
by the Board of Directors of the American Arbi-
tration Association. The decision of the arbitrators
on the subjects hereinbefore permitted to be arbi-
trated shall be final and the conditions imposed by
such arbitration relating to such subjects shall be-
come a part of this agreement from the time of the
decision of the arbitrators, or from such time as
the arbitrators shall decide that they shall become
effective.
14. The Guild shall forthwith appoint a commit-
tee and the producers shall forthwith appoint a
committee to perform the functions specified in
subdivision (g) and (h) of paragraph 3, subdivi-
sions (h) and (j) of paragraph 5, paragraph 25,
and paragraph 29 of this agreement. In default of
agreement between the two committees the matters
left open for clarification and further definition in
said paragraphs shall be settled by arbitration by a
board of three arbitrators, one chosen by the Guild,
one by the Producers and the third jointly chosen,
and in default of agreement, the third arbitrator
shall be chosen by the Board of Directors of the
American Arbitration Association. The decision of
the arbitrators on the subjects to be arbitrated
under this paragraph shall be final and the condi-
tions and definitions fixed by them shall become
a part of this agreement from the date of the
decision of the arbitrators, or from such date as
they shall fix in said decision for the conditions and
definitions to become effective.
15. The Guild agrees that during the term hereof
it will not call or engage in a strike affecting motion
picture production against any producer signatory
hereto, and will order its members to perform their
contracts with the Producers signatory hereto
even though other persons or groups of persons
are on strike.
16. A joint conciliation committee of four, two
to be appointed by the Guild and two by the Pro-
ducers shall sit within seven days after call to
attempt to conciliate any dispute between any
Producer and any actor with respect to which
dispute arbitration is herein provided for. If con-
ciliation fails all such disputes shall be settled by
arbitration in accordance with the laws of the
state of California, to be supplemented or modified
by such rules as may be agreed upon by a com-
mittee to be appointed by the Producers and a
similar committee to be appointed by the Guild.
Pending the agreement of such committee the arbi-
tration shall be by three arbitrators, one to be
selected by the Guild, one other by the Producers,
and the third to be chosen by the two first
selected. In the event of the inability of the first
two arbitators to agree upon the selection of the
third, the third arbitrator shall be designated by
the American Arbitration Association. It is under-
stood that this agreement provides for arbitration
only in the case of extras, stunt men, day players,
and free lance players. Recognizing with respect
to stock players and contract players the desir-
ability of arbitration in connection with disputes not
involving the right of termination of the contract
or the right to injunctive relief, the joint committee
provided for in paragraph 14 will endeavor to work
out and recommend the adoption by the signatories
of a proper basis for the arbitration of such dis-
putes, but such basis shall not be the subject of
arbitration. The Guild and the Producers agree
to cooperate in facilitating the prompt settlement
of disputes without resort to the machinery pro-
vided for in this paragraph. Any complaint may
be presented for any member of the Guild by the
Guild. The Producers agree not to discriminate
in any way against an actor presenting a com-
plaint.
17. All future contracts entered into by the Pro-
ducers shall, in so far as they are affected by any
of the provisions hereof, be deemed to include such
applicable provisions for the benefit of the actors
or Producers who are parties thereto. This contract
may be referred to as the "Producer-Screen Actors
Guild Basic Minimum Contact of 1937."
18. Nothing herein contained shall be construed
to prevent any actor from negotiating with and ob-
taining from any Producer better terms than are
herein provided for.
19. This contract does not apply to contracts
now existing between the Producers and actors.
Within sixty days after receipt by the Guild of the
written notice provided for in paragraph 2 hereof
any actor under such written contract who is or
has become a member of the Guild may give the
Producer written notice that he elects to come
under the terms of this contract and thereupon he
shall be subject to the terms hereof applicable to
such contract and such terms hereof shall be deemed
incorporated in the existing contract between the
producer and the actor and shall supersede all
conflicting provisions in said contract. Any actor
notifying any Producer, pursuant to the provisions
of this paragraph, of the actor's election to come
under the terms of this contract, by such election
agrees that any resignation from the Guild, or
suspension or expulsion by the Guild, shall be
equivalent to a failure, refusal or neglect on the
part of such actor to comply with his existing
contract with the Producer and shall give to the
Producer the same rights and remedies as are
provided in such existing contract in the event
of failure, refusal or neglect by the actor to comply
with his obligations thereunder.
20. This contract shall be ineffective for any
purpose as to any corporate Producer until ratified
by the Board of Directors of such Producer, except
in the following respects, namely :
(a) Subject to the qualifications hereinabove in
paragraph 2 set forth, the Producer agrees that
from and after the date hereof every contract it
enters into with an actor for a period of twelve
(12) weeks or more, or which gives the Producer
an option on the services of the actor for a period
of twelve (12) weeks or more, shall provide
that the actor agrees that the actor shall be a
member of the Guild in good standing and shall
remain so for the duration of said contract.
(b) Beginning June 1, 1937, the Producers
shall operate under the terms of this contract.
On or before June 10, 1937, each Producer shall
notify the Guild in writing whether or not its
Board of Directors has ratified this contract.
If a Producer notifies the Guild that its Board
of Directors has ratified this contract, then
from and after such date the contract shall be
in full force and effect, except that the June 1,
1937, commencement date of working conditions
shall apply. If the Producer notifies the Guild
that the Board of Directors has refused to
ratify this contract, then immediately this contract
shall be ineffective for all purposes.
21. Subject to the limitations hereinabove in
paragraph 2 set forth, nothing herein shall be so
construed as to prohibit the Guild from disciplining
its members under rules and regulations to be estab-
lished by it, but the imposition by the Guild of
such discipline, shall in no manner or to any
extent deprive the Producer of such rights as it
may have under any contract with any player who
may be subject to discipline or from enforcing the
provisions thereof as against any such player.
22. With respect to all pictures in production on
the date on which this agreement goes into effect,
the Guild will issue all permits necessary to avoid
interference with production.
23. This agreement shall be binding on the signa-
tories hereto and all parties who by reason of
mergers, consolidations, reorganizations, sale, as-
signment or the like shall succeed to or become
entitled to a substantial part of the production
business of any signatory. Each Producer agrees
that its signature to this agreement shall likewise
bind subsidiary and controlled companies engaged
in the production of motion pictures to the terms
of this agreement. This agreement may be executed
in any number of counterpart originals, each
counterpart to have the same effect and all such
counterparts shall be construed together as one
agreement.
24. With respect to motion picture production
in and around the city of New York, New York,
by any Producer, such motion picture production
shall be exempt from this agreement until the
777
Guild establishes a New York office, at which time
it will come under the terms of this agreement.
25. The operation of this agreement shall be
limited to motion picture production within the
territorial limits of continental United States of
America exclusive of Alaska, provided, however,
that the committees provided for in paragraph 14
shall attempt to work out rules covering motion
picture production outside the United States of
America by any Producer and if the committees
cannot agree the matter shall be settled by arbitra-
tion and the agreement of the committees or the
decision of the arbitrators shall become a part of
this agreement in like manner as provided in para-
graph 14.
26. In the event that children of tender years
are unable legally to join the Guild, the Guild will
issue the necessary permits so that any Producei
will not be hampered in using children in any pro-
duction. (The committee has agreed that the Guild
will not accept as members children under four-
teen years of age, and that the agreement shall
not apply in any respect with reference to such
children.)
27. The Guild agrees that if there is anything
in its articles of incorporation or its by-laws which
will prevent it from performing its obligations here-
under that it will take proper steps to amend
such articles or by-laws so as to correct any such
defect, and the Guild further agrees that during
the term of this agreement it will not adopt any
code for actors or any amendment to its articles
or by-laws which will be in conflict with its obli-
gations under this agreement. The Guild agrees
that it will cause its by-laws to be amended to
provide that each of its members shall be bound
by the provisions of this agreement.
28. Any person now or hereafter engaged in the
business of producing motion pictures in the United
States, shall be afforded the opportunity of becom-
ing signatory to this agreement either by signing
this agreement or counterparts thereof. Nothing
herein contained is intended nor shall it be con-
strued as intended to prevent the Guild from enter-
ing into contracts with any such persons on terms
more favorable to such persons than are afforded to
the signatories hereto.
29. Unless otherwise specifically defined herein
terms shall be given their common meaning in the
motion picture industry. "Actor" includes "extra."
The masculine gender includes the feminine and
neuter, and the singular number the plural, when
such construction is a reasonable one. "Day player"
is a player employed by the day other than an
extra or stunt man. A "stock player" is a player
employed for more than a specific picture and for
a term of at least twelve weeks (with or without
lay-offs) who receives less than $150.00 a week. A
"contract player" is a player employed not for a
specific picture but for a term of at least twelve
weeks (with or without lay-offs) who receives
$150.00 a week or more. The committees referred
to in paragraph 14 hereof shall work out appro-
priate rules for actors who do not come within any
of the foregoing definitions or within the definition
of a "free lance player" hereinabove in paragraph
6 set forth and the same provision as to agreement
and arbitration shall apply as in other cases to
be determined by the committees under para-
graph 14.
30. Wherever provision is made herein for the
appointment by the Producers of committees oi
arbitrators such appointment shall be made by the
mutual consent of the Producers signatory hereto.
However, if any such Producer shall not agree
as to any such appointment, such Producer, either
separately or jointly with any other Producer or
Producers who are unable to so agree, may appoint
committees or arbitrators, as the case may be, of
its or their own choosing, and in such event the
committees or arbitrators so separately appointed
shall function for and in behalf and only for and
in behalf of the Producer or Producers who shall
have made such separate appointment, and the
discussions, negotiations and arbitrations with re-
spect to which such separate appointment shall have
been made shall, as to the Producer or Producers
who shall have made such separate appointment, be
conducted with the committee or arbitrator so
separately appointed, and the agreement or decision
reached thereunder shall be binding upon the Guild
and the Producer or Producers who shall have
made such separate appointment but upon no
other Producer or Producers. The Guild in such a
case may appoint a separate committee or arbi-
trator, as the case may be, to deal with each
separate committee or arbitrator appointed by the
respective Producers but need not do so, and if
it so desires may designate one committee and
arbitrator to deal with the several committees or
arbitrators of the several Producers. Arbitration
as herein referred to does not mean the kind of
arbitration covered in paragraph 16.
31. Except as joint action by the Producers in
the appointment of committees or arbitrators i*
provided herein (but limited by paragraph 30) this
agreement shall be construed as a separate agree-
ment between the Guild and each Producer signa-
tory hereto, and it is expressly agreed that no
default or breach of this agreement by any Pro-
ducer shall constitute a default or breach hereunder
by, or impose liability on, any other Producer,
and it is further expressly agreed that a default
of the Guild as to one Producer shall not constitute
a default of the Guild as to any other Producer.
This agreement is a several agreement as to each
Producer, and is not joint and several.
32. Whenever the Producers are entitled here-
under to a permit or waiver from the Guild, the
Guild agrees to issue the same without cost.
33. News reels, travelogues, news and sports
commentators and persons rendering similar services
in short subjects shall be exempted from the opera-
tion of this agreement ; provided, however, that the
committees provided for in paragraph 14 shall
attempt to work out rules governing such produc-
tions and persons, and if the committees cannot
agree the matter shall be settled by arbitration
and the agreement of the committees or the decision
of the arbitrators shall become a part of this agree-
ment in like manner as provided in paragraph 14.
34. In any arbitration pursuant to the provisions
of this agreement, the decision of a majority of
the arbitrators shall be final, and such decision shall
be in writing.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF the parties hereto
have executed this instrument.
Hal Roach Studios, Inc., by Hal E. Roach,
President; R.K.O. -Radio Pictures, Inc., by Sam-
uel J. Briskin, Vice-President ; Paramount Pictures,
Inc., by Henry Herzbrun, Vice-President ; Warner
Bros. Pictures, Inc., by Herbert Freston, Assist-
ant Secretary; Twentieth Century-Fox Film Cor-
poration, by Joseph M. Schenck, Chairman; Metro-
Goldwyn-Mayer Corporation, by Louis B. Mayer,
Vice-President; Universal Pictures Co., Inc., by
J. P. Normanly, Vice-President ; Walter Wanger
Productions, Inc., by Loyd YV right, Secretary;
Selznick International Pictures, Inc., by Loyd
Wright, Secretary ; B. P. Schulberg Pictures, Inc.,
by B. P. Schulberg; Major Pictures Corporation,
by Loyd Wright, Secretary; Columbia Pictures
Corporation of California, Ltd., by Harry Cohn,
President; Samuel Goldwyn, Inc., Ltd., by Sam-
uel Goldwyn, President ; Screen Actors Guild, Inc.,
by Robert Montgomery.
778
Producer -Screen Actors Guild
MODIFICATION AGREEMENT OF 1938
(Text of the Basic Minimum Contract of 1937 appears on page 773)
AGREEMENT executed at Los Angeles, California, September 26, 1938, between SCREEN
ACTORS GUILD, INC., a California non-profit corporation, hereinafter called the "Guild,"
and HAL ROACH STUDIOS, INC., RKO-RADIO PICTURES, INC., PARAMOUNT
PICTURES, INC., WARNER BROS. PICTURES, INC., TWENTIETH CENTURY-FOX
FILM CORPORATION, LOEWS INCORPORATED, successor to METRO-GOLDWYN-
MAYER CORPORATION, UNIVERSAL PICTURES COMPANY, INC., WALTER
WANGER PRODUCTIONS, INC., SELZNICK INTERNATIONAL PICTURES, INC.,
COLUMBIA PICTURES CORPORATION OF CALIFORNIA, LTD., SAMUEL GOLD-
WYN INC., LTD., and such other parties who are producer signatories to the Producer-Screen
Actors Guild Basic Minimum Contract of 1937, who with the consent of the Guild may become
signatory hereto, hereinafter called the "Producers,"
WITNESSETH:
The "Producer-Screen Actors Guild Basic Mini
mum Contract of 1937", as amended and/or sup-
plemented by the report heretofore rendered by the
committee under paragraph 14 of said agreement
with respect to children of tender years, weather-
permitting calls, travel time for extras, and travel
time for day players, is hereinafter for convenience
referred to as the "Basic Agreement."
In consideration of the mutual agreements herein
contained, the Basic Agreement is hereby amended
and supplemented, as between the parties hereto,
as follows :
1. Subdivision (b) of paragraph 13 of the Basic
Agreement is hereby stricken and deleted there-
from, except as to extras; it being agreed that
hours of labor (including, but not limited to, the
twelve-hour rest period, overtime and any limita-
tion or restriction of hours of labor) shall not be
arbitrable (except of course individual disputes un-
der paragraph 16 of the Basic Agreement to the
extent the same are arbitrable thereunder) with
respect to any class of actors, other than extras,
during the term of the Basic Agreement, and the
Guild agrees that it will not at any time during
the term of the Basic Agreement make any re
quests concerning hours of labor (including, but
not limited to, the twelve-hour rest period, over-
time and any limitation or restriction of hours of
labor) with respect to any class of actors, other
than extras. The right to so arbitrate shall extend
to all persons employed as extras and adjusted tn
some other basis during such employment. Forth-
with upon the execution of this agreement the
arbitration now pending between the Guild and the
Producers signatory to the Basic Agreement shall
be continued as to each producer herein pending
final ratification of this agreement by such pro-
ducer and if and when ratified shall be dismissed
as between the Guild and such Producer.
2. A Standing Committee shall be appointed to
begin functioning on November 1, 1938 and to
perform, so long as it shall be in existence, the
following duties, and to have the following powers
to be exercised from time to time :
(a) To arbitrate on the demand of any party
hereto all the arbitrable matters under Basic
Agreement paragraphs 13(a), 13(b) except as
deleted by paragraph 1 of this agreement, 14,
3(g), 3(h), _ 5(h), 5(j), 25, 29, 33 and any
other provisions relating to arbitration. Unless
otherwise specifically indicated, arbitrate and
arbitration as used throughout this paragraph 2
means arbitration of the kind specified in para-
graphs 13 and 14 of the Basic Agreement and
with the same force and effect, and subject to
paragraph 34 of the Basic Agreement, but the
Standing Committee until its dissolution shall
be the arbitrator. The Report of Committee Ap-
pointed Pursuant to Paragraph 14 of the Basic
Agreement is incorporated herein by reference
as to weather-permitting calls for extras, weather-
permitting calls for day players, travel time for
extras, travel time for day players and children
of tender years, and the Standing Committee
shall have the same power of continuing arbitra-
tion over these subjects (except travel time for
day players) as is heretofore given for the other
subjects heretofore mentioned in this subpara-
graph. The report of such Committee under
paragraph 14 as to travel time for day players is
not subject to arbitration either by the Standing
Committee or otherwise, and is in effect stricken
out and new provisions substituted therefor by
subparagraph (m) of paragraph 7 hereof.
(b) The parties hereto realize that there is a
need for a solution of the extra problem, taking
into consideration the economic necessity of the
extra player and the economic conditions of the
Producers. Without authority to bind either
the Guild or the Producers, the Standing Com-
mittee shall investigate conditions of the motion
picture industry in an effort to solve the problem
of the extra player (with due regard for eco-
nomic conditions in the motion picture industry)
and from time to time shall make reports con-
taining recommendations to the Guild and to
the Producers concerning such matters. Nothing
in this subparagraph shall be deemed an admis
sion by the Guild that it has not the right to
arbitrate the subject matter of this subparagraph,
or an admission by the Producers that the Guild
has such right.
(c) To arbitrate the matters referred to in
paragraph 10 of this agreement concerning multi-
ple picture and limited term players (as therein
defined) as to which and to the extent arbitration
is therein provided for.
(d) To arbitrate and make rules for, if re-
quested by the Producers, any extension to other
types of conveyance of the rule contained in
paragraph 7(m) hereof, concerning transporta-
tion on a boat or train where a berth is provided.
(e) To arbitrate and make rules for, if re-
quested by the Guild, the subject of pre-record-
ings as treated in paragraph 8 of this agreement.
(f) To discharge the functions provided in
paragraph 13 of this agreement concerning waivers
for extras, so long as the paragraph is in force.
(g) To discharge the functions provided in
paragraph 16 of this agreement.
(h) To conduct all arbitrations pursuant to
paragraph 16 of the Basic Agreement, but the
Guild or any Producer may give notice in writ-
ing at any time that it elects to have an in-
dividual arbitration held pursuant to paragraph
16 of the Basic Agreement, and on such notice
(if given in writing to the other party (but not
to the Standing Committee) within seven days
after the demand for arbitration) the arbitration
shall be held under paragraph 16 of the Basic
Agreement and not by the Standing Committee.
(i) To conduct all arbitrations provided for in
paragraph 2 of the Basic Agreement. After any
dissolution of the Standing Committee, the mat-
ters arbitrable under paragraph 2 of the Basic
Agreement shall be arbitrable in like manner as
any dispute under paragraph 16 of the Basic
Agreement ; it being agreed that the Producers
shall have a continuing right of arbitration with
respect to any matters as to which arbitration is
provided for in paragraph 2 of the Basic Agree-
ment.
The Standing Committee shall consist of three
members, one to be appointed by the Guild, one by
the Producers and the third by the two first ap-
pointed. The power to appoint shall include the
power to remove or substitute from time to time.
The appointment of the Producer representative
on the Standing Committee shall be made by the
mutual consent of the Producers signatory here-
under. However, if any such Producer shall not
agree as to any such appointment, or shall at any
time desire to withdraw from any Standing Com-
mittee created hereunder, such Producer either
separately or jointly with any other Producer or
Producers signatory hereto who are unable to so
agree or who desire to so withdraw, may elect not
to be subject to the jurisdiction of such Standing
Committee, in which case a separate Standing Com-
mittee shall be created with respect to such Pro-
ducer or Producers, such separate Standing Com-
mittee to consist of three persons, one to be ap-
pointed by the Guild, one by the Producer or
Producers, making such election and the third by
the other two members. All of the provisions of
this agreement with respect to the standing Com-
mittee shall apply to any such separate Standing
Committee as between the Guild and the Producer
or Producers signatory hereto represented thereon,
and as between the Guild and such Producer or
Producers such separate Standing Committee shall
be vested with all of the powers of the Standing
Committee hereunder.
On or before October 10, 1938, the Guild shall
notify the Producers in writing of its appointment
of its representative on the Standing Committee.
On or before October 10, 1938, the Producers
shall notify the Guild in writing of their appoint-
ment of their representative on the Standing Com-
mittee. Any, representative so appointed may be
an employee or interested party. On or before
November 1, 1938, the two representatives shall
agree on the third member. In default of such ap-
pointment by either party by October 10, 1938,
or in default of agreement on the third member by
November 1, 1938, thereupon and at any time after
such default, and prior to such appointment or
agreement, either the Guild or the Producers may
elect to treat the Standing Committee as dissolved
by written notice so stating; provided, however,
that such election may not be exercised by reason
of the failure of any Producer to make such ap-
pointment, except as to such Producer.
Either the Guild or the Producers may dissolve
the Standing Committee at any time on thirty days'
written notice, and the same provision applies as
to any separate Standing Committee as between
the Guild and the Producer or Producers rep-
resented thereon.
Upon dissolution of the Standing Committee, the
Standing Committee shall complete any arbitrations
of the kind described in paragraph 16 of the Basic
Agreement then pending before it as to which the
taking of testimony has commenced with the same
effect as though it had not been dissolved. In the
event of any such dissolution, all rules adopted by
the Standing Committee within its powers here-
under shall remain in force, unless and until re-
voked or modified in any arbitration hereinafter in
this paragraph 2 mentioned.
Until the dissolution of the Standing Committee
the work of all committees provided for by the
Basic Agreement (other than the Conciliation Com-
mittee under paragraph 16 of the Basic Agreement)
and all provisions of the Basic Agreement with
respect to arbitration of any kind (except under
paragraph 16) shall be deemed suspended, but such
suspension shall end upon any dissolution of the
Standing Committee, and thereupon, upon written
demand of either the Guild or the Producers to be
made within six months of such dissolution, there
shall be a final arbitration pursuant to paragraph
14 of the Basic Agreement covering all the matters
presently arbitrable under said paragraph 14 or
which the Standing Committee is given specific
power to arbitrate under this agreement, and such
arbitration shall be final for the life of the Basic
Agreement (as modified and supplemented hereby).
Within the same period of six months either the
Guild or the Producers may demand an arbitration
under paragraph 13 on all the matters arbitrable
thereunder (except as limited by paragraph 1 of
this contract) and on the matter of pre-recordings,
and on subdivision (d) of this paragraph 2, and
thereafter such matters shall be arbitrable from
year to year under said paragraph 13. However,
this agreement is intended to be a final settlement
for the life of the Basic Agreement of all provisions
hereinafter contained, except as hereinafter other-
wise specified, and such provisions (except as here-
inafter otherwise specified) are not subject to ar-
bitration whether by the Standing Committee or
otherwise.
The compensation of the Producer representative
on the Standing Committee shall be paid by the
Producers, and the compensation of the Guild
representative on the Standing Committee shall be
paid by the Guild. All other expenses incurred
in connection with the functioning of the Standing
Committee, including the compensation of the third
member thereof, shall be borne and paid one-half
by the Guild and one-half by the Producers, unless
the parties otherwise agree from time to time. The
compensation of the third member of the Standing
Committee, the incurring of expense in connection
with such committee, and the determination of
any other questions arising in connection with the
employment of such third member and assistance
or clerical help shall be mutually agreed upon be-
tween the Guild representative on the Standing
Committee and the Producer's representative on
the Standing Committee. Such third member on
the Standing Committee shall be appointed an-
nually (for the term from November 1st to Oc-
tober 31st of the following year) by said Guild
representative and said Producer's representative,
and may be removed at any time by said repre-
sentatives acting jointly.
It is agreed that any member or members of
the Standing Committee shall have the right, at
any time, to make an independent investigation of
any facts relating to any matter, claim or contro-
versy before the Standing Committee, and that
such investigation need not be made in the pres-
ence of any other member or members of the
Standing Committee or in the presence of any of
the parties interested in or parties to such matter,
claim or controversy. It is further agreed that any
member of the Standing Committee shall have the
right, at any time, to communicate with any person
interested in or a party to any matter, claim or
controversy before the Standing Committee regard-
ing anything involved therein, and that such com-
munication need not be made in the presence of
any other persons interested in or parties to such
matter, claim or controversy, or in the presence
of any other members of the Standing Committee.
Hearings before the Standing Committee shall not
be public, and the Standing Committee may act
informally.
The Standing Committee shall not determine or
arbitrate any matter hereunder, until and unless
conciliation shall have been attempted in like man-
ner as provided in paragraph 16 of the Basic
Agreement. The foregoing does not relate to the
functions of the Standing Committee with respect
to the issuance of waivers as provided in paragraph
13 hereof, or with respect to disputes under para-
graph 20 hereof. The provisions of paragraph 30
of the Basic Agreement shall apply with respect to
the Producer's committee herein provided for. Any
Producer representative on the Standing Committee
may be appointed as a member of the Producer's
committee herein provided for, and any representa-
tive of the Guild on the Standing Committee may
be appointed as a member of the Guild's committee
herein provided for.
3. The provisions of paragraph 18 of the "Screen
Actors Guild Minimum Contract for Free Lance
Players" (hereinafter referred to as the "free lance
contract") with respect to the twelve-hour rest
period (as amended hereby) shall be deemed incor-
porated in all stock and contract player contracts
while the base rate of compensation thereunder is
$1,000.00 per week or less, and in all day player
contracts, except that such stock players, contract
players and day players may be required to waive
the rest period, but such waiver shall not affect
their right to additional compensation as specified
in paragraph 18 of the free lance contract on ac-
count of such waiver. Free lance players receiving
in excess of $500.00 per week but not in excess of
$1,000.00 per week and whose contracts provide for
less than a three weeks' guaranty, may also be
required to waive the rest period (without affecting
their right to additional compensation) in any case
where the rest period is less than that required
solely by reason of time consumed for makeup,
wardrobe, hair-dress and the like in excess of the
allowable time for such purposes, but such waiver
may be required only to the extent of such excess
time.
4. Free lance players receiving $500.00 per week
or under, free lance players receiving in excess of
$500.00 per week but not in excess of $1,000.00 per
week and whose contracts provide for less than a
three weeks guaranty, stock and contract players
while receiving $500.00 per week or under shall
receive overtime pay as follows :
(a) Except as hereinafter otherwise provided,
such players shall receive overtime pay on the
basis of time and one-half for overtime in excess
of forty-eight hours worked in any week and
on the basis of double time for overtime in excess
of ten hours worked in any day.
For the purpose of computing overtime, the player's
week in every instance shall commence on the day
of the week on which he is first placed on salary.
In case of any suspension or interruption of any
player's employment at any time for seven con-
secutive days or more, for any reason whatsoever,
thereafter such player's week shall commence on
the day of the week when he is again placed on
salary. Where compensation is payable for less
than a week the number of hours worked shall be
prorated on a forty-eight-hour (six-day) basis but
nothing herein shall affect the player's right to
overtime with reference to the ten-hour period on
any one day. To illustrate the foregoing, if the
final fractional week of a player's employment
consists of Thursday, Friday and Saturday overtime
shall be computed only as to the period beyond
twenty-four hours. As a further illustration, if
the final fractional week of a player's employment
consists of Friday, Saturday and Sunday, overtime
shall be computed only as to the period beyond
twenty-four hours, provided, however, that in the
latter instance credit for work of stock players on
Sunday shall be given as elsewhere in this agree-
ment provided. To the extent that any weekly or
daily overtime is caused by travel time (whether
at the beginning, during or at the end of the day),
pay for such overtime shall be computed on the
basis of straight time instead of time and one-half
or double time. All overtime pay, pursuant to the
provisions of this paragraph 4, shall be computed
on the basis of fifteen-minute units, except that
any overtime to free lance players which is payable
on the basis of time and one-half or double time
shall be computed on the basis of one-hour units.
For the purpose of computing the number of hours
worked during any week, the number of hours
worked each day during such week shall be com-
puted on the basis of six-minute units. In the de-
termination of the number of hours worked in any
week by any stock player, for the purpose of com-
puting the weekly overtime, if any, of such stock
player, the actual work time of such stock player
on Sunday shall be counted at the rate of one and
one-half hours per hour. In the determination of
the number of hours worked in any week by any
player of any of the classes hereinbefore in this
paragraph referred to, for the purpose of com-
puting the weekly overtime, if any, of such player,
there shall be excluded all time during such week
with respect to which any daily overtime com-
pensation shall be payable to such player. All
overtime accruing hereunder to any free lance
player, stock player or contract player shall be
payable not later than the studio pay day of the
calendar week next following the expiration of the
player's week in which such overtime accrues. Any
failure through error to pay all or any part of
any overtime compensation shall give the player
no right except to collect the amount so unpaid.
For the purpose of applying the foregoing provi-
sions of this paragraph, it is agreed as follows : one
hour's pay on the basis of straight time shall be
l/48th of the base weekly salary, one hour's pay
on the basis of time and one-half shall be l/32nd
of the base weekly salary and one hour's pay on
the basis of double time shall be l/24th of the
base weekly salary. Fifteen minutes pay on the
basis of straight time shall be l/92nd of the base
weekly salary. The provisions of subdivision IV
of subparagraph (c) of paragraph 6 of the Basic
Agreement are hereby stricken and deleted there-
from and shall have no further force or effect
whatsoever. Where a free lance contract is exe-
cuted before the effective date of this agreement
but continues after such effective date, the free
lance player shall receive overtime pay on the
basis of this agreement after such effective date
instead of the overtime pay now provided for, if
any.
5. Except as hereinafter otherwise expressly pro-
vided, day players shall receive pay on the basis
of time and one-half instead of straight time for
Sunday work, and for work on New Year's Day,
Decoration Day, July Fourth, Labor Day, Thanks-
giving Day or Christmas, except that this increase
shall not apply to Sunday work on an overnight lo-
cation of the type described in the first clause of
the second sentence of II of paragraph 7(m) here-
of. Except as hereinafter otherwise expressly pro-
vided, day players receiving $200.00 per day or
less shall receive pay for overtime on the basis of
time and one-half instead of straight time, except
that with respect to any Sunday or holiday as to
which any such day player is entitled to time and
one-half, .pay for overtime shall be computed on
the same basis as during the first eight hours,
i. e. the player will not receive time and one-half
on time and one-half. Overtime pay for day
players shall be computed on the basis of one-hour
units, except that to the extent overtime is caused
by travel time from location, it shall be computed
on the basis of fifteen-minute units. To the extent
that any overtime of any day player is caused by
travel time (whether at the beginning, during or
at the end of the day) pay for such overtime shall
be computed on the same basis as such day player's
pay during the first eight hours of his work day.
S]/2. Whenever any of the six holidays mentioned
in the Basic Agreement falls on a Sunday, such
holiday for all purposes of . this agreement shall be
deemed to fall on the Monday next succeeding and
the Sunday shall be deemed a Sunday preceding
such holiday.
6. Extra players shall receive pay on the basis
of time and one-half instead of straight time for
Sunday work. Overtime on Sundays shall be com-
puted on the basis of two-hour units, except that
such part of such overtime as is caused by travel
time from location shall be computed on the basis
of fifteen-minute units. As to extra players era
ployed on a weekly basis, the foregoing increase is
in lieu of the increased rate provided for in the
fifth paragraph of subdivision (b) of paragraph 2
of Industrial Welfare Commission Order No. 16-a
and is not in addition thereto. The provisions of
this paragraph are subject to the jurisdiction of
the Standing Committee and to arbitration under
paragraph 13 of the Basic Agreement after the
dissolution of the Standing Committee.
7. For the purpose of the rest period, hours of
work and overtime, the period from the time the
player is required to and does report at the studio,
or at any other place at which he is required to
and does report until the time such player is
finally dismissed for the day, shall constitute work
time continuously and without interruption, except
as follows:
(a) Allowable meal periods shall not be counted
as work time for any purpose. The first meal
period shall not be later than five and one-half
hours after the player's first call, nor, in the case
of a night recall, more than five and one-half
hours after such night recall. The next meal
period shall be a reasonable time after the first
meal period. Meal periods shall be not less
than one-half hour nor more than one hour;
(b) Study of lines or script, except during
the period between reporting and dismissal, shall
not be counted as work time for any purpose;
(c) Interviews for publicity purposes held at
the request of the Producer shall not be counted
as work time for any purpose if held on any day
on which the player is not otherwise working for
the Producer. Such interviews for publicity pur-
poses held on any day on which the player is
otherwise working for the Producer shall not
be counted as work time if held after the player's
dismissal for the day, unless, prior to such dis-
missal, the player shall have worked eight hours
or more, in which case the time actually con-
sumed in such interview shall be work time for
all purposes. Publicity interviews during lunch
time are not work time for any purpose.
(d) Tests, fittings and auditions before the em-
ployment of stock players and contract players
or before the starting date of free lance players,
shall not be counted as work time for any pur-
pose. The present rule of paragraph 5(e) of the
Basic Agreement as to day players still applies,
and shall include auditions on the same basis as
tests. Tests, fittings and auditions after the em-
ployment of stock players and contract players or
after the starting date of day players and free
lance players, shall be work time. Tests, fittings
and auditions which occur during the consecutive
lay-off period of any stock player or contract
player shall be deemed to break such lay-off
period unless a waiver is obtained from the
Guild.
(e) The existing rules as to free lance players
with respect to publicity stills, as contained in
the free lance contract, shall continue in effect.
As to stock players and contract players, services
rendered in connection with publicity stills shall
be work time except that such services (not ex-
ceeding eight hours) on any day in which such
players are not otherwise working, shall not be
counted as work time for any purpose, except for
the purpose of breaking the consecutive lay-off,
and except that such day shall not be considered
lay-off.
(f) Services rendered by a stock player or a
contract player in retakes after completion of
ordinary photography of the player's role, and
in added scenes and changes after the completion
of the ordinary photography of the picture, when
such services are rendered on the same day on
which such player works in a different picture,
whether at the same or a different studio, shall
not be counted as work time for the purpose of
computing the overtime, if any, worked by such
player in excess of ten hours during such day,
and shall not be counted as work time for the
purpose of computing the twelve-hour rest period,
but this provision shall not be applied by a Pro-
ducer to the same stock or contract player with
respect to more than three days in any week, or
with respect to more than six weeks in any
year. Such services shall be counted as work
time for the purposes of computing the overtime,
if any, worked by such player in excess of forty-
eight hours during the week in which such serv-
ices are rendered, but to the extent that the
weekly overtime for such week is caused by
such services, it shall be computed on the basis of
straight time instead of on the basis of time and
one-half. Where the period intervening between
the time of such player's dismissal for the day in
connection with the picture in which he is then
currently employed and the time such player is
requested to and does report for retakes, added
scenes, or changes, as aforesaid is two hours or
more, such intervening time shall not be counted
as work time for any purpose. In special cases
the Guild may by waiver give its consent to the
application of the provisions of this subdivision
(f) to added scenes and changes made by stock
and contract players after the completion of
ordinary photography of the role and before the
completion of ordinary photography of the picture.
(g) Story, song and production conferences on
any day on which the player is not otherwise
working, shall not be counted as work time for
any purpose, except that if the same occur at the
request of the Producer during the consecutive
lay-off period of any stock or contract player,
such lay-off period shall be deemed broken there-
by, and except also that this provision shall not
be construed to interrupt the continuous or con-
secutive employment of day players or free
lance players.
(h) Time for makeup, wardrobe, hair-dress and
the like at the beginning of the player's work day
shall not be work time for any purpose unless
the Producer requests that the assistance of
other persons be employed in connection there
with, in which case the Producer shall be en-
titled to a credit of one hour and a half against
work time for the purpose of computing the rest
period, and to a credit of one hour against work
time for all other purposes. The Producer shall
be entitled to such credits whether or not the
lull amount of the time to be credited as afore-
said is actually used, unless the player is in-
structed to and does report on the set, made up,
prior to the expiration of the full amount of the
time to be credited as aforesaid, in which case
the amount of such credit shall not exceed the
time actually consumed in connection with such
makeup, wardrobe, hair-dress and the like before
the player reports on the set as aforesaid. With
respect to free lance players receiving in excess
of $500.00 per week but not in excess of $1,000.00
per week and whose contracts provide for less
than a three-weeks guaranty, any time for makeup,
wardrobe, hair-dress and the like to the extent
that the same constitutes work time hereunder,
shall not be counted as work time for the pur-
pose of computing the overtime, if any, worked
by such player in excess of ten hours during
such day, but it shall be counted for the purpose
of computing the overtime, if any, worked by
such player in excess of forty-eight hours during
the week in which the same occurs. If, on the
player's first call for the day, he is required to
report "madeup" and ready on the set at a
specified time, and unless the Producer requests
that the assistance of other persons be employed
in connection with makeup, wardrobe, hair-dress
or the like, the player's work time shall commence
when he does so report. If the player on his
first call for the day be requested by the Pro-
ducer to report to receive the assistance of other
persons in connection with makeup, wardrobe,
hair-dress or the like, his work time shall start
when he does so report pursuant to such request,
subject, however, to the credits, allowances and
rules hereinbefore in this subparagraph provided in
such case. Tf the player be renuested bv the
Producer to report at a stated time for makeup,
wardrobe, hair-dress or the like, such time, if
the plaver so reports for his first call for the day.
starts the plaver's work time for the day. with
only the allowances or credits provided for in
this subparagraph, even if the assistance of other
persons be not emploved in connection with such
mnketip. wardrohe. hair-dress or the like.
(il Fadio services rendered at the request of
the Producer bv stock, contract, multiple picture
and limited term nlavers. rehearsa's therefor, and
anv period immediatelv prior to the rendition of
such services which otherwise would not be work
time, shall not be work time for anv purpose if
the plaver receives reasonable additional compen-
sation for such services. Tf at any time when any
such plaver is not currentlv encaeed in rendering
services in the production of a picture, such plaver
shall at the request of the Producer render services
in connection with theatrical or personal appear-
ances or radio, or in connection with rehearsals
therefor, such services and as well anv period on
the same dav immediatelv prior thereto which
otherwise would not be work time, snail not be
work time for any purnose except that the plaver
shall receive compensation at the rate of his h^se
weekly salarv while rendering such services. (Of
course, if such a plaver works in a picture during
a week and also renders such services, the compu-
tation of weeklv overtime is based on a pro rata
week. For exnmnle. if such a plaver's week begins
Mondav. and such nlaver does such work on Mon-
day, Tuesdav. and Wednesday, starts a picture
Thursday. a"d works twenty-five hours on such
picture on Thursday, Friday and Saturday, such
plaver has worked an hour overtime for the pur-
pose of the fortv-eight hour week.l Tf at anv time
when the plaver is currentlv engaeed in rendering
services in connection with the production of a pic-
ture the Producer shall request such plaver to
render services in connection with theatrical or
personal annearances. or in rehearsals in connec-
tion therewith, such services and as well any
period immediatelv prior thereto which otherwise
would not be work time, shall not be work time
for anv purpose if the player receives reasonable
additional compensation for such services. One
personal apnearance of any such player renuested
by the Producer in connection with the opening
of any picture in which such plaver has performed,
one rehearsal in connection therewith and any
period immediatelv prior thereto which otherwise
would not be work time, shall not be work time
for any purpose. Personal appearances requested
of any such player by the Producer in connection
with any benefit approved by the Theater Author-
ity, Tnc. ("so long as the same has the sanction of
the Guild') or by any similar agency substituted
therefor which at the time has the sanction of the
Guild, rehearsals in connection therewith and any
period immediately prior thereto which otherwise
would not be work time, shall not be work time
for any purpose.
(j) If the player is working at midnight of any
day then his hours of work for such day shall be
computed until the player has been dismissed sub-
sequently to midnight, subject, of course, to all
exceptions and deductions herein provided for.
Hours of work for the following day shall, except
as otherwise provided in this agreement, be com-
puted from the time when the player, after having
been so dismissed subsequent to midnight, is next
required to and does report. Of course, nothing
herein shall derogate from the rule that where a
free lance player works after 12:01 A. M. of any
day he has worked on that day for the purpose of
the six-day week.
(k) If the period intervening between the dis-
missal of any player and the time when the player
subsequently reports the same day pursuant _ to
call is four hours or more, such intervening period
shall not be work time for the purpose of com-
puting the overtime, if any, in excess of ten hours
worked by such player during such day; but this
provision shall apply to no class of players except
stock and contract players whose guaranteed em-
ployment is not less than at the rate of ten out
of thirteen weeks, or at the same rate for a longer
but not a shorter period.
(1) Rehearsals shall be counted as work time.
Reading of lines, acting, singing or dancing, after
employment, in the presence and under the super-
vision of a representative of the Producer (except
as herein otherwise provided with respect to tests
and auditions) shall be deemed to be rehearsals.
(ml With respect to travel time it is agreed
as follows :
Definitions
I. Studio Zone: With respect to studios situ-
ated in Fos Angeles. California, or its environs,
the "studio zone" shall include all territory within
the radius of six miles from the intersection of
Fifth and Rossmore Streets, Los Angeles, Califor-
nia, and such other territory (such as the present
Columbia Ranch as is now generally recognized
as being within the "studio zone." With respect
to studios not situated in Fos Angeles or its en;
virons. a similar territory as the "studio zone
and similar rules in relation thereto shall be agreed
upon between the Guild and the Producers, and
in default of such agreement, such territory and
such rules (which shall conform as nearlv as pos-
sible to the rules herein set forth shall be deter-
mined by the Standing Committee, or. if the
Standing Committee be dissolved, by arbitration
under paragraph 13 of the Basic Agreement and.
in the latter event, such arbitration may be held
whenever the situation arises and is not limited
to yearly arbitrations.
II. Location and Overnight Location: ^"ca-
tion shall m»an anv place of work not at the Pro-
ducer's studio which is outside the studio zone.
Overnight location shall be anv location where the
player is lodged or offered lodging by the Producer
at or near the location for one or more nights; or
anv location which takes overnight to reach by or-
dinary means of transportation. Ordinary means
of transportation as used in this agreement does
not include airplane transportation.
III. Near Location: A near location shall be
any place which can be reached from the Pro-
ducer's studio within twenty-four hours of travel
by ordinary means of transportation.
IV. Distant Location: A distant location
shall be any place which cannot be reached from
the Producer's studio within twenty-four hours
of travel by ordinary means of transportation.
V. Application of Rules: The provisions of
this subdivision (m) except as otherwise specific-
ally limited herein, shall apply to and only to the
respective classes of players to whom the provi-
sions of paragraph 7 of this agreement are applic-
able, to-wit: day players, free lance players
receiving $500.00 or less per week, free lance
players receiving in excess of $500.00 per week
but not in excess of $1,000.00 per week and whose
contracts provide for less than a three-weeks
guarantee, stock and contract players while receiv-
ing $500.00 per week or under, and for the pur-
pose only of computing the rest period, contract
players while receiving in excess of $500.00 per
week but not in excess of $1,000.00 per week.
As to the respective classes of players described
in paragraph 10 hereof, such of the rules in this
subdivision (m) set forth as are applicable to
such respective classes shall be operative.
VI. Place of Reporting and Dismissal: Except
when already at an overnight location, players
shall be required to report only at the producer's
studio or within the studio rone, and shall be dis-
missed only at the place of reporting (within the
studio zone) or the Producer's studio. When the
player is returning from such overnight location
he shall be dismissed only at the Producer's studio
or the place of reporting (within the studio zone)
and not at the overnight location. This rule shall
not derogate from any rule hereinafter set forth
with regard to traveling to location at the com-
mencement of an engagement.
VII. Travel Time Is Work Time: Except as
otherwise provided in this agreement, all time
spent by any player in traveling at the request of
the Producer between any place at which he is
required to and does report and any location
(both to and from) shall be travel time, and, as
such, shall be work time, subject to all deduc-
tions, limitations and exceptions for which pro-
vision is made in this agreement.
VIII. Time Between Photographing and Trav-
eling: Except as in this agreement otherwise pro-
vided, time intervening between the completion of
a player's work on any day and the commence-
ment of traveling on the same day shall be travel
time.
IX. Maximum Travel Time: Time spent in
traveling shall not be included as travel time or
work time to the extent of more than eight hours
in any twenty-four hours.
X. Travel on Seventh Day: The six-day basis
as set forth in paragraph 5 of the free lance con-
tract applies to a week where the free lance player
has on e^ch day during the week either worked
or traveled but does not apply to any case where
pay for the seventh day is caused by seven days
consecutive traveling whether or not the seventh
day falls within the same week.
XI. Transportation and Lodging Furnished:
As to all players the Producer shall furnish rea-
sonable transportation in going to and from loca-
tion and shall furnish reasonable meals and (where
the Producer requires the player to stay overnight)
lodging to the player on location.
XII. Deduction of Allowable Meal Periods:
Reasonable meal periods shall be given during
traveling, and allowable meal periods of not less
than one-half hour nor more than one hour each
shall be deducted from travel time.
XIII. Deduction of Travel Time Otherwise
Compensated For: Any travel time for which the
player is compensated as work time shall not be
paid for as travel time.
XIV. Computation of Overtime Caused by
Travel Time: All overtime, to the extent the
same is caused by travel time (whether the travel-
ing be at the beginning, during or at the end of
the day) shall be paid for on the basis of straight
time. All overtime, to the extent the same is
caused by travel time (whether the traveling be
at the beginning, during or at the end of the day)
shall be computed on the basis of fifteen minute
intervals, except as otherwise specified in the next
sentence hereof. All time spent by the day player
in traveling to location on the same day he works
is work time for all purposes, but if such time
spent by the day player in traveling to location
causes overtime, such overtime shall be paid for
as straight time to the extent it is so caused, and
such overtime shall be computed in one-hour
intervals.
XV. Travel Time Re Distant Locations at
Beginning or End of Player's Term of Employ-
ment: (This rule does not apply to day players.)
The time spent in traveling to a distant location
at the beginning of a player1! term of employ-
ment shall not be work time or travel time for
any purpose. The time spent in traveling from
a distant location at the end of a player'» term of
employment shall be travel time except as in this
agreement otherwise provided. If the player ar-
rives at the distant location at or before 1 :00
o'clock P. M., his compensation shall begin with
that day (whether he worki that day or not),
and any work or travel that day after such arrival
shall be work time or travel time, as the case may
be, except as in this agreement otherwise provided.
If the player arrives at the distant location after
1:00 o'clock P. M., such day shall not be work
time or travel time for any purpose, unless the
player actually works on such day after such ar-
rival, in which case his compensation shall begin
with that day, and the time worked shall be work
time, except as in this agreement otherwise pro-
vided. If the player does not work on such day
his compensation shall begin with the next day.
XVI. Transportation and Travel Time on
Overnight Locations to and From Hotel or Camp:
On overnight locations the Producer shall provide
transportation to and from the hotel or camp, and
except as in this agreement otherwise provided,
the time to and from the hotel or camp shall be
travel time, except for an allowance of time actu-
ally spent in going to or from the hotel or camp
at the beginning or end of the player's work day
(including the day of arrival and departure even
though there is travel to or from the location on
such day prior to or after, respectively, such
travel to or from the hotel or camp) not exceed-
ing forty-five minutes each way. The time so
allowed shall not be counted as work time or
travel time for any purpose, including the com-
putation of the rest period.
XVII. Intervening Time Between Dismissal
and Travel to Overnight Locations: Except as
otherwise provided in this agreement, the period
intervening between the player's dismissal for
the day and the commencement of travel to an
overnight location the same day, shall be travel
time, unless such intervening period is two hours
or more, in which case such intervening period
shall not be work time or travel time for any
purpose, but this provision shall not affect the
right of day players to a minimum of one day's
pay for such day.
XVIII. Intervening Time Between Dismissal
and Travel From Locations: The period inter-
vening between the player's dismissal for the day
and the commencement of travel on the same
day from an overnight location shall not be work
time or travel time for any purpose, except as
to day players, for whom such intervening period
shall be travel time, except as in this agreement
otherwise provided.
XIX. Rest Period Re Outdoor Photography:
Where a Producer is photographing on a loca-
tion other than an overnight location, the twelve-
hour rest period shall be cut to ten hours on
not to exceed three consecutive days at any one
time, where, by reason of the elements, it is
necessary to do so to obtain outdoor photography
of the kind required.
XX. Travel to or From Overnight Locations
on Boat or Train Where Sleeping Accommoda-
tions Are Provided: Where more than one night's
travel (by ordinary means of transportation) is
required to reach a location, and the player is
given a berth on a boat or train, the time spent
in traveling to or from such location shall not
be work time or travel time for the purpose of
computing the twelve-hour rest period or for
the purpose of computing the ten-hour day; it
being agreed, however, that time spent in travel-
ing on the day of arrival at such location, after
9:00 o'clock A. M. of such day, shall be counted
for the purpose of computing the ten-hour day
if the player works on such day, and provided
further that the interval between the completion
of travel on such day and the commencement
784
of work shall not be considered travel time or
work time for any purpose. Nothing herein con-
tained shall be construed to interrupt the player's
right to remain or go on salary if the player is
otherwise entitled thereto.
XXI. Overnight Trip to or From Location:
Where an overnight trip to or from location is
required, and the same takes at least seven
hours to reach and the play is given a berth on
a boat or train, the time spent in such traveling
to or irjm such location (whether at the begin-
ning, during or at the end of the engagement)
shall not be work time or travel time for any
purpose.
XXII. Rest Period Re Arrival at Overnight
Location After Nine O'Clock P. M.: Where
players arrive at an overnight location after 9:00
o'clock P. M. and do not work that night, the rest
period with respect to their first call following
such arrival shall be ten hours instead of twelve
hours.
XXIII. Travel Time of Day Players on Days
on Which They Do Not Render Services: (This
rule applies only to day players.) If day players
are transported to or from location on any day
on which they do not render services, their mini-
mum travel pay for the day in which such travel-
ing is commenced shall be as follows :
(a) If traveling is commenced before
twelve o'clock noon, a full check.
(b) If traveling is commenced between
twelve o'clock noon and six o'clock P. M., a
half check, unless the actual travel time ex-
ceeds four hours in which event actual travel
time (not exceeding eight hours) shall be
paid.
(c) If traveling is commenced after six
o'clock P. M., actual traveling time (not ex-
ceeding eight hours) shall be paid.
XXIV. Traveling on Sundays and Certain
Holidays: The holidays herein referred to shall
be New Year's Day, Decoration Day, July
Fourth, Labor Day, Thanksgiving Day and Chris-
mas, and are hereinafter referred to as "holidays."
Where a day player travels on any Sunday or
on any holiday he receives time and one-half for
such traveling time. Where a free lance player
travels on holidays or on the Sundays immedi-
ately preceding or succeeding such holiday in
going to location, he receives an additional one-
sixth of his base weekly rate as compensation
for such traveling ; but where a free lance player
travels on holidays or the Sundays immediately
preceding or succeeding such holidays coming
from location, he receives merely straight time
for the day spent in traveling and no extra com-
pensation. The last preceding sentence only ap-
plies on days when the free lance player does no
work and if he does work, of course, the rule of
paragraph 19 of the free lance contract applies.
As a further limitation of the rule for free lance
players in going to location, if the trip takes at
least four days and the holiday or the Sunday is
not the starting date of the trip, then he receives
merely straight time and not any additional com-
pensation for such traveling on the holiday or the
Sunday. Where a contract player travels on such
holidays or the Sundays immediately preceding
or succeeding the same, the same rule applies
as is set forth for free lance players above, if
the contract player does not work on such day.
Where a stock player travels on such holidays
or on the Sundays immediately preceding or suc-
ceeding the same, the same rule applies as is set
forth above for free lance players if the stock
player does no work on such day. Where a stock
player works on any Sunday and travels on the
same Sunday, the same rate of compensation of
his hours applies to the time he travels as to the
time he works, except as herein otherwise pro-
vided.
XXV. Engagement of Player Out of State:
Nothing herein contained shall prevent a Producer
from engaging a player outside of California (if
such player has not gone out of California for
the purpose of evading this rule) to report in
California or to report at any location, and in
any such case the Producer shall not be required
to pay for or provide transportation of such player
to the place of reporting, or to pay such player
for any time spent in traveling thereto ; nor shall
the Producer be required to pay for or provide
transportation of such player, at the end of the
engagement back to the place where such player
was engaged, or to pay such player for any time
spent in traveling back to the place where luch
player was engaged ; such player may be dis-
missed on location. This does not limit the sec-
ond sentence of I hereof.
XXVI. General: Nothing in this subpara;
graph (m) contained shall affect the day players'
or the free lance players' right to continuous
employment, or be deemed to interrupt the com-
pensation of stock players, contract players or
those playes referred to in paragraph 10 hereof
as "multiple picture players" and "limited term
players" if and when such compensation is pay-
able pursuant to their respective contracts.
Of course, any period during which the player fails
or refuses, or is unable because of disability, to
render services, and any period during which the
player at his own request is excused from rendering
services, shall not be work time for any purpose.
The foregoing provisions of this paragraph 7 shall
only apply to day players, the respective classes
of players referred to in paragraph 4 hereof, and,
with respect only to the computation of the rest
period, to contract players while receiving in excess
of $500.00 per week but not in excess of $1,000.00
per week. Nothing in this paragraph 7 shall be
deemed to break the continuous employment of day
and free lance players or derogate from their right
to receive the same or take away the right of stock
or contract players to receive salary unless they
are on lay-off or suspension or unless pursuant to
the provisions of their contracts they are otherwise
not entitled to receive salary.
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary herein
contained, the question of additional exceptions to
and deductions from work time shall be arbitrated
by the Standing Committee at any time upon the
written request of any Producer or Producers. If
the Standing Committee shall be dissolved, any
such question, upon the written request of any
Producer or Producers, may be arbitrated at any
time in like manner as provided in paragraph 13 of
the Basic Agreement, but such arbitration may be
held whenever the request is made and is not
limited to yearly arbitrations. If the question of
any additional exception to or deduction from work
time be so arbitrated (except any arbitration of any
matter pursuant to any other provisions of this
agreement as to which arbitration is provided for
expressly), the Guild shall have the right, in the
same arbitration, to arbitrate any other question
with respect to the computation of work time (in-
cluding those expressly covered by this agreement),
but the Guild shall have such right only if it serves
upon the Producer or Producers who shall have
requested such arbitration, written notice of its
election to exercise such right within twenty days
days after such request shall have been served on
the Guild. If the Guild shall elect to exercise such
right of arbitration, the Producer or Producers
who shall have requested such arbitration shall
have the right, in the same arbitration, to arbi-
trate any question with respect to the computation
of work time and, at their election, any other ques-
tion or questions with respect to hours of labor in-
cluding, but not limited to, the twelve-hour rest peri-
od, overtime and limitations or restrictions of hours
of labor. If any such Producer or Producers elect as
aforesaid to arbitrate "any other question or ques-
tions with respect to hours of labor," the Guild
shall have the same right as to such Producer or
Producers. Any arbitration as aforesaid shall be
only as between and shall only bind the Guild and
785
the Producer or Producers who shall have re-
quested such arbitration. The decision of the arbi-
trators in any arbitration pursuant to the fore-
going shall be immaterial and inadmissible in any
subsequent arbitration between the Guild and any
other Producer or Producers not parties to the prior
arbitration. If on a Producer's request to arbitrate,
the Guild elects to arbitrate other matters (as
above set forth) such Producer, within ten days
after the Guild shall have served notice of such
election on such Producer, may elect to dismiss the
arbitration by written notice to the Guild.
8. As to all day players and free lance players,
neither tests, auditions, fittings, publicity stills nor
pre-recordings after employment, but before the
starting date of such employment, shall start the
continuous and consecutive employment of such
players, but such players shall be paid for the day
or days on which they render services in connection
with pre-recordings. The foregoing provisions in
so far as they apply to pre-recordings. may be
revoked or modified by the Standing Committee
hereinafter provided for or, in case of the disso-
lution of the Standing Committee, in any subse-
quent arbitration under paragraph 13 of the Basic
Agreement ; it being agreed that in the event of
the dissolution of the Standing Committee such
question shall be arbitrable from year to year under
paragraph 13 of the Basic Agreement, notwith-
standing the provisions of paragraph 1 hereof.
9. As to all stock and contract players, neither
the submission of scripts nor interviews for publicity
purposes during their consecutive lay-off period shall
be deemed to break the same.
10(a). The term "multiple picture players" as
used in this agreement shall be deemed to mean
players employed for a specific number of pictures
(two or more) per year or other specified period,
who receive compensation with respect to each
picture at the rate of $1,000.00 per week or less, or
equivalent compensation on a picture or other basis,
and whose contracts, with respect to services in
the production of motion pictures, ar non-exclusive.
Any player so employed whose rate of compensa-
tion is in excess of $500.00 per week but not in
excess of $1,000.00 per week (or who receives
equivalent compensation on a picture or other
basis) and whose contract provides, as to any pic-
ture, for a guarantee of three weeks or more, shall
not be deemed a multiple picture player hereunder
as to such picture, except with resnect to the
twelve hour rest period. The term "limited term
players" as used in this agreement shall be deemed
to mean players employed under term contracts
who do not come within the classification of mul-
tiple picture players, whose rate of compensation
is $1,000.00 per week or less (or equivalent com-
pensation on a picture or other basis) and whose
guaranteed employment is less than at the rate of
ten weeks out of thirteen weeks (or the equivalent
thereof on a picture or other basis).
10(b). Multiple picture players shall be entitled
to pay for overtime to the same extent and on the
same basis as provided in paragraph 4 hereof with
respect to free lance players receiving $500.00
per week or less. Multiple picture players also shall
be entitled to the six-day week as provided for in
paragraph 5 of the free lance contract with addi-
tional compensation for Sunday work as provided
for in said paragraph, to arbitration as provided
for in paragraph 15 of the free lance contract and
to additional compensation as provided in para-
graph 19 of the free lance contract for services ren-
dered on any of the holidays specified in said para-
graph 19 or on Sundays immediately preceding or
succeeding any such holidays. Multiple picture
players also shall be entitled to the twelve-hour
rest period, in accordance with paragraph 18 of the
free lance contract, but, if their rate of compensa-
tion is in excess of $500.00 per week (or the
equivalent thereof on a picture or other basis), may
be required to waive the same but such waiver shall
not affect their right to additional compensation.
Multiple picture players also shall be entitled to
continuous employment with respect to each pic-
ture in which they render services, on the same
basis as free lance players. The provisions of para-
graphs 10, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 29, 30 and 31 of the
free lance contract, with such appropriate modifica-
tions thereof and additions thereto as shall be
determined by the Standing Committee, shall be
deemed incorporated in all multiple picture plaver
contracts. Should the Standing Committee be dis-
solved, such appropriate modifications and additions
shall be determined by arbitration under paragraph
14 of the Basic Agreement as provided in this
agreement with respect to arbitrations under para-
graph 14 of the Basic Agreement after dissolution
o fthe Standing Committee. It is expressly agreed,
however, that the provisions aforesaid shall not ap-
ply to or be deemed incorporated in any multiple
picture player contracts until the modifications and
additions aforesaid shall have been determined by
the Standing Committee or by arbitration as afore-
said. The provisions of paragraphs 7, 8 and 11 of
this agreement shall apply to multiple picture play-
ers on the same basis and to the same extent as
such provisions apply to free lance players.
10(c). All provisions of this agreement which
are applicable to contract players receiving $500.00
or less per week shall apply as well to limited term
p'avers while receiving compensation at the rate of
!t 500.00 or less per week, or equivalent compensa
tion on a picture or other basis; and all provisions
of this agreement which are applicable to contract
players receiving over $500 00 per week but not
over $1,000.00 per week shall apply as well to lim
ited term players receiving $1,000.00 per week or
less, or the equivalent on a picture or other basis.
To the extent but only to the extent that anv mat-
ters with respect to the emnlovment of limited
term players (except hours of labor, including in
said term, but not limited to. the twelve-hour rest
period, overtime and any limitation or restriction
of hours of labor, and except also any other pro
vision of this agreement which is applicable to
such emplovment, none of which excepted matters
shall be arbitrable except as elsewhere in this agr^e
ment otherwise expressly provided) are arbitrable
under the Basic Agreement as amended hereby,
such matters shall be determined by the Standing
Committee or. if the Standing Committee be dis-
solved, by arbitration under paragraph 14 of the
Basic Agreement as provided in this agreement
with respect to arbitrations under paragraph 14 of
the Basic Agreement after the dissolution of the
Standing Committee. However, until any such mat
ter shall be so determined by the Standing Com
mittee or by arbitration, this agreement shall not
be construed to require the same respect to the
employment of any limited term player. Nothing
herein contained shall be deemed an admission by
the Guild that it has not the right to arbitrate
any such matters, or an admission by the Producers
that the Guild has such right.
11. In any case where the engagement of a
player under a free lance contract extends into or
overlaps any other engagement of such player as
a free lance player or day player, as follows :
(a) Because of any unanticipated delay in
production or bona fide mistake, or
(b) Because of any failure of such player to
disclose his other engagements at the time of
accepting any engagement, or
(c) In any case where, as an accommodation
to such player, such player in permitted to work
currently in two pictures,
it is agreed as follows: For any day or days in
which such player renders his services for the Pro-
ducer of the picture in which he has first rendered
his service he shall receive compensation from siich
first Producer. For any day or days in which
such player renders services for the Producers of
the second picture in which he has rendered his
services he shall be compensated by the Producer
786
of such second picture. For any day or days on
which the player does not render his services either
for the first Producer or for the second Producer
he shall be compensated by the second Producer,
unless the first and second Producer agree between
themselves (and notice thereof is given to the
player) that compensation for such additional day
or days shall be paid by the first Producer. The
compensation to be paid by the first Producer shall
be paid at the rate specified in the player's contract
with the first Producer, and the compensation to
be paid by the second Producer shall be at the
rate specified in the player's contract with the
second Producer; provided, however, that if the
rate paid by the first Producer is less than the
rate specified in the player's contract with the sec-
ond Producer the difference shall be paid by the
second Producer, and provided, further, that for
any day or days on which the player does not ren-
der services either for the first or for the second
Producer he shall be compensated at the rate of
compensation which is the higher of the two. This
paragraph does not affect such player's right to
receive compensation from both Producers where
the player, while employed by one Producer, makes
retakes, added scenes, etc. for the other Producer
after the expiration of his term of employment with
such other Producer, in any case where the player
is otherwise entitled thereto. Nothing in this para-
graph contained shall be deemed or construed in
any way to limit or prejudice any right or remedy
of any Producer, either with respect to any of the
contingencies hereinbefore specified or otherwise.
Free lance players may be required to state on their
contracts the starting date of their next engagement
by inserting such date in the following statement
which may be endorsed or printed on such contracts :
"The starting date of the artist's next engage-
ment is "
12. With respect to stunt men, employed as
such, it is agreed as follows :
(a) Except as hereinafter in this paragraph 12
otherwise provided, stunt men employed as such
by the day shall be entitled to pay for overtime
in excess of eight hours worked in any day and
to increased pay for work on Sunday and on the
holidays specified in paragraph 5 hereof, to the same
extent and on the same basis as provided in
paragraph 5 hereof with respect to day players
receiving $200.00 or less per day. Also the pro-
visions of the Basic Agreement applicable to the
employment of day players which relate to oral
agreements and calls, written confirmation of
employment and binding effect thereof, shall apply
to stunt men and be deemed incorporated in their
respective contracts. Such stunt men shall also
be entitled to the twelve-hour rest period as speci-
fied in paragraph 18 of the free lance contract,
but may be required to waive the same, in which
case they shall receive an additional day's base
pay.
(b) Except as hereinafter in this paragraph 12
otherwise provided, stunt men employed as such
by the week shall be entitled to pay for overtime
to the same extent and on the same basis as pro-
vided in paragraph 4 hereof with respect to free
lance players receiving $100.00 per week or less.
Such stunt men also shall be entitled to the six-
day week so provided for in paragraph 5 of the
free lance contract, with additional compensation
for Sunday work as provided for in said para-
graph, to arbitration as provided for in para-
graph IS of the free lance contract and to addi-
tional compensation as provided for in paragraph
19 of the free lance contract for services rendered
on any of the holidays specified in said paragraph
19 or on the Sundays immediately preceding or
succeeding any such holidays. Such stunt men
also shall be entitled to the twelve-hour rest
period as specified in paragraph 18 of the free
lance contract, but may be required to waive the
same, in which case they shall receive one-sixth
of their weekly base pay.
(c) Neither the day player conditions nor the
free lance contract provisions relating to continu-
ous or consecutive employment shall apply to
stunt men; it being agreed that stunt men em-
ployed by the day shall not be entitled to com-
pensation for days between calls and that stunt
men employed by the week may be subsequently
used in the same picture without payment of
compensation for the intervening time. However,
in case of stunt men employed by the week, each
period of employment must be at least a week
in duration, but any consecutive period beyond
one week may be prorated on the basis of one-
sixth of his weekly base rate ;
(d) In any case where any stunt man em-
ployed by the week is entitled hereunder to an
additional day's compensation other than for a
waiver of the twelve-hour rest period, such addi-
tional day's compensation shall be an amount
equal to one-sixth of his weekly base rate plus
an amount equal to the aggregate of all addi-
tional amounts, if any, payable to him for stunts
performed by him during the day with respect
to which such additional day's compensation is
payable.
(e) For the purpose of computing overtime
pay of any stunt man employed by the day, his
daily salary shall be deemed to be his base pay
for the day, unless, in addition to his base pay
for the day, such stunt man is actually paid a
specified amount per stunt for stunts actually
performed during such day, in which case his
salary for the day, for the purpose of computing
his overtime pay, if any, for such day, shall be
deemed to be his base pay plus the price (not
exceeding $100.00) for not more than one per-
formance of one stunt performed during such day
and for which he receives the greatest compen-
sation.
(f) For the purpose of computing the pay for
overtime, if any, in excess of forty-eight hours
worked in any week by any stunt man employed
by the week, his weekly salary be deemed to be
his base pay for the week, unless in addition to
his base pay for the week, such stunt man is
actually paid a specified amount per stunt for
stunts actually performed during such week, in
which case his salary for the week, for the pur
pose of computing his pay for overtime, if any.
in excess of forty-eight hours worked during such
week, shall be deemed to be the following : his
base pay for the week plus an amount, not ex-
ceeding $600.00, equal to the aggregate of all
additional amounts, if any, payable to him for
stunts actually performed by him during such
week.
(g) Pay for overtime in excess of ten hours
worked in any day by any stunt man employed
by the week shall be computed on the same basis
as though such stunt man were employed on a
daily basis instead of a weekly basis, and for this
purpose his base pay for the day shall be deemed
to be one-sixth of his base weekly pay.
(h) The provisions of paragraph 7 hereof shall
apply to stunt men on the basis of day players
receiving $200.00 a day or less, when the stunt
man works by the day, and on the basis of free
lance players receiving $500.00 a week or less,
when he works by the week.
The provisions of this paragraph 12 do not apply
to persons employed as extras who are required to
perform stunts during such employment, it being
agreed that the Standing Committee shall have
jurisdiction with respect thereto.
13. The parties hereto, recognizing the fact that
great difficulty has been experienced in determining
questions of exemptions and waivers with reference
to the employment of extras or persons who might
be classified as extras, agree :
(a) During the existence of the Standing Com-
mittee, as provided in paragraph 2, and subject to
the right of termination hereinafter provided for,
the procedure with reference to waiver* shall be
787
as follows: If a Producer requests a waiver af-
fecting extras, the Guild, if it believes that the
Producer is entitled thereto, will issue the same,
without the imposition of any conditions, which
waiver in the absence of misstatement or con-
cealment of the facts will be final. If the Guild
believes that the Producer is not entitled to such
final waiver it shall issue a reviewable waiver
(which is equivalent to a refusal of a waiver), or
it may issue a conditional waiver wherein it will
designate the conditions upon which it is willing
to have the Producer proceed. The Producer may
either accept such conditions or refuse to accept
the same. If a conditional waiver be issued and
the Producer rejects the conditions thereof, or if
the Guild issues a reviewable waiver as aforesaid,
the Producer may nevertheless proceed as though
a final waiver had been issued. If the Producer
shall proceed without first obtaining a final waiver
or without complying with the conditions of a
conditional waiver, it shall notify the Guild in
writing to that effect within a reasonable time
thereafter, and the Guild within twenty days
after such written notice shall have the right to
refer the matter to the Standing Committee,
which committee will have the power to determine
whether a final waiver should have been given or
whether the Guild was justified in refusing the
same or in imposing conditions. If it finds in
favor of the Guild it shall determine the remedy
to which the Guild is entitled and make an award
accordingly. The Producer, if it so desires, may
refer to the Standing Committee at any time
(including prior to photographing) any question
with regard to the Guild's refusal to issue a
waiver or with reference to any conditions im-
posed or sought to be imposed by the Guild in
connection with the issuance of any waiver, and
the decision of the Standing Committee with re-
spect to such matters shall be final. All waivers
shall be requested as long as reasonably possible
before desired and shall be acted upon promptly
by the Guild, and if the Guild shall fail to do so,
the Producer may proceed in like manner as
though the Guild had issued a reviewable waiver,
so notifying the Guild in writing, and with the
same effect as in the case of a reviewable waiver.
The application for a waiver by any Producer
shall not be deemed an admission that the Pro-
ducer cannot proceed without obtaining such
waiver, nor shall the issuance by the Guild in
any instance of a waiver be an admission that
the Producer is entitled to such a waiver. Either
the Guild or the Producers may terminate the
provisions of this subdivision (a) at any time
after November 1, 1939. This paragraph 13
applies only to extras.
(b) In connection with the foregoing, it is
the intention of the parties hereto to eliminate,
as far as possible, the requirement of standbys
in connection with the issuance of waivers.
(c) Should the Standing Committee be dis-
solved prior to November 1, 1939, or should the
provisions of subdivision (a) of this paragraph
be terminated as therein provided, then within
six months following whichever event shall oc-
cur first, arbitration may be resorted to pursuant
to the provisions of paragraph 14 of the Basic
Agreement for the purpose of determining the
extent to which the Producers are entitled to
waivers by reason of any provisions of the Basic
Agreement, including specifically but not to the
exclusion of other matters, the question of exemp-
tions and/or exempt classes of extras, but nothing
herein shall be construed to enlarge or limit the
matters now so arbitrable under the Basic Agree-
ment, except as expressly otherwise provided for,
or limit any right of the Producers to waivers
as provided for in the Basic Agreement.
14. Extras who are thoroughly and fully notified
at the time of their call of the nature of the ser-
vices to be rendered and of the rate to be paid
therefor, and who accept the employment and per-
form the services, shall not be entitled to additional
compensation except as hereinafter specified. If,
in fact, the extra is required to do more hazardous
work or different work than was described in the
call, such extra may present a claim, which shall
be dealt with by the Conciliation Committee in
accordance with the provisions of paragraph 16 of
the Basic Agreement. If conciliation fails such
claim may be determined by the Standing Commit-
tee. Such extra may also present a claim that any
such call with respect to work of a hazardous
nature was too broad in its terms in the relation to
compensation of the work to be done, or that any
such call with respect to services not of a hazard-
ous nature specified the wrong rate of compensation
with respect to the services described in such call,
and the Standing Committee shall determine the
question and make such award, if any, as it may
deem proper in connection therewith. If the Stand-
ing Committee be dissolved, claims hereunder shall
be arbitrable under paragraph 16 of the Basic
Agreement.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, it is agreed that
if any definite adjustment is made and confirmed
in writing on the set by both the Producer and
the extra prior to the performance of the services
to which such adjustment relates, such adjustment
shall be final and not subject to review. Oral ad-
justments shall not be binding unless subsequently
confirmed in writing by the parties thereto.
15. If any Guild member is inexcusably late in
reporting for photographing on a set, then the
Standing Committee, in its discretion, may relieve
the Producer concerned from its obligation to pay
overtime with respect to all players engaged in
the production with respect to which such late-
ness in reporting occurs, but only to the extent
that such overtime on that day is directly caused
by such lateness, and then only upon the follow-
ing conditions:
(a) In any such case such overtime shall be
promptly paid by the Producer concerned to the
Guild to be held in escrow by the Guild pending
the determination of the question by the Stand-
ing Committee;
(b) At the time of such payment in escrow the
Producer concerned shall advise the Guild of its
claim and the details thereof;
(c) The burden of proof of establishing such
claim (except as to the excuse for lateness) shall
be on the Producer concerned therein.
After any dissolution of the Standing Committee,
any such claim of any Producer shall be arbitrable
under paragraph 16 of the Basic Agreement, not-
withstanding that such claim relates to or involves
any class players as to whom arbitration is not
otherwise provided for in the Basic Agreement.
The provisions of this paragraph do not apply-
to extras.
16. Individual disputes between any Producer
and any contract player receiving $500.00 per week
or less, or any stock player, or any multiple pic-
ture or limited term player, with respect to the
computation of overtime pursuant to the provisions
788
of this agreement, or with respect to computation
of any other compensation of any such player pur-
suant to the provisions of this agreement, and indi-
vidual disputes between any Producer and any
contract player receiving $1,000.00 per week or
less, with respect to the computation of such play-
er's rest period, pursuant to the provisions of this
agreement (none of which matters are now arbi-
trable under the Basic Agreement) shall be sub-
ject to conciliation by the Conciliation Committee
under paragraph 16 of the Basic Agreement. If
conciliation fails with respect to any such dispute,
such dispute may be determined by the Standing
Committee, and after any dissolution of the Stand-
ing Committee any such dispute shall be deemed
arbitrable under paragraph 16 of the Basic Agree-
ment.
17. The respective provisions of this agreement
shall be deemed incorporated in all contracts of em-
ployment whether now existing or hereafter made,
to which the same are applicable. It is agreed,
however, that should the Basic Agreement or this
modification agreement be amended at any time,
such amendments shall affect the provisions of such
contracts of employment to the extent that the
same may be applicable.
18. If the unused portion of any lay-off under
any stock player or contract player contract shall
be less than one week, such unused lay-off may
be availed of by the Producer concerned at any
time but only in one consecutive period.
18!^. Of course, whenever a player receives
overtime or an additional day's pay pursuant to the
provisions of this agreement, such overtime or
additional day's pay shall not be deemed to reduce
such player's guaranteed employment or compen-
sation.
19. The effective date of this agreement shall be
November 1, 1938, except that the provisions of
paragraph 1 hereof shall be effective upon the execu-
tion of this agreement.
20. In any case where it is impracticable or im-
possible to fix any definite starting date of any
player, to be employed under a free lance contract,
because of such player's activities on the stage or
in radio or otherwise in the amusement business
(except motion pictures), the Guild agrees to waive
the requirement of a definite starting date in such
free lance contract, provided that such free lance
contract contains a reasonable provision for the fix-
ing of the starting date thereof and notice thereof.
Any dispute between the Guild and any Producer
with respect to the issuance of any such waiver
shall be retermined, at the request of either party
by the Standing Committee, and after any dissolu-
tion of the Standing Committee any such dispute
shall be arbitrable under paragraph 16 of the Basic
Agreement.
21. This agreement, as to each Producer, shall
be subject to the approval of its board of directors,
and shall not be binding on such Producer until
so approved ; provided, however, that if the board
of directors of any Producer shall fail to approve
this agreement prior to October 10, 1938, and so
notify the Guild in writing by such date, then or
at any time thereafter until this agreement is ap-
proved by the board of directors of such Producer,
and it has so notified the Guild in writing, the
Guild may declare this agreement null and void
as to such Producer.
22. This agreement is a several agreement as to
each Producer and is not joint and several, and
shall be construed as a separate agreement between
the Guild and each Producer signatory hereto.
23. This agreement shall be null and void as
to the Guild until ratified by the Class A members
thereof in such manner as the board of directors
of the Guild shall determine, and any Producer
signatory hereunder may declare this contract null
and void as to it unless the Guild has given such
notice of ratification in writing on or before Octo-
ber 10, 1938.
24. The term "consecutive lay-off" as used in
this agreement shall be deemed to refer to the con-
secutive lay-off provided for in paragraphs 8(f)
and 9 of the Basic Agreement.
25. This agreement may be referred to as the
"Producer-Screen Actors Guild Modification Agree-
ment of 1938." The Basic Agreement as amended
and supplemented by this agreement may be re-
ferred to as the "Revised Producer- Screen Actors
Guild Basic Minimum Contract of 1938," or as the
"Revised Basic Agreement."
26. Whenever the phrase "at the rate of ten out
of thirteen weeks" is used in this agreement, the
same shall be deemed to mean at the approximate
rate of ten weeks out of three months, twenty
weeks out of six months, or forty weeks out of
a year. Whenever a weekly player is entitled to
an additional day's pay this means one-sixth of his
weekly base rate.
27. This agreement may be executed in any
number of counterpart originals, each counterpart
to have the same effect and all such counterparts
shall be construed together as one agreement.
Except as amended or supplemented by this agree-
ment the Basic Agreement shall continue in effect.
28. Any person now or hereafter engaged in the
business of producing motion pictures in the United
States who is or may become signatory to the
Basic Agreement shall be afforded the opportunity
(if the Guild consents) of becoming signatory to
this modification agreement. Nothing herein con-
tained is intended nor shall it be construed as in-
tended to prevent the Guild from entering into
contracts with any person, whether a signatory to
this modification agreement or otherwise, on terms
more favorable to such persons than are afforded
hereunder.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties heretr
have executed this agreement the day and year
first above written.
SCREEN ACTORS GUILD, INC., By Ralph
Morgan, President, and Kenneth Thomson, Execu-
tive Secretary; HAL ROACH STUDIOS, INC.,
By Milton H. Bren ; RKO-RADIO PICTURES,
INC., By J. R. McDonough; PARAMOUNT
PICTURES. IXC, By George L. Bagnall, Vice-
President; WARNER BROS. PICTURES, INC.,
By Herbert Freston, Asst. Secretary; TWENTI-
ETH CENTURY-FOX FILM CORPORATION,
By Joseph M. Schenck ; LOEWS INC., By E. J.
Mannix, Vice-President; UNIVERSAL PIC-
TURES COMPANY, INC., By Cliff Work, Vice-
President; WALTER WANGER PRODUC-
TIONS, INC., By Walter Wanger, President;
SELZXICK IXTERXATIOXAL PICTURES,
IXC, By David O. Selxnick, President; COLUM-
BIA PICTURES CORPORATIOX OF CALI-
FORXIA, LTD., By M. B. Silberberg; SAMUEL
GOLDWYX IXC, LTD., By Edwin J. Loeb ;
DARMOUR, IXC, By Larry Darmour, President.
789
Producer-Screen Directors Guild
BASIC AGREEMENT OF 1939
AGREEMENT
AGREEMENT executed at Los Angeles, California, as of March 13, 1939, between SCREEN
DIRECTORS GUILD, INC., a California non-profit membership corporation, hereinafter called
the "Guild," and severally TWENTIETH CENTURY-FOX FILM CORPORATION,
LOEWS INCORPORATED, COLUMBIA PICTURES CORPORATION OF CALIFOR-
NIA, LTD., SAMUEL GOLDWYN INC., LTD., WARNER BROS. PICTURES, INC.,
PARAMOUNT PICTURES, INC., RKO-RADIO PICTURES, INC., UNIVERSAL PIC-
TURES COMPANY, INC., and such other parties engaged in the production of motion pictures
as may hereafter severally become signatories hereto, each hereinafter sometimes referred to as
the "producer" or the "producers," and sometimes as "company" or "companies,"
WITNESSETH :
In consideration of the mutual agreements herein
contained, the parties agree as follows:
Article I
Recognition
SECTION A: The Guild is recognized by the
producers and each of them and will be during the
term of this agreement, as the sole collective bar-
gaining agent for all directors and first and second
assistant directors in the motion picture industry.
SECTION B: For the purpose of this agreement,
it is agreed that:
1. 'Director! A director is one who directs the
production of motion pictures, as the word "direct"
is commonly used in the industry. The fact that he
may also render services as a producer and/or
writer in any other capacity shall not take him out
of the classification of directors, with reference to
any work performed by him as a director, and dur.
ing the period of such work.
2. First Assistant Director: A first assistant di-
rector, in addition to the performance of other duties,
acts as an assistant to the director.
3. Second Assistant Director: A second assistant
director, in addition to the performance of other
duties, acts as an assistant to the first assistant
director, for the purpose of relieving him of many
details.
4. Unit Manager: A unit manager, in addition
to the performance of other duties, acts as an as-
sistant to the production manager of the studio and/or
the producer and is a channel through which the
production office maintains contact with the shooting
unit, and anyone who performs these duties shall be
deemed to be either a unit manager or a first assistant
director, to the extent that persons rendering such
services as of March 13, 1939, have been so regarded
First and second assistant directors and unit man
agers are defined as said terms are severally anil
commonly understood at the respective studios of the
producers signatory hereto as of March 13, 1939.
Some producers do not employ unit managers and
some do not employ them in connection with all pro-
ductions, and in the instances in which unit mana-
gers are not employed the functions performed by
unit managers are wholly or partially performed by
first assistant directors and/or by the production
departments of such studios.
Where both unit managers and assistant directors
are employed by a producer, or where a unit man
ager is occasionally employed on individual produc
tions, the functions of the unit manager relate sub
stantially but not entirely to business functions, and
those of assistant directors relate substantially but
not entirely to functions more directly under or with
the director on the set. It is recognized, however,
that any individual may sometimes work as an
assistant director and sometimes as a unit manager.
SECTION C: 1. It is the intent of this agreement
to include in the classification of unit managers
present and future employees who perform the
duties actually being performed by unit managers
as of March 13, 1939, at the respective studios then
employing unit managers.
It is agreed both with reference to first and sec-
ond assistant directors, and unit managers as well,
that working conditions will not be changed by reason
of the execution of the Basic Agreement. The pur
pose of this provision is primarily to avoid reduction
in working hours so as to pay less money or to avoid
delegating to employees of other classifications the
duties of the first and second assistants and unit
managers, but nothing in this agreement contained
shall be construed so as to oblige any producer to
continue with its present relative setup as between
unit managers and first and second assistants.
2. Although it is recognized that the duties of
first and second assistant directors and the duties of
unit managers differ among the various producers
and on various assignments, it is understood that the
actual working conditions of each producer on
March 13, 1939, are to be considered in any inter
pretation of this agreement, and that it is an
element of good faith of, and part of the considera-
tion for this Basic Agreement that no producer will
make such a general rearrangement of duties or
changed classifications of employment for the purpose
of defeating the purpose and intent of Article I.
Section A, and Article II, Section A.
3. In the case of producers not maintaining the
unit manager system (this includes producers pro
ducing five or more pictures a year in which a single
unit manager is permanently employed and such
producers, and other producers by which unit mana
gers may be employed occasionally but not as a part
790
of the regular production setup) if a first assistant
is casually employed to perform unit manager's
duties, his classification will not change from that
of a first assistant director.
4. In the case of producers maintaining the unit
manager system (that meaning that their setup in-
cludes the employment of both unit managers and
first assistant directors for more than casual assign-
ments) the employment of a member of the Screen
Directors Guild as a unit manager shall entitle
such employee to the classification of a unit mana-
ger and to be transferred to the Unit Managers
Guild and to be honorably discharged from the
Screen Directors Guild for the period of such
employment.
Likewise the employment of a member of the
Unit Managers Guild as a first or second assistant
director shall entitle such employee to the classifica-
tion of a first or second assistant director, as the
case may be, and to be transferred to the Screen
Directors Guild and to be honorably discharged
from the Unit Managers Guild for the period of
such employment.
Nothing herein is to be construed to prevent,
within the discretion and direction of the producer,
an assistant director from performing the duties of
a unit manager, or a unit manager from performing
the duties of an assistant director.
5. Should the Guild dispute any producer's desig-
nation of the duties of any individual so as to qualify
or disqualify such individual for Guild membership,
the classification of such individual shall be deter
mined by arbitration pursuant to the provisions of
this agreement.
6. To check compliance with this contract, it is
agreed that each producer from time to time and
on request of the Guild shall furnish to the Guild
a list of directors and first and second assistant
directors and unit managers currently employed
showing the periods of such employment.
Each producer further agrees that it will there-
after and within five days after the happening of
the event furnish the Guild with supplemental lists
showing the names of all persons subsequently
employed or dropped and the kind of work done by
each. The Guild shall be entitled to rely upon such
lists, and should any producer fail to notify the
Guild when an employee has been dropped the Guild
will be entitled to count such employee against such
producer in checking the 20% quota of such producer.
Article II
Guild Shop
SECTION A: 1. Directors: It is agreed that at
all times 80% of the directors in the employ of each
producer signatory to this agreement shall be mem
bers of the Guild in good standing.
2. First Assistant Directors: At all times 80'/(
of the first assistant directors in the employ of each
producer signatory to this agreement shall be mem-
bers of the Guild in good standing.
3. Second Assistant Directors: At all times 80%
of the second assistant directors in the employ of
each producer signatory to this agreement shall be
members of the Guild in good standing :
SECTION B: 1. Prior to the execution of this
agreement each producer signatory has delivered to
the Guild a complete list of all directors and first
and second assistant directors who were employed
as such by each of said producer signatories as of
March 13, 1939, and the Guild has delivered to the
producer signatories a complete list of all members
in good standing of the Guild as of said March 13.
1939, supplemented as of the date of the actual execu-
tion of this instrument. The Guild agrees that it
will furnish all producer signatories from time to
time with supplemental lists showing the names of
all persons who are or have been subsequently
admitted to membership and, as well, of all members
who have ceased to be members of the Guild in
good standing. Each producer shall be entitled to
rely upon such lists as furnished by the Guild, and
should any producer give employment to any
director, or first or second assistant director, who
has ceased to be a member of the Guild in good
standing, prior to written notification by the Guild
of such changed status, such employee shall not be
included in the 20% quota.
2. The Guild will accept as a member of the
Guild any director or first or second assistant direc-
tor the producer wishes to employ. Such acceptance
must be effective as of not later than the date the
employment actually starts.
3. The Guild will not impose unreasonable initia-
tion fees, dues or assessments, or unreasonable fees
for transfer pursuant to Article I, Section C, Sub-
section 4.
SECTION C: Except for the instances set forth
in this Article, it is understood that if any producer
employs a non-Guild director or firet or second
assistant director, such employee shall be included
within the applicable 20% quota, and continue in
such quota until or unless he becomes a Guild
member.
SECTION D: 1. Compliance or non-compliance
with the terms of this Article with reference to
maintaining the required percentage of Guild Shop
shall be determined at any time by taking (separately
for each class of employees, director, first assistant
director and second assistant director) the ratio of
the total number of Guild member directors (or
first or second assistant directors, as the case may
be) employed by any producer to the total number
of directors (or first or second assistant directors,
as the case may be) employed by such producer,
with, however, the following exceptions:
(a) Each producer shall be entitled to have any
one of the first five or less directors employed by it
during any year of the Basic Agreement, a non-
Guild member. If more than five directors are
employed by any producer during any year, not
more than 20% of all directors employed by such
producer during the year, whether contract or free
lance, may be non-Guild members.
If a producer produces five pictures or less dur-
ing the year, some under the direction of a contract
director and some under the direction of free lance
directors, then if the contract director is a non-
Guild member, all other directors, whether cotnract or
free lance, must be Guild members, and likewise, if
a free lance director is employed in the direction of
any one of such five or less pictures and is not a
Guild member, no non-Guild director may be em-
ployed to direct any other of such five pictures.
If such five or less pictures are directed by free
lance directors only, then only one of such pictures
may be directed by a non-Guild member.
The same formulas shall apply in reference to
the employment of first and second assistant directors.
(b) An employee, who is employed under an ex-
clusive terra contract by a producer, shall be counted
in the quota of such producer at all times during
the term of such contract, including periods during
which the employee may be on lay-off and periods
during which such contract may be suspended by
reason of illness or default of the employee, or other-
wise. An employee shall be included in the quota
of the producer by which he is employed regardless
of the fact that his services may be loaned to another
producer. In case a director employed under a
term agreement has the right to suspend such term
agreement for the purpose of making an outside
picture, during the making of such picture he shall
be counted in the quota of the producer for which
he is making the outside picture. In case a director
is not under an exclusive term contract with any
producer, he shall be counted only in the quota of
the producer to which he is obligated to render his
services and then only for the period during which
he is so obligated.
2. In the event any director or first or second
assistant director who is, at the time of the effective
date of this agreement, a member of the Guild in
good standing, and also under contract with a pro-
791
ducer, subsequently, and before his contract term
expires, ceases to be a member of the Guild in good
standing, such employee may, if the producer so
elects, be continued on the rolls of the Guild as a
"special non-voting contract member" and so long
as dues are paid to the Guild, he may continue to
perform the duties provided for in his contract for
the balance of the term of the contract, including
options exercisable by the producer only (but for
no renewals or continuances not provided for in the
contract at the time of the effective date of this
agreement or which necessitate the consent of both
parties) without being included in the 20% non-
Guild quota, and if the producer elects to have him
perform the balance of his contract under the above
conditions, producer will see that such dues are so
paid during any period such director continues to
perform his duties under such contract, but it is
understood that before any new contract or renewal
or extension of any existing contract (other than by
exercise of the above-referred-to-options) may be
executed or exercised by producer with such director,
such director must either be reinstated in the
Guild as a member in good standing or included in
producer's 20% non-Guild quota. "Dues," as used
herein, shall not include fines, penalties or assess-
ments.
3. The producer may continue to employ (as part
of the 80% Guild quota) any director with whom
it may hereafter enter into a contract without refer-
ence to whether or not such director actually remains
a member of the Guild and without including such
director in the 20% non-Guild quota under any of
the following circumstances:
(a) If any such director who is engaged in the
production of a photoplay ceases to be a member of
the Guild in good standing, and the producer pays
the dues of such director, the producer may con-
tinue to employ such director until the completion
of his services in connection with the production
with which he was engaged at the time he ceased
to be a member in good standing.
(b) If any such director fails to pay his dues to
the Guild and such director as a result thereof
ceases to be a member of the Guild in good stand-
ing, the Guild agrees to serve written notice of such
fact on the producer, and the producer may have
three months after receipt of such written notice to
continue to employ such director by paying sue1
director's dues during said three months or producer
may proceed under Sub-section 4 below.
4. In the event that a producer hereafter enters
into an emplovment contract with a director who
customarily directs feature pictures and who at
such time or at the time of the commencement of
his employment is a member of the Guild in good
standing and thereafter such director, through no
act or inducement of the producer, ceases to be a
member of the Guild in good standing and the pro-
ducer believes it is thereby placed under hardship
preventing it from placing, or resulting from placing,
such director in the 20% non-Guild quota, the pro-
ducer, unless the Guild issues a satisfactory waiver
may submit the question to arbitration as provided
in Article V, and the arbitrators may relieve the
producer of such hardship by — (a) providing for a
larger percentage than 20r'r non-Guild quota for
such producer for such period as may be necessary
to relieve the producer of such hardship, or (b)
permitting the producer to pay or arrange for the
pavment of dues of such contract directors as have
ceased to be members of the Guild in good standing
for the period of his or their contract or contracts
with such producer, or for the period of the Guild
agreement, whichever is the shorter.
It is understood and agreed that the arbitrators
must take into consideration in arriving at their
decision —
(a) Whether the producer can include, or can con-
tinue to include such directors in the 20% non-
Guild quota without discharging any other employees,
without losing the producer's rights to extend con-
tracts with other directors, or without losing the
right to employ directors whom the producer has
scheduled to direct one or more pictures or whom
the producer regards as peculiarly fitted for the
producer's requirements.
(b) Any other facts or circumstances existing in
the producer's business, particularly (but not ex-
clusively) with reference to the producer's obliga-
tion on existing contracts or plans for making
particular pictures.
In addition to any right under (a) of the pre-
ceding Sub-section 3, pending decision of the
Board of Arbitration but not to exceed sixty days,
the producer may continue to treat such directors
as being within the 80% Guild quota, providing it
pays or arranges for the payment of dues of such
directors to the Guild during such period.
If new circumstances arise in connection with
any matter arbitrated pursuant to the provisions
of this Sub-section 4 which circumstances in the
opinion of either the Guild or the producer affected
justify a modification of the prior decision, the
matter may be resubmitted to arbitration by either
party, such arbitration to be conducted pursuant
to the provisions of this Sub-section.
SECTION E: 1. It is the intent that failure to
pay dues or other breach by a Guild member of his
obligations to the Guild shall not give such member
any defense to a producer's right to enforce the
terms of any contract of employment existing with
such director or first or second assistant director.
2. It is the intention hereof to prevent the Guild
from closing its books so as to prevent any person
who wishes to act as a director or as a first or second
assistant director from joining the Guild.
3. For the purposes of this Article, pictures and
quotas shall be computed as of the year in which
photography is commenced.
4. The special contract Guild member referred to
herein shall be counted as a Guild member for the
computation of the quota.
5. If the producer elects under the provisions of
this Article to pay the dues of any person who has
ceased to be a member of the Guild in good stand-
ing, so as to hold him in the classification of a "spe-
cial non-voting contract member," it is the intent
that the producer will have the right to deduct such
dues so applied from the salary of such director.
6. It is understood that after the effective date of
this agreement, the producers will endeavor to em-
ploy only Guild members, or, at the time of their
employment endeavor to take advantage of the pro-
visions of Sub-section 2 of Section B of this Article;
but if any producer believes it is placed under hard-
ship in meeting quota obligations because of employ-
ing a director (as defined in Section D, Sub-section
4 above) who, at the time of his employment, has
stated in writing a conscientious objection to Guild
membership, then such producer may apply to the
Guild for a waiver of quota obligations as to such
director, and if the Guild fails to issue a satisfactory
waiver, such producer may proceed to arbitration
under Section D. Sob-section 4 above, but nothing
hereinabove shall be construed so as to deprive any
producer of any rights with reference to the 20%
quota.
Article III
What May Be Arbitrated and What
Conciliated
SECTION A: All complaints of abuses or vio-
lations of the terms of the Basic Agreement may
be subject to conciliation and arbitration according
to the machinery set up in Articles IV and V hereof.
Such arbitrations shall be binding and conclusive
upon the parties thereto.
SECTION B: Changes jn the terms of the Basic
Agreement cannot be made by arbitration, but:
1. A proposed revision of the Basic Agreement,
including minimum wages, and working conditions,
may at any time be referred to the Conciliation Com-
mittee as provided in Article IV, but only if there is
a unanimous decision of the Conciliation Committee
will the proposed change become an amendment to
the Basic Agreement.
2. If any proposed revision of the Basic Agree-
ment has not been effected by conciliation as provided
792
in 1 above, then at any time, but not oftener than
once every two years, at the request in writing of
any party, the subject may be referred to the Arbi-
tration Committee provided in Article V, and if
the findings of the Arbitration Committee are agreed
to in writing by the Guild and any producer or
producers, such findings shall thereupon become a
part of the Basic Agreement as between the Guild
and such producer or producers so assenting, but
such findings shall not be binding on any other party.
SECTION C: There is to be no arbitration what-
soever of individual disputes, but any dispute be-
tween any director and any producer, or between any
first or second assistant and any producer, may at
the instance of either such producer or the Guild
be brought in writing before the Conciliation Com-
mittee. Findings of such committee will become
binding only by the unanimous vote of the full
committee. Nothing herein contained shall be con-
strued so as to prevent as between individual
employer and employee immediate recourse to the
courts without prior conciliation by such parties,
but the parties to this agreement will be bound to
arbitrate pursuant to Articles IV and V any ques-
tions arising between them under this Basic Agree-
ment, if arbitrable hereunder.
Article IV
Machinery for Conciliation
SECTION A: A Standing Conciliation Committee
for the Guild and each producer, consisting of four
members, shall be organized as follows:
1. Two members in good standing of the Guild
shall be designated by the Guild, and as soon as so
designated, but in any event not longer than thirty
days after signing this agreement, notice thereof
shall be sent in writing by registered mail to the
producer for which such committee is organized.
2. Two representatives shall be designated in
writing by the producer for which such committee
is organized and as soon as so designated, in any
event not later than thirty days after the execution
of this agreement, the names shall be forwarded by
registered mail by such producer, to the Guild. Each
producer may designate its own separate representa-
tives or it may designate those named by other pro-
ducers, and it and the Guild may from time to time
make substitutions.
The Guild may designate separate representatives
for each producer signatory but need not do so.
3. The representatives of both the Guild and the
producers may be interested persons, but not per-
sonally or directly involved in the matter under
dispute.
SECTION B: The Standing Committee provided
for above will be maintained at all times during the
life of this agreement, and as changes in the per-
sonnel of any representatives are made by any
party, such party will notify the others, it being
understood that such substitutions will be made
within three days (excluding Sundays and holidays)
following the submission of any matter.
The Standing Committee will meet from time to
time, in any event not less than once every six
months. The committee shall have two chairmen,
consisting of one producer and one Guild member.
When a complaint is made to the Committee from
the Guild, it will be the duty of the Guild chair-
man to act, and when a matter is referred by a
producer, the duty of the producer chairman to act.
If either the Guild or any member thereof or the
producers or any of them have any grievances or
complaints of abuses of any of the terms of this
Basic Agreement, or complaint of any other matter
specifically referred to conciliation by the terms
hereof, such complaint shall be stated in writing,
and signed by the person or corporation making the
same and addressed in duplicate by registered mail
to the Chairman of the Standing Conciliation Com-
mittee. It will be the duty of the appropriate chair-
man to refer the matter to the members of the
Standing Conciliation Committee and such commit-
tee must as soon as possible after the receipt of
said complaint, meet, consider the matter, and act
upon such complaint or grievance and state in writ-
ing its conclusions, and if such conclusions are
unanimous, may adjust the matter in dispute, and
such adjustment shall be binding upon all parties
to the proceedings, including also all individual
members of the Guild. But if said Standing Con-
ciliation Committee is unable within thirty days
(unless time be extended in any instance by the
joint consent of the two chairmen) after the receipt
of said complaint or grievance, to agree unanimously
upon a proper adjustment, said Standing Concili-
ation Committee shall:
(a) file its report, or
(b) if said Standing Committee regards the mat-
ter as frivolous, it may so state and dismiss the
complaint, or
(c) if, pursuant to the terms of this agreement,
the matter is arbitrable, refer the complaint to the
Committee of Arbitration as provided in Article V
hereafter.
SECTION C: It is intended to provide that any
matter concerning interpretation of the terms of this
Basic Agreement, alleged abuses arising from the
performance thereof, and other matters of every sort
concerning which dissatisfaction may arise between
the producers and the Guild, or a member of the
Guild, may be referred to the Conciliation Commit-
tee, it being the intent in this Basic Agreement to
provide for full and free conciliation of differences
of every kind whatsoever.
But it is also understood and agreed that matters
to be submitted to arbitration are strictly limited to:
(a) complaints of abuses growing out of the terms
of the Basic Agreement, which must be presented
by signatories to the agreement, and
(b) other matters properly arbitrable by the Ar-
bitration Committee, as herein provided and in the
manner as provided in Article V, but it is intended
that there is to be no arbitration of individual
disputes.
Article V
Machinery for Arbitration
SECTION A: An Arbitration Committee con-
sisting of four members shall be appointed, two by
the Guild and two by each producer, in the same
manner as in Article IV, Section A, Sub-sections
1, 2 and 3. All arbitrators provided for in this
Article may be interested persons but i.ot personally
or directly interested in the matter under dispute.
SECTION B: To hear such disputes as are re-
ferred from the Standing Conciliation Committee and
which are properly arbitrable hereunder, the Arbi-
tration Committee shall sit within seven days after
the matter is referred. If a majority of the Arbi-
tration Committee of four agrees upon the terms of
settlement of the referred dispute, such conclusions
by such majority shall be final and binding upon all
parties to the arbitration. If, however, such Arbitra-
tion Committee is unable to decide, it shall within
ten days call in a fifth arbitrator. This fifth arbi
trator is to be chosen by lot from an atithorized list
of eligible arbitrators. Made a part of this agree-
ment is. a list of at least ten names of prominent
persons within the motion picture industry, any one
of whom each of the parties hereto agrees may be
chosen by lot to be the fifth arbitrator. From time
to time additional names may be added to this list
by written mutual agreement. The decision of a
majority of the board of five arbitrators shall con-
trol, except as otherwise provided in Article III,
Section B of this agreement.
Article VI
Working Conditions of Directors
Each producer agrees that the following provisions
shall govern the conditions of employment of direc-
tors:
SECTION A: For preparation prior to photogra-
793
phy, each director shall be allowed the following
time:
1. For each feature picture, the estimated cost of
which is in excess of $200,000.00, two weeks.
2. For each feature picture, the estimated cost of
which is $200,000.00 or under, one week.
3. For westerns and serials, five days.
4. For shorts (as defined herein), two days.
5. Preparation time is to be waived in case of
emergency, it being understood that the necessity
of change, substitution or partial substitution of the
director where the producer is incurring substantial
expense for the salary of cast actually assigned to
the picture involved, or where photographing has
started or where such substantial expense will be
incurred within the periods above provided, shall he
deemed an emergency, and the director must waive.
Under any other circumstances, the director mav
waive preparation time only after the Guild has in
writing consented to such waiver.
6. All free lance directors employed at a weekly
salary of $750.00 or less, shall be entitled to full
salary during preparation time. The question of
compensation for preparation time, if any, to be
paid all other directors is a matter of individual
negotiation.
SECTION B: The producers agree that each cur-
rent director shall be allowed to express his opinion
nnd to be consulted concerning the cutting of each
feature, western and serial picture directed by him.
To achieve this end, the following procedure will
be carried out:
1. The director shall be permitted to view the
rushes but at such times as not to interfere with
photographing. He shall be permitted to see the cut
sequences in like manner as soon as such sequences
are finished. He shall be allowed to make changes in
such cut sequences, without major elimination of
scenes or dialogue, provided there is no material
delay in the orderly progress of the cutting. Be-
fore the producer changes or re-edits one or more
of these individual sequences, the director shall
have the option of either promptly showing or
explaining these sequences as cut by him to the
producer charged with the responsibility for the
editing of the picture. When the first rough cut of
the completed picture is made, the director shall
be notified and shall be invited bv such producer
to view the first rough cut and discuss with him
any changes the director may deem necessary for
the best interests of the picture. Such producer
shall give the director's suggestions respectful and
sympathetic consideration.
2. Every free lance director, who receives a salarv
of $750 00 per week or less, and who is closed
nn completion of photographing, unless he refuses to
view the first rough cut promptly, will be entitled
to three days' pay after his engagement is closed if
the picture he worked on cost $200,000.00 or less,
nnd to six davs' pay if the cost is in excess of
«200.000.00. Unless the first roufh cut is readv
for viewing by such director within three davs,
in the case of a picture costing $200,000.00 or less,
or six days if in excess of $200,000.00. such director
nevertheless shall be entitled to additional compen-
sation as aforesaid, but nothing herein contained
shall be construed so as to deprive such director of
his right, if he so elects, to view the first rour-li
cut and to discuss changes with the producer in
the manner hereinabove provided.
3. The company's decision as to all cutting shall
always be final and nothing- herein contained shall
be construed so as to prohibit the making of such
changes as the company may deem fit.
4. It is understood that in the case of a bona fide
emergency, the director shall agree to waive such
provisions of this clause as might tend to cause
delay, but no director may be required to waive
the provisions of this Section B except in the case
of such emergency.
SECTION C: The director is to be consulted
concerning the employment of the principal mem-
bers of the cast before assignments are made, pro
vided, however, that where the cast or part of the
cast has been engaged before the director is em
ployed or assigned to the picture, it will be deemed
compliance with this paragraph if the director is
fully advised as to the personnel of the cast who have
actually been employed before the director's em-
ployment, and, provided, the director is consulted
before any further assignments are made. It is
understood that the producers' decision as to the
cast is to be final.
SECTION D: In the event that a second unit
is used on the picture, the director is to be informed
and the first director, if available, afforded an op-
portunity to consult with and give advice to the
second director, provided, however, it is understood
that the producer's decision concerning the work of
the second unit is to be final.
SECTION E: 1. Each producer signatory agrees
that credit shall be given for direction on all twenty-
four sheets, billboard and tradepaper advertising is
sued by the producer for use in the continental
United States and prepared subsequent to the final
determination of direction credit in the manner
herein provided for. The foregoing shall not apply:
(a) To group advertising, provided more than
fifteen photoplays are advertised in the group.
fb) On teaser campaigns.
The location of the credit and the size of type
shall be discretionary with the producer.
2. The director shall be given credit on all posi-
tive prints on a separate title card which shall be
the last title card (except where existing contracts
conflict with such obligation or where the Guild
issues a waiver).
3. Should more than one director do substantial
work on a picture, all such directors (other than
directors of second units) shall be notified in writ-
ing as to the directorial credit intended to be given.
Should any such director be dissatisfied with such
determination, he may immediately appeal to the
Guild and notify the producer in writing that he is
doing so. The Guild may then determine the issue,
and in so doing must take into consideration then
existing contract obligations, and shall issue a
waiver to permit producer to carry out such contract
obligations. Except as herein provided, the pro-
ducer agrees to be bound by such determination as
to credits. If the Guild should fail to reach a
decision and notify^ fhe producer within seven days
after the above notification by the director, the pro-
ducer shall determine the issue and its determina-
tion shall be final. In the event that the Guild's
determination _ as to credit is given at too late a
date to permit the giving of screen or advertising
credit as indicated by the Guild, then credit shall
be given in such manner as may have been desig-
nated by the producer, but appropriate credit shall
be given in any bulletin to be issued by the Guild
or in such other bulletin as may be mutually agreed
upon. In no event shall a producer be obligated to
delay the preparation or issuance of advertising
matter or the release of any photoplay pending pro-
ceedings for the determination of credits.
Article VII
Wages and Working Conditions of First
Assistant Directors
The following minimum salaries and working con-
ditions are hereby established:
SECTION A: Minimum salaries for first a^ist
ant directors shall be:
1. Those on contract, $125.00 per week.
2. Those on a free lance basis, $137.50 per week
794
3. Those working on shorts, whether under con-
tract or free lance, $100.00 per week.
4. Those employed for the day, one-fifth of the re-
spective minimums referred to in 2 and 3 for each
day or fraction of a day.
SECTION B: All first assistant directors now
receiving the minimum or in excess of the minimum
will receive a salary increase of 10%. Those re-
ceiving less than the proposed minimum will be
raised on the effective date hereof to the minimum
or to present salary plus ten per cent (10%), which-
ever is the greater. First assistant directors now
receiving the agreed minimum or in excess of the
agreed minimum may be offered contracts on or
before May 13, 1939, by their present employing
studios at their present salaries without the 10'.
increase, providing the contracts are for the mini-
mum periods referred to in Section C hereof.
SECTION C: 1. The present established salaries,
increased as herein provided, of all first assistant
directors at each studio will be recognized by all
studios and appropriate machinery will be set up
providing for such recognition, it being understood
that if the employment of any first assistant director
terminates for any reason whatsoever, such first
assistant director thereafter may not be employed
as a first assistant director by the former employing
=.tiidio at less than his established salary at such
studio, but his salary if employed at any other
studio shall be the matter of individual negotiation,
subject to this agreement as to minimums. NothiiiK
in this provision shall prevent first assistants from
accepting employment as second assistants, or in
other capacities, at prevailing rates of such other
classifications.
2. All contracts for first assistant directors will
be for a minimum of forty-six weeks of the year,
except in the case of first assistants who for the year
ending March 13, 1939, have been paid or have
been employed for more than forty-six weeks, in
which case such individual contracts shall be for a
minimum equivalent to such number of weeks.
Each contract shall contain a clause for two con-
secutive weeks' vacation with full pay, the vacation
to be taken at such time as may be designated by
the producer.
3. All free lance first assistant directors will re-
ceive severance pay of one week's salary if em
ployed more than two consecutive weeks, and of
three days if employed for two weeks or under,
except in the case of those employed on a daily
basis for less than one week. If after completion
of an assignment the first assistant is carried on
his salary, no severance pay accrues until the
completion of the final assignment and then only
tor the one week or three days, as the case may be.
4. Regardless of membership in the Guild, all
first and second assistant directors will be paid at
least the minimums herein provided.
5. It is understood that there will be no lay-off
for a contract assistant director for less than one
week at a time. ,
6. No free lance first assistant director shall be
called for less than one day's pay.
7. There shall be no weather permitting calls.
8. A first assistant shall be employed on each
feature picture, western, serial and short. In the
case of second units where a second accredited
director is assigned to the same, a first assistant
must be assigned to such second unit, or, if a second
assistant is used instead of a first assistant he shall
receive the pay of a first assistant in connection
with such assignment. If a first assistant or any-
one other than an accredited director is assigned
to direct the second unit, then a second assistant
(or, at the option of the producer, a first assistant)
must be assigned, provided, however, that if a
cameraman is assigned to photograph scenes alone,
or with crew but without members of the cast, no
first or second assistant director need be assigned.
Article VIII
Wages and Working Conditions of Second
Assistant Directors
The following working conditions and minimum
salaries are hereby established for second assistant
directors:
SECTION A: Second assistants shall be employed
on an hourly basis. The minimum for second assist-
ants presently employed shall be:
1. 90c an hour for the first year of the Basic
Agreement.
2. 95c for the second year, and
3. $1.00 for the third and subsequent years. Sec-
ond assistants hereafter employed shall be paid 90c
an hour for the first year of their employment, 95c
for the second year, and $1.00 for the third and
subsequent years. Overtime shall be paid in all
instances as provided for in the Wage and Hour Bill.
4. It is understood, that should second assistant
directors hereafter he exempted from the effect
of the Wage and Hour Bill, the Conciliation Com-
mittee will take appropriate action in the premises.
SECTION B: All second assistants receiving
above the minimum will receive a wage increase of
10%. Those receiving less than the proposed mini-
mum will be raised immediately to the minimum
or to their present wage plus 10%, whichever is
greater.
SECTION C: 1. A minimum call shall be for
eight hours.
2. There shall be no weather permitting calls.
3. Second assistants shall be given credit for
eight hours for each of the six recognized holidays
to-wit: New Year's, Decoration Day, July 4th,
Labor Day, Thanksgiving and Christmas, when not
working, provided they are currently assigned to
a production. They shall be given similar credit for
any other days when idle if there is a temporary
interruption not exceeding one week in the pro-
duction of a picture to which assigned and they
are recalled within the week.
SECTION D: The producers expressly declare
that unless compelled to do so by law they will not
stagger the employment of second assistant directors
for the purpose of avoiding the payment of over-
time, that is to say, if ordinarily an assistant
director would work approximately sixty hours a
week on one picture, it is not the intention to
engage such assistant for forty to forty-four hours,
using another second assistant for the surplus hours.
Article IX
Miscellaneous Matters
SECTION A: 1. The term of this agreement shall
be nine years from the effective date hereof, sub-
ject, however, to cancellation effective at the end
of four years or at any time thereafter as provided
in the following Sub-section 2.
2. At any time after three years there may be a
cancellation of the agreement upon a one year's
notice. Such cancellation may arise as follows:
Changes in the terms of this agreement, including
changed minimum wages and working conditions,
may, at the request of the Guild or any producer
signatory, be referred at any time to the appro-
priate Standing Conciliation Committee. If a unani-
mous agreement is reached by such committee, such
changes or revisions will immediately become a
part of the Basic Agreement as to the Guild and such
party only and be binding on the Guild and such
producers as are parties to the conciliation. If,
however, revisions proposed have not been agreed
upon by conciliation, any aggrieved party may, once
every two years, request arbitration. The appro-
priate Arbitration Committee will make findings,
795
which findings will, however, become a part of the
Basic Agreement only if mutually acceptable. If
any party to the proceedings is dissatisfied with the
conclusions reached by the Conciliation or Arbitra-
tion Committees, such party may, at any time after
three years from the effective date of this agreement,
terminate this Basic Agreement as between the
Guild and such other party by serving one year's
notice of cancellation on all parties signatory hereto.
Such termination shall not be effective prior to
March 13, 1943.
3. This agreement may be modified at any time
and from time to time by mutual agreement of the
Guild and the producers.
4. This agreement and all provisions hereof are
to be effective as of March 13, 1939.
SECTION B: The Guild agrees that during the
term hereof, it will not call or engage in or assist
a strike affecting motion picture production against
any producer signatory, and will order its members
to perform their contracts with the producers signa-
tory hereto. The Guild and the producers mutually
agree that during the term of this agreement they
will endeavor to promote goodwill, mutual under-
standing and real cooperation between members of
the Guild and the producers.
SECTION C: Subject to the limitations herein-
above in Article II, Section B, Sub-sections 2 and
3 set forth, nothing shall be so construed as to pro-
hibit the Guild from disciplining its members under
rules and regulations to be established by it, but the
imposition by the Guild of such discipline shall not
deprive the producer of any rights under this agree-
ment.
SECTION D: 1. The Guild will take proper steps
to provide that its By-laws carry this agreement
into effect, and during the term of this agreement,
it will not adopt any amendments to its Articles
or By-laws or adopt any rules or orders which will
be in conflict with this agreement.
2. The Guild will cause its By-laws to provide
that each of its members shall be bound by the
provisions of this agreement.
SECTION E: It is expressly agreed that no de-
fault or breach of this agreement by any producer
shall constitute a default or breach or impose lia-
bility on any other producer and it is further ex-
pressly agreed that a default of the Guild as to one
producer shall not constitute a default of the Guild
as to any other producer. Termination of the agree-
ment as to any producer shall not affect the agree-
ment as to other producers.
SECTION F: All hearings and deliberations of
the Standing Conciliation Committee and those of
the Arbitration Committee shall be closed to the
public. Only members of the Guild, and producers
and their authorized representatives, or witnesses
called by the committees, may attend. All written
communications to and from the committees shall
be privileged.
SECTION G: 1. All terms are used in the
ordinary accepted sense in the industry.
2. "Shorts" for the purpose of the Basic Agree-
ment are defined as any picture which when re-
leased is thirty-six hundred lineal feet or less in
length other than pictures known as newsreels.
travelogues or news and sports commentations if
such pictures are originally made and originally
distributed as such.
3. Members of the Guild in good standing are
defined as members who have not been suspended
or expelled from the Guild or who have not re-
signed from the Guild.
4. The word "year" shall be deemed to be from
March 13th to the next succeeding March 12th ex-
cept where the context requires a different con-
struction.
SECTION H: 1. Nothing in this agreement shall
prevent any person from negotiating with, and ob-
taining from the producers better conditions and or
terms of employment than those provided for in
this agreement. The terms herein provided are
minimum, and not maximum. The Guild will not
by the adoption of By-laws or otherwise seek to
prevent the inclusion in contracts of employment
with producers of any terms or conditions not vio-
lative of this agreement.
2. It is agreed that it is the intent of the pro-
ducers and of the Guild that nothing in this Basic
Agreement shall be construed so as to give to any
producer or to any individual employee the right
to terminate or the right to refuse to perform pur-
suant to any individual contract, or the right to
claim a breach of any individual contract of em-
ployment by reason of any breach of any provisions
of this Basic Agreement.
SECTION I: Whenever a producer signatory
is to be notified, it will be deemed sufficient for
the notice to be sent to such producer at the ad-
dress indicated opposite its signature on this agree-
ment. Notice to the Guild or any member thereof
will be deemed sufficient if sent to the Secretary' of
the Screen Directors Guild, Inc., 1525 Cross Roads
oi the World. Los Angeles, California. Any party
may change these addresses at any time by sending
notice of the change to the other by registered mail.
SECTION J: Cartoons are not to be included in
this agreement.
SECTION K: 1. No waiver of the minimum
terms herein provided (unless specifically author-
ized by the provisions of this agreement) may be
requested of any director or first or second assistant
director except through the Guild. The Guild may
issue written waivers of any of the terms hereof
when it deems such action appropriate, and unless
such waivers are issued to cover waivers specifically
provided for in this agreement, may impose reason-
able conditions.
2. Whenever any producer is entitled hereunder
to a waiver from the Guild, the Guild agrees to
issue the same without cost or conditions and to
act promptly upon the request for such waiver, and
in event that the Guild fails so to do, the producer
may proceed as though a waiver had been given.
SECTION L: 1: Any person now or hereafter
engaged in the business of producing motion pic-
tures in the United States shall be afforded the
opportunity of becoming signatory to this agreement.
2. This agreement shall be binding upon the
signatories hereto and all parties who by reason of
mergers, consolidations, reorganizations, sale, as-
signment or the like shall succeed to or become
entitld to a substantial part of the production
business of any signatory.
3. The Guild has no present intention of offering
different terms or conditions than herein provided
to any producer, but it is understood that it has
the right to do so and it is agreed that if the
Guild grants different terms or conditions to any
producer, whether signatory hereto or not, relating
to any kind or kinds of production or type or
types of services covered herein, then the Guild
shall offer like terms and conditions to the signa-
tories hereto with respect to like product or like
services.
SECTION M: The provisions of this agreement
shall apply in reference to pictures produced with
California as a base and to all location work in
connection with such pictures and shall apply to
pictures made by signatories hereto with other
places in the United States as a base when the
Guild shall have made proper arrangements to
carry on at such places and thirty days after the
Guild shall have notified the producer signatory
thereof.
SECTION N: This agreement shall be referred
to as the Producer- Screen Directors Guild Basic
Agreement of 1939.
SIGNATORIES : SCREEN DIRECTORS
GUILD. INC.; TWENTIETH CENTURY-FOX
FILM CORP.: LOEWS INC.: COLUMBIA
PICTURES CORP. OF CALIFORNIA. LTD.:
SAMUEL GOLDWVN INC.. LTD.: WARNER
BROS. PICTURES. INC.; PARAMOUNT PIC-
TURES. INC.; RKO -RADIO PICTURES,
INC.; UNIVERSAL PICTURES COMPANY,
INC.
796
797
Foreword And
Miowledgemeit
J[ S a practical aid to the busy theater man, that he may quickly and con-
* veniently find suggestions of a promotional nature for the exaction of added
revenue from his film programs, a compilation of "tested" stunts is presented
annually on the pages of this section.
The present compilation has been chiefly derived through the co-operation
of the following film companies' promotional departments and their respective
chiefs: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Howard Dietz; Warner Bros., S. Charles Enfeld;
RKO Radio Pictures, S. Barret McCormick; Paramount. Robert M. GiUham; United
Artists, Lynn Farnol; Universal, John Joseph; Columbia, Maurice A. Bergman;
Monogram, Louis S. Lifton.
Every idea from the inception of this Digest has been selected because of its
adaptability to a certain type of picture, or because of idea's general value as
a straight promotional stunt for the theater and its attractions.
Admittedly, many worthwhile stunts are omitted because they are limited
to a specific type of picture, or to one production. The main value of this Manual
is in employing it as a Quick Digest List, or to supplement the showman's
own file.
INDEX TO EXPLOITATION MATERIAL
Outstanding Campaigns of 1939: Exploitation Stunts:
'The Wizard of Oz"
801
812
802
814
'Gulliver's Travels"
804
817
805
'Bachelor Mother"
819
806
'Wuthering Heights"
820
807
Ballyhoos
807
Window Displays
822
"The Under-Pup"
808
Printed Matter
824
809
826
"Mr. Smith Goes to Washington"
"Mutiny in the Big House"
811
828
798
showmen's
Calendar
-JANUARY —
I: New Year's Day (In all the States, Territories,
District of Columbia and possessions).
Paul Revere Born (1735).
Proclamation of Emancipation (1863).
4: Utah Admitted (1896).
New Mexico Admitted (1912).
8: Anniversary of the Battle of New Orleans (Lou-
isiana).
17: Benjamin Franklin Born (1706).
19: Robert E. Lee's Birthday (Alabama, Arkansas.
Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, North
Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia).
21: Stonewall Jackson Born (1824).
29: McKinley Born (1843).
30: Franklin D. Roosevelt's Birthday.
-FEBRUARY—
3: Horace Greeley Born (1811).
7: Charles Dickens Born (1812).
Ash Wednesday.
8-14: National Boy Scout Week.
9: Nebraska Admitted (1867).
II: Thomas A. Edison's Birthday.
Daniel Boone Born (1734).
12: Lincoln's Birthday (Alaska, California, Connecti-
cut, Delaware, 1 1 1 no is . Indiana, Iowa. Kansas.
Kentucky, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Mon-
tana, Nevada, New Jersey, New York, North Da-
kota, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Dakota.
Tennessee, Utah, Virgin Islands, Washington, West
Virginia, Wyoming).
Georgia Day.
14: Valentine's Day.
Admission Day (Arizona).
15: Destruction of the Maine (1898).
22: Washington's Birthday (All the States, Territories.
District of Columbia and Colonial Possessions).
27: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's Birthday.
First Railroad Charter (1827).
4: Pennsylvania Day.
5: Boston Massacre (1770).
7: Luther Burbank's Birthday (California).
17: St. Patrick's Day.
21 : First Day of Spring.
22: Emancipation Day (Puerto Rico).
24: Easter Sunday.
25: Maryland Day.
30: Seward Day (Alaska).
-APRIL—
I: All Fools' Day.
7: Peary Discovered North Pole (1909).
8: Battle of Appomatox (1865).
Louisiana Admitted (1812).
9. Surrender of General Lee (1865).
12: Halifax Independence Resolutions (North Caro-
lina).
13: Thomas Jefferson's Birthday (Alabama).
14: Assassination of Abraham Lincoln.
19: Patriot's Day (Maine, Massachusetts).
21: Anniversary of Battle of San Jacinto (Texas).
22: Morton's Birthday (Nebraska).
Arbor Day (Nebraska).
23: William Shakespeare Born (1564).
24: First Newspaper Issued in America (1704).
U. S.-Mexico War (1846).
26: Confederate Memorial Day (Alabama, Florida,
Ceorgia, Mississippi).
Slavery Abolished in U. S. (1865).
27: Ceneral U. S. Crant Born (1822).
28: President Monroe Born (1758).
30: Louisiana Purchased.
Washington Became First President (1789).
Rhode Island Settled (1636).
-MAY
—MARCH—
2: Texas Independence Day.
3: Maine Admitted (1820).
Florida Admitted (1845).
First Postage Stamp used in U. S. (1847)
1 : May Day.
Child Health Day.
Labor Day (Philippines).
Dewey's Victory in Manila (1898).
2: Stonewall Jackson Shot (1863).
5: Napoleon's Death (1821 ).
10: Confederate Memorial Day (Kentucky North
Carolina).
799
11: Minnesota Admitted (1858).
Mother's Day (2nd Sunday).
12: Florence Nightingale Born (1820).
20: Anniversary of the Signing of the Mecklenburg
Declaration of Independence (North Carolina).
23: South Carolina Admitted (1788).
24: First Telegraph Message Sent (1844).
Empire Day (Canada).
29: Wisconsin Admitted (1848).
30: Confederate Memorial Day (1848).
Memorial Day (In all the States, Territories.
District of Columbia and Colonial Possessions,
except Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia,
Louisiana, Mississippi, New Mexico, North Caro-
lina, South Carolina, Virginia and Tennessee).
—JUNE—
1: Kentucky Admitted (1792).
Tennessee Admitted (1796).
3: Confederate Memorial Day (Tennessee).
Jefferson Davis' Birthday (1808).
6: Nathan Hale's Birthday (1756).
8: Battle of New Orleans (1815).
10: Franklin Drew Lightning From Sky (1752).
14: Harriet Beecher Stowe's Birthday.
Flag. Day.
15: St. Swithin's Day.
Arkansas Admitted (1836).
Pioneer Day (Idaho).
17: Bunker Hill Day.
18: Battle of Waterloo (1815).
20: West Virginia Day.
21 : Longest Day in Year.
23: Penn Signs Treaty of Peace with Indians
—JULY—
1 : Battle of San Juan Hill.
Dominion Day (Canada).
Battle of Gettysburg (1863).
2: Garfield's Assassination (1881).
3: Idaho Admitted (1890).
4: Independence Day.
10: Wyoming Admitted (1890).
11: John Quincy Adams Born (1767).
13: Forrest's Day (Tennessee).
24: Pioneer Day (Utah).
25: Occupation Day (Puerto Rico).
—AUGUST—
1 : Colorado Day.
3: Civic Holiday (Canada).
10: Missouri Admitted (1821).
13: Occupation Day (Philippines).
15: Panama Canal Opened (1914).
16: Bennington Battle Day (Vermont).
20: Benjamin Harrison Born (1833).
—SEPTEMBER—
2: Labor Day.
6: Lafayette Day.
President McKinley Assassinated (1901).
First Battle of the Marne.
9: Admission Day (California).
12: Defender's Day (Maryland).
17: Constitution Day.
22: Nathan Hale Executed (1776).
23: First Day of Autumn.
28: American Indian Day (4th Friday).
—OCTOBER—
1 : Missouri Day.
5: Wright Brothers Take First Long Distance Flight
in Airplane (1905).
8: Chicago Fire (1871).
9: Fraternal Day (Alabama).
11: Farmer's Day (2nd Friday) (Florida).
12: Columbus Day.
18: Alaska Day.
19: Surrender of Cornwallis (1781).
26: National Girl Scout Week.
27: Navy Day.
31: Hallowe'en.
Admission Day (Nevada).
—NOVEMBER—
1: All Saints' Day (Louisiana).
North and South Dakota Admitted (1889).
4: John Philip Sousa Born (1854).
5: Election Day.
7: Montana Admitted (1889).
1 1 : Armistice Day.
Washington Admitted (1889).
16: Oklahoma Admitted (1907).
17: Suez Canal Opened (1869).
21 : Thanksgiving Day (Some states will probably
observe Nov. 28).
—DECEMBER—
3: Illinois Admitted (1818).
7: Delaware Day.
8: Eli Whitney Born (1765).
11: Alfred Nobel Born (1833).
12: First Marconi Wireless Across Atlantic (1901).
16: Boston Tea Party (1773).
21 : Shortest Day of Year.
Filgrims Landed at Plymouth Rock (1620).
Woodrow Wilson's Birthday (South Carolina).
25: Christmas Day.
29: Iowa Admitted (1848).
31: West Virginia Admitted (1862).
New Year's Eve.
ARBOR DAY is observed in states on different days,
usually in the Spring. The dates in the same
states often vary from year to year by proc-
lamation.
tmam Campaigns
Of 1939
PROMOTION of films during 1939 was characterized by many standout cam-
paigns, aimed at creating pre-release interest on the part of the public;
spotlighting world premiere performances; and benefiting exhibition outlets all
the way from the first-runs through the entire range of subsequent showings,
including the smallest of theaters. A number of such campaigns are outlined
here, having been specially prepared for publication in this section by the
promotional departments of major and leading independent companies.
M-G-M's Campaign On
"The Wizard Of Oz*
FLANKED by a record advance advertising budget of $250,000.00, M-G-M's
national promotion campaign on "The Wizard of Oz" was one of the most
comprehensive and far-reaching ever planned for a single production.
Striking in its inventiveness and sheer
physical scope of coverage, it proved an in-
spiring foundation for showmen everywhere
who were given every opportunity to cap-
italize on the thorough national groundwork
built up under the supervision of Howard
Dietz, director of M-G-M advertising, publicity
and exploitation, in adapting individual cam-
paigns to local needs and conditions.
Months before the picture's release, late last
summer, newspaper and magazine readers
were being made aware of "The Wizard"
through a barrage of publicity, including
numerous art layouts, in many national mag-
azines, and 100-line teaser ads in 99 news-
papers in 43 cities.
Through July, August and September the
total circulation of publications carrying "Wiz-
ard" ads reached the unprecedented figure
oi 91,912,853. Full page, full-color ads were
used in 28 big city comic supplement sections.
Full-page, full-color ads appeared in 11 na-
tional magazines with a combined circulation
of over 24,000,000. Full-page, 2-color ads were
used in four leading juvenile magazines. The
monthly Lion's Roar columns appearing in 17
magazines devoted generous space to the
"Wizard."
Emphasizing the detailed completeness of
the campaign was the handsome four-section
press book prepared for the exhibitor, en-
closed in a full-color jacket featuring posters,
lobby cards and herald.
An addition to the regular publicity section
was a six-chapter, illustrated serialized article
on "The Story Behind the Wizard of Oz." of-
fered gratis to showmen for newspaper use
and covering the entire history of the book
from its inception to its emergence on the
screen.
801
Along with the special section devoted to
ads were two art serials, one in pen and ink.
in four installments, the other a six-chapter
picture strip affair, both with detailed
captions.
The multi-colored covers of the 30-page ex
ploitation section enclosed one of the most
thoroughgoing exhibitor aids ever issued on
a single picture. It offered suggestions for
contests, ballyhoo stunts and displays of every
description.
An innovation in the press book group was
a special Merchandising-Exploitation section,
containing an imposing list of national manu-
facturers, authorized licensees cooperating in
merchandising the picture. Tie-ups were con-
summated with makers of clothes, accessories,
books, toys and games of every kind. In-
cluded are raincoats, skirts, purses, dresses,
curtains, yard goods, shower curtains, um-
brellas and bibs, refrigerator dish covers,
tennis racket covers, oiled silk headwear,
scarfs, cocktail aprons, masquerade costumes,
slippers, masks, coat and garment hangers,
glassware, decalcominias, charm bracelets
and novelties.
Some 8.000 book stores displayed the 50
cent edition of the book, and there were spe-
cial $1.19 and 10 cent editions.
Three thousand music dealers, in 5,500
stories, 2,500 orchestra leaders, singers and
organists, and 350 radio stations were con-
tacted to cooperate in plugging the hit music
from the picture. These songs were also re-
corded by leading bandmen.
One of the most effective stunts in many
years was the "Wizard of Oz Caravan." Con-
sisting of a special motor van. constructed to
serve also as an exhibition float, the caravan
blanketed the country, visiting hundreds of
cities just prior to local "Wizard" playdates.
Within the van were transported the two black
ponies and phaeton used during the filming
of the picture. In each spot the caravan pre-
ceded by front-page publicity in many in-
stances, promoted, with help of the theater
man and newspaper editor, a children's con-
test, the winners chosen to impersonate the
Wizard, Scarecrow, Tin Woodman, Cowardly
Lion, and Dorothy riding in triumph through
the city. The caravan was greeted with
school holidays in its honor, official recep-
tions and tremendous interest everywhere in
its country-wide tour.
Warner Bros.' Campaign On
"Dodge Out
THE Warner Bros, publicity department, which inaugurated the industry's
policy of staging world premieres in their natural locales through showing
"Gold Is Where You Find It" in the tiny, mountain mining town of Weaverville,
Calif., in February, 1938, accorded "Dodge City" the greatest exploitation send-off
ever given a picture through holding its world premiere at Dodge City, Kansas,
last April.
This showmanship handling of the Errol
Flynn picture sponsored it to one of the great-
est grosses ever registered by a Warner at-
traction, an exploit rivaled in Warner history
only by the trans-continental venture of the
"42nd St. Special" that shook the country out
of the doldrums in 1933. From a promotional
angle, the stunt, devised and engineered by
Charles Einfeld, director of publicity and ad-
vertising, was a sensational success which
netted history-making newspaper, magazine
and radio breaks. It topped by a wide margin
other highly-successful "natural locale" open-
ings conducted by the Warner publicity de-
partment for such pictures as "White Banners,"
"Oklahoma Kid" and "Wings of the Navy."
The "Dodge City" stunt had its inception
last February when the Warner department
arranged for a delegation of prominent Kansas
citizens to call upon Jack L. Warner, vice-
president in charge of production, and Hal
B. Wallis, executive producer, in Hollywood
with a petition seeking the world premiere of
the picture. Heading the committee were
such notables as Lieutenant-Governor Carl
Friend of Kansas, State Senator Jesse C. Deni-
ous, publisher of the Dodge City daily news-
paper, and H. B. "Ham" Bell, only survivor
among the original settlers of that colorful
town. They presented a scroll containing the
names of virtually every one of Dodge City's
10,000 inhabitants asking the Warner Bros,
honor them by the first public showing of
"Dodge City," the Technicolor special. Sup-
porting this petition was a resolution adopted
by the Kansas State Legislature bidding for
the world premiere.
Immediately following completion of ar-
rangements for the important event, Charlie
Einield's publicity organization lounched an
intensive national campaign to focus the na-
tion's attention on the opening. In addition
to a constant flow of information from the
Warner departments in Hollywood and New
802
York, a special four-man unit was installed in
Dodge City three weeks preceding the pre-
miere. This publicity-energetic group not only
worked out cooperative plans with the Cham-
ber of Commerce and civic and state officials
but also served 2.000 newspapers, magazines
and syndicates all over the country with daily
stories dealing with arrangements being de-
veloped. The local Chamber of Commerce
ran a contest to pick a title for the big two-
day celebration marking the premiere and
the town's only paper, "The Dodge City
Globe," conducted a competition to select
the "Queen of Dodge City." In the area
around Los Angeles, crude wooden signs,
savouring of the old West, were posted to
inform passersby that Dodge City was ex-
actly 1,482 miles away.
After weeks of powerful publicity and ex-
ploitation, the "Dodge City Special" left Los
Angeles on Thursday, March 30, bound over
Santa Fe tracks for the premiere town. Ap-
proximately 8,000 persons, aware of the event
through every conceivable publicity medium,
jammed the station and environs to watch the
specially-chartered train depart with 200 of
Hollywood's topflight stars and newspaper
and magazine writers. Almost simultaneously,
about 150 scribes representing nationally-cir-
culated magazines, important daily news-
papers and syndicates were also converging
on Dodge City from other sections of the
country, all as guests of Warner Bros.
Hollywood luminaries who made the trip
on the "Dodge City Special" included: Errol
Flynn, star of the picture; Olivia de Havilland.
Ann Sheridan, Priscilla and Rosemary Lane.
Wayne Morris, Humphrey Bogart, John Gar-
field, Jane Wyman, Frank McHugh, Alan
Hale, Alan Jones, Gloria Dickson, Maxie Rosen-
bloom, John Payne, Gilbert Roland, "Big Boy"
Williams, Hoot Gibson, Jean Parker and
Claire Windsor.
The 20-car special was in every detail a
luxury train. A popular spot was the "Gay
Lady Saloon," identical to the cafe set which
figured importantly in the picture. One car
had been transformed into a press car. with
typewriters and other accessories available
to the scribes. At every station, messenger
service was provided for newspapermen wish-
ingto file telegrams. Another feature of the
"Dodge City Special" was a "palace car"
carrying 14 horses which the stars were to
ride in the Dodge City Roundup celebration
preceding the premiere. Two lounge cars,
a Perc Westmore makeup car, two diners
and an observation car were also included in
the equipment.
Warners' guests automatically became sub-
scribers to the "Dodge City Roundup," a tab-
loid newspaper published daily during the
trip to chronicle the happenings.
The Special stopped briefly at various towns
and cities along the way, with the stars mak-
ing back-platform appearances in more than
22 places. The widely-publicized expedition
drew scores of thousands of fans to the sta-
tions to greet the troupe. Specially-installed
loudspeakers carried their remarks to the
gatherings.
Fully 80,000 persons jammed Dodge City
to participate in the premiere celebration and
welcome the Hollywood celebs. They came
to town from miles around in every type of
vehicle from 1914 Fords to expensive de luxe
sedans. Housing facilities of hotels, boarding
and rooming houses and private homes were
exhausted and enterprising local residents
even erected tents to accommodate the multi-
tudes. Catching the spirit of the occasion.
Dodge City had revived much of the color
and character of its old "cow town" era.
Western costumes were in evidence every-
where and local citizens had scouted their
attics and cellars for old-time props to aug-
ment the authentic flavor of the proceedings.
The Warner publicity department had
worked out a series of novel stunts to add to
the general excitement. Sheriff Claude Dowdy,
presumably recalling that Dodge City was
once the scene of countless six-gun killings
back in its wild and wooly youth, banned pis-
tols during the celebration. Governor Payne
Ratner, joining in with the spirit of the event,
issued a proclamation urging local citizens to
wear beards in ye olde Dodge City manner.
Then Perc Westmore, head of the Warner
studio makeup department, came forth with
an offer of a silver shaving cup for the bes!
hirsute adornment.
Amazed at the huge crowd attracted by
the premiere program. Governor Ratner of-
fered six companies of state militia to help
handle the mob which made the town put
up its S. R. O. sign. In addition, local and
county authorities organized a force of nearly
300 experienced law-enforcement officers fo;
special duty during the celebration.
As the "Dodge City Special" approached
its destination, a fleet of 45 privately-owned
airplanes met it and escorted it into town.
The air armada then flew to Topeka to greet
Governor Ratner, Lieutenant-Governor Friend
and other state officials and accompany them
to Dodge City.
After a tumultous reception at the Dodge
City station, the Hollywood contingent was
given a reception by Governor Ratner, with
chief executives of five other states — Texas.
Oklahoma, Colorado, Nebraska and Missouri
— present. At noon a chuckwagon luncheon,
reminiscent of the pioneer period, took place
at the Lora-Locke Hotel. Nearly every im
portant state, county and city official par-
ticipated.
A parade, five miles long and typical of
the Old West, opened the afternoon's festiv-
ities. Warner stars, in Western costume, rode
on horseback at the head of the procession.
More than 25,000 persons from Kansas, Ne-
braska, Missouri, Oklahoma, Colorado and
Texas were in the line. Every type of con-
veyance, from stage coaches to surreys, was
used. A dozen or so bands, including the
famous Sante Fe outfit of 125 pieces, provided
martial music.
803
Par amount's Campaign On
"Gullivers Travels"
ONE of the most effective and far-reaching exploitation campaigns given any
picture during the past year was offered by Paramount Pictures on behalf
of the Max Fleischer Technicolor feature-length cartoon, "Gulliver's Travels."
an adaptation of the Jonathan Swift immortal story directed by Dave Fleischer.
The opening shot in this campaign, which
saw the film world premiered in Miami, Florida
on December 18 to one of the greatest crowds
in that city's history, got under way early
in March when Paramount inaugurated a li-
censee department for the characters in "Gul-
liver's Travels." To assure showmen through-
out the nation the finest co-operation in
merchandising the film, this department ar-
ranged tie-ups with more than 75 leading
manufacturers for the exclusive use of Gul-
liver character items which were sold in
stores everywhere.
Contracts for the exclusive use of Gulliver
items were closed for printed scarfs, children's
hand bags, novelty jewelry, boxed paper and
cardboard games, valentines, comic masks and
window displays, lamp and interior decora-
tions, glassware, composition books, pads,
stationery, ribbons, hair novelties, soap char-
acters, flashlights, sunsuits, playsuits, large
mechanical displays, coin banks, hard and
soft candy, doll houses, forts, castles, pull
toys as well as hundreds of other articles too
numerous to mention.
The eights popular songs in "Gulliver's
Travels" were given extensive radio and sheet
music publicizing. Following the songs suc-
cessful introduction over national radio net-
works, an initial order of 50,000 copies was
received from music stores. All leading record-
ing companies accorded "Gulliver's Travels"
music 60 separate recordings of the various
songs by the nation's topnotch orchestra
leaders. Among the recording companies were
Victor, Columbia, Decca. Bluebird, Vocalion,
U. S. Record and World Broadcasting.. Pop-
ular orchestra leaders rendering the "Gul-
liver's Travels" songs for the above companies
were Benny Goodman, Sammy Kaye, Bob
Zurke, Eddy Duchin, Guy Lombardo, Victor
Young, Glenn Miller, Johnny Messner, Richard
Himber, Blue Barron and Al Donahue.
In addition to the above publicizing. Para-
mount backed "Gulliver's Travels" with a
$200,000 advertising appropriation. This sum
was expended in both newspapers and na
tional magazines, including Liberty, Saturday
Evening Post, Collier's, Life and Look as well
as all leading fan magazines. Much of the
above advertising was devoted to four-color
ads to emphasize the color photography. The
total paid circulation for the above campaign
was more than 25,000,000 and represented
a reader circulation of 75,000,000.
Every leading syndicate in New York City
had special newsmen and photographers cover
the film's early production activities in Miami
where this Fleischer epic was produced. These
studio visits resulted in "Gulliver's Travels"
receiving the largest and most effective cover-
age in the country with special photographs
and feature articles. Through these channels
"Gulliver's Travels" publicity was placed in
all important key city newspapers throughout
the nation.
Ten exploitation representatives were sent
to key cities to aid showmen prepare their
campaigns on "Gulliver's Travels." In addi-
tion to their general publicity activities they
worked closely with local stores in arranging
merchandising tie-ups for Gulliver items which
have been licensed through the home office.
This important phase of their activity resulted
in department stores devoting special win-
dow and inside counter-displays on "Gulliver's
Travels."
In New York special tie-ups were put over
with R. H. Macy & Company whereby a special
30-foot float of Gulliver was the highlight of
their Thanksgiving Day parade, and effective
Gulliver merchandise was featured in many
departments throughout the store. Abraham &
Straus, in Brooklyn, built a special Toyland
around "Gulliver's Travels" as did Sibley,
Lindsey & Curr in Rochester. Among some
of the leading stores utilizing the Toyland
display material were Dayton Company, Pitts-
burgh; Burdine's, Inc., Miami; Gimbel Bros.,
Pittsburgh; Rike-Kumler Company, Dayton;
Herpolsheimers, Grand Rapids; Rucker-Rosen-
stock, Petersburgh, Va.; John C. Maclnnes.
Worcester; George Wyman Company, South
Bend; Stillman Dry Goods Company, Fort
Wayne; Hochschild Kohn Company, Baltimore
and the Charles Stores in Raleigh and Rich-
mond.
The world premiere of "Gulliver's Travels"
in Miami, Florida, received the full co-opera-
tion of all city and civic officials. Local news-
804
papers devoted generous columns of space to
the attraction which was the first cartoon fea-
ture produced in that city. Stars and leading
circuit and independent exhibitors from all
nearby cities attended the premiere which was
given national radio coverage through many
important coast-to-coast outlets. Jessica
Dragonette and Lanny Ross, who co-star in
the singing roles in "Gulliver's Travels"
rendered the song hits from the picture over
52 stations on a Columbia hookup which orig-
inated from WQAM. Miami. Ted Husing, na-
tionally known broadcaster, acted as master
of ceremonies of this event.
RKO Radio's Campaign On
"Bachelor Mother"
BABIES, baby carriages and even diaper pins figured in the unique campaigns
for RKO Radio's "Bachelor Mother," co-starring Ginger Rogers and David
Niven. And the little babes were a mighty factor in a hundred or more varied
campaigns including parades, banquets and ballyhoos.
Frank Starz of the Worth Theater. Ft.
Worth, staged a baby banquet at which 25
babies were registered. The event, billed
as the most unusual ever attempted, was
broadcast. The banquet room was attractively
decorated with balloons, and dolls and Mickey
Mouse and other rattlers were given each
child as a favor.
A baby carriage parade highlighted the
exploitation of Manager Jay Golden of the
Palace, Rochester. Fourteen girls, clad in
white Hoover aprons, led by an usher dressed
as an interne, were in line. Each carriage
carried a letter of the title and there was a
large doll in each vehicle. Due to the crowds,
the parade required a police escort.
Manager Jonason of the Mayfair Theater,
Asbury Park, used two youngsters labeled
"Bachelor Mother" for his elaborate "Bachelor
Mother" campaign. The babies were wheeled
along the promenade by attendants in
white. At intervals they were taken from the
wheel chairs and allowed to romp on blankets
on the boardwalk.
D. B. Cottral, manager of the Chief, Colo-
rado Springs, staged a spectacular bathing
beauty contest in the Garden of the Gods.
Manager Morton Levin of the Warner Theater.
Atlantic City, tied in with department stores
for a sales girl beauty contest.
Dave Kamsky of the Byrd and State, Rich-
mond, Va., tied in with the Crosley Auto Com-
pany for a novel ballyhoo. Four cots were
obtained, two spotted in the lobbies while the
others toured the community. The cars in the
lobbies were loaded with bathing beauties
while those on tour carried ladies with babies,
along with appropriate billing.
E. C. Perlstein, publicity director of the
Hipprodrome, Cleveland, worked with the
chain of Marshall Drug Stores on a combina-
tion broadcast and window display tie-up.
This chain has a regular half-hour broadcast,
six mornings a week, over Station WHK,
through which they receive thousands of let-
ters. Part of each broadcast was devoted to
the Ginger Rogers-David Niven comedy. Piles
of fan mail were dumped into each store
window, surrounded with black and white
stills and a 30x40 crediting theater attraction
and playdate. The stunt was to guess the
number of letters in the windows, with suit-
able prizes for the winner.
The Golden Gate, San Francisco, worked
with Borden Milk Company and the latter at-
tached small cards to each delivered milk
bottle, reading: "Even a Bachelor Mother can
raise a baby with perfect ease and safety by
using our products."
It took a feminine manager to think up this
one! Manager Julia Smith of the State Thea-
ter, Waterbury, Conn., queried prospective
fans on what they knew about babies in a
novelty card. Mrs. Smith tied in with Engel-
man's Kiddie Shop in the promotion, which
included 10,000 cards with teaser copy and
inserted safety pin.
A check for ten cents, good and valid, on
"The Bachelor Mother Account," was sent to
1000 persons on the house mailing list by
Manager Frank Weatherford of the Worth
Theater, Fort Worth, Texas. Each check was
filled in by ink made out to the prospective
patron and good from date of mailing on the
First National Bank. "The check's purpose
is to call your attention to the next paragraph
of this note," Weatherford said in the letter
accompanying the check, and this was a
sales talk on behalf of the picture.
United Arlists' Campaign On
"WUTHERING HEIGHTS"
A CAMPAIGN keyed to reach an untold number of moviegoers through a
national magazine campaign that cost $125,000.00, radio broadcasts, public
libraries in every part of the country, endorsements by noted personalities which
were used by magazines and newspapers, and cooperative campaigns with
women's clubs and organizations, such as the English Speaking Union, etc.,
made up the exploitation campaign for the Samuel Goldwyn production, "Wuth-
ering Heights," and established it as one of the important pictures of the year.
A publicity campaign was concentrated in
such magazines as McCall's, Good House-
keeping. Cosmopolitan. Each of these pub-
lications, with circulations running into mil-
lions, did a piece on one phase or another
on "Wuthering Heights." For instance, the
Ladies Home Journal sent Alexander Wooll-
cott to Hollywood to do an "on-the-set" piece
on the picture. His praise, and the praise
of many others, such as William Lyons Phelps
and Dale Carnegie, were given the widest
possible circulation for their influence on word-
of-mouih publicity.
For the newspaper advertising the essential
appeal of the national magazine advertising
was changed. The horror and the "beauty
and the beast" element were reduced and we
made more of an appeal on the basis of the
romantic strength of the story.
The campaign was successful. It made one
of the biggest problem pictures of the year
one of the year's biggest successes, playing
seven weeks to a new record at the Rivoli
Theater in New York.
Merle Oberon and Laurence Olivier, stars
of the picture, made radio broadcasts on the
Kate Smith Hour; the Screen Guild Show; the
Chase and Sanborn Hour; and (he Lux Thea-
ter of the Air. These four radio shows, emanat-
ing from New York and Hollywood, before
and directly after the opening of the film
gave advance and current publicity. In each
air show, a scene from the picture, and the
greatness of "Wuthering Heights."
Public libraries, working with schools, in
conjunction with publishers of all Bronte works,
the Hays Office and United Artists, educated
their regular readers, and put on special cam-
paigns to attract new readers to the 100-year-
old novel. Five thousand eight page dis-
plays, telling with pictures the story of the
making of the film from beginning to end, were
prominently shown in libraries everywhere.
Publicity in the Library Journal, official li-
brarian's publication, gave advance informa-
tion about the "Wuthering Heights" displays.
Twenty-five thousand four page pamphlets.
bearing the endorsement of the Hays Office
on the front page, and telling the story of the
film in a series of 12 pictures, was sent to
every public library in the U. S. Many schools
asked for this pamphlet
A "Read-the-book-and-see-the-picture cam-
paign" resulted in an amazing increase in the
sales of "Wuthering Heights." Public libraries
bought many more copies, due to much in-
creased reader interest. Bock shops showed
an unusual number of sales in advance of
the film. Rare first editions were brought out
and sold; the regular priced edition had two
printings; the S1.00 edition went through three
editions, and for the 39 cent edition six print-
ings amounting to more than 35,000 copies
were run off. This renewed interest was
evident not only in "Wuthering Heights," but
all other Bronte writings, which benefitted
accordingly.
Endorsements were obtained from such per-
sonalities as Alexander Woollcott, William
Lyons Phelps, Yale's "Grand Old Man of
Literature" and Dale Carnegie. The importance
of this phase cannot be over-estimated when
we find the New York Times using the Wooll-
cott piece for a Sunday drama page feature,
lames Hilton did a similar story for Cosmopoli-
tan.
Eight of the 10 original costumes worn by
Merle Oberon and Geraldine Fitzgerald to-
gether with accessories were routed through
the country in conjunction with key city show-
ings, where they were used as window dis-
plays in department stores. These costumes
were in constant use for a period of four
month, being shown in New York at Saks
Fifth Avenue for two weeks.
Women's Clubs everywhere, through their
national headquarters, and such organizations
as the English Speaking Union with branches
in 30 cities throughout the U. S., were inter-
ested in "Wuthering Heights." This meant
that publicity channels rarely utilized were
advantageously used to promote the film.
These organizations worked in close harmony
with schools, libraries, etc.
United Artists' Campaign On
"INTERMEZZO"
FOR the Selznick International production, "Intermezzo," the campaign had
several phases. First, introducing and making a star out of a new player,
Ingrid Bergman. Word of mouth publicity was essential. This was done through
columnists, feature stories, and a wonderful spread planted by United Artists
with the Associated Press, which went to 600 newspapers.
The picture had a very special appeal to
women. Previews were arranged for women
feature page writers and columnists such as
Dorothy Dunbar Bromley and Anne Hirst.
The radio also played a big part in the
campaign. Here again, the women's angle
was given utmost consideration, and com-
mentators such as Martha Deane, over the
Mutual Broadcasting System; Nancy Craig, on
her "Woman of Tomorrow" program on the
NBC Blue Network (WJZ, New York) and
Adelaide Hawley's "The Women's Page" pro-
gram for the Columbia Broadcasting System
(WABC. New York) were impressed with the
importance of the picture as women's enter-
tainment. Special showings of "Intermezzo"
were arranged for these broadcasters and
three nation-wide broadcasts, timed to gel
the maximum attention of women listeners,
(in the early afternoons), went out over the
three major networks.
The story was laid in Sweden . . . the star
was Swedish. The Swedish and other Scandi-
navian ministers in Washington and Consuls
General in New York were interested in Miss
Bergman. Count Folke Bernadotte, Commis-
sioner General at the Swedish Pavilion of
the World's Fair, and a cousin of the King
of Sweden, was also advised about the Ameri-
can debut of his country-woman and ex-
hibited unusual interest. The Count and
Countess are leaders in International Society,
so a function was arranged in connection with
the Music Hall premiere. This was attended
by all the official Scandinavian society headed
by Count and Countess Bernadotte, and was
covered by society and fashion reporters and
photographers. After a champagne toast to
the absent star, the entire party were guests
at the premiere of W. G. Van Schmus, manag-
ing director of the Music HalL Earlier that
day, a group of Swedish children, ranging
from six to twelve years of age, dressed in
native costumes, arrived at the Music Hall
bearing flowers as a gift to Ingrid Bergman.
This stunt also broke the news pages, and
reporters and photographers were present.
Letters were sent to Swedish clubs and social
organizations everywhere. As there were
close to one thousand clubs, each having a
membership of approximately five to fifteen
hundred, one-and-a-half-million Swedish peo-
ple were reached in this manner.
The story having a musical background
made the musical magazines a source of pub-
licity not usually available to motion pic-
tures. Editors of these magazines were shown
the picture and came away raving about the
way Ingrid Bergman played the piano. Pub-
licity of this kind brought to theaters every-
where additional audiences.
United Artists' Campaign On
"Four Feathers"
AN advertising and publicity campaign, using national monthly and weekly
magazines, publications such as American Weekly, Life and Look, plus
an auxiliary campaign of two-color ads in key-city newspapers, brought the
"story" of the Alexander Korda production, "Four Feathers" before a country-
wide audience of millions of motion picture patrons. The campaign stressed
the love angle, action, color, authenticity of location (the big battle scenes were
made at the site of the original battle of Omdurman in the Sudan). For the
807
women's angle, an additional campaign was set about the new Korda film dis-
covery, June Duprez. That this campaign was highly successful is shown by
the fact that "Four Feathers" is proving to be one of the biggest money-makers
ever to have come out of England.
Newspaper publicity was centered upon
the discovery, in New York, of a group of
veterans of the British Army who had fought
with Kitchener at Omdurman. These men,
after seeing the picture in advance of the
premiere, vouched for the authenticity of story
and location. An outstanding publicity stunt
was the one the Associated Press liked so
well — the idea of a story on the three Korda
brothers. They ordered the interview from
London, and it was used by nearly 1,000 news-
papers in the United States alone. Picture
layouts and stories in the American Weekly,
Life and Look were planted to augment the
regular newspaper publicity campaign.
The exploitation campaign on "Four Feath-
ers" was made to order for stunts of all kinds.
In New York, helium-filled balloons were spot-
ted at important vehicular and pedestrian
traffic points. These balloons carried picture
and theater copy. An extra "break" came
when one of the balloons broke away during
a heavy wind, and floated all over the city,
coming down in an airshaft of a Mulberry
Street tenement house. Quill pens, the holders
made up of four different colored feathers
were sent to all circuit theater heads, to the
trade and lay press, and were extensively
used by theaters as a giveaway.
A huge float, showing dervishes attacking
the fort with British soldiers defending (12 men
being used in all), was a part of the cam-
paign. Three 30-foot trucks carrying 24-sheets
drove all over New York, paying particular
attention to beaches and baseball games.
These were used for one week. Enlisting the
aid of Veterans of Foreign Wars, the American
Legion, Boy Scouts and other organizations
to participate in premieres, with their own
bands, always made the openings every-
where very colorful afairs.
The game of Darts was exceeding popular
at this time, and a special exploitation give-
away, in the form of a target, (just large
enough for use in a game room), together with
four darts each having a different colored
feather, was sent to the same people who
received the quill pens.
From the fashion exploitation angle. June
Duprez was played up wherever a break was
possible. Jaeger's, famous London woolen
house, was interested, and a series of pic-
tures taken in color, in London, got good
breaks in papers throughout this country.
Univer sal's Campaign On
"The Uider-pup"
ONE hundred and eighty-six thousand words were filed over telegraph lines
from Scranton, Pennsylvania, to newfpapers all over the country by 78
correspondents who had just witnessed the film debut of eleven-year-old Gloria
Jean in Universal's "The Under-Pup." The week running up to the premiere had
seen as many more words dispatched in addition to a half-dozen Associated
Press and United Press stories which printed in probably every good-sized town
in the land.
The above results, recorded in a press book
nearly a foot thick, were the consummation
of the critics' junket instituted by Universal
to introduce Gloria, practically unknown be-
forehand, to film fans. Decision to bring the
critics to Scranton, the little star's hometown,
for the premiere, was made about three weeks
before release of the picture. In that period
nearly 100 invitations were sent to the re-
viewers, complete preparations for Scranton's
enthusiastic reception were made, and trans-
portation arrangements completed that in-
volved two special trains, 42 plane movements
and almost 100 separate train reservations.
The out-of-town scribes were housed at the
St. Moritz Hotel in New York, lavishly enter-
tained in the metropolis and transported to
Scranton by chartered, air-conditioned special
train. On their return to New York, they were
feted at the World's Fair, taken to the pick
of the Broadway shows and night clubs and
sent home by any type of transportation
808
chosen; rail, steamship or plane. The cam-
paign proper was over by August 29.
It resulted in nationwide recognition and
approval by August 29. for a child little known
on August 20. Photos and stories of the pre-
miere and the star appeared in all leading
newspapers, sometimes challenging the world
war crisis for attention on the front page.
Newsreel and radio carried Gloria's personal-
ity and voice to every town where films are
sold. Meeting the Jean girl personally, talk-
ing to her and her family, hearing her sing
and watching her act on the stage made a
favorable impression on every writer, thus
insuring sympathetic newspaper comment on
the star's future activities.
Such an ambitious effort to exploit Gloria
Jean and her film debut was decided upon
when Universal officials saw the first studio
showing of "The Under-Pup." This showing
proved both star and picture to be very valua-
ble cinema properties. A home town premiere
conducted on a national scale was considered
to be the most effective exploitation medium.
The cooperation of the anthracite industry
was successfully solicited in Scranton. On
premiere day 80,000 inhabitants of Scranton
were estimated to be in the celebrating
throngs gathered around the railroad station
and the theater. Gloria Jean's debut was
made a city-wide holiday.
The press, particularly the Scranton Tribune,
cooperated. The Chamber of Commerce,
United Mine Workers of America, merchant
associations and civic and social groups had
been enlisted.
After three days of press interviews, photo-
graphs and parties at the St. Mortiz and a
radio debut for Gloria on the "We, the
People" program, the combined Eastern and
Western forces with the assembled cor-
respondents entrained for Scranton on the
morning of August 24. More than 80,000 of
Scranton's 150,000 inhabitants lined the streets
of that city for the welcome ceremony. Mayor
Huester, Gloria's older sister, Sally, aged 14,
and a Welcome Committee of 100 met the
train at the depot. The American Legion
Post fired an 11 gun salute, one gun for each
year of Gloria's age, from the station roof.
With the star travelling at its head in an
open car escorted by a bodyguard of miners,
the motorcade of guests passed through
crowded, decorated streets to Court House
Square. Here Mayor Huester crowned Gloria
Queen of Anthracite on a throne of polished
anthracite coal, while newsreel cameras
turned.
The interest of magazines of national circula-
tion and radio programs on coast-to-coast
hookups was complete and further publicity
was obtained through these mediums.
Perhaps, in addition to the spot publicity
obtained, the greatest benefit was the good-
will of the many critics who saw Gloria Jean
for the first time in their lives. Their feeling
toward her and toward Universal may be
inferred from the fact that every critic who
attended the junket saw fit to write an en-
thusiastic letter of commendation to Universal,
after returning home.
Those of the Universal staff responsible for
the management of the premiere were: Louis
Pollock, SidneyDavidson, Henry A. Linet, Her-
bert Lewis, Carl Rigrod and James Mac-
Farland.
Columbia's Campaign On
ONE of the most spectacular exploitation campaigns ever set for a Columbia
production was planned and executed successfully on behalf of Frank
Capra's "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington," when, in association with the National
Press Club, the nation's most important newspaper men's club, the world pre-
miere in Constitution Hall of the James Stewart-Jean Arthur co-starring vehicle
secured the widest possible coverage ever accorded a motion picture. No
possible estimate of the full linage can be had, even at this printing, because
Columbia Picture publicists still are getting editorial and columnar comment
from publications all over the United States, and from the most distant points
throughout the world.
Preparations for the world premiere per- which includes in its membership many of
formance of "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington" the nation's most distinguished journalists,
under the aegis of the National Press Club, were under way months in advance of the
809
actual presentation October 17 in Washing-
ton's iamous Constitution Hall. Arthur Hach-
ten, president of the National Press Club, and
International News Service representative in
Washington, headed the organization's com-
mittee, aided by Fred Perkins of the Wash-
ington Bureau of the Scripps-Howard News-
paper Alliance and Walter Karig. Washing-
ton correspondent for the Newark Evening
News. This committee worked closely with
the Columbia publicity organization in setting
plans for the world premiere.
The cooperation of the National Press Club
committee secured Constitution Hall for the
premiere and the further cooperation of the
Daughters of the American Revolution, owners
of the world-renowned building. Invitations
to the nation's law-makers, then attending a
special session of Congress, won a most grati-
fying response, with a large majority of Wash-
ington's dignitaries signifying their intention
to attend the world premiere, including such
personalities as: Postmaster General James A.
Farley; U. S. Solicitor General Robert Jackson;
Charles Edison, Acting Secretary of Navy;
lesse H. Jones. Chairman of RFC; U. S. Su-
preme Court Justice Stanley F. Reed; Asst.
Secretary of Commerce John Monrone Johnson;
Colonel Ed Starling; Senator Alben W. Bark-
ley; Senator Burton K. Wheeler; Senator
George W. Norris; Senator James F. Byrnes;
Senator "Happy" Chandler; Senator Henry
Cabot Lodge; Senator Claude Pepper; Senator
Robert Reynolds; Senator William H. Smothers;
Senator Theodore F. Green; Senator William
H. King; Senator Lynn J. Frazier; Senator Jo-
seph F. Guffey; Senator J. H. Bankhead; Sena-
tor Carl A. Hatch; Lowell Mellett, Executive
Director National Emergency Council; Repre-
sentative Sol Bloom; Representative Edith
Nourse Rogers; Eugene Meyers.
At the same time plans were completed for
the attendance, at the world premiere, of
critics from the Boston, New York, Philadel-
phia, Baltimore and Washington newspapers,
syndicates and trade papers. Nearly 60 news-
paper men and women were in the party
that took the Columbia-"Mr. Smith" special
train to the nation's capital to attend the
screening. Among those present were: From
New York: Chester B. Bahn, Howard Barnes,
William Boehnel, Colvin Brown, Herbert
Cohen, Eileen Creelman, Frank Farrell, Dale
Harrison, Arthur James. Bland Johaneson,
Maurice Kann, George Lait, Chick Lewis, Don
M. Mersereau, Daniel D. Mich. Leo Mishkin.
Lee Mortimer, Frank Nugent, Rose Pelswick,
Martin Quigley, Martin Scofield Quigley.
George Ross, Sam Shain, Frances Simon, H.
Allen Smith, Jack Stinnett. Irene Thirer, Archer
Winsten, Joan Younger. From Philadelphia:
Bernard Bergman, Jay Emanuel, Jeff Keen.
Henry Murdock. From Baltimore: Norman
Clark, Gilbert Kanouer, Rita Swan, H. L.
Cooling and C. Dulaney. From Boston: Mar-
jory Adams, Joyce Dana, Peggy Doyle, Helen
Eager, Prunella Hall, Charles Howard, Elinor
Hughes, John Hutchens.
Prior to the actual premiere, a special New
York luncheon in honor of H. V. Kaltenborn.
who appears in the film as himself, secured
added radio comment from the leading other
commentators who attended the luncheon.
In Washington on the day of the premiere, a
luncheon was held for members of th"> Na-
tional Press Club, at which Frank Capra.
Harry Cohn, president of Columbia Pictures,
and W. G. Van Schmus. managing director
of Rradio City Music Hall, were guests of
honor. Mr. Capra was available for inter-
views following the luncheon and added news-
paper space was secured then in the Wash-
ington press, which outdid itself in featuring
this unusual premiere. An early dinner, at
which Frank Capra again was the guest of
honor, preceded the premiere. The Board of
Governors of the National Press Club and the
attending newspaper men and women were
present.
Further coverage was given the film when,
through the cooperation of the National Press
Club, the club's wire room was made avail-
able to the visiting newspaper men and
thousands of words were telegraphed and
cabled to newspapsrs all over the world im-
mediately following the premiere.
One of the highlights of the campaign was
the special National Press Club edition of the
Washington Times-Herald which succeeded in
placing a special edition of the paper into the
hands of the more than 4,000 dignitaries as
they left Constitution Hall immediately follow-
ing the premiere. The Times-Herald devoted
almost its entire first page to the event, while
inside pages were devoted to a picture spread
and further comment on the motion picture and
the personalities attending the premiere.
The U. S. Army and Navy added their
support to the premiere when arrangements
were made for the flood-lighting of Constitu-
tion Hall by the Navy Department's newest
and most powerful anti-aircraft searchlights,
while the 216th Coast Artillery Band was
loaned for a stage appearance in Constitution
Hall as an important added feature to the
premiere.
The world premiere of "Mr. Smith Goes to
Washington" was commented upon editorially
bv virtually every leading newspaper in the
United States, while columnists devoted maxi-
mum space to furthering audience interest in
the Frank Capra production. "Mr. Smith" also
received widest possible radio coverage, with
virtually every station in the United States
and Canada devoting considerable air time
to exploiting its importance as one of Holly-
wood's most important contributions to screen
advancement. Such commentators as Walter
Winchell, H. V. Kaltenborn, Jimmy Fidler.
Lowell Thomas headed the parade of radio
reporters who devoted several broadcasts to
news and comment about the Capra hit with,
literally, millions of American homes receiving
the message of the film's timeliness in ad-
vance of local showings of the picture.
810
Monogram's Campaign On
^■OR the first time in 28 years, the American Prison Association was scheduled
to hold its annual congress in New York. It was to be the 69th similar
convention of this organization. The dates were October 16 to 20. Monogram
felt that if its big prison picture, "Mutiny in the Big House," could be screened
before the 800 guests attending these sessions from every state in the Union as
well as Canada and Mexico, it reasonably could expect that these 800 would
become advance agents for the film. To obtain permission to screen the picture
as part of the activities of this convention was the task.
When you consider that among the speakers
to address the various sessions were Mayor
Fiorello LaGuardia, Lt. Gov. Poletti and Austin
H. MacCormick, commissioner of correction;
and that Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt was
scheduled to be the speaker at one of the
luncheons — it was no mean achievement. No-
where else in America is a similar meeting
held during the year. This is the great annual
forum for discussion of all problems relating
to delinquency and is attended by leading
authorities in penology — wardens, chaplains,
parole officers, psychiatrists, criminologists,
leaders of the Salvation Army, Department of
Justice representatives, narcotic experts, and
similarly informed men and women.
Permission to show the picture was granted
after several conferences with Edward R.
Cass, who is general secretary of the Ameri-
can Prison Association and former president of
this same organization, as well as a member
of the New York State Commission of Cor-
rection. Among those whose okay had to be
obtained was Edward P. Mulrooney, former
police commissioner of the City of New York,
former Commissioner N. Y. State Department
of Correction and member of the executive
committee of the American Prison Association.
The screening took place in the Grand Ball-
room of the Hotel New Yorker at the first
available opportunity and was attended by
600 persons. At the close of the showing the
guests were asked to send in their written
reactions to Monogram's New York head-
quarters.
The effectiveness of the stunt is apparent
by a reading of some of the endorsements
from all over the country which began to
pour in.
The following were among the letters oi
high praise.
Austin H. MacCormick said "a very fine
picture, both from the entertainment stand-
point and from the standpoint of the prison
administrator or chaplain . . . Aside from its
inspirational value, however, it seems to me
good enough from the straight entertainment
standpoint to be a success and I hope it will
enjoy very wide distribution."
E. R. Cass wrote, "I found 'Mutiny in the
Big House' a sincere, moving and compelling
photoplay. Charles Bickford as the prison
chaplain gives a stirring performance and
Barton MacLane makes a completely believ-
able character of the leader of the rioters. I
think that organizations interested in any
phase of the problem of delinquency would
benefit by seeing 'Mutiny in the Big House'."
Agnes McKernan, Brigadier, Women's
Prison Secretary of The Salvation Army, said,
"am certainly happy to endorse your picture,
'Mutiny in the Big House' which was shown
at the Hotel New Yorker during the recent
Prison Congress. I was greatly impressed
and hope it will do something to help us to
do away with capital punishment. I just
loved the acting of Charles Bickford as Father
Joe, the chaplain, and certainly think he was
outstanding. Thank you for the privilege of
seeing it."
Theater Frosts
Giant Blow-Ups Circus Front
A WHEN you have important stars in your
attractions you can achieve magnificent
fronts by using larger-than-life photographic
blow-ups. The best effect is achieved by em-
ploying full length shots of the subjects rather
than heads. Huge blow-ups of important
scenes or settings in the production can be
utilized to advantage. For instance, on a
recent picture one exhibitor, working from a
scene still, transformed his entire front into
a semblance of the United States Senate,
giving patrons the effect of walking into the
actual Senate Chamber.
Stockade
A ON pictures with a frontier or pioneei
™ theme you can take your cue from an
old-fashioned log stockade or fort. Using either
real logs or simply a compo-board cut-out con-
struct the front of a stockade across your mar-
quee. There can be gates in the center,
slightly ajar, with space for a cannon pointing
out into the street, the cannon to be fired off
to mark the opening of the picture. At both
ends of the marquee use look-out towers from
the top of which you can fly pennants or flags
lettered with name of the attraction.
Timers
.^L. THERE are any number of ways in which
you can build an exciting front around
a circus motif. One exhibitor recently went
as far as to drape his entire entrance with
cheap material to simulate the entrance to
"the big tent" and had a steam calliope play-
ing full force to attract the crowds. Less elab-
orate would be the use of distorting mirrors
in your outer lobby. Since actual ones might
be difficult to procure, you can get the same
effect by using sheet metal bent into shapes
which will reflect the human orm in ludicrous
fashion. People will invariably, after they
have looked at themselves, hang around to
see the effect on others. Animals in cages,
banners and streamers are also of use in
creating the circus atmosphere. A good touch
would be to have your barker or door attend-
ant in the costume of a ringmaster.
Military Guards
.^L. IF there is a military or naval flavor to
your picture you can add a touch of
smartness to your front by having two attend-
ants attired as soldiers or sailors standing at
attention near the box-office or on either side
of the entrance proper to the theater. The
same idea could be applied to air pictures,
using pilots instead. In the event of a histori-
cal picture use soldiers in costumes of the
period with which the film deals.
A A good-will getter that will meet with
™ general favor from your patrons. Twin
clocks are suspended from the glass front of
the cashier's cage, facing the public. On a
metal plate, about nine by twelve inches, two
clocks are set in. One time-piece conveys
the correct time, while the time on the second
clock in about two hours later. Above the first
clock is the legend: "The time is Now—".
Over the second clock, the message reads:
"You will be Out — ". In short, the ticket
purchaser knows at a glance not only on whal
time he is entering, but when he will be ex-
iting.
Hidden Ballyhoo
.^L. A life-size cutout of the star is placed
^ near front of lobby. It is mounted on
beaverboard. Completely surrounding the cut-
out place a number of star stills. A micro-
phone is placed in a spot where the speaker
can watch persons looking at the display. As
each person examines the display, he ii
treated to a talk on the highlights of the pic-
ture and the work of the star. The announcer
in this way has a great opportunity to put
over some clever selling talk.
Sign-Savers
Out-of-Town Notices
A GETTING away irom standard usage
^ sometimes saves money. Most theaters
when they want hanging banners, use sign
cloth or paper, but just as good work can be
done on builder's sheathing or "rosin" paper
neatly tacked to a frame of roofing lath. The
paper is given a coat of oil paint of the de-
sired tint, and lettered in with oil or water-
color, the latter where the sign is protected
from storms. For marquee structures, corru-
gated paper braced on the back with ordinary
plasterers' lath, will often serve as well and
is much cheaper than compoboard and much
easier to cut out. The design is done on all
paint and the back venished with "ceiling"
varnish, which can be had for less than a
dollar a gallon. Such a structure can with-
stand a moderate amount of rain, and still
save considerably on the cost.
Star Portraits
| AN artist sets up his easel in front ol
^ the theater several days in advance ol
Ihe coming attraction and begins an oil or
watercolor portrait of the star or stars featured
in it. The public is always interested in
watching an artist at work. A placard or
signs should announce that the artist is com-
pleting a portrait of name of star) who will
appear at the theater (date) in (name of attrac-
tion). If you desire, the picture at its comple-
tion may be presented to a local celebrity,
newspaper critic or to the president of the
star's local fan-club.
Smoke Signals
THIS is a fine one for pictures with a
^ Western background or one in which
Indians appear. Outfit two bally men as In-
dians and supply them with a smoke-pot.
They should appear atop the marquee and al
intervals send up smoke signals by alternately
covering and uncovering the smoke-pot with
a blanket. People will notice the smoke and
investigate its source. Title of picture should
be prominently display, of course.
Teaser Frames
★ FOR a particularly sensational film use
some of your lobby frames in this manner.
Cover them over completely with heavy
paper or canvas duck and in bold letters write
across the covers "Censored." Placards near
by should announce that the covers will prob
ably be removed in a few days. This of course
should be done a few days before your play-
date and when the covers are taken off the
frames will contain your selling copy and art
work.
WHEN you have an exceptionally good
^ attraction, but one which might prove
somewhat difficult to sell, it will probably pay
you dividends to procure out-of-town newspa-
per notices from cities where the picture has
previously played and blow them up to con-
siderable size to be displayed in your outer
lobby. The more the better and they should
be splashed boldly across your front. Signs
should read: "This is what (name of city) thinks
about (name of picture)."
Crime Display
k DON'T overlook the value of a crime
^ exhibit in a case where the picture per-
mits. It may be an old one, but it is always
effective and will assuredly gain you the
attention of the crowd. Your local police chief
and his department will ordinarily be willing
to co-operate in the interests of law enforce-
ment. Guns, blackjacks, photos and various
pieces of material evidence in the department's
iiles should be displayed. Be sure that they
are always wired down to panels and thai
an attendant is set to guard them.
Premieres, Etc.
.^L. ON occasions when you might wish to
^ stage a "Hollywood" pemiere or are
having the first territorial showing of a major
attraction you can add to the excitement of
the event by such fancy touches as hiring a
large carpet to be laid from the lobby right
out to the curb, or rigging an awning in the
event that your marquee does not come flush
with the curb-line. Potted shrubs around the
front and a basket of fresh flowers in the lobby
are other touches to remember. If the premiere
is a really important one and the audience
is liable to be dressy you might even construct
some small stands outside the theater for
spectators.
Newspaper Blow-Up
★ NEWSPAPER editors like a break for their
publication and at times you will find it
worth while to co-operate with them and dig
up old issues that tie in with the playdate
picture. These may be displayed as they are
or enlarged. One plan is to have a giant
masthead painted and thrown across the entire
theater front. Such a masthead may run as
wide as 60 or 70 feet. Below this you may
use page blow-ups or story blow-ups on a
much smaller scale, but several of them. This
giant newspaper stunt is sure-fire as an
attention-getter for the theater and in addition
it is a good-will builder between the theater
manager and the editor.
813
* Lobbies *
Movie Bait
.jL. AFTERNOON and night of change oi
^ show, have movies taken oi folks enter-
ing your theater and advertise by slide that
the films will be shown the following night
as a part of the new program. This may re-
quire the services of a professional camera-
man, or possibly the town's amateur movie
man. Have only about 100 feet made during
the afternoon and, if you have enough lights
out front or in your lobby, a like amount of
footage at night. Have the print ready for
the next afternoon and night showing and be
sure to announce the stunt in a large frame
in your lobby. This stunt has been tried out
and proved to be a big business-getter.
Summer Colors
IN order to secure a cool-looking lobby
" for the hot months, study your color
combinations. Try a bright green on a glossy
white ground for your signs. Dress up your
lobby with a complete suit of signs in this
combination and you can ease up on the air
conditioner, for the place will look so cool.
There is a combination of a light purple, just
off the lilac, and a pea green that will give
more delicate effects, if a quieter lobby is
desired. Deep blue on a greenish light blue
can be made to suggest an icy background,
and light blue letters against a very faint pink
is another good combination that does not
heat up. Strong reds and yellows should be
omitted from lobby displays until the snow
flies. Another inviting stunt is to drop the
cross lobby banner down to within eight feet
of the floor and light from behind with plenty
of rose-colored bulbs. If you use spots, use
steel, light blue and pink mediums and lay
off the strong purples and Teds.
Eye-Test
A novelty slant can be given to this
poster display. Have card printed up.
similar to the testing charts used by oculists.
At the top in large letters is printed: "Test
Your Eyes." The rest of the copy is graduated
into type size for each line until your entire
billing is completed. End up your message
with copy about the fact that viewing pic-
tures on your screen is soothing to the eyes.
Place this in a prominent spot in your lobby.
You will be surprised to see how many peo-
ple will linger to test their eyes. It makes
the stunt more attractive to have each line
printed in a different color.
Local Critics
THIS is a good gag for a small town
where everyone knows most everyone
else. It is based on the psychology that most
small towners like to see their names played
up. So we have the "Criticism Board," which
is used to mount the audience comment. A
desk is installed in the lobby, with paper
about 3x5 inches, with an invitation card
over the top of the desk inviting patrons to
write out a criticism. These are used on a
permanent board with the best and a few
of the worst picked out. Most of the slams
will be written in an attempt to be funny and
will not prove hurtful. All criticism must be
signed with authentic names.
Hostess
SMALL town theaters will find this a
good idea to build up matinee business.
Employ a hostess as a sort of greeter, spend-
ing as much of her time as possible in the
lobby. It is her job to get acquainted with
the women she does not know. She also con-
tacts her friends, keeps her eye on the
children, and generally promotes a spirit of
friendliness and goodwill. A good hostess
can earn her pay in tickets sold, and by at-
tending women's clubs get over a lot of valu-
able publicity where it will do the most good.
Star Frames
^L.. DIG an old set oi frames out of the stock
^ room. Have them painted to match the
general color scheme of the theater lounge.
Make a list of the stars in the companies
whose product you have booked. One frame
is dedicated to each of the more prominent
players, with the name neatly lettered and
a photograph centered. The surrounding
space is left for chat about the particular
player. The items are taken from the fan
magazines, also Variety, which always car-
ries live, up-to-the-minute chatty items about
the players. One of the girl ushers does the
clipping in her spare time. Items are mounted
on light cardboard, and thumbtacked to the
814
frame, which is backed by soft pine, and
covered with glass. This stunt gives the fans
a chance to follow their favorites closely.
In the center of the frame is a tablet an-
nouncing the players' coming pictures, with
dates added as soon as they become known.
Old items are replaced by newer ones, after
the frame is filled, the guide being dated
credit to the paper from which the item is
clipped. When an item mentions two or
more players, a neatly typewritten card re-
peats the item for the other frames. This
bulletin board of stars does not require more
than three or four hours' work each week.
Summer Fireplace
★ SET up a fireplace in the lobby during
the hot spell, with an electrical coal ef-
fect. Set it in a darkened corner of the lobby
with a one-sheet against the backing. Those
who investigate this winter utility in the hot
season are greeted with the breeze from the
cooling plant. The cool fire will be talked
about in town. Every stranger is run up
against the gag, and the word-of-mouth ad-
vertising is very effective. The only cost is
the cold air. You can promote a coal dealer
to pay for the installation in return for a
reminder that now is the time to lay in the
winter coal.
Ghost Mirror
A ON a feature with the spook angle. Rig
™ up in lobby a narrow box of the height
of the average man. There is a hole at top
to admit the patron's head. The box carries
an invitation to look in the hole and see the
ghost. The observer finds his face reflected
in dimly lit full-length mirror, with a skeleton
body reflected from head to feet from opposite
side of box. This gives the observer some-
thing of a shock, since the face is undoubtedly
his or her's, perched on the body of a skele-
ton. The people hovering around who have
already seen the "ghost," will get a laugh out
of the astonishment of the newcomers who
try the peep-show.
Special Board
A HAVE on hand one large board of emer-
^ gency purposes for special announce-
ments. This board should have a yellow face,
and the lettering in red. Thus it stands out
above all the other boards in the lobbies
when used. Hold it in readiness for a quick
talk to the lobby crowds. It may be used for
a clip from the newsreel that has more than
ordinary local interest; or to announce a
switch in bookings; a special short, etc. Only
use this emergency board to announce some-
thing worth while. And keep the printed mes-
sage short and concise. The regulars will
come to look for it, knowing it is part of your
system, and they will have confidence in its
message.
"Lucky" 13
★ A simple yet effective box-office lure.
On the 13th of the month, admit every
thirteenth customer for half price. This can
be elaborated with an assortment of "unlucky
13" props, such as ladders, a prop black cat,
etc. The idea is that the number 13 is not
unlucky, as proved by the fact that every
thirteenth patron saves money on admission.
Animations
ANIMATING posters is an old stunt, but
™ falling into disuse in many spots because
the sign room is not kept up on its toes. Even
a figure that raises its hat or makes a bow
will get notice. One good animation can be
secured with poster in which one character
slugs another. A practical arm can be rigged
up and given motive power. The area of
the poster in the vicinity of the impact of
the blow struck by the player, can be made
translucent through waxing, then blacked
out save for zig-zag flashes similar to those
used in comic strips to indicate a punch. The
same motive power that moves the arm makes
contact with an electric bulb back of the
poster for a fraction of a second, with the
result that a vivid flash accompanies the
blow. The same mechanical rig can be used
on another poster in which a red light in
back causes a girl to blush violently when
the animated man kisses her. The light can
be used as well for pistol flashes and similar
effects.
Toy Train Gag
.A- THIS toy train contest will get the grown-
^ ups as well as the boys, for all males
go for the miniature choo-choo outfits. The
cooperating store supplies the trackage, com-
plete train, switches and signal lights. They
are all operated from a pair of switchboards.
The contestants control the operation of the
train from one switchboard, while an attendant
puts on the red lights, danger signals and the
like. The idea is for the contestants to take
the train over the tracks in the shortest possi-
ble time. Penalties are imposed for not stop-
ping at stations, whistling for crossings, or
halting for danger signals. The winner of
contest can be awarded the set, or some other
suitable prize.
Candid Shots
.^L. NEW twist to the if-you-see-your-photo
^ stunt by using a candid camera to bring
the old-timer up to date. Use on a Saturday
matinee, by announcing that all kids will be
snapped by the cameraman. The following
week, display 25 of the prints in the lobby,
with free admission to these youngsters. This
way you get them twice — the first time to be
snapped, and then to see if they won. Most
of the youngsters will come with the coin for
815
admission the second trip, just in case they
were not among the winners.
Guessing Clock
WIND up an eight-day clock at noon.
^ eight days before the opening. Set it at
the extreme of slow speed and let the crowd
figure just how much time the clock will lose
in seven days. Name six prizes, each of a
little less value, and award the top prize for
the closest estimate made on the first day,
and in decreasing value to the sixth day, no
estimate being accepted the last day. The
idea is that as time passes and the clock
continues to lose, estimators can get a better
line on how much time is being lost daily.
Or else one prize can be given for the best
estimate each day. Estimates should be in
hours, minutes and seconds.
Television
CAPITALIZATION on public interest in
television development can be made very
impressive. Television equipment may pos-
sibly be borrowed, with a competent expert
to explain latest developments. One manager
in a big city had a broadcasting unit set up
in his lobby, while the glare of photo flood
lamps drew the crowd. On opposite side of
lobby a television receiving set was placed in
a miniature theater where customers saw and
heard broadcasts being made from transmit-
ter. The television expert did the broadcast-
ing, and explained briefly advances made in
sight transmission.
Duals
WHERE two good films appear on a dual
bill, this stunt will attract attention. Two
barrels are painted black, and illuminated in-
side to display the ads on the coming attrac-
tions. A sign above the barrels states: "A
Double-Barreled Program."
Time Table
WHERE the theater depends largely on
drop-in trade, many hesitate because they
do not want to walk in on the middle of the
feature. If they know the shorts are running,
they drop in to get settled and wait. A spe-
cial lobby sign is placel on one of the easels.
It is lettered: "We are now running short
subjects. The main feature will start at — "
and the time is chalked on a small blackboard
space. A clock is just above. In double bill
houses it might be a good plan to indicate
which picture is on next. In both drop-in spots
and nabes there is a feeling that there is only
one good feature, and many wish to avoid
the padder. Playing up the next appearance
of the top feature will often help.
Flower Show
ENLIST the support of the local growers
and florists for a fall flower show. Split
up the list of awards with a prize for the best
bouquets, best chrysanthemums, etc. Get sev-
eral competent judges. Pick them from out of
town, as all the local growers will be in the
contest. Contact the women's page editors
and the garden clubs, and start in early to
build up. It's a lot of work, but it will make
your theater a landmark with everybody talk-
ing if properly handled.
Cinderella Stunt
USE this on any prominent star. Local
store provides a pair of slippers which
are presented to the first woman able to
wear them comfortably. A very small size
is of course selected. The tryouts can be
made in the store, but the lobby is preferable.
The trials should be stopped at the peak
hours, or the crowd will be inclined to stay
outside instead of buying tickets. Better plan
is to run off the stunt till a crowd collects,
then shut down and display a sign reading:
"Next contest at — ." That leaves the crowd
with nothing to do but disperse or see the
show.
Comedy Slides
^ ONE of the most successful stunts that a
small house can use for comedy effect.
Prizes are offered for the most absurd por-
traits or poses made by amateurs. The best
photos are used over a period of weeks, sev-
eral of them being used as lantern slides at
every change of bill. At the end of the con-
test, the ten best are thrown on the screen and
an audience vote taken. The submissions
not put on slides are shown in lobby frames.
You will find a big proportion of the town
filing into your lobby to look over the displays
and get a laugh at the funny poses of people
they know. Cost of making the slides is
small.
816
Special Stunts
Voting Certificates
WITH patriotic short or feature, preeent
^ printed certificates to those who are going
to vote for the first time during the year.
This should be particularly timely during the
national election year or in important local
elections.
Band Contest
INTER-SCHOOL or inter-society band con-
^ tefits can be arranged under supervision
of local theater. Winners are then invited to
give concerts from the stage of the theater and
receive medals. Perhaps some music school
may be interested in giving scholarships.
Ping-Pong
A PING-PONG has become one of the most
^ popular recreations in the country and
great interest can be obtained in promoting
local elimination contests in neighborhood
gyms and "Y's," the finals to be held on the
stage of the theater, with prizes awarded by
the manager.
Book Tie-Ups
ARRANGEMENTS can be made to give
^ away a number of books to those writing
the best reviews or essays on pictures based
on literary properties. This should be con-
ducted with the cooperation of English depart-
ment heads of local schools and CTedit might
be allowed toward competing students' ratings
in the English class.
Jitterbug Contest
A TAKE advantage of interest in swing and
^ "jive" by holding contests either at the
theater or in a local dance hall under super-
vision of theater, with important civic officials
present to judge winners and present awards.
Either trophies or merchandise prizes can be
promoted. This ties up best with pictures of
a musical nature, especially those featuring
swing bands.
Fashion Shows
A THIS is most effectively handled as a
tie-up either with one large local depart-
ment store or a group of several individual
specialty merchandise shops. Eight or ten
models, who may be chosen on basis of simi-
larity of measurements of some Hollywood
player, are picked from girls of high school-
senior or college age. They display clothing
on stage. Show can be greatly helped with
addition of master of ceremonies, or woman
fashion commentator, and orchestra or string
trio.
Graduation
^ ONE of the best standbys for graduation
is the congratulatory letter to each pupil,
with or without a pass for an early (how.
The names and possibly the home addresses
can be secured from the principal or the
school clerk. In some instances, where the
addresses are not given, the letters can by
arrangement be sent to the school in bulk.
The letters should congratulate the recipient,
express good wishes for the future, and men-
tion the ticket, if one is sent.
Camera Night
YOUR anniversary show can be com-
bined with a Candid Camera Night. The
first few rows of seats are roped off so that
the camera owners can shoot the stage show
offerings which you put on specially for the
anniversary celebration. A hookup can be
made with the newspaper to run the best of
the candid camera shots.
Theater Anniversary
FOR your anniversary, try to get the
mayor, or some other local celeb, on the
stage for the special program. Your local
817
editor can stress the advance in quality oi
entertainment since the opening year of your
theater. A musical program should be of-
fered, with a current pop singer and a re-
vival of the old illustrated song, if slides can
be obtained. Or get one of these shorts spe-
cializing in the old favorites. It should be
possible to get someone to circulate an al-
bum in which all the townsfolk subscribe to
a resolution of goodwill to the manager, and
of course, he is taken by surprise at the
presentation ceremonies. Another good gag
is to offer a prize for the best recollections oi
the theater's opening night, to be written, and
read at the anniversary.
Serial Build-Up
^ MAKE an effort to convince the adults
that the serial is not just juvenile fare.
To this end, a poll is taken among the pa-
trons. Small sheets are passed out carrying
voting spaces to indicate whether the patron
is in favor of showing the serial at the night
shows on Friday and Saturday.
Doubles
^ PROMOTIONAL campaign can be cen-
tered about resemblance of local people
to Hollywood players. Make-up or disguises
may be allowed those entering competition.
Winners will receive prizes from theater stage
and will be featured in local newspaper copy.
Local Ads
^ THEATER can issue blanket invitation to
local residents to try their hands at writ-
ing copy for some new forthcoming attraction.
Contest should be open to anyone, except
newspapermen, most prominent of whom
would be called upon to judge the contest.
Winning ads will actually be used as part
of theater campaign.
Spelling Contest
k WITH great current vogue for spelling
and information bees sweeping country,
local interest can be centralized by having
spelling bee on stage of theater. Teams can
be picked from Rotary club. Boy Scouts, Camp-
fire Girls, etc., and perhaps tie-up made with
some local radio station.
Thanksgiving Baskets
^L. FOR the Thanksgiving season, the lobby
is suitably decorated, including special
stills that the major studios turn out expressing
the spirit of the holiday. A ticket box is
placed in the inner lobby for patrons to drop
the stubs of coupons presented with purchase
of each theater ticket. This entitles patrons
to a chance on six to twelve Thanksgiving
Turkey Dinner Baskets. These are given away
on the Monday prior to Thanksgiving. Along-
side the ticket box place a poster of a large
turkey's head, with a green light flasher
where the gobbler's eye would be. This light
is flashed on and off. An imitation turkey
"gobble-gobble" can be secured through the
house phone setup, which sound makes the
display perfect.
Polo Tourney
^ IF you have a stage, this attraction will
give your audience a lot of laughs, and
create business on an off-night. It is a kiddie
car polo tournament. It is played the usual
way but with undersized mallets. When
adults are the players, it becomes a riot of
laughter. It is possible when the stunt be-
comes popular, to form several teams and
play off as a tournament. Have the girls
compete with the men, to add interest. Here
is a stunt that of course will go strong at
the kid club gatherings.
Morning Matinees
THIS will turn out to be a surefire stunt
if properly handled. It is an early show
for the femme office workers. It starts at 7
a.m. and ends at 8:30, allowing patrons 30
minutes to reach their place of business.
Through advertising tieups with a nabe res-
taurant, free coffee and doughnuts can be
provided. The show being for the girls only,
the escorts if they come along must pay ad-
mission.
Fortune-Telling
HAVE fortune-teller, dressed in colorful
Hindu outfit, located in lobby booth or
tent. Certain ticket stubs to be entitled to free
readings. Tie the stunt in with a star in picture
by advertising: "What predicts
for ."
Posters
★ TEASING with posters is a particularly
effective form of exploitation, especially
in this day of fast travel. Teasing requires
only a few words and thus can be used
where other forms of advertising would get
negligible results. Teaser posters can be made
up in odd shapes (and should be to get more
than ordinary attention). They are invariably
used to impress the title upon the public
mind. Teasers in shape of snipes have been
found for "curb sniping." Sometimes city
permission can be procured for the pasting of
these teaser snipes face-up on the sidewalks
at street crossings. This is particularly so
when the picture title has a "safety-first"
angle or something that might tie-up with some
civic movement. Selling pictures from the
horror angle gives opportunity for poster
teasers that will help to do a great selling
job. These teasers stress the "Dare You See
It?" challenge.
Ballyhoo
k BALLY teasers are effective because they
^ can be "gagged" to get paramount at-
tention and talk, as well. Smart showmen
are seen today using the walking teaser on
pictures offering the possibility. The young
married couple picture is a natural for a
walking teaser. The girl with a bridal veil
and a baby carriage is always a sure-fire
tease. No less effective is the man in tails
and high hat wheeling a perambulator (with
the baby buggy properly placarded, of course).
The bally teaser allows of great ingenuity at
small expense. If you can't think of anything
better there is a standard gag that can always
be worked. Mount a six sheet on beaver-
board and make a cutout of it. Hire a good
strong man and dress him up as a messenger
boy. Make handles on the back of the cut-out
so it can be carried without too much trouble.
On the front of the cut-out (which already
carries the picture title and billing), is a good-
sized sticker with theater name. The man
goes out on the sidewalk of the main stret
with the cut-out. He is apparently trying to
deliver it somewhere (and that goes for the
police too). Natural curiosity gets everyone
stretching their necks.
Newspaper Teasers
★ HERE the teaser does one of its best jobs.
It has a peculiar utility value, too, in that
it can be opened and conducted in such a
way that it will build into your regular cam-
paign advertising without taking anything
from your campaign on your current picture.
In other words it allows you to prepare the
ground for your coming campaign several
days before you ordinarily would. In this
connection extra punch is obtained by syn-
chronizing newspaper teasers with poster teas-
ers. The complete tie-in would be a three-
fold tease with the use of a teaser trailer on
your screen. Sometimes in a very unusual
event your teaser might consist of this line:
"Watch the Strand Theater on Dec. 15." The
screen tie-in. then, would provide for a reading
trailer hitched onto the front of the regular
attraction trailer pointing to the importance of
Dec. 15.
Lobby Teasers
A YOUR lobby teaser is always effective
^ but care must be taken to use it far
enough in advance so that your current trailer
isn't a tip-off. The tease value is lost if the
tip-off comes too soon. Your lobby tease can
be extremely clever as you do not have to
depend upon movement or size of display.
If it is clever enough it will get the attention
desired. For instance, on "Moby Dick" some
showmen had a large sign in the lobby with
this copy: "Do you want to buy a whale?
Watch this space for further details." Cut into
the display was a glass fishbowl with an
ordinary goldfish swimming about in it. An-
other effective lobby tease consists of an
attractive board put up from three to four
weeks in advance of a smash attraction. This
board simply states "Only Three More Weeks
to the Big Event . . ." Next week the copy
is changed to "Only Two More Weeks to
Wait . . ." If the picture lends itself to this
treatment a comic cartoon could be used
with the copy the second week. The third
week's copy could either splash the title and
some art or carry the tease to its conclusion
as follows: "Only One Week to Wait for the
Big Event — See Our Sunday Ads . . ."
819
Ballyhoos
Book Review Gag
IF the picture is based on a well-known
book arrange a book matinee and invite
a lacturer to discuss the book. Use trailers
and ads to ballyhoo the matinee, while the
lecture itself should be good for breaks in
the local papers.
Stage Coach Stuff
A gag which could be worked in coop-
eration with exhibs in other towns on a
Western is to get a stage coach and have it
travel from town to town ballyhooing the pic-
ture. The local mayor, chamber of com-
merce. Kiwanis, etc., turns out en masse in
each town to welcome the coach.
Anniversary Ads
IF the action of the picture takes place
anywhere from ten to 50 years ago,
tieup with the local merchants for co-op ads
reading "We Are Celebrating our 30th Year
in City," and using stills and copy
in vogue when the picture's story took place.
Wanted for Murder
FOR gangster or Western pics post
"Wanted for Murder" posters around town
using pictures of the player.
Family Pictures
FOR family pictures arrange a "family
night" with the largest family in town
being guests of honor at the showing. This
also can be used with the family having the
most daughters, most twins, most sons, etc.
Baby Pics
^ FOR pictures featuring a baby, passes
can be given to new fathers (watch birth
announcements, hospital records, etc.) and
post results in the lobby. A benefit perform-
ance can be run for the local orphan asylum
or foundling hospital.
Kid Photos
^ CONTESTS for the best photos of babies
or children including prizes for the pret-
tiest, healthiest, etc., can be run with the
cooperation of a newspaper. This ought to
be good for plenty of space.
Clues
FOR crime pics make up a display board
of actual clues, such as a gun, rope,
bloodstained knife, woman's bloody handker-
chief, lipstick, etc. and place in lobby. It'll
attract a lot of attention.
Military Drill
FOR military pics dress up ushers in
uniform. Have them parade down the
main street with toy guns and stop every
block or so to go through the manual of arms.
Banners on their uniform should carry theater
copy.
Usher on Marquee
FOR military pics have an usher wig-wag
signals from the top of the marquee.
When a crowd gathers let him unfurl a
banner carrying theater copy.
For Men Only
A teaser gag that never fails to click.
It can be used on any strong attraction
with a big appeal for the women. A girl is
appropriately dressed in a costume that fits
in with the atmosphere of the picture. She
travels the main thoroughfares, with a small
box attached to a wide ribbon strung over
her shoulder. She passes out envelopes to
the men, on which is printed: 'Tor Men Only."
Inserted slip reads: "Be sure and take HER
820
to see (picture, theater, play date). It's the
kind of motion picture all women adore." This
stunt arouses the curiosity of the women, as
the girl ballyhooer can be very mysterious ;
about just selecting the men to hand them
the envelopes.
Fall Openings
A FOR the Fall opening, try to plan some-
thing in the way of a civic event that
will stir up business for the entire town. The
well planned civic event with a parade can
create town-wide interest. There will be a
parade of industrial floats, autos containing
the entrants in a star resemblance contest to
be decided at the theater and programs list-
ing the coming attractions. The mayor will
speak and the governor will send a letter
of congratulation at the urge of his party
leader in town. Where a civic parade is not
possible, it is practical to send out a house
parade. This is better in a small town if the
event can be made of sufficient importance
to draw them in from the country. The mer-
chants are persuaded to offer special bar-
gains and to circularize the country trade.
Book Displays
FOR a pic based on a famous book
arrange a display with ribbons leading
from the pages of the book to stills from the
picture, with a few lines of copy next to
each still describing the scene.
Special Shows
^ SPECIAL shows such as spook shows.
Hallowe'en shows. Thanksgiving and
Xmas shows can always be run with appro-
priate door prizes given to the lucky ticket-
holder. Stills of the stars of the picture can be
distributed to patrons of the theater.
Parades
^ IN the case of military pics arrange
parades to the theater on opening night
by National Guard, Boy Scouts, R.O.T.C. and
other organizations with special ceremonies
held by the group.
Advance Stuff
A JUST before showing the trailer of a
crime film darken the house, have a
woman scream, come in with a crash of music
and follow immediately with the trailer.
They'll sit up and take notice.
Endorsements
A FOR those pictures which have a social
problem plot basis, run a special screen-
ing for prominent civic leaders and get their
endorsements. You might arrange for a crime
prevention week, safety week, etc.
Traveling Jazz
A WITH the assistance of five high school
boys musically inclined, this stunt gets
over attractively. They team up as a jazz
band, consisting of a piano, drums, clarinet,
trombone and sax or cornet. A Ford truck
can be gotten from the dealer in return for
a banner on the truck. The music store fur-
nishes one of those miniature pianos. The
truck parks occasionally in front of the music
store. If the attraction has a musical number,
they feature this in their repertoire. During
selling hours, the truck plays in front of the
theater. Easy to enlist the boys for this, as
they play after school hours, and get passes
for the show.
Candid Shots
A THERE is a personal touch about this
ballyhoo that never fails to intrigue the
femmes, for it hits the vanity angle. The
candid cameraman stunt is pulled on as
many girls and women as you care to photo-
graph. Caught on the street of course, the
women shoppers between 16 and 30 are
lensed by the cameraman. He hands them
prepared postcards for their name and ad-
dress, which when mailed to the theater
brings them their photo, which is sent to them
with the compliments of the star in your cur-
rent attraction. This lends the stunt a personal
touch. The angle here is that the women
show the pix to their friends, with resultant
advertising for the feature.
Window
Safe Gag
.^L. PLACE an open safe in a window — door
^ slightly ajar. Place a spot light on the
inside which is empty with the exception of
a stick of dynamite and a catch line such as
TNTertainment and title of pix.
Radio Stunt
A IN an empty window, have a large map
^ of the locale with the particular spot in
bright color. Contact your local radio station
— or a prominent radio dealer — to install a
short wave sending and receiving set along
the map. Have an operator — or a dummy with
phonograph records — make attempt to con-
tact locale of film. A loud speaker carries the
voice out of the window with such catchlines
as "Calling John Doe in Oshkosh" (substitut-
ing the name of the star and proper locale)
or "John Doe in Oshkosh has arrived at the
Cameo Theater." Stunt will attract passersby.
When a crowd gathers, it may be necessary
for police to disperse them. This means news-
paper copy.
For Crime Pix
BORROW photos and headlines from the
" press morgue of actual gang killings
and other crime subjects. Police department
will loan knives, guns and other exhibits taken
from criminals. Dress up an empty store
window with these articles and use stills
from picture for supplementarv display. Cards
should describe each item. There will be a
crowd at the window at all times.
could be a bally man in costume. This will
attract the crowds and will sell the picture.
An insert card should carry a catchline such
as "The thief in (name of film) now playing
at the Cameo Theater, could tell the difference.
Can you?"
Travel Tie-in
.^L. TIE up with local travel agency. They
^ can display stills from the film. The local
woman's apparel shop can cooperate with the
proper latest styles to be worn at the resort.
Airplane Contest
l IN an empty window, set up a display
^ of aviation parts, signal flags. The local
chapter of the American Legion will help in
supplying aviation medals and officers' insig-
nia. The latter can be numbered. Award
free passes to the first five persons to properly
identify insignia, or parts of airplane.
Transportation History
.^L. IN an empty window, have a large wagon
~ wheel up flat against the glass. Looking
through the spokes, trace the history of trans-
portation, going back to the stone age "on
foot." Between the next two spokes, clock-
wise, riding on an animal such as an ass or
burro. Thence to a wagon, to early train, to
early automobile, later trains, later autos,
bringing it up to date with latest in stream-
lined trains, automobiles and airplanes. Stills
from picture should be given featured spot in
this cavalcade of transportation.
Jewel Idea
IN an empty window arrange a display
™ of unmounted fake jewels. The display
should be on a background of black velvet.
In the collection should be one real jewel,
borrowed from the local jeweler. All the
jewels, including the real one, should be of
various sizes, all numbered. To the first ten
persons identifying the real jewel, give free
tickets to see the show. A guard should be
in evidence. Inasmuch as a real jewel such
as an aquamarine is of low value, the guards
Painted Window
A OBTAIN the use of an empty store window
^ on the main street or near the theater.
Paint it entirely in a loose solution of water
color paint that will give you a fairly opaque
effect. Have attendant scratch out copy on
picture. Use stick capped with cotton. Be
sure to follow prepared sketch, spelling mes-
sage backwards so that it reads correctly from
front of window. Paste action stills from film.
After message is spelled out, reapply paint
and repeat, perhaps with different copy. The
822
continual action will attract crowds. If you
have a local artist, he might paint pictures
Irom film, in place of sky writing.
Guessing Contest
A AN old standby that will grab space in
windows is the guessing contest in which
passers-by are invited to submit estimates of
how many beans or pennies or other articles
are in a glass case in store window with
passes offered to 25 best guesses.
Cut-Out Display
A FOR department store window that will
attract beaucoup attention, cut-out figures
of the female players in the picture, on which
clothing is draped. Placard plugs picture.
Horror Pix Plug
.^L- FOR horror show spot in drug stores
^ rubber gloves and hot water bottles with
copy reading: In case you get cold feet — To
stop you from biting your nails! Public will
get a laugh, store has a showmanship window
and film gets ingenious ad.
Cosmetic Idea
A YOU can gain entry into cosmetic store
^ window with board on which is illus-
trated a facsimile reproduction of female star's
lips. Tie-in naturally with special brand of
lipstick.
Typed News Flashes
WITH unsettled world condition and news
^ in the making every day, work out a
two-way hookup with big store and news-
paper whereby a girl at a typewriter will
type out news flashes by direct wire from
newspaper and paste releases on window.
Every other item can be plug for movie. This
will stop them in droves.
Seat in Window
A THROUGH arrangement with local mer
^ chant who is willing to give you one
of his windows in exchange for your attract-
ing attention to it, install theater seat in
window and hire local pantomime artist to
sit in chair and portray various emotions.
Naturally this will adapt itself best for comedy
as pantomimist can illustrate hilarity and other
emotions. Every few minutes he can pull down
shade on which copy for pix can be lettered.
Novel Biz Grabber
A FOR a musical comedy attraction, con-
^ struct a dressing table with lights around
mirror, theater fashion, and hire pretty girl
in as undressed a state as allowed in your
city to apply cosmetics. Her back is to the
street, but public can see her reflection in the
mirror. Placard can read: "Just one of the
pretty girls who will thrill you in the season's
best musical."
"Baby" and Blocks
A IN an empty store window, have a
^ grown up man dressed in baby clothes
playing with blocks. Every few minutes he
will build them so that the title and stars of
the picture and name of theater is readable.
No dialogue, no signs, just the business of
building blocks.
Glamour "On Ice"
^ THIS stunt is used to plug the Hedy La-
™ marr or Ann Sheridan type of glamour
girl. Place a huge cake of ice (dry ice pre-
ferred), in center of window. Pretty girl in
bathing suit sits on thin board placed on
melting ice. Placard in her hands reads: If
you think I'm hot stuff, wait till you see (name
of male lead) melt when (name of glamour
girl) goes to work on him in (title of film) at
the theater.
Bike Tie-Up
A MOUNT a bicycle on a treadmill or cycle-
^ meter in empty store window. As pretty
girl in shorts pedals bicycle, indicator registers
speed. Placard reads, "Gang Way! I'm head-
ing for the Theater to see (name of
male star) in (title of film). It's a swell show.
Come on along!"
Hat Designing
HAVE theater artist draw several heads
^ of feminine star on the inside of plate
glass millinery store window. Attendant, dres-
ses as artist and. carrying easel of water
colors, invites passers-by to draw stylish hats
on the outside of the window. Drawings fit
over the heads on the other side of the glass
and free passes or prizes of hats are awarded
the persons drawing the most stylish hat.
Designs can readily be wiped off with wet
cloth, enabling all to try their luck at style
creation.
Sporting Goods
FOR pictures with a sports background,
^ don't overlook sporting goods and depart-
ment stores. Feature action stills of stars in
window displays of sporting goods or gym-
nasium equipment. Also, stills of prominent
females in the cast can be used with displays
of any exercising devices designed to keep
the feminine figure trim and neat.
Dog House Gag
HERE'S a florist's shop display that can
^ be worked with almost any type film.
Place small dog house in window together
with star heads of feminine stars and display
of flowers. Placard can read "In the Dog
House! (Name of star) now playing in (title
of picture) prefers yellow roses. So will your
sweetheart. Patch up! Send her a corsage
. . . and take her to the theater
for a swell evening's entertainment."
823
Priited Matter
Year Book
.^L. GIVE some thought to issuing an annual
^ publication about your theater. Here is
a permanent announcement, a copy going to
each household. The chief feature should be
a running comment of the pictures played last
year, with stress on the hits. Embellished
with a few cuts on coated paper, chiefly
scenes from various plays. There will be
articles on the new stars, the outstanding
bit actors, and the best players of the current
year. Also an alphabetical list of all titles
played, a short history of the house, a brief
list of early coming attractions, and a full
roster of employees. The trick in starling an
annual publication like this is to assure your-
self of sufficient advertising in the first issue
to nearly break even on printing costs. If
you start off modestly, you can't go in too
deep, and if the innovation catches on, you
can extend it the following year, and bid
for more ad support from local merchants.
Coming Pix
THIS system will make your rest room
^ more attractive. As soon as the press-
book is received, have typed a brief descrip-
tion of the feature, just enough to arouse in-
terest without giving the story away. Paste
the cast to the card, and place it in a frame
about five feet from the floor. In this way
you can have a dozen frames or more plug-
ging your coming attractions. One central
frame should be lettered: "Our Next Picture."
This information, especially the cast, will start
the women talking. And often a picture is
sold to several on a minor name, which ad-
vantage is lost in the usual campaign cen-
tered on the stars.
Special List
,^L. YOU can make your own compilation of
^ owners of automobiles. All auto buyers
of both new and second-hand cars are ad-
vised that if they register the car with the
theater they will receive a pair of tickets.
Names and addresses are given, and this
special list is used for mailing out advertising
on automobile pictures. This plan, if properly
handled, will give you a fine list of a majority
of the car owners in your town.
Heralds Afloat
.^L. GOOD for a feature with a society slant,
^ or one with college atmosphere. A float
is decorated to carry out the atmosphere of
the attraction. Two girls are dressed in even-
ing clothes, or a girl and a boy. Secure a five-
piece string orchestra from the high school
or college set, to supply the music. This can
be tied up to some local dance or festival,
with the sign on the float indicating that they
are going to the party. At the street corner,
the float stops, and the girls pass out heralds.
Good-Will Builder
.^L- GOOD for the small town theater with
~ rural patronage, this weekly communica-
tion keeps the theater owner in touch with
all the people who know him personally.
Government postcards are used. The weekly
announcement is a brief, chatty story of the
current bill, mentioning all the items of the
week's shows, including the shorts. Do not
blow up the weak features. Make this a
sort of "lowdown" as if you are tipping off
a friend. Pretty soon you will find that this
unusual approach will inspire a lot of confi-
dence and win you plenty of approval. The
card goes into the mail on Saturday, for
Monday delivery. This plan is built on per-
sonality and confidence. Once established, it
will prove a steady seller for your theater.
Teaser Idea
YOU can put over a big forthcoming
^ feature by appealing to curiosity. For
a period of a week in advance of the attrac-
tion you give to departing patrons a sealed
manila envelope with the face printed up:
"Please do not open this until . . ." with a
date a fortnight away. Practically everyone
in town will know before the end of the week
that the picture is coming. The date on the
envelope will start their curiosity. Practically
no envelopes will remain unopened, which is
just what you expect. People will not only
read the enclosed herald, but they will read
it with greater care than they would give
an ordinary announcement. Other catchlines
for the envelope are: "Do not open this if
you are not married." "For single women
only." Or, "Don't let your husband see this."
824
The latter works best on a matrimonial prob-
lem.
Errors That Pay
★ HERE is a good stunt with which to sell
weak attraction, lacking good title or
names. Make sure there is at least one typo-
graphical error in each newspaper ad, and
in the throwaway. Have something WTong
with every lobby frame and sign. Even the
marquee should be spoiled with a transposed
letter. One manager even made a new ad-
mission card for the box-office with "lodges"
instead of "loges." Offer a substantial prize
for the largest list of errors. Some incon-
spicuous error can be included in a lobby
card, to make it more difficult. And you
will have a lot of people reading every word
of your newspaper ads.
Revival Angle
★ A month can be set aside for Request
Revivals. Use one revival and one new
picture on each dual program. Ballots are
given to patrons to designate their preferences.
The ballot can carry a list of attractive re-
vivals that you can secure readily, and it
will aid patrons in recalling pictures that they
missed seeing originally.
Kiss Imprints
A CARDS with an indicated place for a
^ kiss imprint are passed out to the young
ladies as they leave the performance. The
directions on the card explain that the patron
is to leave her kiss imprint via lipstick on the
card, sign name and address, and leave at
the box-office. This is in competition for a
small cash prize, with the winner to be an-
nounced from the stage at a certain evening
performance.
Merchant Sponsors
HAVE the local merchants as a body
^ sponsor your Wednesday shows. Under
the plan, special Merchants' Matinee coupons
are placed in all business houses of the town.
They are given, without cost or requirement,
to men, women and children wishing to at-
tend the show. The coupon admits the patron
for 10-cent matinee and 15-cent evening per-
formance, whereas patrons without coupons
must pay the regular fee.
Program Prizes
A THE question of whether your programs
^ are being read or not will be answered
if you put over this idea each week. In your
next issue, include a panel on page one an-
nouncing that some person's name will be
mentioned in that space next week, and that
the person will receive a pair of passes. You
can say that the name will be printed "some-
where" in the program, and in that way
make the readers go through the pamphlet
from cover to cover. Slip the name in on an
ad or house article. Do it each week for a
month or so. You can carry it further by
scattering several names throughout the pro-
gram. Results of a few weeks will tell you
just where the paper is not being read. And
that is the area to cover with exploitation and
accessories.
Future Passes
★ YOU can build up your summer business
with this one. At the end of June, issue
500 passes good any time between Monday
and Friday the third week in September. The
pass must be stamped each week from the
time it is issued until the final date. Use
any rubber stamp of a cartoon character
which can be bought at the stationers. Change
the stamps weekly. It is not required that
a ticket be purchased at the time the pass is
stamped, but the people come to your lobby,
and that's more than half way into your thea-
ter. The pass will be shown to others and
thus carry plenty of ad value. Use several
hundred of these passes.
Photo Galleries
^ THIS plan should not be hard to sell to
the neighborhood photo gallery, or to
the one located at the nearby amusement park.
You supply the tintype emporium with large-
size cutouts of stars you play regularly. The
customers can pose as this star while being
photographed. The posters are mounted on
compoboard, with the top cut away to al-
low the poser to place his head where that
of the star should be. This is a simple ef-
fective stunt that costs little, and makes a big
hit with the patrons of the photo studio.
Hidden Treasure Cards
^ THESE Hidden Treasure cards are issued
to regular customers. They are designed
along the lines of the numbered meal tickets
used in cafeterias. The card has 20 spaces
to be punched out, and the ticket-taker punches
one for every paid admission that is marched
through the turnstile. When it is punched
out, the holder turns it into the box-office.
A secret panel at the bottom is opened, and
the amount of money that it calls for is pre-
sented. There are no blanks, and awards can
run up to several dollars.
825
Newspapers
. n in
Special Edition
GET your newspaper to run a replica of
^ its iront page using stories supplied by
you, and with pictures from your film. If
there is a political or historical angle to the
picture, it should be comparatively easy to
interest local editors. The special edition is
then distributed all over town, especially by
home delivery boys.
Co-operative Ads
GET all the merchants in town to adver-
^ Use in your special section, or if it is
limited, in your single page. By getting one
prominent merchant to staTt the thing off.
other merchants and store owners are more
easily influenced. The local newspaper is
usually only too glad to help by having a
solicitor from its advertising department do
the actual selling, as it is revenue for the
paper.
Picture Identifications
ARRANGE with your newspaper for the
contest to run at least two weeks, and
the longer the better. Take stills of all Holly-
wood stars with the stars of your picture
heavily predominating, and cut them into
pieces, using parts of several different stars
every day. It is up to the contestants to paste
the stars together and submit a one-page
story of each star. Your stars are so placed
and the contest is so arranged that your
publicity pictures are easily made the most
important.
Serializations
PLANT with your local newspaper, one
~ of three forms of serialization. Picture-
and-caption serials for a full page with stills
in sequence telling the story. The other, six
strips of six or eight stills each, to run daily
for ten days, telling part of the story of the
film every day. The third, a story serial, with
stills from the film used as illustrations, always
gets good space.
Limerick Contest
,JL ADVERTISE a Limerick Contest. You can
^ limit it to special groups, such as school
children, or it can be open to anyone. The
idea is to write the catch line for the first
three or four lines which you give them. Of
course, somewhere in the limerick is the plug
for your picture.
Inquiring Photographer
MOST newspapers have an inquiring
™ photographer or reporter. Suggest to him
an idea for questioning people on the street,
particularly if your picture is controversial
in a social or political way, or if it is of
general interest to the public. Have the
photographer or reporter confine his activities
to the environs of the theater, with an em-
ployee of the theater being among those
questioned, thus assuring a publicity break.
Society Page Tie-up
HAVE several of the town's most eligible
^ bachelors sponsor a young lady, at the
best night club or smartest restaurant. They
should pick a girl who has never been in
society, and give her a regular debut, with
all the trimmings. Have the best store in
town dress her for the affair. This was done
successfully in New York, not only breaking
society columns, but also getting into news
and picture pages, as well as drama sections.
Newspaper Contest
.^L- THERE are any number of contests that
^ can be arranged with newspapers. They
are always on the lookout for circulation
building ideas, and will always cooperate
with theaters. The best one from the point
of view of most papers, is a contest that runs
six days. Begin two or three days before
your opening, and make sure that pictures
used in connection with the contest are stills
supplied and captioned by you, thus assuring
yourself of proper credits. Prizes can be
anything from S5.00 in cash to a trip to
California.
Athletics and Sports Pages
^ WHENEVER a picture lends itself, either
^ through its story or stars, to athletic
tie-ups, the most should be made of the sports
pages of the local papers. Invite the Sports
Editors and writers on the sports pages to
see the film, and have on hand any well
known local athlete, or else have the college
or high school football, baseball or basket-
ball teams at the theater. Pictures of the star
826
engaged in his favorite sport will get you
publicity breaks on pages you don't usually
crack.
Fashion Publicity
.^L. EVERY newspaper has a fashion page.
^ Hollywood stars are, as a group, the best
dressed and most highly publicized women
in the world. Hollywood designers are the
highest paid in their profession. All this can
be most advantageously used. Have a fashion
show at your theater, using adaptations of
the gowns worn by stars in the film. Have
the Fashion Editor cover the show and review
it. Thus you get a break on the fashion page.
By using members of your local Junior League,
you can also get society page coverage.
Beauty Contest
A IN cooperation with your local newspa-
^ per, run a beauty contest. That is, try
to find the town's girl who looks most like the
star of the picture you are playing. Unless
you have their fullest cooperation, be sure
not to offer a trip to the studios as a prize,
as screen tests and trips to Hollywood are
always made available by unscrupulous per-
sons.
Problem Contest
A HAVE your paper sponsor an essay con-
^ test, in connection with a problem pre-
sented in your picture. "Would you Marry for
Love?" "Is Money the Most Important Con-
sideration?" There are any number of prob-
lems that your patrons will be only too glad
to thrash out. They love to air their personal
matters and ask for advice, and the "sob
sister" or writer of "Advice to the Lovelorn"
will always be glad to help.
Crossword Puzzles
^J^, ALMOST every newspaper in the United
^ States carries a crossword puzzle. This
means giving the newspaper, for nothing, a
piece of copy for which they ordinarily have
to pay. Of course, the puzzle should contain
a plug for a picture or pictures that you are
soon to play, and any illustrations should be
those of the stars of the films. Prizes of free
admissions would arouse the interest of chil-
dren and adults alike.
Telephone to Hollywood
ARRANGE with the studio, through your
^ local exchange, for a telephone inter-
view with the star of your picture, day before
the opening. This is usually a very popular
stunt with the motion picture editor. The
Theater Manager, after the connection is made
with the star in Hollywood, turns the pro-
ceedings over to the motion picture editor.
This could be very effectively done in the
theater lobby. If a booth, enclosed in glass,
could be used, the public can then be "in"
on the stunt. The telephone company is al-
ways ready to help.
Co-op from Newspaper
.^L. IN any tie-up with newspapers, always
^ insist upon cooperation in the form of
newsstand tack cards, posters for their
delivery trucks, and any form of handbill that
may be used in your locality. An eye-arresting
stunt is to have the newspaper put the thea-
ter's message on a wrapper. This is particu-
larly valuable for home delivery.
A Helping Hand
k BECAUSE department stores are among
^ the newspapers' largest advertisers, any
tie-up with such a store is helpful. More
cooperation is assured the theater by letting
the department store publicity department
handle the stunt with the theater man remain-
ing in the background, as newspapers are
usually more than willing to work with the
stores.
Use Pictures
A EVERY conceivable picture of every star
^ in Hollywood, doing almost anything that
is of interest to newspaper readers, may be
obtained at your local exchange. Why not
supply the papers with stills of the stars on
the set, eating, walking, riding bicycles, in
automobiles, on horses, swimming, and in a
thousand-and-one other poses. Editors are
always glad to get them.
Book Tie-up
^r WHEN your picture is adapted from a
™ famous book, numerous tie-ups are open
to you. If possible, get the author interviewed
by your local newspaper, either by telephone
or by mail. Have the author write a letter
telling how happy he (or she) is about the
picture, how the producers have stuck to the
original idea. If the author lives anywhere
near, it might be worth spending a small
amount to bring them to town for the opening
day, for personal interviews and an appear-
ance at the premiere. Department stores
and book shops could be made to participate
in the expense.
Organizations
★ TIE-UPS with national organizations such
as the Veterans of Foreign Wars, Amer-
ican Legion, Boy Scouts, Boys Clubs of Amer-
ica, etc., are always good for newspaper
space, if the theater manager works through
the publicity departments of the organizations.
Pictures are always taken of any parades
in which members of these organizations take
part, and it is always good business, since
nearly everyone in such organizations are
heads of families, or members of families of
from three to five persons.
827
Tie-ups
Musical Pix
.^L. WORK out special window and counter
displays with local music shops featur-
ing the sheet music and records from the
film. Shops should also feature stills and
theater copy in their displays. Get the local
hotel, restaurant, cafe, and night club dance
bands to plug the music and suggest they
mention picture and, possibly, playdate after
each rendition. Invite band leaders, singers,
etc., down to a special preview. The local
radio station should contribute its share
by plugging your music via its studio orches-
tra. Former songs composed by film's song-
writer, or songs previously popularized by
star, can be played with titles undisclosed,
listeners-in guessing correct titles of songs
winning tickets to the picture. Station can
tie in with theater on voice audition contest
with eliminations being conducted at station
and finals being held on theater stage. Win-
ners are selected by popular applause and
given free week's engagement on radio sta-
tion and, perhaps, in local night club or hotel.
Famous Books
WHEN a picture has been adapted from
^ a well-known book, current or past favo-
rite, bookshops and libraries should be imme-
diately contacted for special window and
counter displays utilizing stills and posters
from the picture along with books, covers and
placards. Special bands, locally made-up, to
fit around the books, is an excellent means
of conveying your message. Libraries, both
public and school, will use bookmarks that
carry your theater copy provided they also
carry a list of other books, either by the same
author or of the same type. Distribute these
bookmarks also to the local bookshops and
lending libraries. In this way you're assured
of a tremendous circulation.
Lady for a Day
MANY variations can be achieved along
^ the "Lady for a Day" lines. For ex-
ample: you can give a man away free for
one evening to some lucky girl, whom he then
takes for a round of the local night clubs and
hot spots. Slips of paper with names and
telephone numbers of local girls are placed
in drum; man to be given away selects one
and calls out the telephone number. Girl
gives correct name (she must be at theater)
and "takes" her man out for a gay evening
which theater has promoted for mutual pub-
licity. Or, men send in photographs to theater
and women do likewise. Photos are placed in
separate drums and man and woman whose
photos are drawn make the rounds of the
night spots.
Fashion Show
TIE in with a department store or worn-
an's specialty shop for a fashion show
either at the shop or in the theater lobby,
with local college, high school or sorority
girls acting as mannequins. Store, of course
takes newspaper ads and theater plays up
the stunt on the screen and in the lobby.
If held at the store, women are invited gratis,
but at the theater, naturally, the fashion show
is limited to those who have paid to see
the movie.
Holidays
.^L. PRESS books, as a rule, do not contain
^ any specific stunts that may be worked
on any particular holiday for the simple reason
that it would "date" the book, once the holi-
day has passed. However, days like Mother's
Day, Thanksgiving, Christmas, etc., give you
the perfect excuse to tie in with your local
florist shops, confectioners, telegraph offices
and the like. Stills with stars (especially
feminine stars) holding flowers, candy, or
telegrams would make ideal centers of attrac-
tion around which displays can be worked.
Promoted carnations should be given to every
mother or elderly woman, or any woman for
that matter, on Mother's Day; candy in im-
printed bags may be given out to the children
on Christmas; an agency of the local tele-
graph office can be opened at the theater
during those holidays at which holiday tele-
grams may be sent at specially reduced prices
— little courtesies that give you big results
in patronage.
Film Arrivals
.jL- A stunt that's always good for newspaper
" coverage is to play up big the arrival
of the can of film. Nature of print's arrival
at theater should, if possible, be in keeping
with subject of film. Thus, if picture concerns
aviation, film should be rushed to nearby
airport in plane and news picture taken of
can being brought out of cabin. If film deals
828
with stagecoach era, stagecoach drawn by-
team of horses should bring film right up to
door of theater, with driver and bodyguards
attired in dress of period. Where practicable,
carrier of print should be bannered with
theater copy.
Athletic Contests
★ BE ready to take full advantage of any
local prize fight, swimming meet, basket-
ball or football game, etc., where you have a
ready-made, concentrated audience. If it's
an outdoor event ,get your message across
by means of an airplane with big banner
attached circling over the field ,or by a
hydrogen-filled balloon with banner or with
message painted on. If you can get a sound
truck, run it onto the field during intermission,
or get your ushers to circle the field with a
banner. Heralds or small balloons with your
message released onto the field will also
help. If your picture has an athletic theme
or a college or high school background,
organize an athletic meet among the various
local athletic clubs and donate a cup or
trophy to the winning team from the stage
of the theater. Newspapermen should be
present at presentation. Offer a trophy, medal
or guest pass to the school boy or girl with
the best athletic record. Have local school
teams (sport in season) down to theater as
your guests. Post announcements of picture
in athletic clubs, on school bulletin boards,
and in various places where athletes gather.
Organizations
A IDEAL for those smaller communities
™ where a theater manager wants to keep
the trade in the community instead of seeing
the neighboring big city get it. Manager
circularizes all local organizations and clubs
— women's groups, boys' clubs, girls' clubs,
schools, etc. — announcing specially reduced
prices for all theater parties of over a speci-
fied amount. Another way is to get some club
that wants to raise money to sponsor a theater
party, prices charged by club to be slightly
higher than theater admission. Regular admis-
sion goes to theater and residue reverts to
organization sponsoring the affair.
Fan Clubs
.^L. FAN clubs are good for houses running
^ chapter plays or a series of Westerns
featuring the same star. Base your fan club
name on the name of the star or the title of
the serial or Western. Print up cards that
are punched each week, allowing a free
admission for every certain number of con-
secutive paid admissions. Make your house
a meeting place for the members of the club,
and promote refreshments for them from local
confectioner. Print up membership cards and
buttons for the members to wear, and tie-in
with merchants for discounts to all kids carry-
ing membership cards.
Newspaper Contests
A THE newspapers, of course, offer unlim-
^ ited opportunities to enterprising show-
men. Countless types and variations of news-
paper contests may be achieved to put over
your picture. For example: (1) Balloon Contest,
in which one star makes a wise-crack and
reader must suggest return crack for other
star (2) Title-guessing Contest, in which star
or stars says something with titles of former
pictures being hidden in the words; (3) Star-
identity Contest, in which portion of star's
face is erased or hidden and reader must
guess identity, or where sections of various
faces have been jumbled together and reader
must reassemble them correctly; (4) Maze
Contest in connection with picture featuring
boat, plane, map, etc., wherein reader must
lead boat, plane, etc., to nearest point or to
safety without touching any other line or
meeting any obstacle. Newspaper contests
cannot be gone into too fully here, but un-
doubtedly, every picture has some angle that
could be worked into a contest.
Classified Page
A IF you happen to be playing a title that
^ will help sell the classified page, get it
over to the paper's advertising or promotion
manager. Generally, a "jumbled ad" contest,
in which the letters of the title or the letters
of the stars' names have to be searched for
through the different ads, and then re-assem-
bled, will do the trick. Another way would
be to spell one word wrong in certain ads
and then offer tickets for the longest lists of
misspelled words. Contestants, naturally, have
to go through each ad very carefully.
Local Schools
★ MANAGER works out three-way spelling
bee contest with school, theater, and
radio station participating. Best spellers se-
lected by teachers meet on specific days in
theater lobby or lounge for series of elimina-
tions. Spelling bee finals are broadcast over
local station. Judges selected from school,
theater, and newspaper (children's page edi-
tor). Winners — one male and one female in
each division — receive medals from theater
and feted in due style. Quiz contest can be
substituted for spelling bee. Contest announce-
ments and playdate copy should be planted
in school paper and on bulletin boards, and
announced in auditorium. When picture is
adapted from book used or read by school
children or based on historical fact, theater
can offer tickets to students through school
heads for best essays on background, story
and characters of film. Teachers should be
asked to talk about film and stills should be
posted in school library. This stunt generally
meets with approval of school authorities.
829
Early Birds
-JL. TIE in with a nearby restaurant or lunch
™ counter on a special early bird matinee
that entitles patron to doughnuts and coffee
plus your picture at a special price. Tickets
must be bought at theater first and then pre-
sented at restaurant in order to get the meal.
Theater and eatery split, of course, unless food
can be promoted for publicity received. Extra
early bird matinee can also be engineered on
Saturday morning for the kids when picture is
a typical juvenile picture.
Restaurant Menus
,JL. AN inexpensive means of getting your
^ playdate message across to a great num-
ber of potential patrons, no matter what the
picture, is to utilize the menu cards of the
various restaurants, cafes and roadhouses. A
footnote at the bottom of the card, mentioning
picture, theater and playdate, is all that is
necessary. If it can't be promoted, it may be
worth your while to pay for the menus, since
everyone who goes to the movies also eats.
Refreshments
TEA, coffee or lemonade and cookies
offered gratis in the afternoon in the
theater lounge will appeal to women weary
of the day's shopping. Tie in with some local
restaurant to furnish the refreshments in ex-
change for publicity on a 40" x 60" and a
counter sign on the table holding the food.
Restaurateur should publicize the tie-up in his
window and on menu cards, and theater ads
should also carry announcement.
Radio Tie-ups
,JL. IF your picture is a timely one, pertinent
™ to current events, spot short announce-
ments over the air following the local news
broadcasts. If the star of the film is also on
the air, spot your announcements directly
before and after his program. If the film has
some unusual angle, tie in with the station
on a quiz contest inspired by the picture and,
in connection with this, you might, as a gag,
have women vs. men; husbands vs. wives;
fathers vs. sons, etc. Many radio stations
have groups of stock players whom they use
for plays, speaking bits, etc. Get the station
to feature this group in a scene from the film
using, possibly, a special script if one is
available on the production. Or, broadcaster
might describe a few scenes from the picture
direct from the theater while film is being
shown.
Radio Broadcast
A GREAT patronage builder, especially if
^ it can be worked on one of those "slow"
nights. Local advertiser sponsoring a com--
mercial radio program, particularly if it's a
quiz of some sort, holds program on stage of
thealer in full view of audience. Novelty of
witnessing an authentic radio program along
with the regular show should pack the house.
Sponsor gets a much larger audience that
way, and theater, without extra expense, gets
a big attraction.
Matinee Nursery
^L. THE "matinee nursery" should build
morning and afternoon patronage. Moth-
ers who have no place to leave children
during the day bring babies down to theater,
where special nursery section, overseered by
a competent nurse, has been provided. Chil-
dren are literally "checked" and left to amuse
themselves with toys while mother sees the
picture in comfort.
Baby Contests
ANY contest dealing with babies natu-
rally has an irresistible appeal to fathers
and mothers. Contest — for best-looking baby;
sweetest baby; baby most resembling father
or mother, etc. — should be worked in con-
junction with local photographer. Photog takes
pictures free for the subsequent sales he makes
to parents, and theater posts them in lobby,
where patrons cast votes for babies. In final
week, each week's winners are again voted
upon for grand prize, which should be a
loving cup with baby's name engraved on it
or some suitable clothing promoted or bought
from local kiddie shop. In contest where judg-
ing is to be done on stage, an afternoon should
be set aside and baby should be chosen by
popular applause. Undoubtedly, every mother
entered will have her friends down to tip
the scales in favor of her own child.
Taxicab Strips
.^U- BEAVER board strips of specified size.
™ with your theater copy lettered on, fast-
ened onto the rear or front bumpers of local
cabs, will get people on the street and away
from your theater into the habit of looking
at the passing cabs when they want to go to
a movie. A card or strip inside the cab, of
course, is effective also.
Back-Number Mags
.^L. A subtle way cf getting your playdate
^ copy to stick in mind, is to promote or
buy up a quantity of back number magazines
— preferably those along the same theme as
your picture — for advance give-away in the
theater, and snipe the top right-hand corners
with stickers or corner cards. By expending a
little more energy, you can work the same
idea on the magazines found in doctors' and
dentists' offices.
830
831
OUR CUSTOMERS
ARE OUR BEST
ADVERTISERS!
Barnes Printing Company,
Dear Mr. Stuart: —
Once again, as so often in the past, I am impelled
to congratulate you upon a most superior printing
job produced under trying circumstances.
You may be sure that the cooperation of your
entire staff with our Mr. Reeser in the production of
this really splendid issue of the American Dyestuff
Reporter is most sincerely appreciated.
Faithfully yours,
HOWES PUBLISHING COMPANY,
A. P. HOWES, President.
Need we say any more?
BARNES PRINTING CO., Inc.
229 West 28th Street : : New York
832
MOTION PICTURE
THEATERS
In The United States. Alaska and Canada
A LIST of wired motion picture theaters in the United States, Alaska
*rJL and Canada. Closed theaters are indicated by the symbol — CI. A
list of circuits operating four or more theaters is started on page 943.
See Page 941 for a list of Negro houses.
ALABAMA
266 Theaters; 98,784 Seats
Closed — 27 Theaters; 8,256 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 239 Theaters; 90,618 Seats
ABBEYVILLE
Abbey 200
ALABAMA CITY
Ritz 300
ALBERTVILLE
Carol 500
Princess 400
ALEXANDER CITY
Avondale Mills CI
Strand 500
ALICEVILLE
Palace 250
ANDALUSIA
Andalusia
Fox
Paramount 240
ANNISTON
Noble 1100
Rialto 350
Ritz 1000
ARAB
Arab 150
ASHLAND
Ashland 175
ASHVILLE
Ashville Port.
ATHENS
Plaza i 330
Ritz 612
ATMORE
Strand 400
ATTALLA
Liberty 450
BAY MINETTE
Rex 200
BAYOU LABATRE
Playhouse . . (Port.) 200
BERRY
Berry (Port.)
BESSEMER
Frolic 250
Grand 600
State 200C1
BIRMINGHAM
Alabama 3000
Avondale 480
Capitol 600
Central Park 300
Champion 600
East Lake 750
Empire 1000
Fairfield 600
Famous 900
Five Points 600
Frolic 600
Galax 800
Grand 350
Lyric 1200
Norwood 300
Panta^e
Pratt City 300
Rialto 600
Ritz 1200
Royal 400
Strand 800
Temple 1200C1
Trianon 600
West End 300
Woodlawn 450
Wylam 300
BOAZ
Rialto 200
BOLINGER
Bolinger (Port.) ...250
BRADFORD
Bradford (Port.)
BRANTLEY
Ritz 200
BREWTON
Ritz 290
BRIDGEPORT
Ritz 160
BRIGHTON
Brighton
BRILLIANT
Boston
BROOKSIDE
Brookside (Port.)
Lyric 200
BRUNDIGE
Brundige
BUTLER
Butler 250
CALERA
Wadesonian 150
CAMDEN
Camden 200
CARBON HILL
Pastime 400
CENTER
Cherokee 150
CENTERVILLE
Goodale (Port.)
Ritz 250
CHATHAM
Lesion Hall (Port.) 166
CITROffELLE
Citronelle (Port.) ..250
CLANTON
New Wadesonian
CLAYTON
Clayton
COAL VALLEY
Coal Valley .... (Port.)
COLLINSVILLE
Cricket 140
COLUMBIA
Columbia 200
COLUMBIANA
Dixie 250
CORDOVA
Dixie 200
Roxy 250C1
CRICHTON
Majestic 450
CULLMAN
Cullman 1000
Lyric 482
DADEVILLE
Ritz 200
DECATUR
Princess 1100
DEMOPOLIS
Morengo 300
DIXIANA
Dixiana (Port.)
DIXON MILLS
Dixon Mills .... (Port.)
DORA
Ritz (Port.)
DOTHAN
Alabama 500
Alcazar 350C1
Houston 790
EAST GADSDEN
Park 500C1
EAST TALLASSEE
East Mt. Vernon... 200
ELBA
Elba 200
New
ENSLEY
Ensley 780
Palace 400
ENTERPRISE
Ritz 250
EUFAULA
Lee 750
Rex
EUTAW
Eutaw 300
EVERGREEN
Pix 893
833
FAIRFAX
Fairfax 400
FAIRFIELD
Palace 260C1
FAIRHOPE
Fairhope 390
FAYETTE
Richards 300
Roxy 300
FLOMATON
Jackson 300
FLORALA
Strand 210
FLORENCE
Majestic 300
Princess 1150
FOLEY
New Foley 357
FT. McCLELLAN
War Dept
FORT PAYNE
DeKalb 350
FRISCO CITY
Frisco 251
GADSDEN
Capitol 350
Dixie 300
Gadsden 650
Gem 300
Princess 833
GENEVA
Avon 280
GEORGIAN A
Georgiana 200
GOOD WATER
Rex 150
GORDO
Gordo
GREENSBORO
Strand 200
GREENVILLE
Ritz 450
GROVE HILL
Capitol 150C1
Grove Hill 210
GTTIN
Lyric 250
GUNTERSVILLE
Palace 450
Ritz 250
Star 200C1
HALEYVILLE
Princess 290
HAMILTON
New 300
HANCEVILLE
Ritz 250C1
HARTFORD
Rosemont 250
HARTSELLE
Strand 472
HEADLAND
Joyce 200
HEFLIN
Heflin 110
HUNTSVILLE
Bradley High School. 300
Dallas Mills YMCA.300C1
Elks 600C1
Grand 750
Lincoln Aud 500C1
Lyric 902
Pi incest- 300
HURTSBORO
Lloyd 200
JACKSON
Jackson 228
JACKSONVILLE
Princess 400
JASPER
Jasper 600
LA BATRE
Pritchard 'Port.) . .256
LAFAYETTE
LaFayette 400
LANETT
Lanett 1200
LANGDALE
Langdale 450
LEEDS
Dixie 250
LINDEN
Linden 200
LINEVILLE
Lineville 200C1
LIVINGSTON
Ritz 200
LOXLEY
Loxley Hall (Port.) 153
LCVERNE
Luverne 300
MARGARET
Margaret (Port.)
MARION
Bonita 300
MARVEL
Marvel CI
MAXWELL FIELD
War Dept
MOBILE
Arlington Park . . . 250C1
Azalea 500
Century 325
Crown 500
Dragron 300
Empire 500
Lincoln 750
Pike 856C1
Roosevelt 250
Roxy 620
Saenger 2684
MONROEVILLE
Franston
Monroe 376
MONTEVALLO
Strand 250
MONTGOMERY
Empire 475
Paramount 1492
Pekin 600
State 375
Strand 380
Tivoli 400
MOULTON
Ritz 285
MT. VERNON
Cameo CI
Mt. Vernon (Port.) 200
NAUVOO
Nauvoo (Port.)
NEW CASTLE
New Castle (Port.)
NEW HOPE
New Hope (Port.)
N. BIRMINGHAM
N. Birmingham ....800
ONEONTA
Strand 300
OPELIKA
Martin 460
OPP
Royal 185
ORVILLE
Orville (Port.)
OZARK
Dale 250
PARRISH
Star 150C1
PELL CITY
Lyric 170
PERDIDO
Harvard 150C1
PHOENIX CITY
Palace 600
PIEDMONT
Fox 400
Princess 240
PINSON
Pinson (Port.)
PRATTVILLE
Lyric 300
PRITCHARD
Pritchard (Port.) . .400
Rex 200
QUINTONN
Quintonn (Port.)
RAGLAN
Strand 200
RED BAY
Bay 500
REFORM
Reform 160
RIDERVIEW
Rirerdale 300C1
ROANOKE
Ritz 500
ROBERTSDALE
Hub 200
ROGERS VILLE
Rogersville (Port.)
RUSSELLVILLE
Franklin 267
SAMPSON
Royal 250
SCOTTSBORO
Bocanito 400
Ritz 400
SELMA
Dixie
New
Roxy 300
Walton 600
SHAWMUTT
Shawmutt 400
SHEFFIELD
Ritz 600
SILURIA
Siluria 260
SILVERHILL
Silverhill CI
SLOCUM
Elite CI
Lyric 300C1
STATE LINE
Auditorium (Port.) 161
STEVENSON
Isabelle 200
SULLIGENT
Strand 200
SUMITON
Sumiton
SUMMIT
Summit (Port.)
SWEETWATER
Sweetwater ...(Port.)Cl
SYLACACGA
Ritz 700
Sylacauga 386
TALLADEGA
Fox 350C1
Paramount 300
Ritz 360
TALLASSEE
Mt. Vernon 300
TARRANT CITY
Imperial 450
THOMAS VILLE
New Royal
Thomasville 200
TOWN CREEK
Town Creek (Port.) ....
TROY
Enzor 360
Princess 350C1
Roxy
TUSCALOOSA
Bama 1000
Diamond 500
Druid 1000
Ritz 356
TUSCUMBIA
Strand 800
TCSKEGEE
Macon 460
Vet's
UNION SPRINGS
Lilfred 360
UNIONTOWN
Strand 200
VINCENT
Vincent (Port.)
WARRIOR
Warrior 335
Warrior Schoolhouse
(Port.)
WEST BLOCKTON
Strand 200
WETUMPKA
Fain 250
WINFIELD
Pastime (Port) 200
YARBO
Ingram 330
YORK
Sumter 300
^ARIZONA—
101 Theaters; 44,702 Seats
Closed — 12 Theaters; 3,610 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 89 Theaters; 41,092 Seats
AJO BENSON BOWIE CASA GRANDE
Oasis 400 Benson ........... 150 Bowie 150C1 Paramount 478
, I> 1 >ti r. r.
ASHFORK Lowell 350 BUCKEYE CHANDLER
Ashfork 405 Lyric 850 Roxy 300 Rowena 400
834
CHLORIDE
Chloride 268
CLARKDALE
Grand 260
Princess 270
COOLIDGE
Coolidge 390
Rex CI
San Carlos 750
COPPER CREEK
Eontas (Port.) ....140
COTTONWOOD
Rialto 250
CLIFTON
Martin 270
Princess 270C1
DOUGLAS
Grand 1100
DUNCAN
Duncan 175
ELOY
Dustbowl 300
FLAGSTAFF
College
Flagstaff 400
Liberty 425C1
Orpheum 631
FORT HUACHUCA
Fort Huachua
GILA BEND
Roxy CI
FLORENCE
Isis 430
GLENDALE
El Rey 394
Glendale 300
GLOBE
Fox Alden 600
Fox Globe 648C1
GRAND CANTON
Community 400
Camps (Port.) ....900
HAYDEN
Rex 360
HOLBROOK
Roxy 360
JEROME
Ritz 480
KINGMAN
Lang's 267C1
State 475
McNARY
Rivoli 400
MESA
Nile 900
Ritz 500C1
MIAMI
Grand 800
Lyric 600C1
MONMOUTH
Monmouth
Kontas (Port.)
MORENCI
Royal 350
NOGALES
Lyric CI
Nogales 800
OATMAN
Oatman 300
PARKER
Arizona 330
PATAGONIA
Allhands (Port.)
PEORIA
Peoria 260C1
PHOENIX
Fox 1795
Orpheum 1690
Phoenix 700
Plaza CI
Ramon a 800
Rex 400
Rialto 993
Strand 791
Studio 325
PINETOP
Rhodes Hall 200C1
PIMA
Pima 200
PRESCOTT
Elks 750
Studio 520
RAY
Iris 350
RUBY
Allhands (Port.)
SAFFORD
Ramona 700
Safford 700
ST. JOHNS
Ritz 400
SELIGMAN
Seligman 240
SNOWFLAKE
Snowflake 350
SOMERTON
Somerton 320
SONORA
Juarez 400
Sonora
SPRINGER VILLE
El Rio 400
SUPERIOR
Alhambra
Uptown 436
TEMPE
State 460
THATCHER
Little
TOLLESON
Tolleson
TOMBSTONE
Tombstone (Port.)
TUCSON
Fox 1300
Lyric 913
Plaza 700
Rialto 1000
Rio 400
State 700
WARREN
Warren 325
WHITE RIVER
Whiteriver Civic Club. .
WICKENBURG
Wickenburg 276
WILCOX
Wilcox 200
WILLIAMS
Sultana 400
WINSLOW
Chief 269
Rialto 640
YUMA
Desert Airdrome
Lyric 400
Orpheum 475
Yuma 900
—ARKANSAS =
241 Theaters; 90,324 Seats
Closed — 15 Theaters; 6,704 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 226 Theaters; 83,620 Seats
ALTUS BERRYVILLE CARLISLE DARDANELLE
Altus Ozark 250 Rex 300 Joy 300
„,ARKADEI-PHIA ,„n BLACK ROCK CAVE CITY DANVILLE
S B00 °zark <P°rt> L&LC .™ C ...175 ^stime 260
ASHDOWN BLYTHEVILLE PHART FSTON ~ DE QUEEN
nw-io AS,HDOWI* Gem 300C1 „ CHARLESTON 6em 350
Dlxle 200 Ritz 650 Gem 150 Grand 400
t> A™INS „.„ Roxy 400 CLARENDON DERMOTT
New Royal 240 BOONVILLE Paramount 300 Allied 350
AUGUSTA Palace 219 ,,T .RKSVII T „ DEVALLS BLUFFS
Ha™™«« BRADFORD Strand^™ . 400 Bluff (Port.) 240
1,1111 ttJMUB New 212 DE WITT
Ritz BRINKLEY CLINTON New 300
BATESVILLE Imperial ... . 300 cllIlton Ritz 250
Landers 600 CAROT CONWAY DES ARC
Melba 274 Cabot Conway 750 Temple (Port.)
BAUXITE School Auditorium .350 Grand 350 DIERKS
Bauxlte 350 CALICO ROCK CORNING Dixie 250
BEEBE Gem .450 State 400 DUMAS
Radl° ~41 Ozark (Port.) COTTER Gem 250
BELLA VIST A CAMDEN Paradise 200 DYESS COLONY
Vlsta New CI COTTON PLANT Dyess 320
BENTON Ritz 400 James 280 EARLE
Imp 350 Rialto 300 CROSSETT
Earle
BENTONVILLE Strand 300 Crossett 364 strand 500
Plaza 600 CARAWAY CUSHMAN ELAINE
Royal 500 New 300 High School New 350
835
EL DURA DO
Majestic 500
Rialto 1200
Ritz 378
Star 400
ENGLAND
Best 500
New 290
EUDORA
Mack 250
EUREKA SPRINGS
Commodore 400
Ozark
FAYETTEVILLE
Ozark 750
Palace BOO
Royal 650
FORDYCE
Dallas 300
FOREMAN
Liberty 250
FORREST CITY
Imperial BOO
Rosemary 1000C1
FORRESTER
Caddo 300
FORT SMITH
Hoyt's 350
Joie 650
Mystic 600
New 1000
Temple 889C1
GENTRY
Cozy (Port.) 200
Gentry
GLENWOOD
Menlo 27B
GRAVETTE
Cozy (Port.) 235
GREEN FOREST
Majestic 200
New 225
GREENWOOD
Clint (Port.)
GURDON
Hoo-Hoo
Wrigrhfs 350
HAMBURG
Pastime 250
HAMPTON
Progress 260
HARDY
Ozark (Port.) 200
HARRISBURG
Radio 203
HARRISON
Lyric 660
Plaza 300C
HARTFORD
Emerson 300
HAZEN
Cozy 280
HEBER SPRINGS
Gem 260
HELENA
Paramount 760
Pastime 500
Plaza 276
HOLLY GROVE
Grove 260
HOPE
New 350
Rialto 550 MARSHALL
Saenger 1200 Marshall 300
HOT SPRINGS MARVELL
Central 600 Capitol 400
Paramount 800
Roxy 600 MELBOURNE
Spa 374 Ozark (Port.)
Star
State
.450
.700
MEN A
Lil
strand Lyric ' '. '. '. '. '. '. '. '. '. '. '. '. 500
HUGHES
Ha>'3 New
HUNTINGTON
Roxy 251
MONETTE
.250
HUNTS VILLE
Dixie 200
JINNY LIND
Jinny Lind (Port.)
JOINER
MONTICELLO
Amusu 600
Drew 714
MORRILLTON
Rialto 475
Ritz 300
MT. HOME
Gem. Jr 324C1 Evans 300
Ozark (Port.)
JONESBORO
Liberty 250 MT- IDA
Palace 600 Ouachita 275
Strand 1000
MT. PINE
JUDSONIA Home
Judd 200
LAKE VILLAGE Lee
New 270
LAVACA
Lavaca (Port.l
LEACHVILLE
Gem 220
LEPANTO
Rialto 250 New
MT. VIEW
. .300
MULBERRY
Clint (Port.)
MURFREESBORO
Menlo 288
NASHVILLE
Howard 300
Liberty 300
320
NEWARK
Crystal 290 Royal 275
t ™™t tv: NEWPORT
LINCOLN CapUol 450CI
New 13° Strand 500
LITTLE ROCK NORTH LITTLE
Arkansas 1300C1 ROCK
Camp Joseph T. Princess 774
Robertson Rialto 600
Capitol 1200 nT.
Crescent 315 _ „Rft
Gem 400 Ray 266
Lee 300 OSCEOLA
New 350 Gem 600
Plaza Joy 200
Prospect 600 OZARK
Pulaski 1000 Ozark 250
oln PARAGOULD
Royal 900 Majestic 378
LONOKE PARIS
New 250 Strand 500
LUXORA Wiggins 500
High School CI PARKIN
McCRORY Ritz 300
McCrory PIGGOT
Ritz 230 Franklin 300
McGEHEE PINE BLUFF
New 350C1 Alamo 530
Ritz 667 Community 450
MAGNOLIA Saenger 1580
Macco 500 Strand 582
Odeon 512 Vesta
MALVERN POCAHONTAS
Liberty 416C1 Imperial 280
Ritz 700 PRAIRIE GROVE
MAMMOTH SPRINGS Beverly 216
Ozark (Port.) PRESCOTT
MANILLA Gem 290
New 250 Nevada 313
MARIANNA QUITMAN
Imperial 500 Quitman (Port.) ...480
MARKED TREE RAVENDEN
Star 500 Ozark (Port.)
836
RECTOR
Ford 317
Palace 200C1
BISON
New
ROGERS
Victory 400
RUSSELLVILLE
New 400
Ritz 694
SALEM
Ozark (Port.)
SEARCY
Plaza 290
Rialto 600
SHERIDAN
Rex 250
SILOAM SPRINGS
Grand 400
Rialto 350
SMACKOVER
Home 275C1
Joy 450
SPARKMAN
New 475
SPRINGDALE
Concord 400
STAMPS
State 300
STAR CITY
Star 366
STELLA
Ozark (Port.)
STUTTGART
Majestic 750
Strand 450C1
TEXARKANA
Capitol 348
TRUMAN
Grand 250
TUCKERMAN
Blue
TYRONZA
Lomo 250C1
Tyronza 275
VAN BUREN
Bob Burns 631
Royal 500
Rio 500C1
WALDO
Wakea 300
WALDRON
Pines 350
WALNUT RIDGE
New 200
Sharon 300
WARREN
Avalon 350
Pastime 500
WEST HELENA
Palace 387
WEST MEMPHIS
Crittenden 700
Strand
WILMOT
Strand 229
WILSON
School 450
WYNNE
Imperial 370
YELLEVILLE
Ozark (Port.>
— CALIFORNIA —
1,095 Theaters; 804,872 Seats
Closed — 124 Theaters; 51,352 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 971 Theaters; 753,520 Seats
AGNEW
State Hospital
ALAMEDA
Elks Club
Lincoln 300C1
Neptune Palace .... 900
New Alameda . . . .2300
Strand 1300
Vogue 864
ALBANY
Albany 500
ALHAMBRA
Alhambra 600
El-Rey 1000
Garfield 1100
Granada 500
ALLEGHANY
Alleghany 400C1
AL TAHOE
Al Tahoe 400C1
ALTUBAS
Alhambra 492C1
Nilea 678
ALVABADO
Naharra 350C1
ANAHEIM
Anaheim 735
Fox 1170
Grand
ANGELS CAMP
Angrels Camp 450
ANTIOCH
Casino 400
El Campanil 1080
ABBUCKLE
Arbuckle 290
H. & R 396C1
ABCADIA
Arcadia 450
AECATA
New Areata 476
ARLINGTON
Airdome 500
ARROWHEAD
Arrowhead 300C1
ARROYO GRANDE
Grand 325
Roxy CI
ARVIN
Airdome CI
Arvin 500
ATASCADERO
LaModa 400
ATWATER
Atwater 300
AUBURN
Auburn 320C1
State 1260
AVALON
Avalon 1100C1
Riviera 535
AVENAL
Avenal 300
AZUSA
State 641
BAKERSFIELD
California 1014
Pox 1537
Granada 630
Kern 860
Nile 1000
Regina
Rex 750
BALBOA
Ritz 450
BALDWIN PABK
Baldwin 696
BANNING
Banning 650
BARSTOW
Forum 180
BELL
Alcazar 1346
Bell 600
Fox Alpha
BELLFLOWER
Bellflower 900
BELL GARDENS
Towne 600
BELVEDERE GARDENS
Bonita 700
Center
Garden 612
Golden Gate 1454
Swickard Strand ..1100
United Artists 916
Whittier Boulevard 866
BENECIA
Majestic 624
BERKELEY
Berkeley 780
Fox California .... 1000
Campus 1500
Elite 824
Lorin 1200
Oaks 1000
Rivoli 1400
Strand 740C1
U. C 1000
United Artists .... 1646
BEVERLY HILLS
Beverly 1270
Elite 824
Fox Wilshire 2295
Warners Beverly ..1620
BIG BEAR
Peter Pan Club. . .312C1
Grizzley CI
BISHOP
Bishop 400
BLYTHE
Liberty 800
Rio 600
BOCLDEB CREEK
Forest 300
BRAWLEY
Aztec 400
Brawley 806
Circle 450
Eureka 750
BBEA
Brea 584
BBENTWOOD
Delta 600
BUENA PARK
Valuskis 250
BCRBANK
Burbank 600
Loma 642
Major 816
San-Val 400 autos
BURLING AM E
Broadway 900
New Peninsula ...2000
BUTTONW1LLOW
Buttonwillow 200
Willow 400
CALEXICO
Aztec 450
Fox Capitol 1070
CALII'ATRIA
Airdrome CI
Poppy 360
CALPINE
Calpine CI
CALISTOGA
Playhouse 240
Ritz 500
CAMPBELL
Blanco's Campbell ..490
CANOGA PABK
Canoga 700
CAKLSBAD
El Encanto 418
CABMEL
Carmel 660
Filmarte 250
CARPENTERIA
Del Mar 325
CEDAR VILLE
Surprise 250
CENTRAL VALLEY
Shasta 388
CHICO
American 844
Empire 658
Little 400C1
Senator 1400
CHINO
Wood's 268
CHOWCHILLA
Chowchilla 300
CHULA VISTA
Seville 600
CLAREMONT
Ciaremont
CLEARLAKE
HIGHLANDS
Legion
CLOVERDALE
Del Rio 200
CLOVIS
El Rey 325
COACHELLA
Paramount 300
COALINGA
California 900
Liberty 432
COLFAX
Colfax 200
COLUSA
Colusa 600
Fifth Avenue ...584C1
Gem 540
COMPTON
Big Top
Compton 618
Symphony
Tower 1000
CONCORD
Concord 300C1
Enan 600
CORCORAN
Corcoran 675
Harvester 400
Lake 550
CORNING
Rodgers 590
CORONA
Circle 350
Corona 800
CORONADO
Coronado 600
Tent City 400C1
COVELO
Covelo 200
COVINA
Covina 499
CRESCENT CITY
Endert's 625
CRESTLINE
Crestline CI
CROCKETT
American 550
Columbia 686
CROSS ROADS
Airdome 300
Cross Roads (Port.) . .CI
CUCAMONGA
Mexico 250
CULVER CITY
Meralta 900
DALY CITY
Daly City 1274
DANVILLE
Danville 760
DAVIS
Varsity 400
DELANO
Delano 700
West 375
DEL MONTE
Hotel Del Monte
DELTA
Legion Hall CI
DINUBA
State 1200
DIXON
Dixon 350
DORRIS
Dorris 200
DOS PALOS
Dos Palos 275
DOWNEY
Downey 500
Meralto 769
DOWNIEVILLE
Do wnieville ( Port. ) . 200
DUNSMUIR
California 776
EAGLE ROCK
Eagle 700
Sierra 600
EARP
Airdome 300C1
EAST BAKEKSFIELD
Granada 630
Rialto 414
Virginia 480
EL CAJON
El Cajon 460
EL CENTRO
Airdome 600C1
Broadway 350
837
Imperial 1288C1
United Artists . . . .1179
Valley 500
EL CERRITO
Cerrito 600
ELDRIDGE
State Home
EL MONTE
El Monte
Rialto 490
EL SEGUNDO
State 370C1
El Segundo
EL SERRENO
Cameo 750
ELSIXORE
Elsinore 350
EXCINTAS
La Paloma 500
ESCALON
Escalon 272
ESCONDIDO
Pala 700
Ritz 800
ETNA
Etna 150
ETNA MILLS
A. R. Highland Portable
Circuit
EUREKA
Eureka 1638
New Liberty 535C1
Rialto 850
State 1199
EXETER
Exeter 450
Ritz 560
FAIRFIELD
Solamo 473
FALLBROOK
Mission 300
FALL RIVER MILLS
Paramount 276
FELLOWS
Star CI
FERNDALE
Hart 350
State 492C1
FILLMORE
Fillmore 500
FIREBAUGH
Columbia 250
Los Delta CI
FIVE POINTS
Tumbleweeds 750
FOLSOM
Folsom 224
FONTANA
Fontana 600
FORD CITY
Roxy 460
FORT BAKER
War Dept 150
FORT BRAGG
State 819
FORT JONES
Hiland 400C1
fort Mcdowell
Post Exchange
FORTUNA
New Fortuna 492
FOWLER
Strand 360C1
FRESNO
Fox State 1245
Fox Wilson 1800
Fulton 400
Hardy's 1400
Kinema 1245
Lyceum 350
Rex
Ryans 400
Tower
Warner 2250
White 1400C1
FRIANT
Friant 500
FULLERTON
Fox Fullerton . . . .1095
GALT
Gait 250C1
GARBERVILLE
Garberville 300
GARDENA
Gardena 800
GARDEN GROVE
Gem 293
GARVEY
Garvey 750
GILROY
Strand 900
GLENDALE
Alexander 2030
Bard's Glendale .... 844
California 772
Cosmo 700
Fox Capitol 808
Gateway 912
Glendale 1024C1
Roxy 8O0
Show Shop 750
Temple 600
GLENDORA
Glendora 600
GRAEGLE
Graegle CI
GRASS VALLEY
Legion 600C1
Montez 600
Strand 690
GREENVILLE
Greenville 200
GRIDLEY
Butte 775
Gridley 585
GUADALUPE
Crescent 240
GUERNEVILLE
Guerneville 344
GUSTINE
Victoria 400
HALF MOON BAY
Half Moon Bay 400
HANFORD
Fox 1000
Rio 517
New Ritz 650
Royal 325
HAPPY CAMP
By a id
HAWTHORNE
Hawthorne 350
Plaza 891
Rex 350
HAYFORK
Bayard (Port.)
HAYWARD
Hay ward 1168
State 600
HEALDSBURG
Plaza 848
HEMET
Hemet 650
HERMOSA
Hermosa 888
HILT
Hiland Circuit
HOLLISTER
State 900
HOLLYWOOD
(See: Los Angeles)
HOLTVILLE
Airdome
Arcade 350
Holtville 450
HUNTINGTON BEACH
Roxy 639
HUNTINGTON PARK
California 1500
Huntington 600
Lyric 950
Parle 700
Warner 1468
IDYLLWILD
Idyll wild 200C1
INDEPENDENCE
Legion Hall CI
INDIO
Desert
INGLEWOOD
Academy 1156
Granada 1106
Fox Inglewood .... 863
Ritz 700
Seville 766
United Artists 942
IONE
Royal 250C1
IRVINGTON
Irvington 248C1
ISLETON
Isleton 278
JACKSON
Amador 750
Jackson 500
JACUMBA
Jacumba 300C1
JULIAN
Julian 150
JUNCTION CITY
Bayard Circuit
KERNVTLLE
Kern 210C1
KING CITY
Reel Joy 473
KINGSBURG
Kings 600C1
KLAMATH
Klamath 350
KNIGHTS LANDING
Welcome 250C1
LAKEPORT
Orpheum 300
LAKE TAHOE
Bal Bijou Club 400C1
Brockway CI
LAGUNA BEACH
Laguna 375C1
South Coast 800
LA HABRA
La Habra 389
LA JOLLA
Granada 780
LA MESA
La Mesa 486
LANCASTER
Valley 490
LEMOORE
Lemoore 400
LEWISTON
Bayard Circuit
LINCOLN
Moore 375
Vet's Home
LINDSAY
Glade 60011
Lindsay 7 50
LIVERMORE
State 600
Vet's Hospital
LIVINGSTON
Court 350
LODI
Lodi 1000
State
LOMA LINDA
Drive Inn 99 Cars
LOMITA
Lomita 500
LA MONT
La Mont CI
LOMPOC
Lompoe S00
LONE PINE
Lone Pine Hall 182
Roxy
LONG BEACH
Belmont 800
Brayton 850
Cabart .924
California
Dale 582
Egyptian 1080
Family
Home
Imperial 821
Lee 030
Long Beach 1000
Metro Ebell 1000
New Tracy 960C1
Palace 850
Rialto 462
Ritz 564
Rivoli 1000
Roxy 800
State 1800
Strand 1450
Tracy 1200
United Artists ....1242
Victor 370
West Coast 2038
LOS ANGELES
Adams (W. Adams). 300
Alhambra 875
Allena 700
Alpine (Sunset) ...470
Alto (Western &
89th) 894
Alvarado
(Alvarado) 750
American
(S. Broadway) . .500
Apollo (Hollywood
Blvd.) 600
Arcade (S. Broad-
way) 800
Arlin 460
Arlington
(W. Washington) 792
Arrow (S. Main) . . .600
Arroyo (Dayton &
Cypress) 900
Art (S. Main) 350
Astor (S. Vermont). 600
Avalon l Avalon
Blvd.) 600
Balboa (Manchester ft
Vermont) 1100
Banner (S. Main
St.) 630
Bard's Adams (Cren-
shaw & Adams). 1100
Belmont (So.
Vermont) 1680
Kill Robinson (4219
South Central) . .850
Boulevard (Washington
& Vermont) . . . .2300
Brentwood
(Wilshire) 414
Broadway (S.
Broadway) 400
Brooklyn ( Brooklyn ) .900
Burbank 1000
Cairo (S. Main
St.) Ii00
California (S. Main
St.) 1500
Cameo (S.Broad-
way) 600
Campus 850
Capitol (W. 9th
St.) 650
Carlton (S.
Western) 1200
Carmel (Santa Monica
Blvd.) 1098
Carthay Circle (Carthay
Center) 1500
Casino (E. Vernon 1.500
Castle (Manchester
& San Pedro) . . .800
Central (3rd &
Broadway) 550
Century (S. Broad-
way) 900
Cinema 700
Clinton
Colony 475
(Holly. Blvd.)
Columbia (E. 7th
St.) 400
Congress 700
Continental 400
Cozv (S. Broadway) 300
838
Criterion (S.
Grand) 1640C1
Crystal (Whittier
Blvd.) 800
Dale ( Eagle Rock
Blvd.) 693
Daly (Daly &
Broadway) 440
Delmar (5036 W.
Pico Blvd. I 600
Deluxe (W. Jeffer-
son ) 550
Dixie 550
Dorkel
Dreamland (S.
Main) 450
Drive In (Pico
Blvd.) 400
Egyptian (Holly-
wood) 1771
Electric (No. Main) .345
Elite (S. Avalon) . . .325
El Rey 900
Elysian ( Riverside) .. 500
Empire (W. Pico).. 650
Esquire 500
Estella CI
Fairfax (Fairfax &
Beverly Rd.) . . .1400
Firueroa (W. Santa
Barbara Blvd.).. 1470
Filmarte (N. Vine). 900
Florencita (E.
Florence) 600
Florence Mills (Central
Ave.) 700
Folly (S. Main) . . . .900
Warners Forum
(W. Pico) 2000
Foui Star ( Wilshire) .900
Fox Embassy (3rd &
Western) 900
Fox Florence (E.
Florence) 1721
Fox Highland
(Pasadena Ave.). 1450
Franklin 500
Garden
Gentry (6525
Compton Blvd.) ....
Gordon 750
Granada (Temple) ... 630
Grand (S. Main) 700
Grand Internationale
(7th Sc Grand) . .1700
Grauman's Chinese
(Hollywood) ...2028
Green Meadow's
(Main St.) 550
Hidalgro (No. Main)
750C1
Hippodrome (S. Main
St.) 2100
Hollyway (Sunset
Blvd.) 732
Hollywood CI
Hollywood
Playhause 1200
Hub (S. Central) . .500
Hunley's (Hollywood
Blvd.) 750
Iris ( Hollywood
Blvd.) 789
Jade 340
Jewel (Whittier
Blvd.) 700
Joy (E. First St.) . .500
Keystone (E. First
St.) 250
Kinema (Graham
St.) 700
Kiva (S. Broadway) .400
Knoll (S. Western). 800
La Brea (S. La
Brea) 900
Lake (W. 17th St.) .460
Larchmont (N. Lareh-
mont) 835
Lark (S. Main St.) .300
La Tosca (S. Ver-
mont) 650
Leimert 750
Lido (Pico and La
Cionega) 880
Lincoln (23rd &
Central) 1960
Loew's State (7th &
Broadway) 2422
Los Angeles (S. Broad-
way) 2200
Los Feliz (N. Ver-
mont) 700
Lux (827 W. 3rd
St.) 500
Lyceum (S. Spring-). 800
McKinney's Regent
(S. Vermont) . . . .800
Madrid (S. Ver-
non) 750
Major (S.
Figueros) 800C1
Manchester (W. Man-
chester) 1600
Mareal (Hollywood
Blvd.) 900
Marquise 900
May (6010 S.
Bway.) 450
Mayfair (Broadway ). 900
Maynard (W. Wash-
ington) 500
Mecca (So. Bway.) .480
Melrose (Melrose) . .880
Meralta (E. First) . .800
Mesa (Angeles
Mesa) 1442
Metro (W. Washing-
ton) 800
Midway (Picor &
Manhattan) 600
Million Dollar (3rd &
Broadway) .... 1200
Mission (S. Broad-
way ) 500
Moon (S. Main) . . . 1000
Monterey
Muse (S. Main) . . . .400
Nadeau (E. Nadeau) .300
National (Brook-
lyn) 1100
Novelty (S. Main) . .248
Optic (S. Main) . . . .700
Olympic (W. 8th) . .524
Oriental (Sunset
Blvd.) 900
Orpheum (S. Broad-
way) 2000
Palace (S. Broad-
way) 2000
Pantages Hollywood
(Hollywood
Blvd.) 2812
Paramount (W. Sixth
St.) 3347
Paramount (Santa
Monica Blvd.) . . .900
Parisian 800
Park 600
Pico (W. Pico) . . .550
Playhouse (W. 7th
St.) 450
President (S. Broad-
way) 1177
Princess (61st &
Main) 750
Rainbow (E. Santa
Barbara Blvd.) .400C1
Ramona (Sunset
Blvd.) 480
Rampart (Temple
St.) 600
Ravenna (N. Ver-
mont) 750
Regent (S. Main) . .800
Regina 640
Rialto (S. Broad-
way) 850
Rio (S. Vermont) .. .500
Ritz (L. Brea &
Wilshire) 1402
Riviera (W. Adams
St.) 600
Rivoli (S. West-
ern) 900C1
RKO Hillstreet (8th &
Hill Sts.) 2916
Roosevelt 800C1
Rosebud (S. Cen-
tral) 800
Rosslyn (S. Main).. 350
Roxie (S. Broad-
way) 1350
Royal (5123
(Whittier Blvd.) ....
San Carlos (N.
Main) 926
Savoy (S. Central) .. 800
Stadium (Pico &
Robertson) ....1200
Star (S. Main) 300
Starland (N. Broad-
way) S50
Strand (S. Broad-
way ) 900
Sun (W. Pico
Blvd.) 500
Sunset (Sunset &
Western) 535
Teleview
Temple (S. Ver-
mont) 864
Times (938 S.
Figueroa) 900
Tower (8th &
Broadway) 900
Town (S. Hill St.) . .430
Trojan (W. Jeffer-
son) 450
Union
Unique (E. First
St.) 1100
United Artists (S.
Broadway) 2100
Uptown (10th &
Western) 1800
Variety (W. Adams) 600
Vermont (S. Ver-
mont) 850
Victor (S. Main) . . .800
Victoria (W. Pico). 700
Vista (Sunset
Blvd.) 638
Vogue (Hollywood
Blvd.) 800
Wabash (Wabash
Ave.) 650
Warner's Downtown
(7th & Hill) . . .2500
Warner's Hollywood
( Hollywood
Blvd.) 2756
Washington (Wash-
ington) 700
Western 900
Westlake (So. Alva-
rado) 1949
Wiltern (Western &
Wilshire) 2300
World (S. Broad-
way) 500
York (York Blvd.) . .900
LOS BANOS
Del Rio 600
Los Banos CI
LOS GATOS
Premier 500
LOS MOLINOS
Dales 210C1
LOS NEITOS
Los Neitos CI
LOWER LAKE
Lake 320
LOYALTON
Sierra 333
LYNWOOD
Lynwood 645
McCLOUD
McCloud 300
McFARLAND
McFarland
MADERA
National
New Madera 900
New Rex 675
Rex 450C1
Strand CI
MANTECA
El Rey
Lyric 400C1
MARCHFIELD
War Dept 250
MARE ISLAND
Mare Island 750
MARIPOSA
Mariposa 250
MARTINEZ
Avalon 750
State 1048
MARYSVILLE
Liberty 4 50
Lyric 350
State 1200
MATHERFIELD
War Dept
MAYWOOD
Mavwood 600
MENDOLINO
Coast CI
MENDOTA
Mendota CI
MENLO PARK
New Menlo 500
MERCED
Merced 1750
Strand 850
MERCED FALLS
Merced Falls 250
MILL VALLEY
Sequoia 900
MODESTO
Lyric 696
Princess 800
State 800
Strand 1700
MOFFET FIELD
War Dept
MOJAVE
Mecca 440
MONROVIA
Lyric 1100
Monrovia 456
MONTEBELLO
Cameo 330C1
Vogue 500
MONTEREY
Golden State 1700
Monterey 1500
Presido 394
U. S. Army Base
MONTEREY PARK
Monterey 750
MONTROSE
Montrose 425
MOON LAKE
CCC Camp
MOORPARK
El Rancho 400
MORGAN HILL
Granada 300
MOUNT SHASTA
Shastona 380
MOUNT VIEW
Blanco's 600
Cinema 438C1
NAPA
Fox 1500
State 500C1
Uptown 1250
NATIONAL CITY
National 765C1
NEEDLES
Needles 700
NEVADA CITY
Broadway 500
839
NEWCASTLE
Community CI
NEW PORT BEACH
Lido . . . 750
New Port S10C1
NEWMAN
Newman 450
NILES
Niles 400
NORTH HOLLYWOOD
El Portal 250
Valley 350
NORTH ISLAND
U. S. Naval Air
Station
NORTH
LONG BEACH
LaShell 470
NORTH SACRAMENTO
Del Paso 1000
NORWALK
Xorwalk 660
OAKDALE
03kdale 500
OAKLAND
Allendale (38th &
Liese) 380
Broadway ( Broad-
way ) 800
Capitol (Foothill
Blvd. I 750
Central (Broad-
way) 154S
Dimond (Fruit-
valet 1200
Downtown (416" —
12th St.) 1000
Eastmont (Foothill
Bird.) 570
Elrey 900
Esquire (17th &
San Pablo) .... 1500
Fairfax (Foothill
Blvd.) 1250
Foothill 600
Fox Senator
(Telegraph) ...1635
Fox State 950
Franklin (Franklin &
12th) 600C1
Gateway (San
Pablo ) 950
Granada (E. 14th). 1000
Grand Lake
(Grand) 1700
Hopkins (35th &
Hopkins) 1000
Imperial
Laurel (3S14
Hopkins) 999
Lincoln (7th Ave.). 900
Miohn (San
Pablo) 900
Moulin Rouge (Sth
St.) 240
New Fruitvale
E. 14th) 1181
New Paramount (20th
& Broadway) ..3434
New Piedmont
(Piedmont) 863
New State (14th &
Broadway) ....1500
Oakland 3500
Orpheum ( Broad-
way) 3700
Palace (23rd Ave.) .9S0
Palm
Parkway I Park
Blvd.) 1061
Peralto (14th &
Peralto) 350
Plaza CI
Premier
Rex (Broadway) . . . 600
Regent (Broadway) .550
Rialto (San Pablo) 740
Ritz (E. 12th St.).. 399
Roxie (17th &
Telegraph) 1150
Royal 1 14th St.).300Cl
Star (Market) 600
T. & D 2944
(11th 4 Broadway)
Tower
Uptown 1100
( College )
OAKLEY
Oakley 300
OCEAN BEACH
Strand 600
OCEAN PARK
Fox Dome 2213
Fox Rosemary .... 1454
OCEANSIDE
Margo 660
Palomar 800
OILDALE
River 900
OJAI
Ojai 214
ONTARIO
California 974
Forum 325
Granada
ORANGE
Colonial CI
Orange 1000
ORLAND
Orland 350
ORLEANS
Bayard Circ
OROVILLE
Rex 500
State 1000
OXNARD
Boulevard 500
Oxnard 852
Strand 450C1
PACIFIC GROVE
Grove 700
PALM SPRINGS
El Paseo 900
Palm Springs 600
Plaza 825
PALMS
Palms 599
PALO ALTO
Fox Stanford 1424
Fox Varsitv 975
Mayfield 512
Vet's
PASADENA
Bard's Colorado . . . 1709
Fair Oaks 440
Park 760
Pasadena 1J94
Raymond 1900
State 797
Strand 782
Tower 754
Uptown 900
United Artists 912
Vista Del Arroyo Hotel . .
Washington 900
PASO ROBELS
Paso Robels 1074
PATTERSON
New Patterson .... 1S7
PETALOI A
California 1100
State 550
PINE KNOT
Grizzley 300C1
PISMO BEACH
Ward's 400
PITTSBURGH
California 1000
Enean 1000
Palace 400C1
PLACER VILLE
El Dorado 2S0C1
Empire 5S0
PLACIENTA
Placienta 300C1
FLEASANTON
Roxy 366
PLYMOUTH
Plymouth 240C1
POMONA
Belvedere 480C1
Fox California . . 1275C1
Fox 1751
Fox Sunkist 888
PORT ARENA
Arena 382
PORT CHICAGO
Port Chicago .... 600C1
PORTER VILLE
Crystal 380C1
Molino 470
Monache 860
I'OIITOLA
Plumas 280
Portola 374
PRESIDO OF
MONTEREY
War Dept 394
PRESIDIO OF SAN
FRANCISCO
Army YMCA .... 400C1
QUINCY
Quiney 240
Town Hall 375
RAMONA
Ramona 200
RANDSBURG
Rand 250
RED BLUFF
State 1174
REDDING
Cascade 1600
Redding 790
REDLANDS
Majestic CI
Redlands 1505
State 490C1
REDONDO
Fox Redondo 1324
REDWOOD CITY
Redwood 550
Sequoia 1200
REEDLEY
Reedley 800
Rex CI
Star 375C1
RICHMOND
California 1364
State 618
RIO NTDO
Rio Nido 900C1
RIO VISTA
Vista 400
RIVERDALE
Sunset 305
RIVERSIDE
De Anzo 800
Golden State 878
Fox Riverside .... 1500
Rubidoux 400C1
ROCKPORT
Rockport (Port.) ... .CI
RODEO
Rodeo 400
ROSEMEAD
Rosemead
ROSEVILLE
New Roseville 7S0
Roxy 400
SACRAMENTO
Alhambra 1990
California 800
Capitol 1235
El Ray 1100
Hippodrome 1743
Liberty S00
Lyric 350
Mission 800
Nippon 400
Oak Park 484
Rialto 850
Roxie 972
Senator 1705
Sierra 500
Sutter
Tower
ST. HELENA
Liberty 375
ST. JOHN
Ritz
SALIN \-
California 1210
Crystal 650
El Ray 850
Vogue 653
SALYER
Bayard Circ
SAN ANDRE \s
San Andreas 135
- \\ ANSELMO
Tamalpais 900
BAN BERNARDINO
Azteca 600
Fox California . . . .1900
Fox 1855
Rialto 770
Ritz 840
Studio 800
Temple 700
West Coast 1272
SAN BRUNO
El Camino 750
SAN CLEMENTE
San Clemente 800
SAN DIEGO
Adams 450
Avalon CI
Aztec 650
Balboa 1608
Broadway 400
Cabrillo 700
Casino 750
Civic 400C1
Coronet 749
Diana 500
Egyptian 821
Fairmont 761
Fox 2878
Fox California . . . .2021
Hillcrest 530
Hollywood 600C1
Marine Corps Base.. 500
Metro 440
Mexico 600
Mission 750
New Ramona 500
North Park 1170
Orpheum 1400
Plaza 750
Rex 400C1
Spreckles 1200
Tower 434C1
U. S. Marine Base
U. S. Naval Air
Station
U. S. Naval
Training Station ....
Victory 450
Vista 500
SAN FERNANDO
Rennie's 896
San Fernando 850
Vet's Hospital
SAN FRANCISCO
Acme 390
(Stockton St.)
Alexandria 1500
(Gary St.)
Alhambra 1625
(Polk St.)
Amazon 900
(Geneva Ave.)
American 1210
(Fillmore St.)
Avenue 1000
(San Bruno Ave.)
Bayshore 350
(Bayshore Blvd.)
Bayview 800
(Third St.)
Bridge (3010
Geary St.) 399
California 2500
(4th & Market)
Cameo 250
(16th St.)
Capitol 1285
(54 Ellis St.)
840
Casino 2200
(Ellis & Mason I
Castro 1870
(Castro St.)
Circle 400
Clay 375
(Fillmore)
Coliseum 2400
(Clement St.)
Columoia 1600C1
(Eddy St.)
Cortland 380
(Cortland St.)
Davies 1008
(Market St.)
De Luxe CI
Egyptian 385
(Market St.)
El Capitan 2580
(Mission St.)
Ellis 1000
(Ellis)
El Presidio 828
(Chestnut I
El Ray 1750
(Ocean Ave.)
Embassy 1358
(Market St.)
Empire 850
(West Portal St.)
Filmart 1900C1
(O'Farrell St.)
Fox 5000
(Polk & Market)
Gaiety CI
Golden Gate 2800
(Market & Golden
Gate)
Granada 1050
(Mission St.)
H. & R. Portable
Circuit
Haisht 1400
(Haight St.)
Harding 1250
(Davisadero St.)
Irving 1350
(14th & Irving')
Kearney 350
(Kearney St.)
Larkin 375
(Larkin St.)
Liberty 700
Lincoln 750
(8th Ave.)
Lyceum 1400
(29th & Mission)
Majestic 760
(Mission St.)
Marina 958
(Chestnut St.)
Metropolitan 1200
(Union St.)
Midtown 1200
(Haisrht St.)
New Balboa 800
(Balboa St.)
New Fillmore .... 1750
(Fillmore St.)
New Mission 2074
(Mission St.)
New Rialto 1600
(Mission St.)
Nob Hill 199C1
Noe 900
(24th & Noel
Orpheum 2440
(Market St.)
Palace 1000
(Powell St.)
Palmer 500C1
Paramount 3000
(Market St.)
Parkside 1200
(Taraval St.)
Peerless 300
(3rd St.)
Potrero (312 Conn
St.) 300
Powell 400 Walkers 650
(Powell St.) Walker's State ....700
President 1100 West Coast 1220
(McAllister St.) SANTA BARBARA
Princess 360C1 Arlington 1810
Regal 385 California 912
(Market St.) Granada 1011
Roosevelt 1000 Mission 1000
(24th St.) SANTA CLARA
Roxie 392 Santa Clara 1000
(16th St.) SANTA CRUZ
Roval 1358 Delmar
(Polk St.) Santa Cruz 1100
St. Francis 1400 Unique 626
(Market St.) SANTA MARIA
Silver Palace 300 Gaiety 500
(Market St.) Santa Maria 1250
Star 350 SANTA MONICA
(Clement St.) Criterion 1200
State 800C1 El Miro 900
(Mission & Oliver) Majestic 750
Strand 950 Wilshire 1200
(Market St.) SANTA PAULA
Sunset 450 Glen City 700
(Irving St.) Lyric 338C1
Sutter 488 SANTA ROSA
(Sutter St.) California 1800
Temple 361 Empire 700C1
(Fillmore St.) Rose 560CJI
Union 385 Roxie 1200
(Union St.) Strand 50001
United Artists ....1465 Tower 900
(Market St.) SAUSALITO
Uptown 1500 Gate 325
(Sutter & Steiner) SAWTELLE
Verdi 900 Nuart 600
(Broadway) Tivoli 750
Victoria 800 SCOTIA
(18th St.)
Vopue 350
(Sacramento St.)
War Dept
Warfield 2600
(Market St.)
SAN GABRIEL
Mission 900
SANGER
Royal 500
Sanger 700
SAN JACINTO
Sabada 738
SAN JOSE
California 2200
Hester 800 Sole<jad
Jose 871
Liberty 990 „. .
Lvric 300 Mission 230
Winona 600
SEBASTAPOL
Elrav 500
SEIAD VALLEY
Bayard Circ
SELMA
Selma 550
SHAFTER
Shatter 600
SHERMAN OAKS
La Reine
SIERRA MADRE
Wisterial CI
SOLEDAD
391
SOLVANG
Mission 1200
Padre 1 000
State 1400
Victory 1250 ^onora ™°
SONOMA
Sebastinai 421
SONORA
Willow Glen 425
SAN JUAN
Star 150C1
SAN JUNQUIN
James Ranch CI
SAN LEANDRO
Star 347
SOUTH PASADENA
Rialto 1200
Ritz 700
SO. SAN FRANCISCO
State 850
SOUTHC.ATE
Palace 1050 Gem
Fairmont Hospital .... South Gate 683
s\N LUIS OBISPO Vogue 1000
Elmo 932 STOCKTON
Obispo 676 California 2359
SAN MATEO Fox State 1510
Baywood 1000 Imperial 400
Colleee 60001 Lincoln 450
New San Mateo. . .1358 Mandarin 398
SAN PEDRO Rialto 700
Barton 432 Ritz
^•>brillo 1518 Roxy 700
Globe 415 Sierra 600
strand 770 Star 550
Warner Bros 1600 State Hospital
SAN RAPHAEL Stockton CI
El Camino 1100 STUDIO CITY
Raphael 1100 Studio
War Dept 420 SUISAN
SANTA ANA Suisan 325
Broadway 1780 SUNNYVALE
Princess 550 Blanco's 640
841
SUSANVILLE
Liberty 600
Sierra .•■ . • •
SUTTER CREEK
Sutter 360
TENNANT
A. R. Hiland. . . . (Port.)
TAFT
Hippodrome 1698
TEHACHAPI
Beekay 300
Tehachapi 230C1
TORRENCE
Grand 600
Torrence 650
TRACY
Grand 800
Tracy 732C)
TRONA
Trona 800
TRUCKEE
Donner 300
Truckee 200
TUJUNGA
Tujunga 843
TULARE
Elray 400
State
Tulare 1200
TULE LAKE
Marcha 392
TUOLUMNE
Firemen's Hall 500
TURLOCK
Fox 1021
New Turlock 840
29 PALMS
29 Palms 200
UPLAND
Upland 400
UPPER LAKE
Lake 100C1
URIAH
State 655
VACAVILLE
Vacaville 593
VALLEJO
Hanlon 1400
Marval 800C1
Senator 1000
Strand 1454
Valmar 395C1
VAN NUVS
Rivoli "00
Van Nuys 814
VENICE
California 960
VENTURA
American 800
Mission 568
New 800
Ventura 1130
VICTORVILLE
Mesa 300
VISALIA
Bijou 360
Fox 784
Hyde 450
WALNUT CREEK
El Rey 600
Walnut Creek .... 375C1
WALNUT GROVE
Grove 350
WALNUT PARK
Imperial
WASCO
Wasco 700
WATSONVILLE
Fox California ...1128
Pajaro 350C1
State 946
WATTS
Largo 1000
Linda 500
WEAVERVII.LE
Trinity 275
WEED
Weed 450
WEOTT
Weott (Port.) 160
WESTWOOD
Fox Villagre 1489
Westwood 1100
WESTWOOD VILLAGE
Bruin 876
WHEATLAND
Wheatland 200C1
WHITTIER
Roxy 1100
Wardmans 952
Whittier 1016
WILLIAMS
Williams 380
WILLITS
Willits 417
WILLOWS
Rialto 560
WILMINGTON
Avalon 450
Granada 994
WINTERS
Winters 300
WOODLAKE
Lake 375
WOODLAND
Bill's 300
National 800
Porter 650
State 999
Yola 803
YREKA
Broadway 600
Shasta 350
YUBA CITY
Smith's 414
= COLORADO —
270 Theaters; 115,050 Seats
Closed — 45 Theaters; 10,855 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 225 Theaters; 104,195 Seats
AGUILAR
Ute 300
AKRON
Variety 252
ALAMOSA
Palm 540
Rialto 672
ALMA
Alma 260
ANTONITO
Eagle CI
La Plaza 160
ARVADA
Arvada 349
ASPEN
Isls 360
BAYFIELD
Hermes 350
BOULDER
Boulder 712
Chautauqua 760C1
Curran 712
Fox Isis 799
State 350C1
BRECKENRIDGE
Eclipse 150C1
W.E.M (Port.) 250
BRIGHTON
Rex 400
BRUSH
Emerson 261
BURLINGTON
Midway 300
CANNON CITY
Jones 748
Rex 286C1
CEDAREDGE
Cedaredge 200
CARBONDALE
D. A. Neal (Port.)
CENTER
Foam 300
CENTRAL CITY
Elk 200C1
Novelty 201
Pioneer 200C1
CHEYENNE WELLS
Rialto 200
COLORADO SPRINGS
Chief 1363
Liberty 425
Peak 400
Tompkins 800
Trail 810
Ute 1200
CORTEZ
Cortez 200
CRAIG
Craig: 450
Gaiety 400 New Victory 1100
West 500 Ogxien 1221
CRAWFORD
Crawford 200C1 Oriental
(E. Colfax Ave.)
CRESTED BUTTE
.992
(W. 44th St.)
p"ncess 250 Orpheum 2600
(Welton St.)
Palace 417
(Curtis St.)
Palm 360C1
Paramount 2096
(16th St.)
Park 450
Plaza 938
(Curtis St.)
Rex 480
(W. 44th St.)
Rialto 878
(Curtis St.)
Rivoli 1700
(Curtis St.)
Roxy 561
(Welton St.)
Santa Fe 894
State 1000
(Curtis St.)
Sun CI
Tabor 2269
(16th St.)
CRIPPLE CREEK
Vida 252
DEER TRAIL
Deer Trail 390
DEL NORTE
Princess 732
DELTA
Egyptian 684
Strand 300C1
DENVER
Aladdin 1400
(E. Colfax Ave.)
Alameda 450
(S. Pearl)
Alpine 645
(Williams St.)
Bide-A-Wee 420
(W. Colfax Ave.)
Bluebird 561
(E. Colfax Ave.)
Broadway 1031
(Broadway)
Cameron 728
Colorado 350 Tivoli
(Curtis St.)
Comet 350
(Knox Court)
Denham 1634
(California St.)
Denver 2525
(Sixteenth St.)
Egyptian 669
(W. 32nd Ave.)
.CI
Victory 1482
(Curtis St.)
Webbers 910
Zaza 448
(Larimer St.)
DOLORES
Pythian 200
DURANGO
Durango 500
Empress Kiva 550
Federal 800 Rialto CI
(Federal Blvd.)
Gem
(Curtis St.)
Granada 516
(W. 25th St.)
Hiawatha 785
(Downing' St.)
Isis 1811
(Curtis St.)
.575 Gothic
Jewell
(S. Broadway)
Mayan 966 pari£
(Broadway)
Mission 590
(S. Pearl St.)
Navajo 380
(Navajo St.)
EADS
500 Plains 200
EAGLE
Eagle (Port.) 164
EATON
Eaton 200
Gala 175C1
ENGLEWOOD
Pioneer 425C1
.500
ESTES PARK
300C1
EVERGREEN
Evergreen 250C1
FAIRPLAY
Fairplay 150
FLAGLER
Grand 275
FLORENCE
Rialto 596
FORT COLLINS
America 891
Lyric 713
State 375
FORT LOGAN
War Dept 250
FORT LUPTON
Star 350
FORT LYON
U. S. Veterans
Hospital 80
FORT MORGAN
Cover 548
U. S. A 488
FOWLER
Star 401
FRASER
Hall 150C1
FRUITA
Rialto 250
GEORGETOWN
Loop 220C1
GILMAN
Gilman .... (Port.) 100
GLENWOOD SPRINGS
Colorado 500C1
Orpheum 360
New 300
GOLDEN
Gem 500
GRAND JUNCTION
Avalon 1100
Kiba 403
Messa 957
Mission 298
State Home 100
GRAND LAKE
Grand Lake .... 135C1
GREELEY
Chief 862
Kiva 900
Park 350
Sterling- 954
GUNNISON
Unique 364
HAXTUN
Rialto 385
HAYDEN
Auditorium 100
Crystal
HOLLY
Pontiac 200
Sun 250
HOLYOKE
Peerless 300
842
HOTCHKISS
350
HOT SULPHUR
SPRINGS
Legion Hall
123
HOM GLARE
S & S
100
HUGO
200
IDAHO SPRINGS
250
IGNACIO
Ute
150
JULESBURG
500
KIOWA
140
KREMMLING
Victory .... (Port.)
166
LAFAYETTE
325
LA JARA
208
LA JUNTA
273
768
LAMAR
Isid 4anri
625
LAS ANIMAS
500
LA VETA
155
LEADVILLE
Liberty Bell
650
LIMON
200
LITTLETON
280
LONGMONT
Longmont
538
LOUISVILLE
300
LOUVIERS
Club 250
LOVELAND
Loveland 270
Rialto 861
LYONS
Lyons
MANASSA
Valley 200
MANCOS
Mancos 300
MANZANOLA
Comet 196C1
New 120
Rio 240
MEEKER
Rio 250
MINTURN
Jewell (Port.) 100
MONTE VISTA
Granada 575
MONTROSE
Empress 300C1
Fox 789
Ute 300
MOUNT HARRIS
Liberty (Port.) 200
NORWOOD
Mesa 200C1
Norwood 150C1
OAK CREEK
Rio 250
OLATHE
Olathe 340
ORDWAY
Princess 300
OTIS
Sun 200
OURAY
Rajah 160
Uray 239
PAGOSA SPRINGS
Liberty 200
PALISADE
Alberta 260
Roxy
PAONIA
Paonia 250
PINE RIDGE DAM
Pine
PLATTEVILLE
Rex 200C1
PUEBLO
Avalon 530
Chief 741
Clyne 400
Colonial 450C1
Colorado 1326
Main 1000
Pueblo 791
Rialto 750
Uptown 812
RED CLIFF
Rio (Port.) 200
RIDGWAY
Ridgway (Port)
RIFLE
Alamo 500
El Ray 500C1
Ute 300
ROCKY FORD
Grand 598
Rex 660
Roxy 700C1
SAGUACHA
Canada 190
SALIDA
Isis 344C1
Salida 600
SAN LUIS
K of C Hall CI
La Plaza 125
SEDGWICK
Sedgwick 216C1
SEIBERT
Star CI
SILVERTON
Lode 650
SIMLA
Simla 100
SI'RINGFIELD
Capitol 400
STEAMBOAT SPRINGS
Chief 460
STERLING
America 599C1
Fox 900
Rialto 550
STRASBURG
Mazdo 176
STRATON
Moon 210C1
Royal CI
TELLURIDE
Nugget 200
Opera House 250
TRINIDAD
East 350
Isis 269
Rialto 379
Strand
West 1100
VICTOR
Isis 375
New
VONA
Vona 160C1
WALDEN
Star (Port.) 175
WALSENBURG
Rialto 250
Valencia 684
WALSH
Peoples 150C1
Walsh 200C1
WESTCUFFE
Canda 150
WINDSOR
Windsor 396
WRAY
Tyo
Wray 350
YAMPA
Yampa CI
YUMA
Yuma 250
CONNECTICUT
223 Theaters; 176,420 Seats
Closed — 18 Theaters; 12,911 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 205 Theaters; 163,509 Seats
ALLINGTON
Forest
Park 600C1
ANSONIA
Capitol 1788
Tremont 600
BALTIC
Jodin 400
BANTAM
Bantam 260
BRANFORD
Branford 356
BRIDGEPORT
American 749
Barnum 620
Black Rock 499
Bostwick 516
Capitol 923
Centennial
Colonial 499
Globe 2792
Hippodrome 998
Liberty 500
Lyric 2170
Majestic 2195
Park City 1090
Parkway 400
Poll Palace 3048
Rialto 758
Rivoli 730
Strand 877
Strand Palace 708
Warner 1415
West End 750
BRISTOL
Bristol 937
Cameo 1660
BROADBROOK
Broadbrook 300C1
BROOKLAWN
Brooklawn 495
CANAAN
Colonial 418
CHESHIRE
Cheshire 499
CLINTON
Clinton 498
COLCHESTER
Colchester 274
COLLINSVILLE
Cinema
DANBURY
Capitol 1497C1
Empress 1385
Palace 1995
DANIELSON
Orpheum 715
DARIEN
Darien 686
DEEP RIVER
Pratts 495
DERBY
Commodore Hull . . 1335
DEVON
Devon 414
EAST HAMPTON
East Hampton 325
EAST HARTFORD
Astor 490
EAST HAVEN
Capitol 244
ESSEX
Essex 498
FAIRFIELD
Community 858
FORT WRIGHT
Fort Wright 750
GLASTONBURY
Glastonbury 388
GREENWICH
Greenwich 650C1
Pickwick 1990
GROTON
Groton 650
GROVE BEACH
Grove Beach . . . .400C1
843
GUILFORD
Guilford 340
HAMDEN
Strand
Whitney 916
ll \u II OKI I
Allyn 2300
Colonial 11!)4
Crown 800
Daly 1400
Lenox 046
Loew's 1500
Lyric !>!)!)
Palace 2344
Poli 301?
Princess 700
Proven 1250
Regal 946
Rialto 743
Rivoli 900
State 2000
Strand 1489
Webster 900
JEWEL CITY
LAKEVILLE
High School
Auditorium 385
State 520
Stuart 500
MADISON
Bonoff 597
MERIDEN
Capitol 800
Palace 1 703
Poli 1022C1
MIDDI.ETOWN
Capitol 1200
College Open Air..825Cl
Middlesex 1400
Palace 950C1
Mill OKI)
Capitol 710
Drive in CI
Moonns
Moodus 300
MOOSUP
Moosup 499
MYSTIC
Strand 500
NAUGATUCK
Alcazar 499
Gem 499
NEW BRITAIN
Arch Street 712
Capitol 1445C1
Embassy 1004
Palace 1263
Rialto 962
State 490
Strand 2400
NEW CANAAN
Playhouse 400
NEW HAVEN
Apollo 499
Biiou 1627
Bristol 850
Cannon S43
College 1565
Dixwell 716
Hrenmlarid 800
Fail-mount 403
Howard 1164
Lawrence 700
Lincoln 280
Lyric 430
Paramount 2373
Park 600
Pequot 1269
Plaza 400
Poli 3005
Roger Shermon . . . 2076
State 200
Strand 729
Victory 600
Whalley 900
White Way 728
Winchester 612
NEW LONDON
Capitol I 759
Crown 1094
Empire 1117
Garde 1 603
NEW MII.FOKI)
20th Century 500
NEWTON
Edmond Town Hall. 650
NIANTIC
Crescent
NO. GROSVENORDAI.E
Union Hall CI
NOR WALK
Norwalk 1003
NORWICH
Broadway 1307
Palace 1307
Strand 933
OAKVILLE
Community 363
I'LAINFIEI.D
Plainfield 000
PLAINVILLE
Strand 698
PUTNAM
Bradley 805
RIDGEFIELD
New 456C1
KOCKVILLE
Palace 723
Princess 30(1
SAYRKOOK
Saybrook 572
SEYMOUR
Strand 698
SH ELTON
Shelton 550
SIMSBURY
Memorial Hal! 499
SOlTNI) VIEW
Cinema City
Strand 408
SOUTH MANCHESTER
Circle 808
State 1346
SODTHINGTON
Colonial 600
SOUTH NORWALK
Empress 1550
Palace 858
Rialto 858
SI'RINGDALE
State 836
STAFFORD
Country
STAFFORD SPRINGS
Palace «00
STAMFORD
Avon 725
Palace 1946
Plaza
Rialto 492
Stamford 1046
Strand 1419
STRATFORD
Stratford 500
TAFTVILI.F.
Hillcrest 496
TERRVVII.LE
Mayfair 000
THOMASTON
Paramount 550
Park
THOMPSONVILLK
Franklin 927C1
Strand 825
TORRINGTON
Alhambra 1247C1
State 999
Warner 1 247
UNIONVILLE
Luxor
WALLINGFOKD
Strand 500C1
Wilkinson 1402
WALNUT BEACH
Colonial 491
Tower 250
WASHINGTON DEPOT
Bryan Memorial . . .400
WATERBURY
Alhambra 499
Cameo 1041
Capitol 650
Carroll 681
Hamilton 678
Lido 450
Plaza 646
Poli Palace 3400
Saint Joseph 600C1
State 2800
Strand 1 396
WATERTOWN
Cameo 470
WESTBROOK
Paramount CI
WEST HARTFORD
Central 984
WEST HAVEN
Cameo 692C1
Rivoli 932
WESTPORT
Fine Arts 499
WHITNEYVILLE
New
WII.LIM ANTIC
SI rand 621
WINDSOR LOCKS
Rialto 550
WINDSOR
Plaza
Windsor 450
WINSTEAD
Strand 920
DELAWARE
34 Theaters; 22,343 Seats
Closed — 2 Theaters; 600 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 32 Theaters; 21,743 Seats
BRIDGEVILLE
Bridgeville 500
CLAYMONT
Green Lantern . . .350C1
DELAWARE CITY
Ft. Dupont
DELMAR
Delmar 250
DOVER
Capitol 600
Temple 400
GEORGETOWN
Sussex 500
HARRINGTON
Reese O. H 800
LAUREL NEWARK
New Waller 600 State 700
LEWES NEW CASTLE
Auditorium 430 Earle 400
CCC Camp
MIDDLETOWN
Everett 500
MILFORD
Plaza 1000
MILLSBORO
Ball 475
Opera House . . . . 250CI
MILTON
REHOBETH BEACH
Blue Hen 795
SEAFORD
Palace 600
SELBYVILLE
Diamond 400
SMYRNA
Roxy
Milton 350 Strand
844
.400
.300
WILMINGTON
Ace 700
Aldine 1819
Grand O. H 1387
Loew's 1000
National 600
Park 600
Queen 1724
Rialto 700
Savoy 752
Strand 600
Warner 1761
^DISTRICT of COLUMBIA^
64 Theaters; 51.246 Seats
Closed — 1 Theater: 1.000 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 63 Theaters: 50.246 Seats
WASHINGTON
Academy 400
Alamo 203
Ambassador 1200
Apollo 900
Ashley 225
Atlas 900
Avalon 794
Ave Grand 1100
Belasco 1000C1
Beverly 900
Booker T 350
Broadway 900
Calvert 900
Capitol 3433
Carolina 300
Central 1000
Circle 600
Colony 1000
Consrress 550
Criterion 350
Dunbar 300
Dunbarton 450
Earle 2240
Empress 400
Fairlawn 400
Gem 250
Hippodrome 400
Home 650
Howard 1100
Jesse 700
Jewel 300
Keith's RKO 1500
Kennedy 980
Leader 300
Lido 300
Lincoln 1523
Little 350
Loews Columbia ..1000
Lcew's Palace .... 2700
Metropolitan 2000
Mid City 200
Mott 400
Newton 700
Penn 1550
Princess 400
Raphael 400
Republic 1500
Roosevelt 450
Rosalia 350
Savoy 1500
Sheridan 1100
Stanton 500
Strand 500
Strand ( Dean wood I . 500
Sylvan 750
Takoma 734
Tivoli 2500
Uptown 1364
York 1 000
— FLORIDA
313 Theaters: 144,198 Seats
Closed — 77 Theaters; 22,126 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 236 Theaters; 122,072 Seats
APALACHICOLA
Dixie 400
APOPKA
Municipal 300
Ritz 300
ARCADIA
Rosy
Star 484
ARCHER
Archer (Port.) CI
Al'UL'RNDALE
Park 200
AVON FARK
Park 500
BARTOW
Harlem 20SC1
Ritz 600
BELLE GLADES
Ace 175
Everglades 400
BLOUXTSTOWN
Eagle 200
BOCA GRAXDE
Little
BOMFAY
Bonifay 200
BRADEXTON
Lincoln 200
Palace 1027
BROOKS VILLE
Dixie 300
BUNNELL
Flagler 150
BUSHNELL
Bushnell 175
CEDAR KEYS
Cedar Keys ..(Port. I CI
CENTURY
Century CI
CHATTAHOOCHEE
Gibson 450
CHIEFLAND
Chiefland (Port.) CI
CHIPLEY
Reva 300
CLEARWATER
Capitol 800
Dixie 300
Ritz 500C1
CLERMONT
Reliance 300
CLEWISTON
Dixie Crystal 200 State
COCOA
State 690
CORAL GABLES
Coral Gables 600 Ritz
CRESCENT CITY
V. I. A 310
CRESTYIEW
Crestview 200
CROSS CITY
Princess 200
CRYSTAL RIYER
Regent 300
DADE CITY
Crescent 550
DANIA
Dania 500C1
DAYTONA BEACH
Crystal 436C1
Empire 1200
Florida 300
Kingston 400
Lyric 350
DELRAY BEACH
DE FUNIAK SPRINGS
Ritz 350
DELAND
Athens 650
Dreka 700C1
Washington 200
845
380
Roxy . . .
500C1
DUNELLON
250
EAU
GALLIE
Eau Gallie CI
Vancroix
700
EDGEWOOD HEIGHTS
Open-Air
CI
EUSTIS
Statp
B 1 S
EYERGLADES
Tamiami
200C1
FERNANDINA
Ritz ....
350
FLORENCE VILLA
Elite
FOLEY
Fnlev
nno
FT. LAUDERDALE
Florida
Queen . .
300
Sunset
757
FT.
MEADE
Fox , ,
300
FT.
MYERS
670
175
Ritz
350C1
FT.
PIERCE
CI
Ritz
500C1
Sunrise
1000
FT.
WALTON
Ft. Walton 150
FROSTPROOF
Ramon
500
GAINESVILLE
Florida
800
Lincoln 400
Lyric 450
GRACEVILLE
Graceville 1 75
GREENCOVE SPRINGS
Clay 275
GULF HAMMOCK
Gulf Hammock (Port.)Cl
GREENVILLE
Roxy
HAINES CITY
Florida 800
HAVANA
Havana 275
HIGH SPRINGS
Priest
HOLLYWOOD
Arcade CI
Florida 795
Ritz 650
HOMESTEAD
Seminole 650
INVERNESS
Avalon 325C1
Valeria 300
JACKSONVILLE
Arcade 600
Beach 600
Capitol 625
Empress 600
Florida 3200
Imperial 750
New Casino 650
New Frolic 750
Palace 1000
Rialto 1059
Ritz 654
Riverside 800
Roxy 500
Strand 900
JASPER
Fay 200
JAY
Santa Rosa
KEY WEST
Monroe 600
Palace 400
Strand 794
KISSIMMEE
Arcade 500
LABELLE
La Belle 300
Republic CI
LACOOCHEE
Vivian 200
LAKE BUTLER
Lake 200
LAKE CITY
De Sota 465
Grand 465
LAKELAND
Lake 600C1
Palace 1191
Polk 300
Roxy 400
Strand 500C1
LAKE PLACID
Thimble 100
LAKE WALES
Colored 150
Scenic 33S
LAKE WORTH
Oakley 575
LEESBIRG
Fain 500
Leesburg 500
Palace 400
LIVE OAK
Alimar 600
Suwannee 200
McCLENNY
Baker 150
MADISON
Swan 300
MALONE
Malone 200
MARIANNA
Ritz 350
MAYO
Mayo 160
MELBOURNE
Van Croix 747
MIAMI
Ace 250
Biltmore 600
Capitol 1500
Edison 500
Flagler 800
Grove 750
Harlem 350
Hialeah
Lyric 605C1
Mayfair 700
Miami
Miami Drive-In
Modern 500
Olympia 2500
Paramount 1509
Parkway 620
Regent 780
Rex 1000
Ritz 500
Rosetta 1084
Roxy 725
State 893
Strand 902
Tivoli 900
Tower 750
MIAMI BEACH
Cameo
Cinema Casino .... 973
Colony
Community 700C1
Lincoln 1500
Plaza 1400
Sheridan 1332
Surf
MILTON
Imogene 400
Palace 350
Rex 300
Ritz 300
MONTICELLO
Katherine 250
MT. DORA
Princess 500
NAPLES
New Naples 250
NEWBERRY
Newberry . . . . (Port.)Cl
NEW SMYRNA
Palace 300
Victoria 553
NEW PORT RICHEY
Meighan 424C1
NICEVILLE
Frywald 200
OCALA
Dixie 500
Ritz 800
Roxy 300C1
OKEECHOBEE
Gilbert 300
ORLANDO
Beacham 1068
Grand 600
Lincoln
Rex 500
Rialto 450
Roxy 1100C1
Strand 600C1
PAHOKEE
Gold Nugget 150
Prince 250
Sugar Mill Plantation. . .
PALATKA
Howell 631
PALM BEACH
Paramount 1000C1
Paul Burras
PALMETTO
New 300
Palmetto 300
Rex 150
PANAMA CITY
Panama 562
Ritz 1270
PENSACOLA
Fort Barrancas
Roxy 350
Isis 500
New Belmont 400
Rex 651
Saenger 700
Strand 240C1
U. S. Naval Air Sta
PERRY
Temple 400
PLANT CITY
Capitol 785
POMPANO
Pompano 350C1
PORT ST. JOE
Airdome
Portable
PCNTA GORDA
New 412
QUINCY
Roxy 250C1
Shaw 400
RAIFORD
Florida State Farm . . .
ST. AUGUSTINE
Jefferson . . ; 799C1
Matanzas
ST. CLOUD
Granada 250
ST. PETERSBURG
Cameo 472
Capitol 614C1
Florida 2400
Harlem
LaPlaza 375
Ninth St 390
Palace 480
Park 400
Pheil 500
Playhouse 600
Reno 800
Roxy 715
SANFORD
Princess 762C1
Ritz 760
SARASOTA
Florida 1507
Ritz 750
SEBRING
Circle 450
SOUTH JACKSONVILLE
Park 200C1
STARKE
Ritz 200
STUART
Lyric 498
SULPHUR SPRINGS
Roxy 498
SUMNERYTLLE
Royal 300
TALLAHASSEE
Capital 500
Florida A. & M.
College 250
Ritz 400CI
State 800
TAMPA
Central 530
Florida 853
Garden 580
Park 1280
Plaza 650
Rialto 375
Seminole 752
Starlite
Tampa 2000
Victory 1550C1
TARPON SPRINGS
New Tarpon 600
Royal 300
TA VERNIER
Keys
TITUSVILLE
Alamo 400C1
Magnolia 350
TRENTON
Trent 200C1
UMATILLA
American Legion. .300C1
VENICE
Gulf 200C1
VERO BEACH
Florida 800
WARRINGTON
Community CI
WALCHULA
f.oyal 500
WEST PALM BEACn
Arcade 834
Beaux Arts 428C1
Dixie 485C1
Florida 700
Grand 511
Palace 650C1
Park 500C1
Rialto 800
WEST TAMPA
Royal 800
Sicilia 800
WILD WOOD
Corbet 200
WTLLISTON
Arcade 200
WINTER GARDEN
Winter Garden 300
WTXTER HAVEN
Grand 600
Ritz 968
WINTER PARK
Baby Grand 500
Harlem 150C1
YBOR CITY
Broadway 550
Casino 700
Ritz 400
ZEPHYR HILLS
New 150
GEORGIA—
320 Theaters; 137,865 Seats
Closed — 19 Theaters; 8,737 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 301 Theaters; 129,128 Seats
ABBEVILLE ALBANY AMERICUS
Amuzu 350 Albany 1500 Rylander 874
ACWORTH Liberty 400 ARLINGTON
Acworth 175 Ritz 600 Garret 200
AD EL ALMA ASHBURN
Majestic (Port.) ...240 Alma (Port.) Ideal (Port.) 250
846'
ATHENS
Georgia
Morton 200C1
Palace 600
Strand 500>
ATLANTA
Alamo 600C1
Alpha 250
American 300
Ashby 480
Bailey Royal 600
Bankhead 350
Buckhead 1000
Cameo 400
Capitol 2100
Cascade 800
Center 500
Dixie 300
Eighty-One 1500
Emory
Empire 800
Fairview 520
Fox 4462
Grand 2500
Harlem 400
Hilan 800
Kirkwood 400
Lake wood 165
Lenox
Liberty 250
Lincoln 300
Palace 500
Paramount 2476
Parking: Place No. 1...
Parking- Place No. 2 . . .
Ponce de Leon . . . .450
Rialto 800
Roxy 2500C1
Strand 500
Sylvan 470
Teckwood
Temple 1000
Tenth St 500
West End 495
AUGUSTA
Cherokee 800C1
Dreamland 495
Imperial 1400
Lenox 800
Modjeska 800
Rialto 550
AUSTELL
Ritz 260
AVONDALE ESTATES
Avondalt 600
BAINBRIDGE
Ritz 900
BARNESVILLE
Gem 300
Ritz 600
BAXLEY
Dreamland 310
Pricess 340
BLACKSHEAR
Royal (Port.) 495
BLAKELET
Blakeley 200
BLUE RIDGE
Blue Ridge 200C1
Royal 200
BOLTON
Riverside 375
BOWDIN
Palace 200C1
BREMEN
Bremen 160
Ritz 150
BROOKHAVEN
Brookhaven 500
BRUNSWICK
Bijou 300
Ritz 600
BUENA VISTA
Buena Vista 200
BUFORD
Allen 648
Colonial 200
BUTLER
Dean 300
CAIRO
New Zebulon 280
Syrup City 290C1
CALHOUN
Gem 450
CAMILLA
Camilla 374
CANTON
Haven 250
CARROLLTON
Carroll 760
CARTERSVILLE
Grand 450
CEDARTOWN
Cedar 592
Princess 400
CHATSWORTH
Chatsworth 300C1
Fort
CHICAMAUGA
Liberty 360
CLARKSVILLE
Habershan 300
CLAXTON
Italian Garden 450
CLAYTON
Rabun 200
COCHRAN
Roxy
COLLEGE PARK
Park 450
COLQUIT
Colquit 325
COLUMBUS
Dixie 250
First Division
Grand 800
Liberty 750
Pastime 800
Rialto 625
Royal 2800
COMMERCE
Ritz 250C1
Roxy 400
CONYERS
Conyers 225
CORDELE
Cordele 460
Wood's 660
CORNELIA
Dixie 200
COVINGTON
Strand 300
CUTHBERT
Lee 700
DALLAS
Strand 200
DALTON
Crescent 600
DANIA
Dania
DAWSON
Lee 350
DECATUR
DeKalb 800
Ritz 250
DOERON
Doeron 250
DONALSONVILLE
Olive 288
DOUGLAS
Rivoli 700
DOUG LAS VILLE
Alpha 200
DUBLIN
Rose 600
Ritz 900
EAST ATLANTA
Madison 600
EASTMAN
Princess 300
EAST POINT
Fairfax 400
EATONTON
Pex 250
EDISON
Edison 200
ELBERTON
Strand 600
ELLIJAY
Ellijay 300
FAIRBURN
Fairburn 200
FITZGERALD
Grand 800
FOLKSTON
Ritz 250
FORSYTH
Rose 260
FORT BENNING
War Dept
FORT GAINES
Ritz 250
fort Mcpherson
War Dept
FORT OGLETHORPE
War Dept
FORT SCREVEN
War Dept
FORT VALLEY
Model 150C1
Peach
Princess 361C1
GAINESVILLE
Harlem 160
Royal 832
State 567
GLENNVILLE
Rex 150
GORDON
Jewell 300
GREENSBORO
Greenland 375
GRIFFIN
Imperial 700
Rex 270
Roxy 400
HAHIRA
Hahira 300C1
HAPEVILLE
Fulton 600
Han?or 500
HARTWELL
Emily 375
Ritz CI
Strand 194
HAWKINSVILLE
PrincesB 388
HALELHURST
Palace (Port.)
HOGANS VILLE
Royal 887
HOMERVILLE
Homerville .... (Port.)
Liberty 350
JACKSON
Dixie 250
JASPER
Jasper 300
JEFFERSON
Roosevelt 376
JESUP
Strand 310
JONESBORO
Jonesboro 165
KINGSLAND
Kingsland
LAFAYETTE
Palace 400
LA GRANGE
Family 776C1
LaGrangre 995
Princess 350
Ritz 681C1
Troop 490
LAKELAND
Lakeland 360
LAVONIA
Franklin
LAWRENCEVILLE
Colonial 200
LINCOLTON
Linco 300
LINDALE
Auditorium 712
LITHONIA
Harlem 175
Roxy 150
LOUISVILLE
Pal 200
LUMKIN
Lumkin
LYONS
Gem 250
McDONOUGH
McDonough 250
McRAE
Princess 329
MACON
Bibb
Capitol 950
Dixie 350
Douglas 400
Grand 1200
Rialto 850
Ritz 825
MADISON
Madison 350
MANCHESTER
President 500
Y. M. C. A 250
MARIETTA
Strand 400
MEIGS
Palm 350
METTER
Dixie 270C1
MILLEDGEVILLE
Campus 600
MILLEN
Pal 300
MILSTEAD
Milstead 300
MONROE
Cherokee 300
MONTEZUMA
Grand 350
MONTICELLO
Royal 250
MOULTRIE
Grand 350C1
Moultrie 900
MOUNT BERRY
Berry Schools
MT. VERNON
Metro 200
NASHVILLE
Majestic 450
NEWNAN
Alamo 600
Gem 276
OCILLA
Ocilla 250
PEARSON
Drake 360
PELHAM
Pine 375
PENBROOKE
Tos 400
PERRY
Perry 230
Princess 186
PORTERDALE
Porterdale 400
Ritz 200
QUITMAN
Ilex 350
REEDSVILLE
Tos 400
REYNOLDS
Ritz 370
RICHLAND
Richland 250
RINGOLD
Ring- 300
ROCHELLE
Rochelle
ROCKMART
Joy 330C1
Rockmart 833
ROME
DeSoto 1200
Georgia
Gordon 500
Rivoli 564
ROYSTON
Royce 300
ST. MARYS
St. Marys
ST. SIMONS
Casino
SANDERS VILLK
Pastime 550-
SAVANNAH
Arcadia 750
Bijou 1200
Dunbar liOd
Folly 60(1
Lucas 170(1
Odeon 700
Savannah 000
Star 750
Victory 723
SHELLMAN
New
SOCIAL CIRCLE
Circle .300
S0PERT0N
Pal
Soperton 250
SPARTA
Pex 300
SPRINGFIELD
New
STATESBORO
Georgia 500
Stale 275
SUMMERVILLE
Royal 375
SWAINSBORO
Dixie 450
STLVANIA
Dixie 375
SYLVESTER
Palace (Port.) . . . .280
TALLAPOOSA
Grand 250
TATE
Community 200
TENNILLE
Erin 400
THOMASTON
Five Points 400
Ritz 718
Silvertown 675
THOMASVILLE
Mode 500
Ritz 200
Kose 900
THOMSON
Knox 250
Price 400
TIFTON
Ritz 550
Tift
TOCCOA
Star 250
TRION
Trion 600
UNADILA
Dixie 200
UNION POINT
Union 186
VALDOSTA
Palace 593
Ritz 1000
VIDALIA
Annex 200C1
Pal 650
VIENNA
Vienna 400
VILLA RICA
Amusu 300
WARM SPRINGS
Mcrriwether
WAKRENTON
Knox 426
WASHINGTON
Strand 350
WAVCROSS
Lyric 886
Ritz 700
WAYNESBORO
Grand 250
WEST POINT
Georria Alabama ...200
Riviera 700
WILLACOOCHEE
Dixie 250C1
WINDER
Mayfair 350
Strand 350
WOODBINE
Woodbine 170
WRENS
Dixie 400
WRIGHTSVILLE
Dixie 400
IDAHO
192 Theaters; 60,630 Seats
Closed — 36 Theaters; 7,357 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 156 Theaters; 53,273 Seats
ABERDEEN
Star 280
Aberdeen Ward . . 250C1
ACE0L1A
Acequia CI
ALBION
Home (Port.) 130
AMERICAN FALLS
Iris 500
ARCO
Walker 250
ASHTON
Star 300
BANCROFT
North Gem 240
BLACKFOOT
New Mission 350C1
Nuart 600
BOISE
Fox Ada 1200
Granada 611
Lyric 300
Pinney 1000
Rialto 400
Rio 370
BONNE RS FERRY
Rex 350
BRl'NEAU
Slack (Port.)
BUHL
Cozy CI
Kamona 600
BURKE
Sidney 360
BURLEY
Burley 680
Orpheum 500
CALDWELL
American 400
Roxy 540C1
Stadium 640
CAMBRIDGE
Cambridge 240
CAREY
Carey Ward 200
CASCADE
Cascade 150C1
CHALLIS
Lyric 212
CLARKFORK
Jewel
CLIFTON
Ward Hall C!
COEUR D'ALENE
Dream 900
Liberty 700
Roxy
COTTONWOOD
Mode 150
COUNCIL
Peoples 200
CRAIGMONT
Craigmont -00
DEARY
Deary (Port.)
DOWNEY
Downey 200
DRIGGS
Orpheum 250
DUBOIS
Dubois (Port.)
EASTPORT
Bliss CI
EDEN
Eden (Port.)
EMMETT
Ideal 570
Liberty 450
FAIRFIELD
Liberty CI
FELT
School CI
FILER
Filer 250
FIRTH
Melba CI
FRANKLIN
Ward Hall CI
GENESEE
Audian 200
(ill. MORE
Pierce CI
til. ENS FKKKY
Opera 300
GOODING
Sc-hubert 500
Higgins CI
GRACE
Opera House 400
GRANDVIEW
Grandview (Port.) ....
GRANGEVILLE
Blue Fox 500
HAGERMAN
Hasrerman (Port.) ....
II AILEY
Liberty 400
HAMMER
Hammer (Port.)
HARRISON
Liberty CI
HAZELTON
Hazel ton (Port.)
Walling- (Port.)
HOMEDALE
Gem 400
IDAHO CITY
Idaho City CI
Weigel CI
IDAHO FALLS
Gayety 590
Paramount 1500
Reo 866
Rex 500
IONA
Iona CI
IRWIN
Irwin (Port.)
JEROME
Rialto 500C1
Voris 500
KAMI AH
Audien 150C1
Kamiah (Port.)
KELLOG
Liberty 000
Rena 800
KENDRICK
Kendrick 200
KOOSKIA
Kooskia (Port.) . . . 100
KUNA
Kuna CI
LAVA HOT SPRINGS
Resort 240
LEADORE
I.eadore CI
I.EWISTON
Granada 500
Liberty 776
Roxy 472
Temple 762C1
LEWISVILLE
Lewisville 300C1
McCALL
McCall 273
Stadium 500
McCAMMON
McCammon (Port.) ....
MACK A V
American 869
MALAD
Aldea
Star 500
MALTA
Malta (Port.)
MELBA
Melba 150C1
MERIDIAN
Meridan . .CI
Roxy 250
MIDVALE
Ml.lv ale 250
MONTPELIER
Rich 525
Roxy 450
MOSCOW
Kenworthy 923
Nuart 500
848
MT. CITY
Mt. City (Port.)
MOUNTAIN HOMK
Mountain Home . . . .300
MULLAN
Liberty 300
NAM PA
Adelaide 700
Majestic 550
NEW MEADOWS
La Fay (Port.) . . . .250
NEW PLYMOUTH
New Plymouth ....260
NEZ PIERCE
Wigwam 200
OROFINO
Rex 300
PARIS
Novelty 250
PARMA
Parm 300
PAUL
Paul (Port.) 225C1
PAYETTE
Rio 400
Ritz 500
PIERCE
Arc (Port.) 200
PLACERVILLE
Placerville (Port.)
POCATELLO
Auditorium CI
Capitol 480C1
Chief 1244
Orpheum 400
Rialto 500
Strand 500C1
POTLATCH
Potlach 300
PRESTON
Grand 452
Isis 600
PRIEST RIVER
Roxy 200
RATHRUM
Cozy 203
REXBURG
Elk 700
Romance 650
RICHFIELD
Richfield (Port.)
Rex 200
Walling- (Port.)
RIG BY
Main 500
Royal 500
RIGGINS
Rig-gins 100
RIRIE
Olive CI
Star 250
ROSE LAKE
Y. M. C. A 100
RUPERT
Wilson 652
ST. ANTHONY
Rialto 500C1
Roxy 606
ST. JOHN
St. John (Port.)
ST. MARIES
Bungalo 300
SALMON
Main 564
Roxy 600
State 200C1
SANDPOINT
Panida 575
SHELLEY
Virginia 450
SHOSHONE
Rex 420
SODA SPRINGS
Idan-ha 380
SPIRIT LAKE
Family 249
SPRINGFIELD
Springfield 300
SUGAR CITY
Ricks (Port.)
Ward House
SUN VALLEY
Opera House
TENSED
Pastime CI
TETON
Opera House CI
TETONIA
Rex 200
TROY
Liberty (Port.)
Troy
TWIN FALLS
Idaho 540
Orpheum 798
Joe K's Roxy 382
VICTOR
New Paramount . . .225
WALLACE
Grand 666
Liberty 500
WARREN
Warren 125
WEIPPE
Grand (Port.) 100
WEISER
May fair 350
Star 450
WESTON
Westside 200C1
WILDER
Wilder 160
WINCHESTER
Winchester (Port.) .200
= ILLINOIS
1,100 Theaters; 720,593 Scats
Closed — 168 Theaters; 63,354 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 932 Theaters; 657,239 Seats
ABINGDON
Bijou 350
ALBION
Hollywood 400
Majestic 300
ALEDO
Aledo O. H 400
Tivoli 215
ALLERTON
Community 125C1
ALSEY
Alsey 200C1
ALTAMONT
Main 280
Princess CI
ALTON
Gem 300C1
Grand 1117C1
Hippodrome CI
Norside 450
Princess 600C1
State 500
AMBOY
Amboy 280
ANNA
Rodgers 785
Yale 550
ANNAWAN
Coliseum 429
ANTIOCH
Antioch 300
Crystal 300
APPLE RIVER
Downtown 150
ARCOl \
Ritz 400
ARGO
Argo 461
ARLINGTON HEIGHTS Ritz 500
Arlington 400 Washington 900
ARTHUR BELLWOOD
LaMar 242 Bell 300C1
BELVIDERE
ASHLAND
Ashland 294 Apollo
ASHTON
Ashton 180C1 Avalon 250C1
BEMENT
ASSUMPTION
Scenic 250
ASTORIA
Colonial 250
ATLANTA
Tatham 230
AUBURN
American
AUGUSTA
Bement 400
BENLD
Grand 450
BENSONVILLE
Center 300
BENTON
Star 300
385 Capitol 1200
BERWYN
Cozy 300 Bcrwyn
.2000
AURORA
Fox
Isle 750 Ritz
Paramount 2016
Oakwyn 500
6814 Roosevelt Rd
1500
BETHANY
200C1
Tivoli 1600 Cozy
AVON BLOOMINGTON
Avalon 190 Castle 889
BARRINGTON K & R.
Catlow's 499 Illini
BARRY' Irvin
Clark
. . . 300
.1156C1
.1200
.400 Majestic 1100
BLUE ISLAND
Grand 700
Star 300
BATAVIA
Capitol 500 Lyric 928
BEARDSTOWN
Princes 600
BECKMEYER
Princess 250
BELLEVILLE
Lincoln 1350
Rex
BLUFFS
Bluffs 200
BOWEN
Opera House .... 200C1
BRADFORD
480 Brad 320
849
BREEZE
Grand 375
BRIDGEPORT
Capitol 350
BRIGHTON
Opera House 586
BRIMFIELD
Community 600C1
BROADLANDS
Broadlands 200C1
BROOKFIELD
Strand 299
BROOKLYN
Travel Show CI
BROOKPORT
Crystal CI
BUCKNER
Cozy CI
BUNKER HILL
Lincoln 300
BUSHNELL
Rialto 500
CAIRO
Opera House 500
Rodgers 460
Uptown 334
CAMBRIDGE
Palace 275
CAMP POINT
Deluxe 225
CANTON
Capitol 403
Garden 500
CARBONDALE
Barth 700
Rodgers 799
Liberty 500CI
CARLINVILLE
Marvel 750
CARLYLE
Grand 300
CARMI
New Carmi 500
Strand 600
CARRIER MILLS
Grand 600
Nox . .350
CARROLLTON
Bijou 400
CARTHAGE
Woodbine 400
CARTERVILLE
Hayton 600
CASEY
Lyric 260
CENTRALIA
Grand 600
Illinois 600
Playhouse 300
CHAMPAIGN
Co-ed 762
Orpheum 1000
Park 500
Rialto 800
Varsity 300
Virginia 1900
CHANDLERSVILLE
Cozy 240
CHARLESTON
Lincoln 700
Rex 500C1
Will Rogers 1000
CHATAUGO
Summer Camp CI
CHATSWORTH
Virginia 248
CHENOA
Ritz 200
CHESTER
Gem 300
Joy 479
CHICAGO
Academy 962C1
(16 S. Halsted St.)
Acadia 500
(2739 W. 55th St.)
Ace 750
(6223 S. Halsted St.)
Adelphi 1312
(7074 N. Clark St.)
Admiral 1250
(3940 Lawrence Ave.)
Alamo 1557
(3641 W. Chicago Ave.)
Alba 968
(4816 N. Kedzie)
Alex 1200
(3826 W. Madison St.)
Alma 286
(5332 Wentworth Ave.)
Alvin 540
(1612 W. Chicago Ave.)
Ambassador 2600
(5825 W. Division St.)
American 1226
(8 N. Ashland Ave.)
Amo 723
(436 E. 61st St.)
Apollo 669
(526 E. 47th St.)
Apollo 1383
(Clark & Randolph)
Archer 914
(2008 W. 35th St.)
Argmore 658
(1040 Argyle St.)
Armitage 951
(3553 Armitage Ave.)
Astor 300
(12 S. Clark St.)
Atlantic 1158
(3950 W. 26th St.)
Austin 500
(5619 W. Madison St.)
Avaloe 299
(2811 Diversey Blvd.)
Avalon 2400
(1645 E. 79th St.)
Avenue 595
(306 S. Cicero Ave.)
Avenue 1000
(3108 Indiana Ave.)
Avon 762
(3325 Pullerton St.)
Banner 796
(1611 N. Damen Ave.)
Bell 430
(3064 Armitage Ave.)
Belmont 3257
(1632 Belmont Ave.)
Belpark 2004
(3231 N. Cicero Ave.)
Bertha 591
(4717 Lincoln Ave.)
Beverly 1200
(W. 95th St.)
Biltmore 1677
(2046 W. Division St.)
Biograph 942
(2435 Lincoln Ave.)
Blaine CI
(3743 Southport Ave.)
Boulevard 998
(1606 W. Garfield Ave.)
Brighton Park .... 1200
(4221 Archer Ave.)
Broadway 1527
( 1641 W. Roosevelt Rd.)
Bryn Mawr 786
(1125 Bryn Mawr Ave.)
Buckingham 994
(3319 N. Clark St.)
Bugg 992
(3940 N. Damon Ave.)
Burnside 282
(9304 Cottage Gr. Ave.)
Byrd 1390
(4740 W.Madison St.)
California 683
(3434 W. 26th St.)
Calo 880
(5406 N. Clark St.)
Cameo 660
(740 Milwaukee Ave.)
Capitol 2499
(7941 S. Halsted St.)
Casino 288
(58. W. Madison St.)
Castle 300
(6 S. State St.)
Central Park 1780
(3535 W. Roosevelt Rd.)
Century 832
(1421 W. Madison St.)
Charm 298
(4303 S. Halsted St.)
Chatham 1100C1
(7536 Cot. Grove. Ave.)
Chelten 994
(7945 Exchange Ave.)
Chicago 3861
(175 N. State St.)
Chopin 987
(1541 W. Division St.)
Cine
(Devon & Maplewood)
Cinema 299
(151 E. Chicago Ave.)
Circle 707
(3241 W. Roosevelt Rd.)
City 600
(303% Lincoln Ave.)
Clark 1000
(11 N. Clark St.)
Clarmont 624
(3226 No. Clark St.)
Colony 1610
(3208 W. 59th St.)
Commercial 1800
(92nd & Commercial)
Commodore 1000
(3105 Irv. Park Blvd.)
Community Center High
School CI
Congress 2820
(2135 Milwaukee Ave.)
Cornell Square 300
(1923 W. 51st St.)
Cosmo 1222
(7938 S. Halsted St.)
Covent 1972
(2653 N. Clark St.)
Crane 299CI
(4236 Archer Ave.)
Crawford 1210
(19 S. Crawford Ave.)
Crest
(2424 Lincoln Ave.)
Criterion 1050C1
(1222 Sedgwick St.)
Crown 774
(4013 W. 26th St.)
Crown 1400
(1605 W. Division)
Crystal 299
(4921 Ashland Ave.)
Crystal 1860
(2705 W. North Ave.)
Dante 300C1
(813 W. Taylor St.)
Davis 1349
(4614 Lincoln Ave.)
Dearborn 741
(40 W. Division St.)
De Luxe 541
(1141 Wilson Ave.)
Devon 949
(6225 Broadway)
Douglas 730
(3236 W. 22nd St.)
Drexel 672
(859 E. 63rd St.)
Eagle 299
(3224 S. Morgan St.)
E. A. R 890
(6839 Wentworth Ave.)
East Side 600
(10561 Ewing Ave.)
Elmo 780
(2405 W. V. Buren Ave.)
Embassy 1400
(3940 Fullerton Ave.)
Emmett 300
(4338 Wentworth Ave.)
Empire 1281
(673 W.Madison St.)
Empress 1100
(6320 S. Halsted St.)
Englewood 1282
(Halstead & 63rd St.)
Erlanger 1500C1
(127 N. Clark St.)
Essex 653
(717 Sheridan Rd.)
Famous 600
(Chicago & Monticello)
Fashion 275
(557 S. State St.)
Four Hundred 732
(6746 Sheridan Rd.)
Four Star 1100
(2418 Madison)
Fox 300
(3167 Elston Ave.)
Franklin 700
(328 E. 31st)
Frolic 872
(951 E. 55th St.)
Gage Park 300 CI
(2620 W. 51st St.)
Gaelic 299
(2425 W. 47th St.)
Garden 300
(1221 W. Taylor St.)
Garfield 692
(2844 W. Madison St.)
Garrick 980
(Randolph & Dearborn)
Gateway 2093
(Laurence & Mil-
waukee)
Gayety 759
(9205 Commercial Ave.)
Gem 418
(450 S. State St.)
Gene 296
(3769 Grand Ave.)
German Kino 299
(659 W. North Ave.)
Globe 850
(1145 Blue Island Ave. )
Gold 800
( 3411 W. Roosevelt Rd.)
Gold Coast 900
(1548 N. Clark St.)
Granada 3447
(6427 Sheridan Rd.)
Grand 585
(3435 W. North Ave.)
Grand 300
(1525 Crawford Ave.)
Grand 500
(3110 S. State St.)
Grove 1857
(7620 Cot. Grove Ave.)
Grove 425
(Fox River Grove)
Halfield 952
(5451 S. Halsted St.)
Hamilton 997
(2150 E. 71st St.)
Harding 2762
(2724 Milwaukee Ave.)
Harmony 287
(2639 W. Division St.)
Harper 1200
(5236 Harper Ave.)
Harrison 568
(503 S. Kedzie Ave.)
Harvard 688
(6312 Harvard Ave.)
Hawthorne 500
(4905 W. 29th St.)
Haymarket 998
(722 W. Madison St.)
Highland 2050
(7859 S. Ashland Ave.)
Highway 900
(6325 S. Western Ave.)
Hillside 280
(W. 69th St.)
Holden 288
(2839 Archer Ave.)
Hollywood 1000
(1500 Fullerton Ave.)
Homan 300
(3346 W. 26th St.)
Home 299
(3749 W. 26th St.)
Howard 1623
(1621 Howard Ave.)
Hub 400
( 1746 W. Chicago Ave.)
Hyde Park 600
(5312 Lake Park Ave.)
Ideal 680
(1622 Larrabee Ave.)
Illington 980
(2118 W. 22nd St.)
Imperial 1030
(2329 W. Madison St.)
Indiana 786
(219 E. 43rd St.)
Iris 500
(5743 W. Chicago Ave.)
Irving 1600
(4005 Irv. Park Blvd.)
Irving 298
(1310 S. Halsted St.)
Jackson Park 1490
(6711 Stoney Is. Ave.)
Janet 300
(617 W. North Ave.)
Jeff 491
(4750 Milwaukee Ave.)
Jeffrey 1800
(1952 E. 71st St.)
Joy 299
(9223 Comm. Ave.)
Joy 700
1 1611 Roosevelt Rd.)
Julian 750
(918 Belmont Ave.)
Karlov 893
(4048 Armitage Ave.)
Kedzie 1396
Kedzie Annex 750
(3210 W. Madison St.)
Kenwood 885C1
(1225 E. 47th St.)
850
Kimbark 688
(6240 Kimbark Ave.)
Kosciusko 299C1
(Milwaukee Ave.)
Lake Shore 526
(3176 Broadway)
Lakeside 1000
(4730 Sheridan Rd.)
Lane Court 1000
(322 Center St.)
La Salle 900
(110 W. Madison St.)
Lawn 300
(3419 W. 63rd St.)
Lawndale 2000
(4015 Roosevelt Rd.)
Lexington 721
(1162 E. 63rd St.)
Liberty 650
(3705 Fullerton)
Lincoln 299C1
(3132 S. State St.)
Lincoln 1700
(3164 Lincoln Ave.)
Linden 780
(743 W. 63rd St.)
Lindy 383
(1710 W. Madison St.)
Lindy 600
(3437 Ogden Ave.)
Little Paramount . . .299
(2153 Lincoln Ave.)
Logan 961
(2648 Milwaukee Ave.)
Logan Sq 1200C1
(2540 Milwaukee Ave.)
Loomis 299
(2858 Archer Ave.)
Louis 668
(108 E. 35th St.)
Luna
(Belmont & Keating)
Lynn 299
(1044 W. 03rd St.)
Lyric 300
(3950 W. Cermak Rd.)
Madlin 790
(1910 W. Madison St.)
Main 200
(4815 Armitage Ave.)
Majestic 1969C1
(W. Munroe St.)
Manor 1827
(5609 W. North Ave.)
Marbro 3978
(4100 W.Madison St.)
Marquette 900
(3167 W. 63rd St.)
Marshall Square ..1350
(2879 W. 22nd St.)
Maryland 1540
(855 E. 63rd St.)
McVicker's 2264
(25 E.Madison St.)
Metro 890
(3308 Lawrence Ave.)
Metropole 299
(238 W. 31st St.)
Metropolitan 1442
(4649 S. Parkway)
Michigan 1399
(110 E. Garfield Blvd.)
Mid City 350C1
(613 W. Madison St.)
Midway 850
(6246 Cot. Grove. Ave.)
Mid- West 1700
(3538 Archer Ave.)
Milda 897
(3140 S. Halsted St.)
Milford 1188
(3311 N. Crawford Ave.)
Milo 925
(1821 S. Loomis St.)
Mode 791
(3912 Sheridan Rd.)
Monroe 950
(57 W. Monroe St.)
Mont Clare 1200
(7133 W. Grand Ave.)
Music Box 800
(3700 Southport Ave.)
National 290
(608 S. State St.)
Newberry 700
(856 N. Clark St.)
New Century 3056
(2820 N. Clark St.)
New Dale 700
( 2860 Milwaukee Ave.)
New Drake 1300
(3548 Montrose Ave.)
New Groveland . . . 600C1
(3123 Cot. Grove Ave.)
New La Salle 700
(152 W. Division St.)
New Langley 700
(706 E. 63rd St.)
New Lex 721
(1162 E. 63rd)
New Lexington 650
(715 S. Crawford Ave.)
New Liberty 650
(3705 Fullerton Ave.)
New Lyric 295C1
(718 W. 47th St.)
New Regent 825
(6826 S. Halsted St.)
New Strand 800
(2111 W. Division St.)
Nita 792
(2915 Milwaukee Ave.)
Normal
(452 W. 119 St.)
North Centre 2500
(4031 Lincoln St.)
Northshore 3017
(1749 Howard St.)
Nortown 2105
(6320 N. Western Ave.)
Norval 299
(516 W. 26th St.)
NRA 750
(5748 Prairie Ave.)
Oak 1036
(2004 N. Western Ave.)
Oakland Square . . 1495
(3947 Drexel Blvd.)
Oakley 1400
(2320 W. Chicago Ave.)
Ogden 436
(2760 Ogden Ave.)
Ogden 2065
(1619 W. 63rd St.)
Ohio 299
(653 N. Cicero Ave.)
Olympia 582
(4619 S. Ashland Ave.)
Oriental 3217
(20 W. Randolph St.)
Orpheum 677
(110 S. State St.)
Owl 944
(4653 S. State St.)
Palace 2500
(159 W. Randolph St.)
Palace 1700
(Cicero St.)
Palace 400
(1826 S. Halsted St.)
Pantheon 2035
(4642 Sheridan Road)
Paradise 3612
(231 N. Crawford Ave.)
Paris 299
(618 S. State St.)
Park 400
(5960 W. Lake St.)
Park 750
(3955 S. Parkway)
Park Manor 300
(321 E. 69th St.)
Parkway 750
(2736 N. Clark St.)
Parkway 761
(11053 S. Michigan Ave.)
Pastime 390
(66 W. Madison St.)
Patio 1500
(6000 Irv. Park Blvd.)
Paulina 840
(133 Paulina St.)
Peoples 2400
(1620 W. 47th St.)
Piccadilly 2500
( 1445 Hyde Park Blvd.)
Pickford 600
(108 E. 35th St.)
Pix 800
(824 E. 47th St.)
Plaisance 400
(406 N. Parkside Ave.)
Plaza 1195
(308 W. North Ave.)
Portage Park 1890
(4050 Milwaukee Ave.)
Praga 300
(3951 W. 26th St.)
Princess 900C1
(319 S. Clark St.)
Public 600
(4701 Prairie Ave.)
Queen 295
(2543 North Ave.)
Radio
(5035 S. Halsted St.)
Ramova 1500
(3518 S. Halsted St.)
Randolph 800
(14-16 Randolph St.)
Ray 560
(2638 E. 75th St.)
Regal 2826
(4719 S\ Parkway)
Revue 695
(3956 Elston Ave.)
Rex 600
(6848 S. Racine Ave.)
Rhodes 1435
(544 E. 79th St.)
Rialto 1500
(336 S. State St.)
Ridge 1600
(1554 Devon Ave.)
Ridge 734
(645 W. 120th St.)
Rita 299
(2419 Wentworth Ave.)
Rio 1200
(2540 Milwaukee Ave.)
Riviera 1943
(4746 Broadway)
Rivoli 1500
(4380 Elston Ave.)
Road 600
(3723 W. Roosevelt Rd.)
Rogers 487
(2516 Fullerton Ave.)
Roosevelt 1535
(124 N. State St.)
Rosco 650
(2026 Rosco Ave.)
Roseland 1000
(1131 S. Michigan Ave.)
Rosette 325C1
(2150 W. Cermac Rd.)
Rosewood 950
(1823 Montrose Ave.)
Roxy 800
(33rd & Grove)
Royal 1400
( 1453 Milwaukee Ave.)
Savoy 400
(4346 W. Madison St.)
Schindlers 1000
(1005 W. Huron St.)
Senate 3097
(3128 W. Madison St.)
Shakespeare 954
(940 E. 43rd St.)
Sheridan 2654
(4038 Sheridan Rd.)
Shore 1498
(2507 E. 75th St.)
Silver 500
(6108 S. Halsted St.)
Sonotone 357
(E. Van Beuren St.)
Southtown 3200
(610 W. 63rd St.)
Stadium 280
(1803 Blue Isl. Ave.)
Standard 397
(760 N. Clark St.)
Stanley 297C1
(3010 E. 79th St.)
Star-Garter 998
(Madison & Halsted)
State 1895
(5814 W. Madison St.)
State-Congress . . .1600C1
(S. State St.)
Stale-Harrison 288
(546 S. State St.)
State-Lake 2734
(180 N. State St.)
State-Roseland ....2030
(11020 S.Michigan Ave.)
States 676
(3507 S. State St.)
Strand 693 CI
(Lincoln Ave.)
Stratford 2460
(715 W. 63rd St.)
Sunnyside 530
(7219 Wentworth Ave.)
Symphony 1750
(4937 W. Chicago Ave.)
Telenews 600
Temple 600C1
(5241 N. Clark St.)
Terminal 2456
(3315 Lawrence Ave.)
Thalia 600
(1215 W. 18th St.)
Tiffin 2000
(4045 W. North Ave.)
Times 1000
(4847 Milwaukee Ave.)
Tivoli 3520
(6328 Cottage Grove)
Town Talkie 610
(641 N. Clark St.)
Tower 3015
(1510 E. 63rd St.)
20th Century 798
(3530 W. Roosevelt Rd.)
United Artists ....1696
(145 N. Dearborn)
Uptown 4320
(4814 Broadway)
Verdi 300
(303 Kensington Ave.)
Vic 1414
(3143 Sheffield Ave.)
Villa 650
(320 Halsted St.)
Virginia 272
(210 E. 43rd St.)
Vision 722
(2650 Division Ave.)
Vogue 1473
(3810 Broadway)
Wabash 1340
(1838 S. Wabash Ave.)
Wallace 299
(622 W. 31st St.)
Walton 560
(2768 Lincoln Ave.)
Webster 500
(2157 N.Damon Ave.)
West End 1190
(121 N. Cicero Ave.)
West 750
(22nd St.)
White Palace 750
(1609 S. Kedzie Ave.)
Wicker Park 570
(1541 Milwaukee Ave.)
Willard 600
(340 E. 61st St.)
Will Rogers
(5635 Belmont Ave.)
Windsor 1200
(1225 N. Clark St.)
Woods 1200
(54 W. Randolph Ave.)
World Playhouse ...400
(416 S. Michigan Ave.)
CHICAGO HEIGHTS
Liberty 300
851
Lincoln-Dixie 1000
Illinois 800
Rex 699
Rio 750
Washington 75SCI
CHILLICOTHE
Palace 480
Sunset 400C1
CHUISMAN
Empire 275
CHRISTOPHER
Globe 589
CICERO
Annetta 800
Grant 325
Morton Park 300
Olympic 1100
Palace 1700
Town 300
Villas 760
CISNE
Cisne (Port.) CI
CLAY CITY
Clayton (Port.)400
CLEARING
Mayfair 250
CLINTON
Clinton™ 700
New Star 370C1
COAL CITY
Rialto 360
COLCHESTER
Princess 250
COLFAX
Colonial 460
COLLINSVILLE
Miner's 1000
Will Rogers 600
COLUMBIA
Turner 390
COl LTERVILLE
Roxy 300
CRYSTAL LAKE
El Tovar 900
CUBA
Cuba 280
Fulton 280
DALLAS CITY
Opera House 280
DANVILLE
Colonial 375
Fisher 1000
Lincoln 1022C1
Palace 1092
Tivoli 550
DECATUR
Alhambra 600
Avon 1014
Empress 947
Lincoln-Square ....1377
Morrow 350
Rodgers 800
DE KALB
Barb 467C1
Egyptian 1200
Fargo 1000
DELAVAN
Del-Van 430
Resent 250C1
DE PUE
Rex 235
DES PLAINES
Des Plaines 940
Echo 655C1
DIXON
Dixon 1200
Lee
DOLTON
Dolton 300
DOWNERS GROVE
Don
Hollywood 300
Tivoli 1000
DUNDEE
Dundee 500
DUPO
Dupo 300
DUQUOIN
Grand 900
State 312
DWIGHT
Blackstone 500
EARLVILLE
Lyric 300
EAST ALTON
Ritz 460
EAST MOLINE
Majestic 450
Strand 800
EAST PEORIA
Bluebird 406
EAST ST. LOUIS
American 750C1
Avenue 1001
Broadway 465
DeLuxe 400
Esquire 750
Fourtieth St 800
Granada CI
Grand 500
Home 600
Liberty 485
Lincoln CI
Majestic 1 769
New Granada .... 500C1
Orpheum 500C1
Park CI
Roosevelt 455
Roxy 700
St. Clair 1100
Washington 400C1
EDGEWOOD
Edge wood .... (Port.) CI
EDWARDS VILLE
Lux 600
Wildey 930
EFFINGHAM
Effingham 994
ELDORADO
Grand 500
Knox 650
Orpheum 500
ELDUED
Apex
ELGIN
Crocker 1560
Grove 1102
Rialto 1600
ELIZABETH
Bishop 300C1
ELMHURST
York 1500
ELMWOOD
Palace 350
ELMWOOD PARK
Elm 1166
EL PASO
El Paso 300
EMDEN
Community 400
ERIE
Erie 240
Slenker (Port.)
EUREKA
Woodford 300
EVANSTON
Coronet 600
Stadium
Valencia 1000
Varsity 1850
FAIRBURY
Central 350
FAIRFIELD
SI rand 500
Uptown 400
FAIRMOUNT
Habit 200C1
FARINA
Lyric 350
FARMER CITY
Kendall 400
FARMINGTON
Princess 450
Strand 600CI
FINDLAY
Okaw 300
FISHER
Silverscreen 200
FLANAGAN
Uden 225CI
FLORA
Florine 900
Orpheum 350C1
Roxy 360
FOREST CITY
Alexander 190C1
FOREST PARK
Forest 1200
Lil 500
FORT SHERIDAN
Fort Sheridan 250
FOX RIVER GROVE
Grove
FRANKLIN
Airdome 250C1
FRANKFORT HEIGHTS
Family CI
FREEIill KG
Gayety 350C1
FREEPORT
Freeport 1202
Patio 1200
State 350
Strand 600
FULTON
Fulton 250
GALATIA
Lyric 300C:
GALENA
Stanley 285
Dreamland 250C1
GALESBURG
Colonial 500
Gala 250
Orpheum 1091
West 600
GALVA
Galva 350
GENESEO
New Geneseo 350
GENEVA
Geneva 800
GENOA
Crystal 300
GEORGETOWN
Georgetown 250
GIBSON CITY
Edna 500
GILLESPIE
Colonial 600C1
Lyric 750
OILMAN
Palace 248
GIRARD
Avalon 400
GLASFORD
Dreamland 300C1
GLEN CARBON
Imaginery CI
GLEN ELLYN
Glen 900
GOLDEN
Golden 200C1
GOLCONDA
Ohio 282
GRAFTON
Grafton 200
GRANITE CITY
Columbia CI
Rialto 300C1
Washington 1000
GRANVILLE
Granada 400
GRAYVILLE
Premiere 250
GREENFIELD
Lyric 250
GREENUP
Old Trails 280
GREENVILLE
Bond 350
Lyric 350C1
GKIGGSVILLE
Pike 300
HAMILTON
Picture Play 300
HANOVER
Town Hall 200
HARDIN
Apple Blossom . . . .200
HARRISBURG
Grand 500
Orpheum 700
HARTSBURG
Community CI
HARVARD
Harvard 600
Roxy 300
Saunders 400
HARVEY
Era 374
Harvey 911
HAVANA
Havana 450
Lawford 460
HEGEWISCH
Hegewisch 400
HENRY
Henry 500
HERRICK
Herrick 200
HEREIN
Annex 360
Marlow 1400
HEYWORTH
Comunity Hall . . .300C1
HIGHLAND
Lory 500
HIGHLAND PARK
Alcyon 861
HIGH WOOD
Bartlett 275
HILLSBORO
Grand 300
Orpheum 500
HINSDALE
Hinsdale 820
HOMER
Homer 306
Pastime 300
HOMEWOOD
Homewood 300
HOOPESTOWN
Lorraine 600
McFerren 700
Princess
HULL
Hull
HUME
Stark CI
HURST
Hurst 300
JACKSONVILLE
Illinois 1155
Majestic 520
JERSEYVILLE
Jersey 420
Orpheum 500
JOHNSTON CITY
American 500C1
Palace 450
JOLIET
Crystal 625
Majestic 250
Mode 700
Orpheum 1032
Princess 900
Rialto 2089
KAMPSVILLE
Kampsville 200
KANE
New 190
KANKAKEE
Luna 880
Majestic 928
Paramount 1287
KANSAS
Kansan 200
KEITHSBURG
Mississippi 225
KEWANEE
Kee 465
Majestic 300C1
Peerless 800
Rialto 300
KINCAID
Kincaid 300
KNOXVILLE
Tivoli 176
852
I.ACON MARTINSVILLE MT. MOKKIS OMARGA
Lyric 230 Mars 306 Granada 300 Omargra 425
LADJ) MASCOUTAN MT. OLIVE ONEIDA
Ladd 200 Norton 225 Grand 250 State 165
LA GRANGE MASON CITY MT. PULASKI OQUAWKA
La Grange 1500 Arlee 400 Pulaski 360 Opera House 200C1
Park Liberty 290 jit. STERLING ORANGEVILLE
LAHARI'E MATTOON Brown 350 Orangeville 300C1
Amnsll 200 Clark 700 Widney OREGON
LAKE FORK EST Miittoon 1150 MT. VERNON Oregon 350
Teerpath 935 Time 550 Granada 1000 ORION
LANARK MAYWOOD P'^-a S5<) 0rion (Port.)400Cl
La Nar 23! Lido 1260 Royal CI OTTAWA
LA SALLE ™e 600 Lvri0 MOWBAQUA ApoU„ . . 400C1
La Salle 744 MAZON M ilRPHYSBORO Illinois 400
Majestic 950 Opera House 250C1 Hi„J^™m"YSBOBO100n Palace 500C
I.AWKENCEYILLE „ .MCHENRY Liberty . . '. '. . '. '. .CI Kam^ 750
Avalon 500 E'"P|re 421 vapfrviitf y
^lace CI MCLEAN Naper^^™. .480 pal PALATINE
LEBANON Civic CI P ....„„.„. Pal 600
Alamo 250 Community 350C1 NASHVILLE PALESTINE
IEMOVT »ir LEANSBORO *Ute ' ' Va"Ce 3°,°™
Arthur I'EMON1 300 Capitol 400 NAUVOO Vogrue 400
LEROy'- M0LURE
Princess 300 State ..... . . .350 _ _ . . . ' f£ 77.7. .7. .7. 200Ci
LEWISTOWN MEDORA
_ . -xrp/tnva NEOGA PANA
Prlncess 250 lIRne;-plB""' Bluebird 300 Illinois 600C1
LEXINGTON MELROSE PARK athfms Palace 600
S~nic 350 Melrose Park 1 000 Com*X ™.^400 Sand 900
LIBERTYVILLE MENDOTA BADEN PANAMA
La Villa 400C1 State 450 ™w KADftN ^ 400C]
Libert* _ ME,TAM0RA ft„, Modern 7. ".300 PARIS
LINCOLN Community 300C1 BERI IN Lincoln 600
Grand 600 METROPOLIS New Berlin . .300C1 Paris 700
Lincoln 900 Elite 400
NFW BOSTON PARK RIDGE
Vo?ue 540 "hnols ••• Roval 190C1 Park Ridge 1800C1
Massac 537 Royal 180CI pjckwjck 1500
LITCHFIELD
Capitol 700 Pictureland CI NEW CANTON patOKA
R«z 250C1 MIDLOTHIAN Gem 225 (Port.) CI
State 450C1 Midlothian 400 NEW HAVEN pawtvFF
LIVINGSTON MILAN Nox Pawnee 100C1
Eagle 240C1 Opera House 300C1 NEW LENOX PAW PAW
LOCKPORT MILFORD Colonial 225C1 House 260C1
Roxy 320 Milford 260 NEWMAN °PPra p"™'
LOMAX MINIER VlhuOa 256 VaxinnJ„ S88
"le Hour 300C1 Minier 300 NEWTON pfCATONICKA '
LOMBARD MINONK Star 350 Le„ J^™™ 225C1
DuPage 800 Minonk 500 NILES CENTER p^ .384
LORRAINE MOLINE Niles 300
PEKIN
Lorraine 300C1 i,eClaire 1000 NOBLE Fmnire 450
Opera House 400C1 Orpheum 600 Opera House Pekin 1250
LOUISVILLE Paradise 700 NOKOMIS Rialto 7.7.7 450
Louise 375 Roxy 400 Pa]ace 400 pFnRIA
LOVINGTON MONENCE NORMAL Apol,o ...800
Lovington 250 Monence 600 Normal ^von
LYONS _.. MONMOUTH NORRIS CITY Beverly 700
Lyons 400 Bijou 300 Maje3tic -335^ Columbia 500
MACOMB RlVOh 887 NORTH CHICAGO Gem 200C1
Illinois 800 MONTICELLO Sheridan 430 Grand 400
La Moyne 580 Lyric 450 OAK PARK V^Z 1083
Royal 250C1 MORRIS Lake 625 Majestic vAoT-i
MADISON Morris 725 (Lake nr. Marion St.) °™be"m i820
Madison 550 MORRISON La Mar 1074 £a/„™ 550
MANHATTAN Capitol 500 ( 120 So. Marion St.) Rialto 7 7.1674
Manhattan 356 MORRISONVILLE Southern 500
MANSFIELD State 250 OAKLAND
Lyric 300C1 MORTON Grand CI varsity
PEORIA
MANTENO
Morton 350 Oakland 150 PEORIA HEIGHTS
Darb 500 MOUND CITY OBLONG Crest 450
Palace 200C1 Home 250 PERCY
MOUNDS O 'FALLON Princess 400
Roxy 500 O'Fallon 350 PERRY
MT. CARMEL State 500 Perry 300
American 1000 OGLESBY
297 Majestic 265 Aida ' .400
MARENGO
MARION
Orpheum
1000
MARISSA
Gem
297
MARSEILLES
Coliseum
700C1
Mars
400
Ritz
400
MARSHALL
Pythian
. .430
Palace 400C1
PERU
Peru 726
60d M^™l":K..300 pFSOTnM-4°4a
MT. CARROLL Rex 300C1 . PESOTUM
ajestic 265 OLNEY American 300C1
MT. GREENWOOD Arcadia 500 PETERSBURG
Christina Parish.l50Cl Elks 600 Salem 300
853
PINCKNEYVILLE Lyric CI STAUNTON VIRDEN
Capitol 394 Rialto 500 Temple 600 Gaiety 600
New 237 Riviera 650
Ritz
STEELVILLE VIRGINIA
PIPER CITY Rocket 804 Auditorium 335 Joy 300
p~ity..:::::::2i6 ::::::::::ioSS
WALNUT
ROCK LORDS
Stegrer 400 Walnut 335
n.rfc P,TTSFIELD „on Roxy CI . STERLING WARREN
CIark 300 «««ww»m™™ State 800 Warren 310
PLANO KOODHOUSE Sterling 900 Warren Audit'um . 400C1
Grand 350 sta,e 250 STEWARDSON WARSAW
PLEASANT HILL ROSEVILLE Aloma 200 R°yal 300
Eltingre 290 La Rose 200 STOCKTON WASHBURN
PLYMOUTH ROSELAND Stockton 350 Opera House 400
Franklin 268 Parkway 300 STONTNGTON WASHINGTON
POCOHONTAS . ROSICLARE Dehlia CI Tazewell 300
Pocohontas 300 Capitol 350 STREATOR WATERLOO
POLO ROSSVILLE Granada 400 Capitol 400
Polo 244 Rosslyn 225 Majestic 915 WATSEKA
PONTIAC Times 302 piumb (Port.)986 Watseka 664
Crescent 800 ROYALTON STRONGHURST WAUKEGAN
Nira 300C1 Royal 425 strand .....600 Academy 1250
PRINCETON RUSHVILLE SULLIVAN Genesee 1500
Apollo 720 Ll0>"d 450 Grand 564 RlaU°. Vn«n™
State 400C1 SADORUS SYCAMORE 3"° 100°C'
PRINCEVILLE Crown 150C1 State 285C1 uptown 250C1
Prince 160 ST. ANNE Fargro 600 W4VURIV
PROPHETSTOWN St. Anne 281 TAMMS Biiou WA VEKL Y
Town 300 ST. CHARLES Tamms 200C1 Rex 450
QUINCY Arcada 769 TAMPICO WELDON
Belasco 476 ST. ELMO Tampico 250C1 Pa]ace " 168C1
Empire 1214 Dixie 200 TAYLORVILLE
Family 300 Elmo 250 Capitol 1200
Orpheum 1500 SALEM Ritz 620
WENONA
Art 226
Quincy 300 Lyric 460 THAYER R "'EST CHICAGO
!*" tnn New Opera House 250C1 RoXV 750
State .500 orpheum 280C1 „,„ WEST FRANKFORT
Washing-ton 2100 Salem 500 T,LDEN annm Family
RAYMOND SANDOVAL E'eCtriC 30°C' State 770
Community 500C1 Redmans tv TIPTON strand 880
RANKIN SANDWICH 150 WEST SALEM
^ 350 state SA™™" . .432 Roxy T0LUCA Palace 200
RANTOUL SAVANNA T=,« 4Kn WESTMOUNT
New Home 360 Orpheum ...... 478 ^ ' ' TOULON " Westmount 400
War DePt Web 350 etai,b TOULON WESTVILLE
RED BUD savrrook Eaele 300
Red Bud 295 cavbro„k 746 TOVEY Orpheum 300
RIDPFWAY Say brook 740 New Tf)vey 250c, WHEATON
Strand .. . . .275 War . .914 King TREMONT p.^™^ . . . S00
Dale —^.3050, Hope ....«0 Gem ™ 825 PHncS.™. .490
ROANOKE SHABBODA TROY WILMETTE
Oak .350 opera House 300C1 Tr0y .... .300 £e -atr° ,Del Lairo ■ ' ■ ' £ on
Palasette 300C1 SHEFFIELD °y TI erftT a Wilmette 500
ROBERTS Movies CI t vr'm 1U*C01>A ,nnri WILMINGTON
Coliseum 200C1 Proving- Grounds CI aon Marr 535
ROBINSON Royal 358 Strand ... ... • • • ■ -400 wiUon 400
Grand 400 SHELBYVILLE nntnwn ARj±v" WINCHESTER
Lincoln 730 Roxy 424 uptown '*''**' ' ' Lyric 250
ROCHELLE SHELDON Albro URBANA VVINDSOR
Hub 1000 Sheldon 275 Princess" '.7.7.7.7. .688 Windsor 300
ROCKDALE SIDELL VALMEYER WINNETKA
•Uale American 250 Royal 400 Community 400
ROCK FALLS g0 WILMINGTON VAN BUREN WINSLOW
=>trand White 300C1 Ritz Lyric CI
r0r,i( ,R0CKFORD , nnn SPARTA V AND ALIA WOOD RIVER
JCL^L, o-nri Grand 430 EsWire 400 Wood River 1072
Columbia 350C1 Liberty 600
Coronado 2582 SPRINGFIELD ™'„7,«7-' WOODSTOCK
Family 600 Esquire 900 Tr * — HSOH* Miller 900
Midway 1800 Lincoln 800 Vermont 250
Orpheum 1000 Orpheum 2766 VERSAILLES . . MUKU,,'> ORn_,
Palace 1372 Pantheon 575 Rex 225C1 Ke(iwln»
Rialto 1000 Roxy 992 VIENNA WYOMING
Rex 450 Senate 750 Grand 500 Paramount 300
State 635 Southtown 300 ' ' 77.7.7 vncirvinir
Times 800 State 300 e VILLA GRO^ E A ORRVILLE
Strand 700 Star 275 Yorkville 250C1
AmeHcanK ISLAN° CI Tiv0li 77 . 7.7 .7 . 621 VILLA PARK ZIEGLER
Avon Pi Vaudette CI Park 450 Empire 863C1
FamUy 7.7.7.7.777 . SPRING VALLEY Villard 800 Kite 300
Fort Armstrong- ...1623 Liberty 700C1 VIOLA ZION CITY
Lincoln 420C1 Valley 900 Viola 500C1 Zion 500C1
854
^INDIANA-—
549 Theaters; 293,515 Seats
Closed — 86 Theaters; 22,635 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 463 Theaters; 270,890 Seats
AKRON
Madrid 278
ALBION
Albion 200
ALEXANDRIA
Family CI
Liberty 436
Ritz 450
ANDERSON
Crystal CI
Granada 900C1
New Colonial 485
Orpheum 155C1
Paramount 1500
Ritz 206
Riviera 862
Starland 600
State 1518
ANGOLA
Brokaw 400
Strand 285
ARCADIA
Bee Point CI
ARGOS
Lido 200
ATTICA
Devon
Messner 450
AUBURN
Court 734
Empire 200C1
AURORA
Palace 760
AUSTIN
Austin 300
BAINBRIDGE
Amus-u CI
BATESVILLE
Gibson 490
BEDFORD
Indiana 955
Lawrence 1000
Von Ritz 875
BEECH GROVE
Grove 602
Palace 246C1
BICKNELL
Colonial 580
Indiana 600C1
Lyric 200CI
BLOOMFIELD
Citadel 600
BLOOMINGTON
Harris-Grand 1200
Indiana 1000
Princess 918
Roxy 450
BLUFFTON
New Grand 750
BOONE VILLE
Opera House CI
Ritz 655
BORDEN
Pythols CI
BOSWELL
Roxy 200
BRAZIL
Beverly 396
Lark 800
Sourwine 800
BREMEN
Bremen 297
BROOK
Brook 250C1
BROOKSTON
Paramount 190C1
BROOK VILLE
Morin 300
BROWNSBURG
Brownie 318
BROWNSTOWN
Royal 225
BUTLER
Butler 250
CAMBRIDGE CITY
Grand 275
CAMPBELLSBURG
Legion 147C1
CANNELTON
Irvin 300
CARLISLE
Lyric 297C1
Star CI
CARTHAGE
Auditorium 350
CAYUGA
Princess 300
CHARLESTOWN
Charlestown 300
Hayes CI
CHESTERTOWN
Palace 296
CHRISNEY
Liberty CI
CHURUBUSCO
Busco 300
CLAY CITY
Photoplay 225
CLINTON
Capitol 854C1
Columbia 340
Palace 900
Wabash 696
CLOVERDALE
Music Box 200C1
COLFAX
Arcade CI
COLUMBIA CITY
Columbia 694
Miller 325C1
COLUMBUS
American 800
Crump's 1000
Mode 650
CONNERSVILLE
Auditorium 744
Lyric 310
Vaudette 660
CORYDON
Dream 350
COVINGTON
Lyric 300
CRAWFORDSVILLE
Ritz 175
Strand 1100
Vanity 575
CROTHERSVILLE
State 235
CROWN POINT
Palace 400
CULVER
Military Academy
Onyx 255C1
Palms 300
Y.M.C.A CI
CYNTHIANA
New American .... 200
DANA
Dana 264
DANVILLE
New Royal 500
DARLINGTON
Sunshine 250
DECATUR
Adams 500
Cort 293
Madison 315
DECKER
Decker CI
DELPHI
Arc 242
Roxy
DUGGEK
Cozy 212
DUNKIRK
Rex 388
EARL PARK
Riviera CI
EAST CHICAGO
Forsythe 1000
Midway 300
Vogrue 639
EDINBURGH
Playhouse 300
Temple
ELKHART
Bucklin 900
Elco 2200
Orpheum 650
Roxy 280
ELNORA
Elnora 200
ELWOOD
Elwood 587
Princess 200
Vogrue 341
ENGLISH
English 250
EVANSVILLE
Alhambra 384
American 635
Carlton 792
Columbia 300
Franklin 650
Grand 1400
Loew's Victory ...2110
Majestic 1000
Marylane 300
Ohio 350C1
Rosedale 712
Royal 410
Washington 500
Woodlawn 600
FAIRLAND
Club CI
Community CI
FAIRMOUNT
Palace 200
FERDINAND
Star 100
FLORA
Flora 225
FT. BEN.J. HARRISON
U.S.M.P.S 450
FORT BRANCH
Fort 146C1
FORTVILLE
Rialto 311
FORT WAYNE
Avenue 350
Capitol 482
Drive In 200
Eastern 634
Emboyd 2970
Family 499
Indiana 592
.Tefferson 1298
Maumee 600
New Lincoln 979C1
Palace 1800
Paramount 2086
Rialto 750
Riley 575
State 575
Wells 384
FOWLER
Dreamland 350
FRANCES VILLE
Devon 350
Meyers 200C1
FRANKFORT
Clinton 650
Ritz 407
Roxy 1130
FRANKLIN
Artcraf t 879
Franklin 565
FRANKTON
Riley 200C1
FREEMONT
Star CI
FRENCH LICK
Dream 300
GARRETT
Gala 380
Pastime CI
Royal 390
GARY
Broadway 600C1
Central 615C1
Family 575
Gary 800
Grand 600
Indiana 750
Palace 2421
Paris
Plaza CI
Rex 400C1
Roosevelt 1000
Roxy 600
State 1200
Tivoli 1175
GAS CITY
Arcade 300
GASTON
Cozy CI
GENEVA
Star 185
GOODLAND
Gravel 318
GOSHEN
Circle 300C1
Jefferson 1200
Lincoln 600
GOSPORT
Gosport 247
GREENCASTLE
Chateau 276
Granada 700
Voncastle 859
855
GREENFIELD
Riley 600
State 300
OREENSBURG
K. of P 578
Strand 269
Tree 449
GREENWOOD
Community 600
HAGERSTOWN
Community 225C1
High School
HAMLET
Majestic CI
HAMMOND
Calumet 750
Hohman 700
Orpneum 1000
Paramount 1091
Parthenon 1500
Rio
HARTFORD CITY
Dawn 250C1
Jefferson 300
Orpheum 550
HEBRON
Hebron 250
HENRY VILLE
Legion 375C1
HESS VILLE
Ace 400
HOBART
9tran<l 400
HOBBIEVILLE
Charmiehael CI
HOWE
School
HUNTINGBURG
Gem 262
HUNTINGTON
Huntington 621
Jefferson 830
Tivoli 315
HYMERA
Pearl 340
INDIANA HARBOR
American 400
Broadway 345
Garden 600
Indiana 1200
Vic 250
INDIANAPOLIS
Alamo 400
(152 N. Illinois)
Ambassador 500
(N. Illinois)
Apollo 1200
(17 N. Illinois)
Arcade 450C1
(1911 W. Morris)
Avalon 440
(2119 Prospect St.)
Belmont 500
(2043 W. Washington)
Bijou 580
( E. Washington )
Capitol 900
(148 W. Washington)
Cinema 584
(213 E. 16th St.)
Circle 2712
(45 Monument PI.)
Colonial 980C1
<N. Illinois)
Cony 330
(138 N. Illinois)
Daley 600
( W. Michigan)
Douglas 460
(19th & Martindale)
Dream 532
(2351 Stadium St.)
Emerson 532
(4630 E. 10th St.)
Esquire 628
Fox
Fountain Square ..1428
(Shelby & Prospect)
Garfield 450
(2303 Shelby)
Gem 340CI
( W. Washington )
Golden 500
(6116 E. Washington)
Granada 1400
(1045 Virginia Ave.)
Hamilton 497
(2116 E. 10th St.)
Hills Indiana 565
(412 Indiana Ave.)
Hollywood 500
(1502 Roosevelt)
Howard 470
(1601 Howard St.)
Indiana 3133
(134 W. Washington)
Irving 600
(E. Washington)
Keith's 1271C1
(118 N. Pennsylvania)
Lido 300C1
(Indiana Avenue)
Lincoln 250
(Lincoln and East)
Loew's Palace ....2441
(N. Pennsylvania)
Lyric 1892
(135 N. Illinois)
Mecca 425
(733 N. Noble)
Ohio 1000
(40 W. Ohio)
Oliver 400CI
(1123 Oliver Ave.)
Oriental 14G4
(1105 S. Meridan)
Paramount 500
(411 E. Washington)
Park 700
(2441 Martindale Ave.)
Parker 480
(N. Dearborn St.)
Regal 370
(2464 Northwestern)
Regent 650
(42 S. Illinois)
Rex 500
(3026 Northwestern)
Ritz 1043
(34th and 111.)
Rivoli 1032
(3155 E. 10th St.)
Roosevelt 750
(1429 S. Meridan)
Sanders 680
(HOC E. Prospect)
St. Clair 1100
(800 Ft. Wayne)
Speedway 500
State 590
(2702 W. 10th)
Strand 696
(1332 E. Washington)
Stratford 520
(19th & College Ave.)
Tacoma 440
(2442 E. Washington)
Talbot 500
(2145 Talbot)
Tower 800
(20 S. Illinois)
Tuxedo 600
(4020 E. New York Ave.)
Udell 350
(1075 Udell)
Uptown 986
(42nd & College Ave.)
Vogue 800
Walker 1200
(Indiana Ave. & West St.)
Zaring's Egyptian . .1077
(Park Ave.)
JAMESTOWN
Joy CI
JASONVILLE
Amusu 160
Crescent 350
JASPER
Astra 600
Tivoli 470
JEFFERSON VILLE
Dream CI
Le Rose 1187
KENDALLVILLE
Princess CI
Strand 500
KENTLAND
New Kent 400
KEWANNA
Palace CI
KNIGHTSTOWN
Alhambra 600
Strand 215C1
KNOX
Fairy 300
Knox 449
KOKOMO
Colonial 292
Fox 400
Indiana 1000
Isis 500
Palace 262
Sipe 1500
Woods ' 236
LADOGA
Ladoga 350
LAFAYETTE
Arc 400
Lafayette 1201
Luna 1022
Mars 1472
New Main 330
LA GRANGE
Wigton 375
LA PORTE
Cozy 300
Fox 500
La Porte 1500
Roxy 715
LAWRENCEBURG
Liberty 605
Walnut 588
LEAVENWORTH
Wyandotte CI
LEBANON
Avon 490
Lido 230
LIBERTY
Union 250
LEGIONIER
Crystal 464
LINTON
Cine 815
Grand 700
Sheritz 327
LOG ANSPORT
Are 240
Logan 1100
New
Paramount 450
Roxy 750
LOOGOOTEE
Ritz 300
LOWELL
Ritz 325
MADISON
Madison 700
Ohio 600
MARENGO
Rialto 250
MARION*
Indiana 1301
Lunalite 345
Lyric 550
Paramount 1202
MARTINSVILLE
Indiana 600
State 600
MICHIGAN CITY
Lake 600
Tivoli 1500
Uptown 500
MioKLEYVILLE
Old Trails 494
MILAN
Milan 294
MILLTOWN
State 254
MISHAWAKA
Northside 750
Tivoli 700
Temple 250
MITCHELL
Orpheum 250
MONON
Howard 282
MONROE CITY
Community 260C1
MONROE VILLE
Capitol 160C1
Monroe 220
MONTEZUMA
Rex 375
MONTICELLO
Lake 500
MONTPELIER
Palace 384
MOORESVILLE
Ritz 400
MORGANTOWN
Community 300
MOROCCO
Morocco 350
MORRISTOWN
Community CI
MOUNT VERNON
New Empress . . .300C1
Vernon 553
MUNCIE
Hoosier 568
Liberty 480
Rivoli 1800
Strand 436
Uptown 700
Vaudette 250
Wisor-Grand 1000
NAPPANEE
Fairy 372
NASHVILLE
Strand 165
NEW ALBANY
Elks 984
Grand 1000
Indiana 750
Kerrigan 706C1
NEWBURGH
Princess 350
NEWCASTLE
Castle 800
Ideal 250C1
Princess 572
Royal 375
Starette 325
NEW HARMONY
Harmonie 300CI
Strand 200
NEW HAVEN
Haven 238
NEW WASHINGTON
Masonic 20O
NOBLESVILLE
Diana 850
Logan 429
Wilde's O. H 675
NORTH JUDSON
Gayble 300
N. MANCHESTER
Marshall 270
Radio Electric . . . .2000
Ritz 300
NORTH VERNON
Amuzu
Family CI
Park 560
Ritz 235
OAKLAND CITY
Amuzu 450
Storm 500
ODON
Ritz 494
ORLEANS
Orleans 400
OSGOOD
Damm 385
OTTERBEIN
Band Box 189
OWENSVILLE
Star 200C1
PAOLI
Strand 387
856
PENDLETON
Rosy 250
PERU
Ritz 400C1
Roxy 1288
State 240C1
Wallace 750CI
PETERSBURG
Lincoln 600
Lyric
PIERCETON
Ardy 190
PLAINFIELD
Prewitt 350
PLYMOUTH
Gem 300
Rialto 620
PORTLAND
Crystal CI
Hines 850
Princess 350
POSEYVILLE
Marian 250
PRINCETON
Princeton 700
Roxy 427
REMINGTON
Little Paramount. .215C1
Rem 380
Roxy 225C1
RENSSELAER
Palace 400
Ritz 422
RICHMOND
Hudson 412
Indiana 680
Pastime 298
Ritz 740
Tivoli 1198
RISING SUN
Columbia 400
ROCHESTER
CharBell 780
Rex 350
ROCKPORT
Rio 380
ROCKVILLE
Ritz 688
ROSEDALE
Rosedale CI
RUSHVILLE
Castle 400
Princess 600
ST. PAUL
St. Paul 250
SALEM
Indiana 400
SCOTTSBURG
Indiana 350
SELLERSBURG
Empire 280
SEYMOUR
Little 290
Majestic 800
Vondee 460
SHELBURN
Sebring 300
SHELBYVILLE
Alhambra 509
Strand 750
SHERIDAN
Hippodrome 430
SOUTH BEND
Armo 600
Castle 580
Circle CI
Colfax 2100
Cozy 500
Granada 2400
Indiana 668
Lyric 250
Oliver 1200
Palace 1000
River Park 350
State 1800
Strand 800
White Eagle 350
SOUTH WHITLEY
Kent 200
SPEEDWAY
Speedway
SPENCER
Tivoli 500
SULLIVAN
Lyric 525
Sherman 600
SUMMITVTLLE
Town Hall 226
SYRACUSE
Pickwick 300
TELL CITY
Ohio 600
Royal CI
TERRE HAUTE
American 905
Garfield 786
Grand 1000
Idaho 500
Indiana 2018
Liberty 1147
Little Virginia 299
Lyceum 499
New Fountain 250
Orpheum 603
Rex 240
Savoy 340
Swan 660
THORNTON
Boone 185
TIPTON
Diana 300
Ritz 669
TRAFALGAR
Community CI
UNION CITY
Grand 500
Miami 484
Strand CI
VALPARAISO
Lake 500
Memorial 500C1
Premier 700
Shilling O. H 300C1
VEEDERSBURG
Tokyo 247
VERSAILLES
Austin 283
VEVAY
Hoosier 500
VINCENNES
Fort Sackville 750
Moon 490
Pantheon 1182
Strand 330
WABASH
Colonial 300
Eagles 739
WALKERTON
Rialto 250
WARREN
Mystic 200
Savoy 200
WARSAW
Centennial 550
Strand 350
WASHINGTON
Indiana 900
Liberty 850
Temple Court 388
WATERLOO
Waterloo 250
WEST TERRE HAUTE
West 386
WHITING
Capitol 700
Hoosier 1500
WILLIAMSPORT
Gem 225C1
Williamsport 240
WINAMAC
Isis 350
WINCHESTER
Cozy 200
Lyric 490
WINDFALL
Rex 223
WINONALAKE
Tabernacle CI
WINSLOW
Star 300
WOLCOTT
Lyric 300C1
WORTHINGTON
State 250
ZIONSVILLE
Zionsville 212
IOWA
536 Theaters; 208,211 Seats
Closed — 45 Theaters; 13,581 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 491 Theaters; 193,630 Seats
ACKLEY
Strand 279
ADAIR
Riada 200
ADEL
Rialto 400
AFTON
Paris 300
AKRON
Empress 300
ALBIA
King 739
ALGONA
Iowa 200
New Call 450
ALLERTON
Allerton 150
ALLISON
State 200
ALT A
Roxy 225
ALTON
Palace 300
AMES AVOCA
Ames 600 Harris 400
Capitol 900 BANCROFT
Collegian 1000 Croft 325
Varsity 500
ANAMOSA
Nilea 700
ANITA
Rialto 250
ARLINGTON
Arlington CI
ANTHON
Sioux 225
ARMSTRONG
Roxy 300
ARNOLD PARK
Uptown 250
ATLANTIC
Iowa 600
BATTLE CREEK
Luna 280
BAYARD
Movie 200C1
BEDFORD
Rialto 200
BELLE PLAINS
King 250
BELLEVUE
Cozy 350
BELMONT
Lyric 380
BIRMINGHAM
Coliseum 200C1
BLANCHARD
New Grand 460 Imo (Port.) 200
AUDUBON BLOOM FIELD
Broadway 350 Iowa
AURELIA
BLOCKTON
Community Electric
460
250
BODE
New Bode 200
BONAPARTE
Oriental 290
BOONE
Boone
Princess 700
Rialto 855
Strand 300C1
BRADDYVILLE
(Port.)
BRADGATE
Wonderland 200
BRISTOW
Bristow (Port.)
BRFTT
Princess 380
BROOKLYN
Broadway 300
BUCK GROVE
Dale's Movies. . . (Port.)
BUFFALO CENTER
Iowa 250
857
BURLINGTON
Avon 250
Capitol 493
Iowa 500
Palace 900
Rialto 600C1
Zephyr
BURT
Royal 200
BUSSEY
Bussey
CALMAR
Olympics 350
CAMBRIDGE
Strand 200
CARLISLE
Carlisle 200
CARROLL
Earl 600
State 350
CARSON
Dreamland 200
CASEY
Casey 196
CASCADE
Cascade 260
CASTANA
Dale's Movies ... (Port.)
CEDAR FALL
Regent 500
CEDAR RAPIDS
Iowa 2000
Palace 400
Paramount 2500
Rialto 700
State 1000
Strand 420
Sun 300
CENTER POINT
State 190C1
CENTERVILLE
Majestic 350
Ritz 400
CHARITON
Ritz 790
State 400C1
CHARLES CITY
Charles 500
Gem 500
CHARTER OAK
Rivoli 235
CHEROKEE
American 750
Empress 300
CHCRDAN
Churdan
CINCINNATI
Opera House 304CI
CLARENCE
State 175
CLARINDA
Clarinda 630
Rialto 364
CLARION
Clarion 480
CLARKSVILLE
Clark 250
CLEGHORN
Cleghorn 250C1
CLEAR LAKE
Lake 500
Park 250C1
CLEARFIELD
Community 200C1
CLINTON
Capitol 1031
Clinton 600
Parkside 450
Rialto 1000
Strand 500
COIN
Sun 200
COGGON
Coggon 200
COLESBURG
Coleaburg (Port.)
COLFAX
Star 265
COLUMBUS JUNCTION
Columbus 225
COON RAPIDS
Lyric 370
CORNING
American 250
CORRECTIONVILLE
Ritz 200
CORWITH
Merchant 250
CORYDON
Wayne 400
COUNCIL BLUFFS
Broadway 1300
Liberty 900
Strand 500
CRESCO
Cresco 714
CRESTON
Uptown 535
Strand 550
CUMBERLAND
Strand 250
DALLAS CENTER
Dallas 250
DANBURY
Roxy 500
DAVENPORT
Capitol 2500
Columbia 1800C1
Esquire 834
Garden 800
Orpheum 1600
Star 250
State 500
Uptown 250
Washing-ton 250
Zenith 318
DAYTON
Royal 220
DECORAH
Grand 400
Lyric 360
DENISON
Ritz 800
DES MOINES
Amuzu 400
Avalon 400
Beaver 400
Casino 600
Des Moines 1679
Family 350
Forest 580
Ft. Des Moines
Garden 900
Grand 500
Ideal 250
Ingersoll 600
Iowa 700
Lincoln 500
New Hiland 650
Orpheum 2000
Paramount 1708
Roosevelt 600
Strand 1068
Uptown 700
Varsity 500
DE WITT
Majestic 409
DIAGONAL
Diagonal 200
DOW CITY
Iowa 150C1
DOUDS
State 170C1
DOWS
Dows 200
DUBUQUE
Avon 550
Capitol 190
Grand 900
Iowa 300C1
Opera House CI
Orpheum 1000
Palace 300C1
State 500
Strand 600
Varsity 300
DUNLAP
Dunlap 250
Miller
DYERSVILLE
Plaza 250
EAGLE GROVE
Princess
520
EDDYVILLE
Bonzo 1
80C1
F.nftFwoon
11, 1 . \r ' r u
200
ELDON
Ritz
250
ELDORA
300
ELKADER
Rivola
.250
ELKHORN
Elkhorn 300C1
ELMA
Elma
EMMETSBURG
Iowa
.673
ESTHER VILLE
Grand
Hollywood
334
EVERLY
Corn
.200
EXIRA
225
FAIRFIELD
Orpheum
Rex
FARMINGTON
State
FARRAGUT
FAYETTE
Cozy
200
FENTON
Fenton
200
FONDA
Amuzu
335
FOREST CITY
470
FORT DODGE
Dodge
408
Iowa
800
Park
Rialto
800
Strand
500
FORT MADISON
Orpheum
500
Strand
600
Iowa
4 SO
FREDERICKSBURG
250
GALVA
Galva
CI
GARBER
Garber (Port.)
GARDEN GROVE
Garden 2
OOCl
GARNER
Avery
350
GEORGE
200
Gem
200
GILMORE CITY
Gilmore
250
GLADBROOK
Uptown
300
GLENWOOD
300
GLIDDEN
Legion 190C1
GOWRIE
Star
250
GRAETTINGER
Hawk Eye
300
GRAFTON
Community
a
GRAND JUNCTION
250
GREENE
300
GREENFIELD
450
GRINNELL
800
Strand
430
GRISWOLD
Globe 260
Strand 260
GRUNDY CENTER
New Grundy 250
GUTHRIE CENTER
Garden 450
GUTTENBERG
Princess 250
HAMBURG
Colonial 460
HAMPTON
Lido 280
Windsor 600
HARLAN
Harlan 600
HARRIS
Harris 200
HARTLEY
Capitol 300
HAWARDEN
Tivoli 400
HEDRICK
State 185
HOLSTEIN
State 300
HOPKINTON
Princess 200
HUBBARD
Hubbard 200
HUMBOLDT
Humota 260
HUMESTON
Princess 300
IDA GROVE
Kin? 360
INDEPENDENCE
Grand 350
INDIA NOLA
Empress 375
IOWA CITY
Englert 1143
Iowa 400
Pastime 360
Strand 550
Varsity 500
IOWA FALLS
Metropolitan 434
Rex 385
IRWIN
Irwin 165
JEFFERSON
Howard 300
Iowa . . . . . . 300
JEWELL
Strand 350
KANAWHA
Tall Corn 300
KELLERTON
Avon
KELLOG
Kellogr 200C1
KEOSAUQUA
Wampas 200
KEOKUK
Grand 1000
Iowa 300
KEOTA
Avon 236
KEYSTONE
Ace 300
KIMBALLTON
Dale's Movies. . . . (Port.)
Rialto 250C1
KINGSLEY
DeLuxe 250
KNOXVILLE
Grand 800
Marion 600
LAKE CITY
Iowa 300
LAKE MILLS
Irving 250
Mills 400
LAKE PARK
State 200
LAKE VIEW
Lakeview 260
LAKOTA
Lakota 200
858
LAMONI
Coliseum 300
LANSING
Black Hawks 200
LA PORTE CITY
Pastime 190
LAURENS
Elite 250
LEEDS
Leeds 300C1
LEHIGH
Lehigh
LE MARS
Royal 500
LENOX
New Lenox 225
State 300
LEON
Strand 250
LIME SPRING
Lime Spring- 244
LINEVILLE
Rialto 180
LIVERMORE
Princess 200
LOGAN
Pastime 300
LOHRVILLE
Royale 250
LOST NATION
Urbana 300
LUVERNE
Verne 200C1
LYTTON
Lytton 200
McClelland
Bowman 150
McGregor
Strand 250
MADRID
Iowa 250
MAGNOLIA
Dale's Movies. . . (Port.)
MALVERN
Empress 225
MANCHESTER
Castle 500
Plaza 250
MANILLA
Manila 280
MANLEY
Lido 250
MANNING
Crystal 250
MANSON
Manson 375
MAPLETON
Orpheum 350
MAQUOKETA
Pastime 300
MARBLE ROCK
Vesta 250
MARCUS
Lyric 200
MARENGO
Strand 300
MARION
Garden 600
MARQUETTE
Star 200
MARSHALLTON
Capitol 700
Casino 600
Family 600
Strand 600
MASON CITY
Cecil 763
Palace 763
State 325
Strand 400
MASSENA
Princess 200
MAXWELL
State 185
MECHANICSVILLE
Cedar
MEDIAPOLIS
State 182
MELCHER
Iowa 300
MILFORD
Strand 300
MILTON
State 190
MINGO
Mingo
MISSOURI VALLEY
Rialto 450
Valley 462C1
MONONA
Plaza 220
MONROE
Fox 250
MONTEZUMA
Monte 300
Princess 250C1
MONTICELLO
Monte 450
Princess 230
MORNING SUN
Morning Sun 210
MOORHEAD
Moorhead 200
MOULTON
Colonial 280
MOUNT AYR
Princess 300
MOUNT PLEASANT
Colonial 600
Temple 500
MOUNT VERNON
Strand 240
MOVILLE
Iowa 325
MURRAY
Murray 190
MUSCATINE
Amuzu 550
Crystal 400
Grand 700C1
Palace 600
Uptown 450
MYSTIC
Strand 375
NASHUA
Nashua 250
NEOLA
Phoenix 250
NEVADA
Circle 750
NEWELL
Newell 250
Wonderland 189
NEW HAMPTON
Firemen's 400
NEW LONDON
Alamo 285
NEW MARKET
Community CI
NEW SHARON
Sharon 290
NEWTON
Capitol 685
Cozy
Iowa 350
Rialto 350
NORA SPRINGS
Fox 200
NORTH ENGLISH
Orpheum 400C1
NORTHWOOD
Northwood 250
OAKLAND
Liberty 300
OAKVILLE
New 200
ODEBOLT
Princess 308
OELWEIN
Grand 430
Rit 500
OCHEYDAN
Princess 200
OGDEN
Ogden 294
OLIN
Plaza 200
ONAWA
Iowa 465
Onawa 400
ORANGE CITY
Nira 200
OSAGE
Osage 400
OSCEOLA
Lyric 400
Osceola 300
Ossian
OSKALOOSA
Mahaska 475
Princess 300
Rivola 600
OTTUMWA
Capitol 619
Grand 760C1
Ottumwa 1000
Rialto 680C1
Strand 350
OXFORD JUNCTION
Oxford 200
PANAMA
Dale's Movies. . . . (Port.)
PANORA
Panora 210
PARKEKSBURG
Princess 200
PATON
Carlton
PAULLINA
Wonderland 250
PELLA
New Holland 1:')0
PERRY
Foxy 250C1
Perry 700
PETERSON
Peierson 200
PIERSON
Lyric 200C1
PISGAH
Strand 200
PLEASANTVILLE
Strand 245
POCAHONTAS
Kialto 200
POMEROY
Pom 250C1
Riviera 200
POSTVILLE
Iris 300
PRESTON
Lyric 200
PRIMGHAR
Time 275
QUIMBY
Quimby 200C1
REDFIELD
Rozoda 250
RED OAK
Grand 300
Iowana 400
REINBECK
Reinbeck 225
REMBRANDT
Community 150
REMSEN
Grand 250
Vogue 300
RENWICK
Renwick 275
RICEVILLE
Ins 400
RIDGEWAY
Community 200
RINGSTED
Opera House 235
RIVERSIDE
State 175C1
ROCKFORD
Rock 260
ROCK RAPIDS
Rapids 550
ROCK VALLEY
Orpheum 260
ROCKWELL CITY
Empress 300
ROLAND
Maylew 240C1
ROLFE
Ritz 200
RUTHVEN
Lerion 280
SAC CITY
Casino 400
Chief ton 310
ST. ANSGAR
Roxy 300
SANBORN
Princess 200
SCRANTON
Rialto 250
SCHALLER
Iowa 200
SCHLESWIG
Schleswig 250
SEYMOUR
Lyric 230
SHAMBAUGH
Roof Road Shop (Port.)
SHEFFIELD
Grand 300
SHELDON
Iowa 700
SHENANDOAH
Iowa 250
Mayfair 900
State 790
SIBLEY
Royal 300
SIDNEY
Strand 250
SIGOURNEY
Garden 350
SIOUX CITY
Capitol 1300
Circle 500C1
Garden 275
Granada 600
Hipp 600
Iowa 1000
Loop 300
Orpheum 2500
Park 500
Princess 1200
Rialto 650
West 400
SIOUX RAPIDS
Star 250
SLOAN
Sloan 210
SOUTHERLAND
Southerland 300
SPENCER
Fraser 350
New Spencer 650
SPIRIT LAKE
Royal 260
STACEYVILLE
Staceyville
STATE CENTER
State 250
STORM LAKE
Empire 500C1
Lake 400
Tracy
Vista 500
STORY CITY
Story 350
STRAWBERRY POINT
Orpheum 300
STUART
Stuart 300
SUMNER
Cass Opera House . . 400
SWALE DALE
Portable
SWEA CITY
Iowa 200
TABOR
New Isis 250
TAMA
Iuka 300
TERRIL
Rialto 200
Terril 264
THOMPSON
Princess 200
THURMAN
Portal 300
859
TIPTON
Hardacre 600
Toy 240
TITONKO
Tyke ': .270
TOLEDO
Whiting: 240
TRAER
Traer 200
TRIPOLI
Tripoli 200
TROY MILLS
Portable
TRLRO
Truro 236
UTE
Star 300
VALLEY JUNCTION
(West Des Moines)
Lyric 300
VICTOR
Strand 2.10
VILLISCA
Rialto 260
VINTON
Palace 500
WALKER
Portable
WALL LAKE
Reo 200
WALNUT
Strand 300
WAPELLO
Keck 200
WASHINGTON
Fox 350
State 375
WATERLOO
New Iowa 500
Orphcum 1700
Palace 698
Paramount 2000
Strand 1063
State 700
WAUCONA
Waucona 150
WAUKON
Cota 372
Town 500
WAVEKLY
Bremer 305
Waverly 450
WEBSTER CITY
New Webster 400
Isis 400
WELLMAN
Grand 238
WEST BEND
West Bend 300
WESTPHALIA
Westphalia (Port.)
WEST LIBERTY
Strand 227
WEST POINT
West Point 300
WEST ONION
Avalon 350
WHAT CHEER
What Cheer . : 600
WHITING
Whiting- 250
WILLIAMSBURG
Iowa 260
WILTON JUNCTION
Cozy 200
WINFIELD
Winfield 300
WINTERSET
Iowa 350
WINTHROP
Winthrop 210
WOODBINE
Woodbine 241
WOODWARD
Sun 260
—KANSAS^
445 Theaters; 193,865 Seats
Closed — 71 Theaters; 18,823 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 374 Theaters; 175,042 Seats
ABILENE
Lyric 400
Plaza 689
AGRA
Electra CI
ALLEN
Allen CI
ALMA
Colonial 220
ALMENA
Rabourne 275
ALTON
Pastime CI
ALTOONA
Star CI
ANTHONY
Anthony 600
Novelty 375
ARCADIA
Rex
ARGONIA
Arg-onia 250C1
Portable
ARKANSAS CITY
Burford 1200
Howard 601
Star 300
ARMA
Empress 300
ASHLAND
Ritz 260
ATCHISON
Madrid 246
Orpheum 800
Royal 692
ATTICA
Attica 225
ATWOOD
Jayhawk 350
AUGUSTA
Augusta 400
AXTELL
Royal 300C1
Isis
BALDWIN
Gem 265
BARNARD
Kansan 240
BARNES
Fox
BAXTER SPRINGS
CEDARVALE
300 Mystic 250
CENTRALIA
New Baxter 871 Centralia 200
Ritz 465
BEATTIE
Community CI
BELLE PLAINE
Belle Plaine 300
BELLVILLE
Blair 792
BELOIT
CHANUTE
Jayhawk 541C1
Main Street 517
Peoples 992
Plaza CI
CHAPMAN
Chapman 325
CHENEY
Dickinson 700 Cheney 500
Mainstreet 675
BENTLEY
Gilchrist CI
BIRD CITY
Bird City 200
BLUE RAPIDS
Regent 326
BLUE MOUND
Uptown 250
BLUFF CITY
Home 200C1
BONNER SPRINGS
Iris 350
BREWSTER
Liberty 424C1 Clifton
BUCKLIN
DeLuxe 230
BURLINGAME
Ritz 260
BURLINGTON
Newks 350
BURDEN
(New)
BURTON
Ritz 300
CALDWELL
Ritz 360
CANEY
Liberty 500
CANTON
Canton 350C1
CARBONDALE
(Port.)
CAWKER CITY
CHEROKEE
Crescent 350
CHERRYVALE
Lee 365
CHETOPA
Cozy 200
CIMARRON
Morris 300
CLAFIN
Clafin 300
CLAY CENTER
Rex 850
Star 260
CLIFTON
200
COATS
Coats CI
CLYDE
Plaza 800
COFFEYVILLE
Ismo 300
Midland 1000
Tackett 795
COLBY
Lyric 350
New
COLDWATER
Gossett 350
COLUMBUS
Liberty 480
State 400
COLLYER
Rialto 318 Seman
860
. ci
CONCORDIA
Brown-Grand 755
Strand 300
CONWAY SPRINGS
Opera House 225
CORNING
Electric 182
COTTONWOOD FALLS
Lyric 200
COUNCIL GROVES
Ritz 600
Roxy 300C1
COURTLAND
Courtland 200
CUBA
Rose Playhouse ... .CI
CULVER
Princess CI
CUNNINGHAM
Cunningham 283
DE SOTA
De Sota 227C1
DEXTER
Dexter CI
Portable
DIGHTON
Neeley 385
DODGE CITY
Beeson 850C1
Cozy 400
Crown 500
Fox-Dodg-e 1200
DOUGLASS
Doug-lass
DOWNS
Lido 300
EDGERTON
Electric CI
ELDORADO
Eldorado 963
Eris 425
Roxy 550
ELKHART
Doric 360
ELLINWOOD
Ellin wood 400
ELLIS
New Crystal 400
ELLSWORTH
Dickenson 280C1
Golden Bell 690
ELSMORE
City Hall 200C1
EMPORIA
Granada 1340
Lyric 400
Strand 974
ENGLEWOOD
O-K 200
ERIE
Doric 325
ESKRIDGE
Strand 160
EUREKA
Princess 460
Resent 390C1
FALL RIVER
Fall River 230
FLORENCE
Mayflower 475
FORMOSA
Formosa 200
FORT LEAVENWORTH
Fort Leavenworth
FORT RILEY
U. S. A.M.P.S 400
FORT SCOTT
Empress 000
Liberty 700
Yale 350
FRANKFORT
Royal 300
FREDONIA
Klock 350
New Peoples 3B0C1
Whiteway 300
FRONTENAC
Liberty 300C1
GALENA
Maywood 780
GARDEN CITY
Ritz 500
HAYS
Star 300
Strand 624
HERINGTON
Dreamland 700
Kansan 500C1
HIAWATHA
Chief 851
HILL CITY
Midway 450
HILLSBORO
Avon 330 Langxlon
HOISINGTON
Royal 620
Star 300
HOLTON
Arcada 408
HOLY ROOD
Holy Rood 260
HORTON
Liberty 660
HOWARD
KINSLEY
Palace 470
KIOWA
Kansas 300
LACROSSE
Paramount 550
LACYGNE
Liberty 285
LAKIN
Lakin 300
LANGDON
270
MARYSVILLE
Liberty 949
Rialto 315
MEADE
Meade 370
MEDICINE LODGE
Pastime 340
MERIDAN
City 350C1
MILFORD
Electric 220C1
MILTONVALE
Opera House 250
MINNEAPOLIS
Ritz 385
MISSIONHILL ACRE
800
LARNED
Electric 390
State 350
LATHAM
Portable Dickinson
LAWRENCE MOLINE
Dickinson 975 DeLuxe 230
Granada 900 MONTEZUMA
Jayhawk 600C1 Diamond 264C1
Pattee 1010 MORAN
Howard 450 Varsity 1000 Ralston 350
HOXIE
Palace 250
HUGOTON
Harris BOO
HUMBOLDT
Cozy 300
HUTCHINSON
Iris 300
Midland 1272
New Fox 1358
Royal 400C1
LEAVENWORTH
Hollywood 1000
Lyceum 750C1
Orpheum 900
LEBANON
Owl 250
LENORA
Neal 300
LEONARDSVILLE
Royal 200
LEOTI
State 400 Plaza 200
Strand 560
INDEPENDENCE
Beldorf 650
Best 300
Booth 1000
Mainstreet 433
IOLA
Iola 625
Pic 345
Kesner
Lewis
LEROY
LEWIS
. .345
250C1
o,ntp 900 Plaza 650
State " Uptown 595
JAMESTOWN
.300
GARDNER
Community
GARNETT
Peoples 500
GENESEO
Cozy 250
GIRARD
Cozy 600
Ritz CI
Rivoli 550
GLASCO
Dream 200
GLEN ELDER
Plaza 200
GOODLAND
Sherman 760
GRAINFIELD
Elite CI
GREAT BEND
Kansan 550
Plaza 640
Strand 250
GREENLEAF
Elite 184
GREENSBERG
Twilight 400
GRENOLA
Portable Park
Royal 250C1
JENNINGS
Electric CI
JETMORE
Majestic 260
JOHNSON
Southwest 300
JUNCTION CITY
Cozy 400C1
Junction 731
Kaw 642
KANSAS CITY
Electric 1500
(Minn. Ave.)
Guantier 600
Granada 1200
(Minn. Ave.)
Home 600
Jayhawk 500
(Central St.)
Kansas 400
(Kansas Ave.)
Midway 600
(Central)
Osag:e
(Sag-e St.)
GRIDLEY
Electric 254
GRINNELL
Electric 300
GYPSUM
Portable
HALSTEAD
Ideal 250
HANOVER
Kaw
Ritz 400C1
HARDTNER
DeLuxe 400
HARPER
Harper 360
HAVEN
Booster 285
400
790
782
600
(Strong: Ave.)
Princess
(W. 5th St.)
Regal
(N. 10th St.)
Rosedale 500
(S. W. Blvd.)
State 385
(Minnesota)
10th St 700
KENSINGTON
Royal 200
KINCATLD
Community 430
KINGSMAN
Meade 400
Parma
LIBERAL
Tucker 500
LINCOLN
Princess 385
LINDSBORG
Wonderland 205
LINN
Majestic CI
LITTLE RrVER
Ritz 383
LOGAN
Mainstreet 200
LONGTON
Electric CI
LOUISBURG
Majestic 168
LUCAS
Isis 450
LURAY
Luray Community .350
LYNDON
Rialto 300
LYONS
Fox Lyons 539
Star
McCRACKEN
Garden 240
MCDONALD
L. B 300
McLOUTH
Parker (Port.)
McPHERSON
Helstrom
Mac 600
Ritz 688
MACKSVILLE
Rothrocks 250
MADISON
Madison 300
MANHATTAN
Carlton 850
Dickinson 814
Sosna 774
Wareham 978
MANKATO
Ute 300
MARION
Kaw 400
MARQUETTE
Strand 276
MORGANVILLE
Elite CI
MOUND CITY
Alladin 225
MT. HOPE
Community 400
MULBERRY
Rex 350
MULVANE
Mulvane 325C1
NATOMA
Welling: 300
NEODESHA
Klock 600
NICKERSON
Gem 250C1
NESS CITY
Ness 375
NEWTON
Regent 615
Rex 235
Star 250
NICKERSON
Gem 250C1
NORCATUR
Liberty 240
NORTH TOPEKA
Princess 375
NORTON
Cozy 550
NORTONVILLE
City Hall CI
NORWICH
Norwich 260
OAK HILL
Grand Cl
OAKLEY
Mainstreet 390
OBERLIN
Chief 400
OLATHE
Andrews 800
Dickinson 500
ONAGA
Graff 260
ONEIDA
Community Cl
OSAGE CITY
Osage 500
OSAWATOMIE
Dickinson 566
Kansas 250
OSBORNE
Blair 600
OSKALOOSA
Ritz 185
OSWEGO
New Era 350
OTTAWA
Cozy 400
Memorial
Auditorium . . . 1500CI
Plaza 735
Strand 400C1
Webster 400
861
OVERBROOK
Overbrook CI
OVERLAND PARK
Star CI
OXFORD
Oxford 350
PAOLA
Dickinson 600
Empress 600
PARSONS
Cozy 406C1
Kansan 600
Orpheum 850
Ritz 366
Uptown 973
PEABODY
Sunflower 400
PHILLIPSBURG
Majestic 750
PITTSBURG
Cozy 866
Pox Colonial 1161
Midland 914
PLAINS
Plains 230C1
PLAINVILLE
Moore 400
PLEASANTON
Linn 260
POTWIN
Portable
PRATT
Barron 800
Kansas 500
PROTECTION
Midway 275
QUENEMO
Liberty CI
RANSOM
Strand 250
REPUBLIC
Republic 260C1
REXFORD
Rexf ord 250
RILEY
Community CI
ROBINSON
Robinson 450
RUSSEL
Dream 590
Mecca 400
ST. FRANCIS
St. Francis 300
ST. JOHN
Pix 380
ST. MARY'S
Princess 250
ST. PAUL
Royal 236
SABETHA
Royal 336
SALINA
Jayhawk 700C1
Royal 400
Strand 600
Vogrue 500
Watson 1457
SATANTA
Satan ta 250
SCAMMON
Rex 400C1
SCANDIA
Princess 350
SCOTT CITY
Majestic 400
SCRANTON
Cozy 225C1
Parker (Port.)
SEDAN
Gregg 350
SELDEN
Selden 200
SENECA
Royal 400
SEVERANCE
Community CI
SEVERY
Severy CI
SHARON SPRINGS
Strand 400
SHAWNEE
Mission 500
SIMPSON
Cozy 200C1
SMITH CENTER
Blair 600
SPEARVILLE
DeLuxe 200
SPRING HILL
Community 300C1
STAFFORD
Ritz 400
STERLING
Lowe 400
STOCKTON
Nova 400
STRONG CITY
Uptown 260
SYLVIA
Owens 250
SYRACUSE
Northrup 400
TAMPA
Auditorium 200
TIPTON
Royal 240
TONGANOXIE
Royal 278
TOPEKA
Best 400
Capitol CI
Co-ed . . . . : 600
Cozy 350
Crystal 375
Gem 500
Fox Orpheum 850
Grand 1361
Jayhawk 1358
Kaw 500
Novelty 1086
Ritz 550
TORONTO
Toronto 219
TRIBUNE
Tribune 400
TROY
Opera House (Port.) 300
TURON
Turon 250
ULYSSES
Grant
Ulysses 284
UTICA
Williams 200
VALLEY FALLS
Rio 342
Royal 250
VERMILLION
Lone Star 250
VIRGIL
Virgil 180C1
WAKEENEY
Kelly 540
WAKEFIELD
Wakefield 151C1
WAMEGO
Columbian 500
WASHINGTON
Major 380
WATERVILLE
Isis 260
WAVERLY
Bailey 350
WEIR
Main Street 300
WELLINGTON
Fox Regent 737
Lyric 600
WELLS VILLE
Liberty CI
WESTMORELAND
Mayer 200
WETMORE
Opera House 450
WHITE CLOUD
Star 200C1
WHITE WATER
White Water H. S...600
WICHITA
Civic 400
Crawford 740
Kansas 440
Miller 2250
New 632
Nomar 900
Novelty 300
Orpheum 1619
Palace 1438
Sandra 590
Southern 400
State 300
Uptown 1464
West 500
Wichita 1400
WILSEY
Wilsey 250
WILSON
Screen Land ... 300
WINFIELD
Regent 770
Ritz 337
Zimm 450
YATES CENTER
Temple 400
— KENTUCKY—
318 Theaters; 141,203 Seats
Closed — 61 Theaters; 15,852 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 257 Theaters; 125,351 Seats
ALBANY
Clinton
ALLAIS
Columbia CI
ALVA
Casino CI
ASHLAND
Alfon 500
Capitol 825
Columbia CI
Edisonia 200C1
Family 350C1
Lyric 300
Paramount 1500
AUBURN
Starlight
AUGUSTA
Odeon 300
AUXIER
Auxier 100
BARBOURSVILLE
Mitchell 318
BARDSTOWN
Crystal 315
BARDWELL
Milwain
BENHAM
Benham 40C
BEREA
Berea 300
BLOOMFTELD
Masonic
BLUE DIAMOND
■ 260 Blue Diamond 300
BOWLING GREEN
LyDd^^™V^-65° Capitol 1028
BARLOW
BEATTYVILLE
Lyric 240
BEAVER DAM
Majestic . . .300
BELLE VUE
Sylvia 690
BENTON
Diamond 850
Princess
BRANDENBURG
(Cressmont P.O.)
Brandenburg 300
BROOKSVILLE
Benton 220 Lyric 300
862
BROWNSVILLE
Brown CI
Swan
BURKESVILLE
Ritz 250
BUTLER
Butler 250
CADIZ
Kentucky 244
CALHOUN
Masonic 100C1
Princess 276
CAMBELLSVILLE
Alhambra 600
CAMPION
Peoples CI
CARLISLE
Lyric 266
CARROLLTON
Richland 300
Royal 400
CATLETTSBURG
Gate City 250
Reel
CAVE CITY
Ace 300
CENTRAL CITY
State 750
CLAY
State 200
CLINTON
Strand 337
CLOVERPORT
Arcade 250
COLUMBIA
Rialto 300
COMPTON
People's
COMBS
Combs CI
CORBIN
Hippodrome 835
Kentucky 396
COVINGTON
Broadway 1175
Family 400
Liberty 1000
Shirley 600
Strand 700C1
Wilson 816
CUMBERLAND
Cumberland 156
Nova 500
CYTHIANA
Roh's Opera House. .706
DANVILLE
Kentucky 793
State 450
DAWSON SPRINGS
Strand 450
DAYTON
Liberty 350
DIXON
Dixon 274C1
Rex 200C1
State CI
DRAKESBORO
Moody
DRIFT
Tumors CI
DRY RIDGE
Kentucky 250
EARLINGTON
Earl 400
Roxy 400
EDDYVILLE
Kentucky 250
Strand 275C1
EDMONTON
Swan 266
ELIZABETHTOWN
Ritz 643
ELKHORN
Murphy 306
ELKTON
Palace 150
EMINENCE
Eminence 250
ERLANGER
Gayety 300
EVARTS
Palace 280
FALMOUTH
Falmouth 250
Pastime 350
FLEMING
Fleming CI
FLEMINGSBURG
Princess 300
FORT KNOX
War Dept 250
FT. THOMAS
Fort Thomas CI
Hiland 700
FRANKFORT
Capitol 814
Grand 300
New 400
State 300
FRANKLIN
Liberty 350
Roxy
Victor 400C1
FREEBURN
Frceburn 350C1
FULTON
LATONIA
Derby 430
Kentucky
Latonia 450
LAWRENCEBURG
Lyric 200
LEBANON
Arista 430
LEITCHFIELD
New Fulton 250 Alice 326
Orpheum 400
Strand 320
GARRETT
Ace 300
Kentucky 180
GEORGETOWN
Glenn 630
GLAMOUR
Reliance CI
GLASGOW
Plaza 360
Trigg 360
GRAYSON
Gray 300
GREENSBERG
Fort Airdome 300
Mossland 500
GREENUP
Theatorium
GREENVILLE
Palace 200
GUTHRIE
Lyric 200
HARDBURLY
Hardburly 600
HARDINGSBURG
Lyric 325
HARDY
Hardy CI
HARLAN
Cumberland CI
Margie Grand 600
New Harlan 600
HARRODSBURG
Harrod 500
Opera House 475
HARTFORD
Kentucky 425
HARVEYTON
Harveyton 290C1
HAWESVILLE
Select 180
HAZARD
Family 300
Virginia 500
HENDERSON
Kentpcky 500
Kraver 880
Princess 523C1
HICKMAN
Ritz 600
HODGENVILLE
Lincoln 300
HOPKINSVILLE
Alhambra 943
Kentucky 400
Princess 500
HORSE CAVE
Strand 395
IRVINE
Irvine 500
Strand 400
IRVINGTON
Irvington CI
JACKSON
Pastime 250
JAMESTOWN
Mary Agnes 408
JENKINS
Jenkins 500
KENVIR
Black Mountain . . .350
Kenvir CI
LACKEY
Lackey 522
LaGRANGE
Griffith 250
LANCASTER
Grand 475
Jo Jon CI
LEXINGTON
Ada Meade 750
Ben Ali 1400
Kentucky 1276
Opera House 900
Orpheum 285C1
State 888
Strand 1150
LIBERTY
Gay 404
LIVERMOKE
Green River .... 300C1
LONDON
Southland 290
LOTHAIR
Lothair 250C1
LOUELLEN
Louellen 208C1
LOUISA
Garden 300
LOUISVILLE
Baxter 952
(Bardstown Rd.)
Broadway
LYNCH
Lynch 600
McKEE
McKee
McROBERTS
MeRoberts 265C1
McVEIGH
McVeigh CI
MADISON VILLE
Cameo 400C1
Capitol 845
Kentucky 650C1
MANCHESTER
Manchester 125
MARION
Kentucky 311
MARTIN
Martin 160C1
MAYFIELD
Dixie 300
Legion 1043
Princess 720
MAYSVILLE
Beech wood CI
Hollywood 300
Russell 707
Washington 600
MIDDLESBORO
Brownie 350
Manring 750
MIDWAY
Midway 200
MONTICELLO
Wayne 246
MOREHEAD
(816 E. Broadway)
Brown 1491
(W. Broadway)
Capitol 830
(S. Preston St.)
Cozy 350
Crescent 514
(2862 Frankford)
Dixie 280
(Preston & Caldwell)
Downs 300
(Taylor Blvd.)
Drury Lane 500C1
Grand 655
(Walnut St.)
Hiland 270
(Superba)
Hilltop 496
(Frankfort & Pope St.)
Ideal 1187
(23rd & Market)
Kentucky 796
Lincoln 677C1
(W. Walnut)
Loew's United
Artists 3050
Mary Anderson . . . .1405
National 2310C1
New Lyric 700
New Ritz 565
(1603 S. 2nd St.)
Norman 308
(21st & Portland)
Oak 750
Ohio CI
Orpheum 415
(W. Jefferson)
Park 774
Parkland 448
(2817 Dumesen)
Rex 700
Rialto 3100
Savoy 1500
(W. Jefferson)
Shawnee 490
(28th & Broadway)
Shelby 375
(S. Preston)
Shelmar 450
Strand 1866
Sun 600C1
450 College 400
Mills 425
Trail 325
MORGANFIELD
Morgan 300
MORGANTOWN
Hollywood 300
MT. OLIVET
Gem 190
MT. STERLING
Trimble 648
MT. VERNON
Boonoway CI
Vernon 280
MUNFORDVILLE
High School 197
MURRAY
Capitol 375C1
Kentucky 350
Varsity 2400
NEON
Bentley 300
NEWPORT
Hippodrome 1700
Music Hall 450
Strand 800
NICHOLASVILLE
Park 326
OLIVE HILL
Dixie 286
OWENTON
Pastime 457
OWNESBORO
Bleich 853
Malco 500
Seville 433
Strand 350
OWINGSVILLE
Majestic 268
PADUCAH
Arcade 700
Columbia 1000
Orpheum CI
Rialto 400
PAINTSVILLE
Arcade 300C1
Sipp 500
PARIS
Bourbon 709
PIKEVILLE
Liberty 600
500
Towers 1068
Uptown 1243 Weddington
LUDLOW PINEVILLE
Elm 383 Gaines
.626
863
PRAISE SALYERSYILLE STONE WALTON
Praise 306 Rex CI Stone 400 James 350
PRESTONBURG Star 300 STURGIS WARSAW
Abagrail 600 SCOTTSVILLE Princess 225 Gem 200
Princess CI Lyric 210 Ritz 300 WAYUND
Unique 350C1 SEBREE THREE POINT Wayland ...... . 300
PRINCETON Palace 263 Akers 200C1 iiTmeRipv
CaPito1 366 SECO Three Point CI Koppars .320
PROVIDENCE Seco CI TOMKINSVILLE WEST LIBERTY
Lid0 331 SHELBYVILLE Uptown 300 Rex 165
RAVENNA Shelby 600 UNIONTOWN WHFFT wricht
Family 300 Strand 370C1 Dohn CI Wheelwright .312
RICHMOND SHEPHERDSVILLE VANCEBURG wnTTPennnr
Madison 987 Temple CI Kentucky 400 Kentucky 142
State 500 SOMERSET Strand 200 *-emucKy liz
RUSSELL Kentucky 750 VAN LEAR ni J^LLIAMSBCKt,H9-n
Russell 300 Virginia 804 Van Lear 310C1 ",x,e _ .
RUSSELL SPRINGS SPRINGFIELD VERSAILLES Idle^TW-141"8™™ * 9^n
Strand 285 Majestic 200 Lyric 250
RUSSELLVILLE STANFORD VICCO
WINCHESTER
Colonial 600
Dixie 300 Lincoln 425 Pastime 250 Lee(Js ".600
SADIE VILLE STANTON VIRGIE WOT roTT
Eagle CI Powell 150C1 Virgie 200C1 Lyric . . CI
ST. MATHEWS STEARNS WALLINS YANCEY
Evelyn 240C1 Stearns 327 Wallins 280 Yancey 250
—LOUISIANA—
306 Theaters; 150,721 Seats
Closed — 27 Theaters; 10,989 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 279 Theaters; 139,732 Seats
ABBEVILLE BOGALUSA COVINGTON FERRIDAY
Dixie 500 Redwood 750 Majestic 750 Melz 400
Gem 400C1 State 800 CROWLEY FRANKLIN
ALEXANDRIA BOSSIER CITY Acadia 600 Opera House 400
Liberty 500 Southland 485 Opera House 500 FRANKLINTON
Paramount 800 BREAUX BRIDGE CUTOFF Franklinton 300
Rex 650 Conrad 350 Cutoff 210 Strand 250
Ritz f™. BUNKIE DELCAMBRE GALIANO
Saen?er 600 Bailey 400 Bijou 150 Star 350
AMITE BURAS DELHI GARYYILLE
Amlte 500 New Buras 160 Delhi 350 Taylor 200C1
ARCADIA CAMERON DENHAM SPRINGS GLENMORA
Arcadian Beacon 150C1 Leslie 265 Amusu
Joy 263 CARENCRO DE QUINCY Pringle 300
ARNAUDVILLE Tip Top 300 Strand 500 GOLDEN MEADOW
Arnaudville 200 CARVILLE DE RIDDER Buccaneer 400C1
BASILE u. S. Marine Hospital. CI Realart 800 Golden Meadow 250
Joy 250 CHVUVIN Uptown 450 GONZALES
BASTROP Jov " .\...500 DONALDSONVILLE Gonzales 300
Rose 700 CHTTRCH POINT Grand 500 ^
Swan 450 - CHURCH POINT DUBACH GRAMARCY
BATON ROUGE 7 "rw*WKs " Waho° 200 J°y 450
Avenue 300 Librarv CLAKKh 3-0 EDGARD GRETNA
Chimes 400 LlDrarr aou Edgard 268 Hollywood 500
?r,and Tov CLINTON ELIZABETH GROSS TETE
Jstr?uma |50 Joy 200C1 400 Joy 275C1
Louisiana 600 COLUMBIA f-ttvw GUEYD4N
McKinley 300 Rilz 350 - ELTON UUK1DAIN
Paramount 1450 „,^..„„c„ Joy lo0C1 y
pe0ples 335 CONVERSE Melba 250 HAMMOND
Temple 500 Sabine CI ERATH Columbia 1198
Tivoli 290 COTTON PORT Bijou 316 HARVEY
Varsity 740 Joy 200 EUNICE Gay 175
BERNICE COTTON VALLEY Liberty 650 HAYES
Royal 375 Strand 350 Queen 500 Magnolia
BERWICK COUSHATTA FARMERSYILLE HAYNESVILLE
Rex 175C1 Hollywood 359 Palace 275 Milba 450
864
HODGE MANDEV1LLE Mecca 800 SHBEVEPORT
Gem 250 Elks 300C1 Metry 400 Barksdale Field
HOMER MANCHAM Napoleon 1000 Capitol 888
T„„ 4nn T ihertv National 750 Centenary 750
J°J 400 MA>;ePIR,I'n palace 1100 Glenwood 488
HOUMA MANSFIELD Peacock 350 Majestic 1000
Bijou 950 De Soto 400 piety 1200 Palace 480
Fox 650 New 300 popiar 840 Rex
3rand 700 MANSCRA Prytania 750 Saenger 700
INDEPENDENCE J°f 350 Queen 650 Star 800
Liberty 250 MANY £1° 360 Strand 1600
mwa Crystal 406 5,ltz,. ,i0° Venus 640
. Rivoh 1222 West End 350
R:>.v 100 „ MARINGOUIN RKOOrpheum ....2214 «™Mwa=rto-p
JACKSON Gwcn 170 Roxy 500 - SIMMESPORT
Rex 200C1 MARKSVILLE Saeng-er 3400 Joy 250
jfivr™ Bailey 300 St- Charles 1200C1 SLIDELL
-i-n MARRERO Strand 1600 Arcade 275
V'aI°n 3°° Royal 220 Tiv°H 1328 SPRINGHILL
Strand .™ 325 Jov MELVILLE \ WWWY. V. .If S Auditorium
Jo> 250 WnshirWnn s„.n State ?50
JENNINGS MINDEN WonderSuS ' / / / / ^OO Webster 425
St,and 5,5 Rex 600 NEW R04DS SULPHUR
JONESBORO Scout 350C1 Alamo W «"AUS Roosevelt 230
PaIace 400 MONROE WoRCn" " Strand 250
JONESV1LLE Capitol 700 She], Empl*^. SUNSET
Palace 350 Dixie 300 c, _ J „ Sunset 200
,,..„, ,,. Paramount 1200 d0°
KAPLAN RUz (;oo OAKDALE „ . TULLULAH
p"* {■ 552 Siegle 650 Allen 500 ,?alIey 500
Peoples 500 " Cameo 450
Queen 300 MONTEGUT OAKGROVE _ „ ' '
KENNER Oak 200 Fiske 350 Raby THWODAUX
Kenner 250 MORGAN CITY OIL CITY Grand 704
KENTWOOD Dixie 400 George I. Matson Harlem 1 263
Ott s 550 OP»a House 900 Strand 200 _„..-_
KINDER „ MORGANZA OPELOUSAS New Princess .... 288
Joy 350 Century 225 Delta 200 Tu]los 288
KROTZ SPRINGS NAPOLEONVILLE PATTrR«nv VACHERIE
Lay 200 300 Arcade^ 300 V^erle 440
LABADIEYILLE NATCHITOCHES PIXFVII I F- VALVERDA
Roval 305 Amusu 550 „ . "'NEVILLE Valverda
KoJal a^ Cane 450 Hauber 480 vaIveraa
Cane 450
LAFAYETTE New 450 PI AIN nF4Ilvr VILLA PLATTE
Azalea 500 6W 450 Pn/LAIN DEAL,NGQQA Bailey 500
Jefferson 850 NEWELTON Fox 380 Jov 300c,
Liberty 300 Hawkins 400 PLAQUEMINE Roxy
Royal 350 NEW IBEBIA Rosso's 300 viivtok
LAKE ARTHUR ^Iks 800C1 Wilbert 000 Joy «»
Grand 300 Essanee 960 PLAUCHEVILLE Vim ft
Evangeline 600 Plaueheville ten VIOLET
LAKE CHARLES Palace 500 ^Iaucnevllle 150 viole, 250
NEW ORLEANS lo.ear°NCHATOOLA «™ VIVIAN
Jlxie 350 Ace 655 ideal 650 Pox 400
Palace • • ■ 300 Arcade 1148 PORT ALLEN Ritz 464
Paramount 600 Ashton fi00 Magic 350 State 400
V,'„,\7.*. ' SeU. 1222 POKT EADS WALLACE
LA PLA{ E Best 600 Community CI Wallace CI
La Place 400 Bijou 500
Medere 409C1 Capitol . . . 1250C1 PORT SULPHUR WASHINGTON
LAKE PROVIDENCE Carrollton 900 port Sulphur 300 Tate
Lake 500 Casino 507 RACELAND WATERPROOF
* tnncp Center 480 Fun 400 Home 250
LAKOSt C rele 550
Jov 150C1 nabon 460 RANE WEEKS ISLAND
LE COMPTE Coliseum ".'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'600 Jov 400 Myles 200
R0val 226 Cortez 600 RAYVILLE WELSH
Dreamland 960 Joy 450 Joy 300
LEESVILLE
ver„o„"7. 5oo :::::::::io| com^rBVE..,5„ RlalrST MONKOE45o
LOCKPORT ......... Maurim 30fl ....... .....450
Lockport 450 Garden 900 RINGOLD WESTWEGO
mrAwnRT Gayety 450 Jo>' 250 Gem 250
Castle 300 °f"tilly *™ D RODESSA WHITE CASTLE
CaStle Globe 600 Palace 570 Fairyland 300
LOREAUVILLE Granada 1374 ritstav „•,». „
Dixie ..250 Happy Hour 600 _.. . RUSTON WITsNFIELD
w^,^ Imperial 500 Dlxle 500 Palace 416C1
LULING jsis 832 Gem 450 Winn 350
T"Uner 300 Jolly ".'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.' .'.'298 Stland 350C1 WINNSBOBO
LUTCHEB Joy 450 ST. FBANCISVILLE Avon 500C1
Lutcher 460 Lafayette 1000C1 St. Francis 250 Princess 300
MAGNOLIA T^bewl 1250 ST- JOSEPH WISNER
Hayes CI liberty .......... 1250 BIackman 360 wisner 30Q
MAMOU Loew s State 3285 ST. MARTINVILLE ZWOLLE
Joy 200 Lyceum 800 Bienvenu 300 Rio 400
865
MAINE
202 Theaters; 94,819 Seats
Closed — 47 Theaters; 18,779 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 155 Theaters; 76,040 Seats
ANDOVEK
McAllister 260C1
ASHLAND
O. H 300
AUBURN
Auburn 1160
AUGUSTA
August St. Hospital...
Capitol lino
Colonial 1375
BANGOR
Bijou 900
Olympia 900
Opera House 800
Park 700
BAR HARBOR
Building of Arts CI
Criterion 846
BAR MILLS
Bar Mills 200C1
BATH
Columbia 767C1
Opera House . . 7 SO
Uptown 767
BELFAST
City 500
Colonial 700
BELGRADE LAKES
Casino 450C1
BETHEL
Odeon 350
BIDBEFORl)
Central 1600
City O H M0
BINGHAM
Bingham . . (Port.) 600
Kenebec 250
BLUE HILL
Community 200
BOOTHBAY HARBOR
Strand 1000
BRIDGTON
May-fair 300
State 900
BRIDGEWATER
Bridgewater 400C1
Community 300C1
BROWNVILLE JCT.
Majestic 350
BRUNSWICK
Cumberland 656
Pastime
BUCKSPORT
Alamo 545
CALAIS
Opera House . ...600C1
State 500
CAMDEN
Cumiqne 450
CARIBOU
Powers 400
Rudy 500
CASTLME
Folly 300C1
COLUMBIA
Town Hall .... (Port.)
CORNISH
Cornish 500C1
DAMARISCOTTA
Lincoln 500
DANFORTH
Paramount 400
DEERING
Cameo 392
Deering 350
DEXTER
Park 500
DIXFIELD
Tuscan O. H 500C1
DOVER
Star 417C1
E. MILLINOCKET
Municipal 400
EASTON
Easton (Port.)
EASTPORT
Acme 500
Armory 250
ELLSWORTH
Dirigo 500C1
Grand
FAIRFIELD
Star 375
FAKMINGTON
State 300
FT. FAIRFIELD
Paramount 986
FT. KENT
Community 360
Savoy 400
FREEPORT
Nordica 300
FRIENDSHIP
Playhouse. . . . ( Port. 1 300
FRYEBURG
Fryeburg 250
K. of P. Hall 250
GARDINER
Opera House 700
Strand 400C1
GRAND ISLE
Town Hall (Port.)
GREENVILLE
Moosehead 340
GUILFORD
Community 400
HALLOWELL
Rialto
HARMONY
Range Hall. . (Port.) 300
HARTLAND
Opera House 300
HOULTON
Temple 300
HOWLAND
Town Hall 375
ISLAND FALLS
Opera House 300
ISLEBORO
Ocean View 200
JACKMAN STATION
Strand 400C1
JONESPORT
Opera House 200
KEZAR FALLS
Stanley 250
KENNEBUNK
Acme 300
KENNEBUNKPORT
Lyric 350C1
KINGFIELD
Webster 273
LEE
Elmwood 200C1
LEWISTON
Empire 1320
Priscilla 725
Strand 1885
LIBERTY
Community 200C1
LIMERICK
Limerijk 500
Sokokis
Tarn 300C1
LIMESTONE
Star 210
LINCOLN
New 480
LISBON
Bijou 300
LISBON FALLS
Met 250
LIVEKMORE FALLS
Dreamland 478
LUBEC
Eagle 350
MACHIAS
Colonial 400
MADAWASKA
Roxy 600
MADISON
Pastime 300
MARS HILL
Husseys 400
MASARDIS
Town Hall (Port. I
MATTAWAMKEAG
Cameo 200C1
MCKINLEY
Neptune 299
MECHANIC FALLS
Community 250
MEXICO
Mexico 400
MILLBRIDGE
Colonial 360C1
Opera House .( Port. 1 37 5
Whittan (Port.)
MILLINOCKET
Fourt Star 360
Keiths 300C1
Millinocket 700
Opera House 600
MILO
Chic 367C1
Milo 250
MONTICELLO
Monticello (Port.)
NEW HARBOR
Surf Casino 175C1
NEWPORT
Playhouse : 600
NORRIGEWOCK
Town Hall 350C1
NO. BERWICK
Commercial 200C1
NO. E. HARBOR
Pastime 200C1
NORTH HAVEN
Calderwood ...(Port.) CI
NORWAY
Rex 427
OAKFIELD
Oakfleld 260
OGUNQUIT
Leavitts 700C1
OLD ORCHARD
Capitol 500C1
New 600C1
Palace
Pier 600C1
OLDTOWN
Strand 800
ORONO
Strand 516
PATTEN
New 260
PHILLIPS
Wilbur 276
PITTS FIELD
Bijou 543
PORTLAND
Cameo 500
Cape
Caseo 500C1
Colonial 300
Empire 1000
Fort McKinley CI
Fort Williams
Keith's 1600C1
Maine 900
Portland 900
Seville 350
State 2055
Strand 2030
PRESQUE ISLE
Opera House 1000
State 900
PRINCETON
Opera House 260
PROSPECT
Town Hall (Port.)
RANGELEY
Lakeside 800
RICHMOND
Opera House . . . .1000C1
ROCKLAND
Park 830
Strand 600
RUMFORD
Acadia 551
Opera House 750
Strand 812
SACO
Motor-In CI
Mutual 630
SANFORD
Capitol 1070
State 1000C1
SEDGEWICK
Eureka 200C1
SHERMAN MILLS
Opera House 300
SHERMAN STATION
Sherman Station .( Port . )
SKOHEGAN
Opera House 750
Strand 968
Tilton (Port.)
SMYRNA MILLS
Tarbell 350
SO. BERWICK
Park 460
SO. LINCOLN
Community 200
SO. W. HARBOR
Park 396
STOCKHOLM
Stockholm (Port.i
866
STOCKTON SPRINGS
Andrews . . (Port.)300Cl
STONINGTON
Opera House 600
STRATTON
Ricker Hall 200
THOMASTON
Watts Hall (Port.)
UNITY
Odd Fellows Hall
(Port.) CI
VAN BUREN
Gayety 400
VINAL HAVEN
Gem 260
WALDOBORO
Star 300
Waldo 450
WASHBURN
Town Hall (Port.)
WATERVILLE
Haines 1000
Opera House 1100
Maine 600
State 600
WELLS BEACH
Island Ledge Casino. . . .
Wells 300C1
WESTBROOK
Rialto 600
Star 800
WEST SULLIVAN
Alhambra 260C1
WILTON
Bijou 316
WINTHROP
Gem 267
New
WISCASSET
Pastime . . . (Port.) 200C1
WOODLAND
Opera House 276
YARMOUTH
Yarmouth 250C1
YORK BEACH
Beach 1000C1
Village CI
YORK HARBOR
Harbor 400C1
YORK VILLAGE
Community CI
MARYLAND
228 Theaters; 129,617 Seats
Closed — 17 Theaters; 5,887 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 211 Theaters; 123,730 Seats
ABERDEEN
New 260
ANNAPOLIS
Circle 1000
Republic 676
Star 500
ARBUTUS
Hollywood 500
BALTIMORE
Aldine 365
Ambassador 900
Apollo 850
Arcade 1000
Astor 499
Auditorium 1580
Aurora 390
Avalon 1073
Avenue 300
Avon 398
Belnord 1750
Booker T 400C1
Boulevard 800
Bridge 912
Broadway 800
Brooklyn 400
Cameo 412
Capitol 850
Carey 275
Casino 700
Centre 1000
Clover 500
Cluster 600
Columbia 560
DeLuxe 250
Diane 500
Dunbar 500
Earle 600
Echo 250
Edgewood 1170
Embassy 1250
Eureka 500
Europa 190
Forest Park 600
Ft. Holabird
Fremont 275
Fulton 500
Globe
Goldfield 600
Gwynn 600
Hampden 1060
Harford 500
Harlem 1500
Hippodrome 3000
Horn 600
Howard 250
Ideal 470
Idle Hour 300C1
Irving-ton 600
Keith's 2400
Lafayette 300
Leader 500
Lenox 375
Lexway 275
Linden 850
Lin wood 450
Little 300
Loew's Century . . . 3500
Loew's Valencia. . 1487C1
Lord Baltimore . . . .1000
Lord Calvert 600
Main 450
May fair 246
McHenry 800
Metropolitan 1500
Monroe 490
Nemo 400
New 1000
New Grand 1500
New Lincoln 600
Northway 500
Pacey's Garden .... 600
Palace 800
Palace CI
(W. Fayette)
Patterson 600
Park 400
Parkway 1000
Pennington 400
Pic 325
Plaza 312
Pimlico 999
Preston 372
Radio 600
Realart 276
Red Wing 700
Regent 1400
Rex 482
Rialto 600
Rio 400
Ritz 800
Rivoli 1200
Roosevelt 410
Roxy 1500
Royal 1500
Schanze 500
Senator 850
Stanley 3225
State 1600
Vilma 450
Wal brook 900
Waverly 750
West way 700
York 300
BELAIR
Arsonne 500
Belair 450C1
BERLIN
Globe 260
BETHESDA
Bathesda 700
Hiser 400
BISHOPVILLE
Ringlers 250C1
BOONESBORO
Stanley 268
BOWENS
Town Hall CI
BRUNSWICK
Imperial 580
CAMBRIDGE
Arcade 900
State 600
CAPITOL HEIGHTS
Capitol 175
CATONSVILLE
Alpha 500
CENTREVILLE
Opera House 400
CHESAPEAKE CITY
Rio 1016
CHESTERTOWN
Lyceum 400
CHURCHILL
Churchill 175
CRISFIELD
Lyric
New Arcade 350
CUMBERLAND
Embassy 700
Garden 450
Leader 400
Liberty 500
Maryland 900
Strand 1400
New 500
DEAL
Deal
DENTON
Dentonia 250
DUNDALK
Strand 400
EASTON
Avalon 500
Music Hall 250
ELKTON
New 400
ELLICOTT CITY
Earl 180
EMMETTSBURG
Gem 275
ESSEX
New Essex 300
FEDERALSBURG
Federal 700
FORT GEORGE
Meade
FORT HOWARD
War Dept
FORT HOYLE
War Dept
FORT WASHINGTON
War Dept CI
FREDERICK
Frederick 350
Opera House ....1000
Tivoli 1400
FRIENDS VILLE
Grand 250
FROSTBtRG
Lyric 450
Palace 600
GAITHERSBURG
Lyric 330
GLENBURNIE
Glen 300
Gov. Ritchey Open Air.Cl
GREEN BELT
Green Belt 500
GREENSBORO
New 262
HAGERSTOWN
Academy
Colonial 1000
Henry's 260
Maryland 1200
HAMPSTEAD
Central 250
HANCOCK
New 240
HAVRE DE GRACE
State 600
HUGHESVILLE
Hughesville 200
HURLOCK
Hurlock 450
HYATTSVILLE
Arcade 350
Hyattsville 800
INDIAN HEAD
Recreation Hall . .200
KITZMILLER
Alpine 225
LA PLATA
Town Hall 225
LONACONING
San Toy 700
LAUREL
Laurel 400
LEONARDTOWN
Duke 400
LUKE
Devon 400
MANCHESTER
Manchester 190
867
MARLBORO
Marlboro 50(>
MIDLAND
Opera House 350
MILLINGTON
Kent 200
MX. AIRY
Mt. Airy 190
MT. RAMOR
Cameo 500
MT. SAVAGE
Majestic 250
NORTH EAST
North East 450
OAKLAND
Maryland 500
OCEAN CITY
Capitol 350
Showell 400C1
Windsor 400C1
OVERLEA
Overlea 450
TIKESVILLE
Pikes 500
TOCOMOKO CITY
Marva 600
PORT DEPOSIT
Port 250
Tome 250
PRINCESS ANNE
Preston 400
QUEENSTOWN
Queen 330
REISTERTOWN
Montrose 500C1
New 500
Reistertown 300C1
RIDGLEY
Ridgley 300
ROCK HALL
Mechanics Hall .... 225
ROCKVILLE
Milo 425
ST. MICHEL*
Marada 200
SALISBURY
Arcade 950
New 450
Ulman's 600
Wicomico 500
SAVAGE
Baldwin 275
SILVER SPRINGS
Seco 500
Silver 980
SNOW HILL
Gem 350
SOLOMON'S
Evans 250
Parish Hall 200
SPARROWS PT.
Lyceum 500
STEVENSVILLE
Queen Ann 200
SYKESVILLE
New 150
TAKOMA
Takoma Missionary
College CI
TANEVTOWN
Shriner 250
THURMONT
State 300
TOWSON
Towson 530
UNION BRIDGE
Carlton 600
WESTMINSTER
Carroll 500
Opera House 500C1
State 450
WILLIAMSPORT
Port
Stanley 300C1
WOODSTOCK
Woodstock College .... CI
— MASSACHUSETTS =
443 Theaters: 431.050 Seats
Closed — 51 Theaters: 28,803 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 392 Theaters; 402,247 Seats
ADAMS
New Adams 609
Park 600C1
AGAWAM
Park Inn 250C1
ALLERTON
Bayside 500C1
ALLSTON
AUston 1138
Capitol 1T49
AMESBURY
Strand 850
AMHERST
Amherst 844
ANDOVER
Playhouse 694
ARLINGTON
Capital 1618
Regent 982
ATHOL
Capital 1200
York 1159
ATTLEBORO
Bates 1000
Columbia 850C1
Union 1400
AYER
Fort Devons
Playhouse 550
Strand 475
BALDWINS VILLE
Town Hall 350
BARRE
Town Hall 325
BEVERLY
Larcom 1300
Olympia
Strand 585
Ware 1200
BOSTON
Apollo 700
(Washing-ton St.)
Beacon 787
i Tremont St.)
Bijou 1021
(Washington St.)
Bowdoin Sq 1500
(Bowdoin St.)
Casino 1200
Cobb 700
(Washington St.)
Columbia 1800C1
(Washington St.)
Exeter St 1286
(Exeter St.)
Fenway 1301
l Massachusetts Ave.)
Fine Arts
Gaiety 1 300
(Washington St. I
Globe 1500
(Washington St.i
Howard 1003
I Howard St.)
Kenmore 650
Lancaster J 380
(Causeway)
Loew's Orpheunj . .3100
(Washington St.)
Loew's State 3700
i Massachusetts Ave.)
Lyric 607CI
Majestic 1 550
(Tremont St.)
Metropolitan 4330
I Tremont St.)
Modern 742
(Washington St.)
National 1200
(Tremont St.)
Normandie
Paramount 1797
(Washington St.)
Puritan 700
RKO Boston 3500
RKO Keith 2900
(Washington St.)
Repertory 1000
i Huntington Ave.)
Riallo 365
(Scollay Sq.)
Scollay Sq 2542
South Station
Terminal 500
Strand 800
I Huntington Ave.)
Stuart 458
(Washington St.)
Telepix Cinema
Trans-Lux 700
(Washington St.)
Tremont 1500
(Tremont St.)
Uptown 2000
(Huntington Ave.)
Washington St.
Olympia 2500
BRAINTREE
Braintree 665
BRANT ROCK
Brant Rock 500C1
BRIDGE WATER
Capitol 412
BRIGHTON
(Boston P.O.)
Egyptian 2054
BROCKTON
Brockton 1866
Colonial 800
Modern 850
Rialto 1000
Strand 1460
BROOKLINE
Brookline 1100
Coolidge Corner ...1200
BRYANT VILLE
Mayflower Grove.. 600C1
BUZZARDS BAT
Buzzards Bay 400
Capiiol 470C1
CAMBRIDGE
Central Square ...2121
Durrell Hall 600C1
Inman Sq 1100
Olympia 600
Porter 900
University 1980
CAMPELLO
Keith's 500
CANTON
Strand 572
CHARLESTOWN
(Boston P.O.)
Hollywood 1000
Thompson Sq 1000
CHATHAM
Chatham 540
CHELSEA
Broadway 1200
Chelsea 600
Olympia 1531
Strand 900
CHICOPEE
Playhouse 792C1
Rivoli 1260
Victoria 750
CHICOPEE FALLS
Wernick 1044
CLINTON
Strand 1100
COHASSETT
Town Hall 560C1
DALTON
Dalton 450
DANVERS
Orpheum 750
DEDHAM
Community 1200
DENNIS
Cape Cinema 317C1
DORCHESTER
Codman Sq 1932
Dorchester 800
Fields Corner .... 1598
Franklin Park . . . .1100
Hamilton 600
Liberty 880
Magnet 740
Morton 1960
Strand 1819
EAST BOSTON
Central Sq 1700
Gem 700
Orient Palace 800
Seville 1700
E. DOUGLAS
G.A.R. Hall 487
EASTHAMPTON
Majestic 843
868
E. MILTON
State 710
E. PEPPEKELL
Pepperell 500
E. WEYMOUTH
Jasen 400
EDGARTOWN
Playhouse 475
EVERETT
Capital 1800
Park 820
Rialto 750
FAIRHAVEN
Keith's 550
FALL RIVER
Academy 1600C1
Capital 1560
Durfee 2240
Empire 1898
Park 1644
Plaza 900
Royal 500
Strand 1564
FALMOUTH
Elizabeth 800
FAULKNER
Capital
FISHER VILLE
Fisher 300
FITCHBURG
Cumminss 800
Fitehbur? 1750
Lyric 800C1
Majestic 800C1
Shea's 800
State 1000C1
Strand 750
Universal 745
FORGE VILLAGE
Abbott Hall 450C1
FOXBORO
Orpheum 53 J
FRAMINGHAM
Gorman's 780
Hollis 800
St. Georg-e 1321
FRANKLIN
Morse 800
GARDNER
Orpheum 1132
Uptown 1000
GILBERTVILLE
Premier 320
GLOUCESTER
North Shore 1138
Strand 900
GT. HARRINGTON
Mahaiwe 895
GREENFIELD
Garden 1885
Lawler 1000
Victoria 832
HARWICHPORT
Modern 450
HAVERHILL
Colonial 1400
Lafayette 600
Paramount 1731
Strand 1400
HINGHAM
Lorinsr Hall 360
HOLLISTON
Town Hall CI
HOLYOKE
Bijou 1300
Globe 450
Holyoke 900
Majestic 1050
Strand 1175
Suffolk 980
Victory 2067
HUDSON
Hudson 880
HYANNIS
Center 600
Hyannis 1020C1
HYDE PARK
(Boston P.O.)
Fairmont 800
Hyde Park 760
INDIAN ORCHARD
Grand 690
IPSWICH
Strand 700
JAMAICA PLAIN
(Boston P.O.)
Jamaica 1958
Madison 420
LAWRENCE
Broadway 1500
Capital 900
Modern 1000
Palace 2000
Premier 500
Star 700
Strand 824
Victoria 750
Warner 2300
LEE
Park 700
LEOMINSTER
Metropolitan 1100
Plymouth 1000
Rialto 1116C1
LEXINGTON
Lexington 500
LOWELL
Capitol 1000
Crown 800
Gates 1410
Merrimac Sq 1635
Rialto 1000
RKO Keiths 1697
Royal 900
St. Joseph's Parish . . 800
Strand 1635
Tower 980
LUDLOW
Burr 699
LYNN
Auditorium 700
Capital 1300
Comique 725
Olympia 2762
Open-Air CI
Paramount 2329
Waldorf 1500
Warner 2600
MALDEN
Auditorium 1600C1
Granada 2200
Maplewood 660
Mystic 1200
Orpheum 800
Strand 1800
MANCHESTER
Horticultural Hall 426C1
MANSFIELD
Mansfield 600
MARBLEHEAD
Warwick 700
MARION
Tabor Academy CI
MARLBORO
Marlboro 1037
Modern 750
Princess 850C1
MATTAPAN
(Boston P.O.)
Mattapan 450
Oriental 2167
MAYNARD
Colonial 462
Maynard 462
Peoples 720
MEDFORD
Fellsway 750
Medford 1800
Square 1300
MELROSE
Melrose 800
MENDON
Nipmuck Park . . . 800C1
METHUEN
Merrimack Auto Park . CI
Methuen 750
MIDDLEBORO
Key 400
Middleboro 800
MILFORD
Garden Hall 500
Ideal 680
State 1402
MILLBURY
Town Hall 350
Paradise -698
MONSON
Capitoi 375
MONTELLO
Park 575
NANTASKET
Apollo 500C1
NANTUCKET
Dreamland 500C1
Yacht Club 500C1
NATICK
Colonial 1508
NEEDHAM
Paramount 1116
NEW BEDFORD
Allen 700
Bayl'es Sq 1000
Capital 1400
Casino 600
Empire 1700
New Bedford 1400
Olympia 2472
Orpheum 1200
Rialto 850
Royal 1000
State 1700
Strand 800
NEWBURYPORT
Premier 950
Strand 920
NEWTON
Paramount 1268
NORFOLK DOWNS
(Quincy P. O.)
Resent 800
NO. ABINGTON
Capitol 300
NO. ADAMS
Mohawk 1100
Paramount 1250
Richmond 740
NO. ATTLEBORO
Community 1396
NORTHBRIDGE
Pastime 300
NO. BROOKFIELD
Star 580
NO. CAMBRIDGE
Harvard 1200
NO. EASTON
(Brockton P.O.)
Easton 300
NORTHAMPTON
Academy 1000
Calvin 1710
Plaza 873
NORWOOD
Guild 600
Norwood 1200
Southern . . .360
OAK BLUFFS
Island 500
Sea Breeze 450C1
Strand 400C1
ONSET
New Onset 540
Temple 810C1
ORANGE
Town Hall 700
ORLEANS
Orleans 320
OSTERVILLE
Community 275C1
OXFORD
Town Hall 300
PALMER
Palmer 500
Strand 900C1
PEABODY
Strand 940
PINE POINT
(Spring-field P.O.)
Lvric 360C1
PITTSFIELD
Boy s Club
Capital 1350
Colonial 800
Kameo 900
Palace 1500
Strand 780
Tyler 652
Union Square 500
PLYMOUTH
Old Colony 979
Plymouth 485
PROVENCETOWN
Provencetown 550
QUINCY
Alhambra 1600
Quincy 1500
State 784
Strand 2000
QUINCY POINT
(Quincy P.O.)
Lincoln 734
RANDOLPH
Randolph 700
Stetson Hall 600
RAYNHAM
Ravnham Auto Theatre
CI
READING
Reading: 775
REVERE
Boulevard 1802
Revere 1750
ROCKLAND
Strand 873
ROCKPORT
Town Hall 350C1
ROSLINDALE
(Boston P.O.)
Bellevue 800
Rialto 800
ROXBURY
Criterion 740
Dudley 1950
Eg-leston Sq 1200
Humboldt 830
Ideal 600
Rivoli 1532
Roxbury 640
Shawmut 2095
Warren 1320
SALEM
Empire 888
Paramount 2187
Plaza 800
Rialto 400
SALISBURY BEACH
Salisbury Beach
Open Air CI
SAUGUS
Drive-In CI
State 600
SCITUATE
Scituate
Playhouse 775
SHELBURNE FALLS
Memorial 400
SHREWSBURY
Drive-In CI
SOMERVILLE
Ball Sq 1300
Broadway 1200
Capital 1736
Central 1200
Cross St. Orpheum.. 800
Davis Sq 700
Somerville 1100
Strand 900
Teele Sq 1000
SO. BARRE
Florence 250
SO. BOSTON
Broadway 1600
Strand 1500
SOUTHBRIDGE
Strand 1650
SO. WEYMOUTH
Cameo 650
SPENCER
Park 666
869
SPRINGFIELD
Arcade 1100
Art 1444
Bijou 900
Broadway 1852
Capital 2200
Court Square 1250
Fox Poll 2500
Garden 500
Jefferson 1036
Liberty 1000
Lyric 808C1
New Franklin .... 796C1
Paramount 1852
Phillips 1160
Spring- field
Boy's Club 600
Strand 746
STONEHAM
Stoneham 760
STOUGHTON
State 750
STURBBIDGE
Stm-bridge Ride In . . . CI
TAUNTON
Casino 500
Grand 1100
Park 1600
Strand 1000
THREE RIVERS
Idle Hour 500
TOWNSEND
Memorial Hall 325
TURNERFALL8
Shea's 700
UXBRIDGE
Bijou 450
VINEYARD HAVEN
Capawoek 213
WAKEFIELD
Princess 750
Wakefield 900
WALPOLE
Elite 440
WALTHAM
Central Sq 800
Embassy 2084
Waltham 000
WARE
Casino 750
WAREHAM
Warr 637
WATERTOWN
Coolidge 1200
E. M. Loew 500
WAVERLY
Strand 700
WEBSTER
Stale 98!)
WKLLESLEY
Community
Playhouse 499
WELLFLEET
Cnion 200C1
WESTBORO
Strand 750
WESTFIELD
Park 1070
Strand 1200
WEST LYNN
Uptown 600
WEST NEWTON
Newton 1200
W. SPRINGFIELD
Crown 386C1
Majestic 660
WEST WARREN
Grand 260
WEYMOUTH
Drive-In CI
Weymouth 678
WHITINSVILLE
Prospect (Port.) .... 750
Star 360
WHITMAN
Empire 700
WILLIAMSTOWN
Walden 530
WILLIMAN8ETT
Willow 760
WILMINGTON
Wilmington 450
WINCHENDON
Capital 560
WINCHESTER
Winchester 886
WIN! HKOP
State (Port.) 800
Winthrop (Port.) ...900
WOBURN
Strand 950
WOLLASTON
Wollaston 1300
WORCESTER
Capital 2000
Kamily 800
Fox Elm 2476
Fox Poli Palace. . .3228
Greendale 750
Majestic 300C1
Olyrnpia 1200
Park 740
Plaza
Plymouth 1500
Regent lOOOCl
Rialto 1250
Royal 760
St. Mary * Hall. . .800C1
Warner 1600
MICHIGAN
684 Theaters; 445,938 Seats
Closed — 60 Theaters; 23,706 Scats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 624 Theaters; 422,232 Seats
ADDISON
Maryland 190C1
ADRIAN
Croswell 1074
Family 423
ALBION
Albion 480
Boom 600
ALGONAC
Alronac 400
ALLEGAN
Regent 588
ALMA
Alma 336
Strand 919
ALPENA
Alpena
Lyric 400
Maltz 1200
AM ASA
Pioneer 200
ANN ARBOR
Majestic 1403
Michigan 1500
Ornheum 680
Whitney lOOOCl
Wuerth 1027
ATLANTA
Atlanta (Port.) . . . .250
All GRES
Au Gres 300
RAD AXE
Bad Axe 500
BALDWIN
Baldwin 290
BANGOR
Regent
Sun 275
BATTLE CREEK
Bijou Arcade 1053
Orpheum 260
Post 902
Regent 1300
Rex 240
Strand 584
War Dept CI
BAY CITY
Bay 776
('enter 636
Lafayette 600
Regent 1300
Temple 900C1
Tivoli 600
Victory 260
Washington 917
Wenonah
Westown 900
Woodside 300
BEAVERTON
Beaverton (Port. )... 202
BELDING
Empress 426
BELLEVILLE
Belleville 269
Martin 300C1
BELLEVUE
Strand 177
KENTON HARBOR
Bell lOOOCl
City 400
Lake 799
Liberty 1398
BERRIEN SPRINGS
Our 200
BESSEMER
Rex 350
RIG KAY
C.C.C. No. 10
BIG RAPIDS
Big Rapids 670
BIRMINGHAM
Birmingham 1500
BLISSFIELD
Bliss 230
Elvona 230C1
KOYNE CITY
Boyne 560
KRIDGEMAN
Bridgeman 438
BRIGHTON
Rialto CI
Washington 360
BKONSON
Coliseum 350
BROOKLYN
Star 200
BROWN CITY
Brown City 200C1
BRUCE CROSSING
Co-op Hall 150
BUCHANAN
Hollywood 400
CADILLAC
Center 400
Lyric 817
CALUMET
Calumet 930
Royal 295C1
CAPAC
Capac 230
Palace 190C1
CARLTON
Carlton 298C1
CARO
Strand 460
Temple 320
CARSON CITY
Lee 243
CA9ANOVIA
Dreamland 200C1
CASPIAN
State 250C1
CASS CITY
Cass 208
CASSOPOLIS
Gem 360
CEDAR SPRINGS
Kent 300
CENTER LINE
Motor City 400
CHARLEVOIX
Palace 658
CHARLOTTE
Bee 300
Eaton 473
CHATHAM
Chatham 200
CHEBOYGAN
Brown CI
Cheboygan 200
Kingston 1063
Ritz 500
Silver 225C1
CHELSEA
Princess 245C1
Sylvan 400
CHESANING
Crystal 240
870
CLARE
Ideal 390
CLINTON
Clinton 350
CLIO
Gem 300
COLDWATER
Crystal 220
Tibbits 722
COLOMA
Coloma 400
COLON
Avalon 240
COLUMBIA VILLE
Rex 200
CONSTANTINE
Park 267
COOPERSVTLLE
Century 300
CROSWELL
Maxine 586
CRYSTAL FALLS
Ejay 500
DAGGETT
Palace '. 200
DAVISON
Davison 200
DEARBORN
Alden 400
Calvin 1200
Circle
Fordson 350
Lowry School 285
Midway 600
DECATUR
Cozy 300
DECKER VILLE
Regent 200
Thumb 350
DETROIT
Adams 1770
(W. Adams St.)
Alamo 1073
(Charlevoix)
Alden
Alger 1100
(Warren Drive)
Alhambra 1472
(Woodward Ave.)
Ambassador 810
(John R. St.)
Arao 350
(Grand River)
Amsterdam 400
(Grand River)
Annex 1824
(Grand River)
Apollo 1000
(Third & Canfleld)
Arc ( Tireman ) 340
Arcade 430
(Hastings St.)
Arcadia 517
(Gratiot Ave.)
Astor 732
(Twelfth St.)
Atlas 900
Avalon 1972
(Linwood Ave.)
Bagley 400
(Baker Ave.)
Beacon 1325
(Grand River)
Beechwood 399
(W. Warren)
Belmont 350
(Woodward)
Beverly 1450
(Grand Ave.)
Bijou 314
(Monroe Ave.)
Blackstone 250C1
Woodward)
Blackstone No. 2..260C1
(2611 Woodward Ave.)
Booth 894
(E. Jefferson)
Boulevard 400
(Gratiot Ave.)
Broadway- Fenkell 700 Michigan ........4038
Capitol 3448 (Fenkell Ave.) (Bagley Ave.)
(Broadway) Fine Arts 572 Monroe dlJ
Brooklyn 491 ( Woodward Ave.) (Monroe Ave.)
(Michigan Ave) Fisher 297o Myrtle 780
Buchanan ° 796 (Grand Blvd. & Second) (Gladstone St.)
(Buchanan Ave.) Flamingo . . . . ..997 National ......... .980
Cameo 1500 (Seven Mile M.) (Monroe Ave.)
Campau 348 Forest ....592 New 1500
(Joseph Campau Ave.) (Woodward Ave.)
Capitol 996 Fox • ■ • • • v V ■ ■ 6600
(Verner Hy.) v (Woodward Ave.)
Carlton 850 Franklin ...... • • - .400
(Fenkell Ave.) „ (Gratiot)
Casino 500 Frontenac .... .... 834
(Six Mile Rd.) (Harper)
Castle 100O Garden . . . 903
(Hastings St.) m (Woodward Ave.)
Globe 8o3
(Grand River)
Granada 1465
(Warren A vs.)
Centur^ "."""""TV. . 1990 Grande ■ • ■ „■ " V 1837
(14th St.) „ (W-. Jefferson)
Chandler 400 Gramd Victory. ... .919
(Harper Ave.) „ (Grand River)
Chopin 400C1 Grant .... . . .... . .764
(Michigan Ave.) (Russell St.)
Cinderella 1897 Graystone ... ...395
(E. Jefferson) (Michigan Ave.)
Clay 400 Great Lakes 1800
(Clay Ave.')' ' (Grand River & Terry)
Coliseum '....480 Greenwood .380
(Hamilton Blvd.) (Hamilton Ave.)
Colonial 1566 Harmony 1000
(Mack Ave.)
Catherine 320
(Chene St.)
Center 346
(Woodward)
(Woodward Ave.)
Colony 800
(Mack Ave.)
Columbia 482
(Monroe Ave.)
Conant 937
(Conant Rd.)
Cooley 486
Courtesy 800
(W. Vernor Hy.)
Cozy
(Michigan Ave.)
Crane 394
(Harper Ave.)
Crystal 500
(Michigan Ave.)
Davison 329
(Davison Ave.)
Dawn 900
(Gratiot Ave.)
Delray 600
(W. Jefferson)
Delthe 1076
(Mack Ave.)
DeLuxe I486
(Kerchoval)
Dexter 1100
(Dexter Ave.)
Dix 384
(W. Vernor Hwy.)
Downtown 2900C1
(Adams Ave.)
Dox 300
(Livernois Ave.)
Drive-In 500C1
(7 Mile & Harper)
Dunbar 658C1
(Hasting St.)
East Detroit 700
(Gratiot)
East End 1050
(E. Jefferson)
East Side 650
(Gratiot Ave.)
Eastown 2500
(Harper & Van Dyke)
Echo 650
(Oakland Ave.)
Esquire 998
(E. Jefferson)
Family 930
(Monroe Ave.)
Harper 1945
(Harper)
Highland Park 600
(Woodward Ave.)
Hollywood 3436
(W. Fort St.)
Hoover 300
(Oregon Ave.)
Imperial 374
(Michigan Ave.)
Iris 881
(E. Grand Blvd.)
Irving 1025
(Fenkell Ave.)
Jefferson 376
(E. Jefferson)
King 400
(Chene St.)
Kramer 1732
(Michigan Ave.)
New Home 736
(Joseph Campau)
Nortown 940
(E. Seven Mile)
Norwest 1400
(Southfield & Grand)
Norwood 574
(Woodward Ave.)
Oakland 570
(Oakland Ave.)
Oakman 1213
(Oakman Blvd.)
Odeon 426
(Concord Ave.)
Oliver 325
(Mt. Elliott)
Oriole 2078
(Linwood Ave.)
Palace No. 2 397
(14th St.)
Palmer Park 1200
(Hamilton)
Park 676
(Davidson Ave.)
Pasadena 386
(Mack Ave.)
Perrein 350
(Chene St.)
Piccadilly 825
(Fenkell Ave.)
Plaza 801
(E. Jefferson)
President 465
(Mack Ave.)
Priscilla 474
(Mt. Elliott)
Rainbow 262
(Grand Rv.)
Ramona 2000
(Gratiot Ave.)
Redford 1236
I Lasher Rd. & Gr. River)
Regent 2253
( Woodward Ave.)
Rex 865
(W. Fort St.)
Lafayette 2500 Rnythm ! 1600C1
(Lafayette)
Lakewood 1270
(E. Jefferson)
Lancaster 1220
(W. Jefferson)
Lasky 998
(Joseph Campau)
Library 367C1
(Gratiot Ave.)
Lincoln Park 590
(W. Fort St.)
Lincoln 1850
(W. Fort)
Linwood
Rialto 1400
(Gratiot Ave.)
Rio 1400
(Vernier Highway)
Ritz 352
(5741 Chene St.)
Riviera 2800
( Gr. Blvd. & Joy Rd.)
Rivola 1000
(Cadillac Ave.)
Rogers 750
( W. Warren)
Roosevelt 1700
(Gratiot)
Rosedale 900
(Woodward)
LaSalle 1400 1200
(Linwood) (Woodward)
Loop 550 Rupert 285
(Michigan) (713 St. Aubin)
Lyric 225 Russell 1046
(Michigan) (Russell St.)
Savoy 370
(Chene St.)
Senate 1200
(Michigan Ave.)
Seville 600
Ma)eStl(Woodward, 1651 <*«! Grand River, ^
MaXi^MackAve:, -96° "T^tf^ " ^
Farnum 900 Mayfair 1200 Stanley 530
f Joseph Campau) (Woodward) (W. Warren)
Mack Uptown ....1550
(14407 Mack)
Madison 1976
( Witherel)
871
State 3000
(Woodward & Elizabeth)
Strand 1384
( Grand River)
Stratford 987
(V. Vernon)
Theatorium 386
Times Square 1400
(Michigan & Cass)
Tower 1440
(Grand River)
Town 440
(Grand River)
Tuxedo 1800
( Hamilton Ave.)
United Artists 2070
(Clifford & Bag-ley)
Varsity 1200
(Livernois St.)
Virginia 500
( Hamilton )
Vogrue 1458
(16928 Harper)
Warfield 376
(Hastings St.)
West End 800
( W. Warren)
Westown 2000
(Wyoming-)
White Star 360C1
(Joseph Campau)
Whittier 970
( E. Jefferson )
Willis 399
(Hastings)
Wolverine 504
(Michigan Ave.)
Woodward Grand. . . .900
(W. Grand Ave.)
Your 798
(E. Forest)
Zellah 385
(Moran St.)
DOWAGIAC
Century 800
DUNDEE
Dundee 330
DURAND
Durand 298
EAST JORDAN
Temple 350
EAST LANSING
State 839
EAST TAWAS
Family 450
EATON RAPIDS
Capitol 400
ECORSE
Ecorse 400
EDMORE
Coliseum 400
ELK RAPIDS
Community 200
ELKTON
Star 200
ESCANABA
Delft 650
Michigan 600
EVART
Lyric 350
EWEN
Happy Hour 150
EXCELSIOR SPRINGS
Casino
FENNVILLE
Our 225
FENTON
Rowena 300
FERNDALE
Ferndale 400
Radio City 1218
FLAT ROCK
Flat Rock 500
FLINT
Burton 650
Capitol 2200
Columbia 465
Delia 1200
Dixie 350
Family 350
Flint 532
Garden 1000
Gem 300
Lincoln 350
Michigan 1500
Palace 1430
Regent 1600
Rialto 650
Richard 486
Ritz 1250
Roxy 800
Star 400
State 1000
Strand 940
FLUSHING
Dawn 284
FT. WAYNE
War Dept CI
FRANKFORT
Garden 592
FREEMONT
New 300
Oz 468
GARDEN CITY
Rex
Shafer 600
GAYLORD
Gay lord 450
GLADSTONE
Rialto 500
GLADWIN
Star 275
GLENNIE
Glennie (Port.)
GRAND HAVEN
Crescent 500C1
Grand 1900
Robinhood 500
GRAND LEDGE
Sun 400
GRAND RAPIDS
Alcazar
Burton 650
Center 1177
Creston 500
E. Grand Rapids H.S.
1400
Eastown 914
Family 600
Four Star 800
Franklin 520
Fulton 402
Galewood 400
Keith's 1800
Kent 1000
Liberty 742
Madison 500
Majestic 1250
Our 700
Park 400
Regent 1700
Rialto 300
Roosevelt 450
Roxy 450
Royal 602
Savoy 900
Southlawn 498
State 490
Stocking 614
Uptown 450
Vogue
Wealthy 578
GRANT
Grant 200C1
GRAYLING
Rialto 500
GREENVILLE
Gibson 310
Silver Family 545
GROSSE PT. FARMS
Punch & Judy 600
GWINN
Gwinn
HAMTRAMCK
Martha Washington 1000
Pastime 385
HANCOCK
Kerredge 826
Orpheum 511
HARBOR BEACH
Community 675
HARBOR SPRINGS
Lyric 600C1
HARRIS
Harris CI
HARRISON
Community .(Port.) 225
HARRISVILLE
Harris 280
HART
Hart 250
HARTFORD
Heart 280
HASTINGS
Barry 300
Strand 428
HAZEL PARK
Hazel Park 550
Oakdale 750
HERMANSVILLE
Doris (Port.) 298
HESPERIA
Star 200
HIGHLAND PARK
RKO Uptown 2858
Liberty School 200
HILLSDALE
Alhambra 230
Dawn 728
HOLLAND
Colonial 732
Holland 706
HOLLY
Holly 278
Liberty
HOMER
Majestic 210
HOUGHTON LAKE
Houghton Lake (Port.).
HOWARD CITY
Roxy 240
HOWELL
Howell 500
HUDSON
Hudson 250
IMLAY CITY
DeLux 440
IONIA
Ionia 1026
IRON MOUNTAIN
Braumart 1000
Colonial
IRON RIVER
Delft 600
IRONWOOD
Ironwood 1051
Morg-an 500
Rex 726
ISHPEMING
Butler 700
Ishpeming 862
ITHACA
Ideal 250
JACKSON
Bon Ton 240
Capitol 1100
Colonial 250
Family 822
Majestic 1703C1
Michigan 2000
Reg-ent 1000
Rex 730
JONES VILLE
Civic 400
KALAMAZOO
Capitol 1090
Fuller 1007
Grand 190C1
Michigan 600
New 250
Orpheum 302
State 2000
Uptown 720
KENT CITY
Kent 200C1
KINDE
Family 150C1
LAINGSBURG
Laingsburg-
LAKE LINDEN
Little Gem 300
LAKE ODESSA
Lake 218
LAKE ORION
State 360
LAKE VIEW
Lake 250
L'ANSK
New Mazda 450
LANSING
Capitol 750
Garden 350
Gladmer 1500
Lansing 750
North Town 800
Orpheum 443
Plaza 600
Strand 1825
LAPEER
Lyric 530
LARIUM
Peoples 496
LAWTON
Lawton (Port.) 210
Montford 220C1
LINCOLN
Community (Port.) . .250
LITCHFIELD
Liberty 400C1
LOWELL
New Strand 514
LUDINGTON
Lyric 895
MACKINAC ISLAND
Orpheum 280C1
Temple CI
MANCELONA
Oswego 250
MANCHESTER
Manchester 188
MANISTEE
Cedar 300
Lyric 635
Vogue 900
MANISTIQUE
Gero 700
MAPLE RAPIDS
Elmac 250C1
MARENSCO
C. C. C. No. 9
MARINE CITY
Mariner 600
MARION
Sun 350
MARLETTE
Center 250
MARQUETTE
Delft 1100
Nordic
872
SPARTA
Our 331
MARSHALL ONTONAGON" ROMEO SOUTH LYONS
Bogar 500 Rex GOO Juliet 300 Lyons 200
Garden 490 OSCODA P»la« 226
MASON Iosco 200 K°meo 3.55 gtar 240
Fox 400 OTSEGO ROMULUS
MAYVILLE Otsego 3!)6 Family 305C1
Palace 198 Ovid rowvii I P
MENOMINEE State 250 RoM^EVI,'LI5 . . 682 SPRINGFORT
Lloyd's 824 OWOSSO Strand 150C1
MPRiri Capitol 1200 ROYAL OAK a twd » rrr- a
M«riU MERILL 208 Center 480 Royal Oak 2000 D . STAMBAUGH
Strand 603C1 Washington 1148 Perfect 400
MIDDLEVILLE mFnRn ST4NDISH
Arcade 235 _ . , OXFORD RUDYARD - STANDIS.H
Oxford 340 RiuH-nrri °ur 1278
MIDLAND Kudyard Temple 245
Frolic 708 PAINESDALE SAGIWAW
Mecca 375 Opera House 30C Center ........ 600 . STANTON"
MILAN PAW PAW Court 600 SUn
Milan 350 strand 380 De Luxe 400 STEPHENSON
MILFORD Dreamland 300 Tivoli 350
Milford 2<>n PENTVVATER Franklin 1425
„ "l ' ' " " " 00 Pentwater 350 Gem 350 STOCKBRIDGE
MILLINGTON Janes 500 Avon 200
C™iM 274 PETERSBURG Mapr V..354C1 STURCIS
MIO Garde" 300 Marr 650 STURGIS
Mio (Port.) PETOSKEY (Gratiot St.) l40
MONROE Hollywood 400 Mecca 798 :,lrana °*u
Dixie 480 Palace 347 Michigan 1230 TAWAS CITY
Familv 1050 TemPle 5~5 Northside 350 Rivoli 350
Majestic 500 PICKFORD Paloma 260 tfi i m^fii
Monroe 1200 Grand 300 Senate 250 TECUMSEH
Qtatp Strand 400
MORENCI PIGEON Temple sTofi
R- 248 Gem 283 SLton " ! ! ! ! . ! 'sOfi Kiveria™0^ 190C.
MT. CLEMENS PINCONNING Wolverine 800 Rlverla 190U
Jewel 900 State 230 gT CHARLES THREE OAKS
Macomb 1634 PLAINWELL R0xv ' ' ^40 Lee's 300
Selfridge Field 2507 Sun "50 1_ ' 11""" ' '
. i -> ST. CLAIRE THREE RIVERS
«< MT. MORRIS. PLYMOUTH St. Claire 324 Rialto 406
Mt MomS 300 P * A 605 ST. CLAIRE SHORES Riveria 702
MT. PLEASANT PONTIAC Lakeview 400 TRAVERSE CITY
Broadway 800 Ea?le 1000 Shores 300 Lyric 1033
Ward 900 Oakland 1500 ST. IGNACE Trabay 700
MUNSING Orpheum 1200 St. Ignace 500 TRENTON
Delft 500 State 1300 gT JOHN8 Trenton 600
MUSKEGON Strand 1175 c]inton / 60Q TROUT CREEK
Majestic PORT AUSTIN Trjs 450C1 Trout Creek .(Port.) 150
Michigan if.74 Broadway ST. JOSEPH UNION CITY
2" ", PORT HURON Caldwell 823 Broadway Strand ..300
Recent !J00 Desmond 1320 Cozy 380
Ritz 500 Familv 568 UNION VILLE
State 1000 Grand Riviera ' . . . . [476 „ ST. LOUIS Radio 240C1
MUSKEGON HEIGHTS Griswold 350 <*em *J0 UTICA
Strand 850 Majestic 1375 SALINE Capitol 300
Pinegrove 400 Saline 250 VASSAR
Ritz 400 SAND LAKE Vassar 486
PORTLAND Lake 300C1 VICKSBURG
NASH* ILLE Sun 200 SANDUSKY Sun 325
star PRESCOTT Sanilac 400 VULCAN
NEGUANEE Prescott (Port.) SAUGATUCK Star 250C1
vir.v»v. « QUINCY Big Pavillion . . . .400C1 WAKEFIELD
\- no WJ5WAI"*U our 16;> SAULT STE. MARIE Wakefield 763
aU6J RAMSEY Soo 1200 VV4TERVLEIT
NEW B ALTIMORE victor 400 Temple 500 Ritz . . .400
READING SAWYER WAYLAND
NAHMA
Nabma Club . .
Family 200C1
New 180
Roosevelt "30C1 Readin" 200 Sawyer 300C1 Wayland 250
REED CITY SCOTTVILLE WAYNE
Reed 350 Star 254 Wayne 800
NEW BUFFALO
Buffalo 200C1
NEWBERRY REPUBLIC SEBEWAING WESX BRANCH
n Republic 260 Lincoln 200 Midstate 304
stat. .' 400 Richmond shelby Whitehall
MI ES Majestic 200 Shelby 249 Plavnouse 412
Ready 1000 RIDGWAY SHEPHERD WILLIAMSTOWN
Riveria 933 New 200 Shepherd (Port.) . . 240C1 Sun 16f>
Strand CI RIVER ROUGE SHERIDAN WYANDOTTE
NORTH BRANCH Visger 300 Gould 280C1 Majestic 976
Strand 290 ROCHESTER SOO ST. MARIE Rialto 600
NORTHVILLES Avon 336 Fort Brady CI Wyandotte 1420
P. & A 700 ROCKFORD SIDNAW YALE
NORWAY Star 360 Odd Fellows 150 Yale 230
Rialto 400 ROGERS CITY SOUTH HAVEN YPSILANTI
ONAWAY Rogers 400 Center 438 Martha Washington . 800
9tate 300 Strand 285CI Model 460 Wuerth 1399
873
New
-MINNESOTA-
544 Theaters; 233,715 Seats
Closed — 53 Theaters; 14,563 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 491 Theaters; 219,152 Seats
ADA
BLUE EARTH
COLD SPRINGS
EVELETH
316
Avalon
300
400
Grant
600
ADAMS
Sandon
600
COLERAINE
Regent
400
Capitol 225C1
BOVEY
275
Roxy
350
EXCELSIOR
ADRIAN
Star
375
200
BOYD
COLIMBIA HEIGHTS
FAIRFAX
Boyd
CI
Heights
New Topic
350
AITKEN
BRAHAM
COMFREY
FAIRMONT
Rialto
300
Park
350
New Deal 9nnri
800
AKELY
BRAINERD
COOK
Community . . . (Port.) CI
Brainerd
1000
Comet
200
FARIBAULT
ALBANY
500
COTTONWOOD
Lido
536
Alo
200
Paramount
1000
Cozy
.190
Paradise
600
ALBERT LEA
BRECKENRIDGE
CROOKSTON
FARMINGTON
Broadway
1000
New Ridffe
686
900
250
Rivoli
400
BRICELYN
400
FELTON
ALDEN
240
Royal
240
Felton Hall
.200
BROOKLYN-HIBBING
CROSBY
FERGUS FALLS
ALEXANDRIA
Astor
250
Peoples
300
400
750
BROOTEN
CURRIE
700
State
650
Avalnn . . . .
200
Rex
FERTILE
ANNANDALE
BROWNS VALLEY
DASSELL
Fox
200
250
Roxy
200
Lakeland
200
FLOODWOOD
ANOKA
BROWNTON
DAWSON
Floodwood
200
Green
464
Auditorium
150C1
Grand
300
FOLEY
APPLETON
BUFFALO
DEER RIVER
Foley
250
300
Strand
200
Lyceum
300
FOREST LAKE
ARGYLE
BUFFALO LAKE
DELANO
Forest
300
200
150C1
200
i
FT. SNELLING
ARLINGTON
BUHL
DETROIT LAKE!
Ft. Snelling-
200
Community
250
Buhl
250
640
FOSSTON
ATWATEB
CALEDONIA
State 396C1
250
Lyric
229
New State
236
DEXTER
FRANKLIN
AURORA
CALUMET
Dexter 150C1
Franklin
CI
200
Calumet
245
DULUTH
FRAZEE
AUSTIN
CAMBRIDGE
Doric
465
650
250
Fl'LDA
Eag-le
233
CANBY
850
Fulda
220
910
Lake
300
GAYLORD
State
480
"Vpw Panhv - . _ . .
600
400
200
BADGER
CANNON FALLS
1283
GILBERT
Community
233
800
Lyceum
300
BAGLEY
CARLTON
Star
400
GLENCOE
Pic
200
Park
200
Strand
507
300
BALATON
CASS LAKE
West
400
Oriel
700
325
CCC Unit No. 8
CI
EAGLE BEND
GLENWOOD
BARNESVILLE
Lyric
400
Eas-le
200
Bijou
300
CHASKA
EAST GRAND FORKS
GONVICK
BATTLE LAKE
Rex
300
State
500
Gonvick
200
Roxy
450
CHATFIELD
EDEN VALLEY
GOODHUE
BAIJDETTE
360
Eden
250
210
Grand
200
CHISHOLM
EDINA
GRACEVILLE
RET.I.E PT.AINE
Range
350
800
300
State
236
Time
312
ELBOW LAKE
GRAND MARAIS
BEMIDJI
CLARA CITY
Crystal
290
CCC Unit No. 1
CI
754
Tholen
200
ELGIN
Wie-wam
9.9*.
Chief
400
CLARKFIELD
Elgin
240
GRAND MEADOWS
EIco
400
Roxy
200C1
ELK RIVER
Grand
250
BENSON
CLARISSA
Elk
250
GRAND RAPIDS
400
Times
CI
ELLSWORTH
400
BERTHA
CLEARBROOK
Ona
250
Rialto
450
200
Roxy
200
ELMORE
GRANITE FALLS
BIG LAKE
CLINTON
280
500
Clinton
200C1
ELY
300
BIRD ISLAND
CLITHERALL
Ely
750
GREENBUSH
238
180
New State
500
Greenbush
200
BIWABIK
CLOQUET
Opera House
300
GULLEY
200
500
ERSKINE
Gulley
200
BLACK DCCK
Leb
575
200
HALLOCK
T.vrenm
200
Little Club
300C1
Roxy
230
260
BLOOMING PRAIRIE
COKATO
EVANSVILLE
HALM A
Rex
250
Cecil e
250
Evansville
CI
Trianon
300
874
HALSTAD
Halstead 200
HANCOCK
Time 200
HARDWICK
Gem CI
HARMONY
Jem 325
HASTINGS
Riviera 600
State 385C1
HAWLEY
Garrick 270
HAYFIELD
Roxy 326
HECTOR
Palace 200
HENDRICKS
Lake 250
HENNING
Rex 260
HERMAN
Grand 250
HERON LAKE
Lake 250
HEWITT
Hewitt 150
HIBRING
CCC Unit No. 5 CI
Garden 422
Homer 400
New Victory 350C1
State 860
HILL CITY
Gem 516
HILLMAN
Hillman 200C1
HINCKLEY
CCC Unit No. 7 CI
Roxy 200
HOFFMAN
Movie
HOLDINGFORD
Scenic 200
HOPKINS
Royal 400
HOUSTON
Lyric 240
HOWARD LAKE
Triangle 250
HUTCHINSON
Rex 350
State 800
INTERNATIONAL
FALLS
Border 480
Falls 575
Grand 750
IRONTON
Ironton 416
ISLE
Isle 200
IVANHOE
Gem 200
JACKSON
State 500
JANESVILLE
Star 200
JASPER
Happy Hours 350
JEFFERS
Cozy 210
JORDAN
Jordan
KARLSTAD
Karlstad 160
KASSON
State 427
KEEWATIN
Itasca
.250 Ritz
KELLIHER
Pastime 200
KENNEDY
Kennedy 200
KENYON
Thune
Time 300
KER KOVEN
MAPLETON
MARSHALL
.220
Roxy 360
State 550
MAYNARD
Pavillion 275
MEADOWLANDS
Meadowlands 250
Dreamland
MELROSE
Okay . .". . "'. 150C1 Melrose 600
MENAHGA
LAKE BENTON
Majestic 250
LAKE BRONSON
Lake 208
LAKE CITY
Grand 300
LAKE CRYSTAL
Crystal 250
LAKEFIELD
Lyric 200
LAKE PARK
Star 175
LAKEVILLE
State 250
LAMBERTON
Star 200
LANCASTER
Hub 166
LANESBORO
State 300
LE CENTER
Lyric 240
LEROY
Tivoli 250
LeSUER
LeSuer 410
LEWISTON
Comet 185
LINDSTROM
Princess 300
LITCHFIELD
Hollywood 600 Empress
Unique 300
LITTLE FALLS
Palls 589
Menahga 200
MILACA
Casino 260
MINNEAPOLIS
Agate 400
(E. Franklin Ave.)
Alhambra 600
(Penn Ave.)
Alvin CI
American 600
(E. Lake St.)
Aster 830
(Hennepin Ave.)
Avalon 800
(Bloomington & Lake)
Bijou 800
(Washington Ave.)
Boulevard 1000
(Lyndale Ave.)
Broadway 550
( W. Broadway)
Bryn Wood 650
Camden 350
(Washington Ave.)
Campus 350
Century 1600
(S. Seventh St.)
Chateau 600
(Fourth Ave.)
Crystal 350
( Hennepin Ave.)
East Lake 500
(E. Lake St.)
Ei Lago 500
(E. Lake St.)
450
(W. Broadway)
Falls 300
(Minnehaha Ave.)
Lowell Franklin
.900
Ripley 350
LITTLE FORK
Little Fork 200C1
LONG PRAIRIE
Cozy
LONGVILLE
Longville 200C1
LUCAN
(E. Franklin Ave.)
Gopher 1155
Granada 732
(Hennepin Ave.)
Heights 500
.350 Hollywood 950
Homewood 900
(Plymouth Ave.)
lone
Home .."T7'.'."...180C1 Lake •• ; • ■ -600
(E. Lake St.)
Palace
Pix . .
Cozy
LaSalle 500
(Nicollet Ave.)
Leola 597
McINTOSH (34th Ave.)
.336 Loop 400
Grand 336 Loring 1160
MABEL
Castle 200
New Opera House. . .276
MADELIA
Madelia 200 LVra
MADISON
Grand 320
(Nicollet Ave.)
Lyceum 2200C1
(S. 11th St.)
Lyndale 500
(Lyndale Ave.)
MAHNOMEN
.400C1
(Washington Ave.)
Lyric 1126
(Hennepin Ave.)
Rainbow 300 Metro . . ......... .400
(27th Ave.)
MANKATO
Grand 1028
Minnesota 4024
(Ninth & LaSalle)
state ™2 New Arion 942
Tlme 347 (Central St.)
MAPLE LAKE Nile 1000
Wright 300 (23rd Ave.)
'875
Nokomis 550
( Chicago Ave.)
Northtown 483
(Emerson Ave., N.)
Orpheum 2600
Palace 1887
(Hennepin Ave.)
Pantages ....... .1600
(Hennepin Ave.)
Paradise 500
(W. Broadway)
Park 400
(S. 10th St.)
Parkway 500
(Chicago Ave.)
Princess 890
(N. E. 4th St.)
Rialto 650
(E. Lake St.)
Ritz ....400
Roxy 350
Savoy 350
(Hennepin Ave.)
Seventh St 2000
(S. 7th St.)
State 2290
(Hennepin Ave.)
Stockholm 320
(Washington Ave.)
Time 290
Uptown 1160
(Hennepin Ave.)
Varsity 700
(S. E. 4th St.)
Vogue 500
(West Lake St.)
World 300
(N. Seventh St.)
MINNEOTA
Joy 694
MONTEVIDEO
Hollywood 700
Monte 500
MONTGOMERY
Monty 400
MONTICELLO
Lincoln 252
MOORHEAD
Moorhead 600
MOOSE LAKE
Lake 325
MORA
Mora 300
MORGA
Browning 300C1
MORNINGSIDE
West Gate 600
MORGAN PARK
Club House 300C1
MORRIS
Strand 450
MOUND
Mound 375
MOUNTAIN LAKE
State 300
NASHWAUK
Grand 385
NEW DULUTH
State 150
NEW PRAGUE
Granada 300
NEW RICHLAND
Faust 300
NEW ULM
Lyric 500
New Ulm 500
Time 400
Turner Hall 600
NEW YORK MILLS
Liberty 360
NIMROD
Nimrod CI
NORTH BRANCH
Family 275
NORTHFIELD
Grand 050
West 500
NO. MANKATO
Urban 500
NORTHOME
CCC Unit No. 4 CI
Royal 300
NORTH ST. PAUL
Rialto 400
NORWOOD
Norwood 342
OKLEE
Oklee 250
OLIVIA
New State 350
ONAMIA
Arrowhead 200
ORTONVILLE
Orpheum 500
OSAKIS
Empress 250
OSLO
Roxy 200
OSSEO
Osseo 250
OUTING
CCC Camp CI
OWATONNA
Roxy 650C1
State 600
Tonna 500
PARK RAPIDS
Park 679
Royal 350
CCC Unit No. 6 CI
PARKERS PRAIRIE
Farrow 376
PAYNESVILLE
Rialto 300
PELICAN RAPIDS
Park 300
PERHAM
Comet 250
Lux 350
PIERZ
Star 300
PINE CITY
Family 400
PINE ISLAND
Pine 275
PINE RIVER
Marlow 200
PIPESTONE
Indian School
Orpheum 600
PLAINVIEW
Gem 200
PRESTON
Strand 205
PRINCETON
Strand 400
PRIOR LAKE
Gem 329C1
PROCTER
Orpheum 300
RAYMOND
Opera House 250C1
REDBY
Lyceum 150C1
RED LAKE FALLS
State 200
RED WING
Auditorium 650
Chief 650
Metro 550
REDWOOD FALLS
Falls 600
Redwood 500
REM EI
Remei 150
RENVILLE
Revilla 225
ROBBINSDALE
Robbin 300
ROCHESTER
Chateau Dodge ...1507
Empress 800
Lawler 700
Time 831
ROSEAU
Princess 350
Grand 200
Roxy 200
KOTHSAY
Grand 200
ROYALTON
Palace 350C1
RUSH CITY
Aladdin 300
RUSHFORD
Royal 300
SACRED HEART
Roxy 200C1
ST. CLOUD
Eastman 850
Grand 769
Miner 874C1
Paramount 1570
Roxy 874C1
State Reformatory 500
Vet. Hospital 600
ST. CHARLES
Rialto 250
ST. JAMES
Princess 450
ST. LOUIS PARK
Park 1000
ST. PAUL
Arcade 400
(Arcade St.)
Astor 1000
Beaux Arts 300
(Selby Ave.)
Bluebird 300
(Rice St.)
Capitol 400
(Payne Ave.)
Dale 700
(Dale & Selby Ave.)
DeLuxe 452
(Maria Ave.)
Faust 400
(Dale & University)
Garden 450
(W. Seventh St.)
Garrick 500
(8th & St. Peter)
Gem 485
(W. 7th St.)
Grandview 050
( Grand & Fairview 1
Hamline 500
(University Ave.)
Highland 997
Hollywood 350
Lyceum 1486
(Wabash Ave.)
Metropolitan 700C1
Midtown 500
Mohawk 600
(Smith Ave.)
Mounds 500
( Hastings Ave.)
New Como 300C1
New Ray 350
(Fairfield Ave.)
New State 600
(E. Seventh St.)
New Strand 750
( Wabasha Ave. )
Orpheum-Palace . . . 1400
(7th & Wabasha)
Oxford 335
Paramount 2362
( Hamm Bldg.)
Park 854
(Selby & Snelling)
Radio 600
(E. Seventh)
Randolph 900
Riviera 1300
(Wabasha)
Roxy 400
St. Claire 838
(St. Claire)
Tower 1070
(Wabasha)
Uptown 1226
(Grand & Oxford)
World 800
(Wabasha)
ST. PETER
Ludcke 500C1
State 700
SANBORN
Sanborn 250
SANDSTONE
Vogue 250
SAUK CENTER
Main Street 553
Oxford 400
SAUK RAPIDS
Rapids 400
State 350
SEBEKA
Sebeka (Port.) 150
SHAKOPEE
Shakopee 570
SHELLY
Auditorium 150
SHERBURN
Sherburn 250
SLAYTON
Murray 250
SLEEPY EYE
Pix 400
SPRINGFIELD
State 400
SPRING GROVE
Opera House 250
Ristey 227
SPRING VALLEY
State 450
Torium CI
STAPLES
New Staples 350
STARBUCK
Starbuck 232
STEPHEN
Idle Hour 200
STEWART
Stewart 190
STEWARTVILLE
Lake 240
STILLWATER
Auditorium 600
Majestic 400
State Prison 500
STRANDQUIST
Royal 200
THIEF RIVER FALLS
Avalon 400
Falls 750
Lyceum 300C1
Opera House CI
TOFTE
CCC Unit No. 2 CI
TOWER
Rex 300
TRACEY
New CI
O'Brien 400
Tracey 262
TRUMAN
Rialto 200
TWIN VALLEY
Cozy 200
Valley 200
TWO HARBORS
Harbor 600
State 400
TYLER
Scenic 350
ULEN
Ulen (Port.) 200
VERNDALE
Verndale 200
VIRGINIA
Granada 500
Maco 749
State 562
WABASHA
Princess 350
W.MONIA
New Conia 200
WADENA
Cozy 400
WALKER
State 250
State Sanitarium ...500
WARREN
Strand .325
WARROAD
Fox 250
WASECA
Park 300
State 476
WATERTOWN
River 200
WATER VILLE
Gem 400
WATKINS
May
WAVERLY
Waverly 290
WAYZATA
Wayzata 250
WELLS
State 365
WESTBROOK
Westbrook 200
WEST CONCORD
Concord 300
W. ST. PAUL
West 1000
WHEATON
Gem 275
WHITE BEAR
Avalon 500
White Bear 600
WHITE EARTH
Chippewa 130
White Earth 130
WILLMAK
New Willmar ....1000
State 400
WILLOW RIVER
Willow River 250C1
WINDOM
State 500
WINGER
Winger Hall CI
WINNEBAGO
Roxy 300
WINONA
Avon 368
Broadway 500
State 1156
West End 400
Winona 922
WINSTED
Winsted 350
WINTHROP
Sibley 200
WOLBERTON
Meyer 200
WORTHINGTON
Grand 500
State 700
ZUMBROTA
State 400
876
-MISSISSIPPI-
202 Theaters; 82,553 Seats
Closed — 9 Theaters; 3,549 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 193 Theaters; 79,004 Seats
ABERDEEN CRENSHAW Buck 250 NEW ALBANY
Elkin 800 Ritz 300 Capitol 280 Ritz 440
Ritz CROSBY Century 900 Royal " "4ro
ACKERMAN Crosby 350 Majestic 980 NEWTON "
Ackerman 400 CRYSTAL SPRINGS Paramount 700 Roxy oo0
AMORY Crystal 426 State 397 OCEAN SPRINGS
Strand 400 Queen KOSCIUSKO Illing-s %r;n
Varsity 446 DECATUR Amusu 400 OKOLONA
BALDWIN Rex 200 Strand 400 Oklolona oqq
Baldwin 275 DE KALB LAUREL OXFORD"
Lyric 197 Rex 250 Arabian 1200 Lyric 4nn
BATESVILLE DREW Jean 600 Ritz " 700
Batesville 325 Globe 400 Lincoln 250 University li>nnri
BAY ST. LOUIS DURANT Ritz 500 PASCAGOULA
A. & G 600 Strand 400 Royal (Port.) Ritz 4fift
BAY SPRINGS Strand 200C1 Strand 900 PASS CHRISTIATV
Lyric 350 ECTU LELAND Avalon
BELZONI O K 105 Rex PHILADELPHIA
Crescent 386 ELECTRIC MILLS Temple 480 Strand qno
Harlem 300 Alexander 400C1 LEXINGTON PICAYUNE
Strand 394 ELLISVILLE Star 350 Dixie .. roi
BENOIT Varsity 200 Strand 350 Ritz
.396
P. T. A 100 EUROPA LOUISVILLE PONTOTOC
BILOXI Europa 350 Strand 350 Joy or,,
Buck 350 FAYETTE LUCEDALE POPLARVILLE
Saengrer 1300 Fayette 176 Lucedale .... (Port.) 253 Strand ' -toe,
BLUE MOUNTAIN FOREST LUMBERTON PORT GIBSON
College 876 Palace 350 Ladner 250 Trace -j^O
Von 500 FULTON Royal 200 PRENTISS
BOONEVILLE Dixie 108 Royal Portable Theaters Ritz . oB0
New 475 GLOSTER MABEN PURVIS "
Princess 325 Gloster 450 Country Show 300 Lamar ?on
BROOKHAVEN GREENVILLE MACON RALEIGH "
Arcade 600 Delta 350 Dreamland 400 Royal (p . ,
Haven 326 Harlem 315 MAGEE " QUITMAN
BRUCE Lincoln 432 Magee 300 Majestc 400
Bruce 350 Paramount 1000 MAGNOLIA RICHTOn"
BUDE GREENWOOD Pike 199 Richton 200
Amusu 250 Dixie 500 MARKS RIPLEY "
CALHOUN CITY Lyric 500 Folly 196 Ripley n
City 350 Paramount 882 MC COMB Strand 3"?o
CANTON GRENADA Lyric 150 ROLLING FORK
Canton 450 Gem 275 Palace 300 Joy qoo
Harlem 200 Grenada 650 State 1100 Palace "hr
CARTHAGE GULFPORT MENDENHALL ROSEDALE
Fox 300 Anderson 600 Star 300 Rosedale 400
CENTERVILLE Paramount 700 MERIDIAN Talisman -too
Picto 195 HATTIESBURG Alberta 250 RULEVILLE
CHARLESTON Buck 395C1 Star 350 Delta 425
Superba 600 Dixie 300 Strand 750 SANITORIUM '
CLARKSDALE Lomo 600 Temple 1500 Sanitorium 4QR
Delta 400 Royal 399 MIZE SAUDIS " "
Globe 600C1 Saengrer 800 Royal (Port.) Tower 4R0
Paramount 900 HAZELHURST MONTICELLO srivATftRiV
Savoy 320 Queen 400 Monticello 200 oinrH ->r„.
CLEVELAND HOLLANDALE School House 396
Ellis 775 Roosevelt 225 MOREHEAD SHANNON
Regent 515 HOLLY SPRINGS Strand 325 •Toy
COFFEYVILLE Holly 330 MORTON SHAW
New 240 HOUSTON Morton 250 Globe 300
COLLINS Houston 350 MOSS POINT
SHELBY
Rex 250 INDIANOLA Joy 250 Shelby ion.
T)ivip TOO }uu
COLUMBIA £™| ^ MOUNT OLIVE STARKVILLE
Columbia 500 Rp?pn, ; ; ; ; ; • ; ; ; ; Palace 249 Rex 500.
Marlon b80 ITTA BENA NATCHEZ s,ate 643
COLUMBUS Strand Buck CI STONEWALL
Princess 800 IUKA Grand 1100 Palace 517
Varsity 700 Majestic 250 Ritz 500 Stonewell .......
CORINTH JACKSON Star 600
Coliseum 1000 Alamo 600 NETTLETON
TAYLORS VILLE
nixie 145
Pickwick 500 Booker T 301 Joy 200 Royal ".'(Port)
TCHULA TYLERTOWN WALNUT WINONA
Tchula 180 Avenue 275 Hinz 300 Maxie CI
TUNICA TJNION WATER VALLEY New 500
Palace 320 Grand 700 pix 454C1
Savoy 290 u,uon WAYNESBORO Winona 600
TUPELO VICKSBURG Princess 200 WOODVILLE
Lyric 750 Alamo 400 WEST POINT Fern 250
Strand 365 Grand 300 Ritz 699 YAZO CITY
TUTWILER Saenger 650 WIGGINS Dixie
Tutrovansum 288 Strand 300 Palace 300 Yazo ..800
—MISSOURI —
672 Theaters; 355,010 Seats
Closed — 138 Theaters; 49,626 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 534 Theaters; 305,384 Seats
ADRIAN
Adrian 300
ALBANY
Rigney 600
ALTENBURG
Central 225C1
ANDERSON
Lyric 275
APPLETON CITY
Plaza 200
Uptown 265
ARCHIE
Archie 400C1
ARGY'LE
(Port.)
ARMSTRONG
Gem CI
ASHGROVE
Gaiety 250
Melba 250
AURORA
Aurora 300C1
Caldwell 250C1
Princess 500
AVA
Pettit's Avalon .... 250
Thrasher 250
BAGNELL
(Port.)
BARNARD
Barnard CI
BELTON
Dixie 275
BERNIE
Elite 200C1
Weeks
BETHANY
Castle 550C1
Noll 500
Roxy 533
BEVIER
Rex CI
BIBLE GROVE
Crooks Road Show. . .CI
BILLINGS
Billings 325CI
BISMARK
Ozark 200
BLACKBURN
Blackburn CI
BLACKWATER
Princess CI
BLAIRSTOWN
American CI
BLOOMFIELD
Gordon 200
BLUE SPRINGS
Blue Springs 200C1
BLYTHEDALE
State 235C1
BOGARI)
Memorial Hall CI
BOLIVAR
Ritz 467
BONNE TERRE
Odeon 600
BOONVILLE
Casino 296
Lyric 664
BOSWORTH
Bosworth 365
BOWLING GREEN
State 460
BRASHEAR
Theater
BRANSON
Owen 200
BRAYMER
Michlo 400
BRECKENRIDGE
Opera House CI
BRONAUGH
Ellis CI
BROOKFIELD
Civic 330
De Graw 800
BROWNING
Electric 233
BRUMLEY
(Port.)
BRUNSWICK
Roxy 450
Russell 450C1
BUCKNER
Joy-Mor CI
BUFFALO
Buffalo 325
Nubuf lo 300
BUNCETON
Princess CI
BURLINGTON
JUNCTION
Burlingrton Junction . . 200
BUTLER
Fisk 650
CABOOL
Cozy 273
CAINSVILLE
Baker 250
CALHOUN
Myer's (Port.)
CALIFORNIA
Ritz 306
CAMDEN POINT
College 200C1
CAMDENTON
Camden 250
CAMERON
Ritz 450
CAMPBELL
Lyric 250
CANTON
Canton 450
Gem 320C1
CAPE GIRARDEAU
Broadway 1250
Orpheutn 723
CARDWELL
Grand 300
CARROLLTON
Missouri 300
Uptown 600
CARTHAGE
Crane 800
Delphus 400
Tiger 400C1
CARUTHERSVILLE
Rodgers 799
CASSVILLE
Ozark 250
Strand
CENTER
Community 250C1
CENTRALIA
Vista 350
CHAFFEE
Horstman 400
CHAMOIS
St. Marys 200C1
CHARLESTON
American 600
CHILLICOTHE
Grand 750
Ritz 475
CLARENCE
Clarence 300
CLARKSVILLE
Community 300
New CI
CLAYTON
Shady Oak 660
CLINTON
Lee 777
Uptown 600
COLE CAMP
Star CI
COLUMBIA
Boone 430
Hall 1200
Missouri 1500
Uptown 700
Varsity 950
CONCORDIA
Lyric 250
CORDER
Corder 250
COWGILL
Cowgill (Port.)
CRAIG
Craig: 400
CRANE
Plaza 250
CREIGHTON
Jewell CI
CROCKER
Crocker 350
CRYSTAL CITY
Crystal 320C1
Roxy 600
CUBA
Cuba 600
DEARBORN
Community (Port.)
DEEP WATER
Horosko 300
DENVER
Denver 200CI
DESLOGE
New Grand 250
DE SOTO
Desoto 638
Jefferson 500C1
DEXTER
Dexter 396
Weeks 500
DIXON
Dixon 200
DONIPHAN
Missouri 250
Princess 250
DOWNING
Crook's Road Show
Majestic CI
DREXEL
Drexel 250C1
EAST PRAIRIE
Lyric 250
EAGLEVILLE
Eagle
. EDGERTON
Shafer 210
EDINA
Lindina 250
ELDON
Ozark 350
ELDORADO SPRINGS
Park 400
ELLINGTON
Strand 140
ELMER
Elmer CI
ELMO
Elmo
ELSBERRY
Orpheum 400
ELVINS
Regal 336
878
EMMINENCE
Opera House 200
EOLIA
Eolia 572C1
ETHEL
Ethel 200C1
EXCELSIOR SPRINGS
Beyers 1000
Wood 400
FAIRFAX
Crescent 250
FAIRVIEVV
Opera House 150C1
FARMING TON
Ritz 1000
FAYETTE
Collegiate 300C1
Fayette 500
FERGUSON
Savoy 600
FESTUS
Idle Hour 450
Miller
FILLMORE
Mainstreet 300C1
FLAT RIVER
Roseland 780
FORTESCUE
Fairway CI
FOSTER
Opera House CI
FREDERICKTOWN
Mereier 550
FREEMAN
Freeman CI
FULTON
Fulton 700
Gem 300C1
Roxy 400C1
GALENA
Standridge 175C1
GALLATIN
Courter 400
GALT
Royal CI
GIDEON
Princess 400
GIFFORD
Portable
OILMAN CITY
Gilman 308C1
GLASGOW
Electric 250
GLENWOOI)
Idle Hour CI
Crook's Road Show. . .CI
GOLDEN CITY
Palace 300
GOODMAN
Electric CI
GOWER
Community CI
GRAHAM
(Port.)
GRAIN VALLEY
Royal 200C1
GRANBY
Club 300
GRANDVIEW
Frazee Road Show
(Port.)
GRANT CITY
Grant City 200
GRAYVILLE
Crook's Road Show
t (Port.)Cl
GREENCASTLE
Portable
GREENFIELD
Plaza 338
Strand 240C1
GREEN TOP
Crook's Road Show
(Port.)
GREENVILLE
Greenville 200
HAMILTON
Courter 350
HANNIBAL
Orpheum 1500
Rialto 400
Star 760
HALE
Trip CI
HALF ROCK
Crook's Road Show
Apollo 1004
(Troost)
Ashland 1750
(24th & Elmwood)
Bag-dad 1000
(27th & Troost)
(Port.)Cl Baltis 700
HARDIN
Odeon
HARRIS
Opera House
HARRISONVILLE
Perkins 500
HAYTI
(35th & Indiana)
300 Belmont 800
(St. Johns)
,C1 Benton 700
( Independence Ave. )
Bijou 750C1
(Prospect)
Missouri
HERCULANEUM
Riverview 200
HERMANN
Hermo 400
HERMITAGE
Hermitage CI
HIGBEE
Gem 300C1
HIGGINSVILLE
Davis 350
HOLDEN
Davis 350
Holden
HOLLISTER
.300 Boone 809
Brook6ide 1006
(Brookside)
Byara 730
Indiana Ave.)
Casue 600
(E. 12th St.)
Central 800C1
(Indiana)
Circle 500
(Prospect)
Colonial 660
(Woodland)
350 Columbia 611C1
(Indep. & Cherry)
Hollister CI Empress 1400C1
HOLT
City Hall (Port.) Fairmount
Esquire 800
HOPKINS
Royal 270
HORNERSVILLE
Strand 200
HOUSTON
New Melba 200
HUMANSVILLE
Community 800
HUME
Peoples 290C1
Town Hall (Port.)
HUMPHREYS
Shaffer Road Show
(Port.)
HUNTSVILLE
Capitol CI
Roxy 240
IBERIA
Electra
ILLMO
Fox Rockhill 1471
(Troost Ave.)
Gem 1200
(E. 18th)
Giles 1195
(Broadway)
Gilham 962
(512 E. 31st St.)
Gladstone 1000
(St. John)
IsiB 1417
(Troost)
Liberty 1200
(Main St.)
Lincoln 1164
(Lydia)
Lindbergh 1197
(Troost)
Linwood 867
(Prosp.)
Plaza 304 Ly»e ■ • • 35001
INDEPENDENCE
(Main St.)
Electric 450 Madrid 1200
Granada 600 (Main St.)
Mavwood 550 Maln Street 2500
Plaza 400 Mary Lou 660
irontox (59th & Prospect)
350 Midland 4000
(13th & Main)
400 Murray 700
(E. 27th St.)
National 624
(Indep.)
Newman 1800
(Main)
Oak Park 900
(Prospect Oak)
State
JACKSON
JAMESTOWN
Picture Show CI
JEFFERSON BARRACKS
U. S. Army Hospital 250
JEFFERSON CITY
Capitol 1000
Palace
(Main)
.400
.700
Gem 600C1 Orpheum 2500
Missouri State
Penitentiary
State 750 paseo
JENNINGS ( 8 1 & Woodland )
Janet 300 plaza 1950
(Wyandotte)
.550 Prospect 600C1
(Prospect)
JOPLIN
DeRay .
Electric
.350
Fox 1787 Regent 600
Hippodrome 1317 (E. 12th St.)
Orpheum 600 Ritz
Paramount 600
Rex
KAHOKA
Kozy 300 st- John
.900
(College)
500 Roanoke 500
(Summit)
.800
KANSAS CITY
(St. John)
Admiral
(8th & Tracy)
Aladdin 900
(15th & Belmont)
.800 Southtown 956
(Troost)
State 490
I 15th & Prospect)
Strand 600
(Troost)
Summitt 800
' ( Summitt)
Sun 500
( Prospect )
Tivoli 765
(Indiana)
Tower 2093
(12th St.)
Uptown 2043
(Broadway)
Vista 898
(Indep. & Prospect)
Vogue 500
(Broadway)
Waldo 720
(Washington)
Warwick 1000
(Main)
Westport 800
(Mereier)
World in Motion. . . .360
(Walnut)
KEARNEY
City Hall (Port.)
KENNETT
Ford 400C1
Palace 212
Ritz ci
KIDDER
Wonderland CI
KING CITY
Lucille 400
New 530
KINLOCH
(St. Louis P. O.)
Harlem 200C1
KIRKSVILLE
Family 250
Kennedy 1000
Princess 800
KIRKWOOD
Kirkwood 668
Osage
KNOX CITY
Cozy 250C1
LA CLEDE
City Hall (Port.)
LAGRANGE
State 250
LAMAR
Plaza 325
LANCASTER
Strand 300
LAPLATA
Green 300
LAREDO
Princess
LATHAM
Latham CI
LATHROP
Lathrop 300
LAVONIA
Portable
LEADWOOD
Roxy 350
LEBANON
Lyric 550
LEES SUMMITT
Lee 350
LEMONS
Shaffer Road Show
(Port.)
LEWISTOWN
Mertz 225C1
LEXINGTON
Eagle 320
Main Street 893
LIBERAL
Cozy 300
LIBERTY
Plaza 600
LICKING
Licking 160
LILBOURNE
Clark 533
Grand 900C1
Rex 235
879
LINNEUS
Dixie 240
LIVONIA
Crook's Road Show
(Port.)
LOCKWOOD
Cozy 300
LOUISIANA
Clark 700
LOWRY CITY
Electric (Port.)
LUCERNE
Shaffer Road Show
(Port.)
LUDLOW
Community Hall CI
MACON
Macon 300
Roxy 600C1
Valencia 650
MAITLAND
Portable
MALDEN
Liberty 500
MANCHESTER
Colonial 300
MANSFIELD
Mansfield 200
MAPLEWOOD
Powhattan 1200
MARBLE HILL
Park 300
MARCLEINE
Chief 550C1
I'ptown 500
MARIONVILLE
Marion ville CI
MARSHALL
Auditorium 800
Mary Lou 400
MARSHFIELD
Ritz 470
MARTHASVILLE
Marhaus 150CI
MARY VILLE
Missouri 800
Tivoli 750
MARYSVILLE
New
MAYSVILLE
Ann 200
MEADEVILLE
Horosko Road Show
(Port.)
MEMPHIS
Majestic 400
MERCER
Crook's Road Show
(Port.)
METZ
Electric CI
MEXICO
Liberty 900
MILAN
Grandview 250
Karyl 300
MINDEN MINES
Electric CI
MISSOURI CITY
Happy Hour CI
MOBEKLY
Fourth St 926
Grand 856
Sosna 450
MODINA
Crook's Road Show
(Port.) CI
MONETT
Gillioz 750
Rialto 725C1
Strand 400
MONROE CITY
Monroe 400
Nolan 300
MONTGOMERY CITY
Ritz 350
MONTROSE
Portable
MORRISON
Woodmen 200C1
.206
MOUND CITY PERRY Missouri 1391
State 288 Strand 350 Orpheum 700
MOUNTAIN GROVE PERRYVILLE Plaza 470
Cameo 366 Electric 450C1 Regal 600
MOUNTAIN VIEW Mercier 650 Rialto 1000
Gordon 150 PIEDMONT
Oak 217 Piedmont
MOUNT MORIAH PIERCE CITY
Crook's Road Show Strand 250C1
(Port.)Cl PINEVILLE
MOUNT OLIVE Boone CI
Shaffer Road Show Dixie Belle ..(Port.)250
(Port.) PINELAWN
MOUNT VERNON (St. Louis P. O.)
Strand 360 Studio 460
MYSTIC PLATTSBURG
Crook's Road Show Lyric 415
(Port.)Cl PLEASANT HILL
NEOSHO Peoples 400
Orpheum 500 POLLOCK
Photo Show 250 Shaffer Road Show
NEVADA (Port.)
Arbo 307 POLO
Star 787 Frazee Road Show
NEW BOSTON (Port.) Baden"
Crook's Road Show POPLAR BLUFF (N Broadway)
(Port.) Criterion 799 Bremen 700
NEWBURG Jewell 500 (Bremen Ave.)
Newburg 250 PORTAGEVILLE Bridge 700
.NEW FRANKLIN Maxon 300 i Natural Bridge St.)
Roxy 350 Shannon 500 Capitol 871
NEW HAMPTON POTOSI ( 6th & Chestnut)
Opera House 350C1 Delco 300C1 Cinderella 1300
NEW HAVEN Plaza 600 i Cherokee & Iowa)
New Haven 160 POWERSVILLE circle 585
NEW LONDON Shaffer Road Show (4470 Easton)
Gem 240 (Port.) Columbia 1200
NEW MADRID PRINCETON i Southwest & Columbia >
Dixie 350 Lambert 420 Compton 440
Rivoli 800
ST. LOUIS
Ambassador 3000
(Locust)
American 500
Amytis 525
(Newstead & Brilliant)
Annex
Arcade Airdome . . 1764C1
I Sarah & Pine )
Apollo 649
(De Baliviere)
Armba Airdrome . 800C1
Ashland 790
( Newstead & Lex'gton)
Aubert 1440
( Aubert & Easton)
Avalon 1000
(Kings Highway)
939
New 550
NEWTOWN
Crook's Road Show
(Port.)
MX A
Elite 300C1
NOEL
Bijou 300C1
NORBORNE
Royal 200
NORMANDY
Normandy 699
Normandy Airdome. 500C1
NORTH KANSAS CITY
Armour 700 Farris
OAK GROVE
Opera House CI
ODESSA
Dixie 300
OLD MINES
Orchid 200C1
ORAN
Majestic 250
OREGON
Oregon 300
ORRICK
Mainstreet 250C1
OSCEOLA
New Osceola 195
OSGOOD
Crook's Road Show
PIXICO
(Park Ave.)
Burris 176C' Congress 898
QUEEN CITY
Crook's Road Show
(Port.) CI
REED SPRINGS
Star
REPUBLIC
Republic 200
RICHLAND
Gem 288
RICH HILL
Booth 564
RICHMOND
(Olive)
Criterion 892
(Franklin St.)
Dakota 476
(Virginia Ave.)
Douglas 700
( Whittier & Finney )
Easton 580C1
( Easton Ave.)
Empress 1476
(Olive)
Fairy 770
.700 (Easton Ave.)
Vogue Florissant 1500C1
RICHMOND HEIGHT Ft. Jefferson 250
Richmond 600 Fox 5000
RIDGWAV (Grand & Washington)
Palace 200 Globe 750
ROCKPOKT (Franklin)
Paramount 350 Granada 1585
KOCKVILLE Grand Central ...1800CI
Rainbow (Port.) (Grand & Locust)
ROLLA
Rolla-Mo 450
ROSENDALE
Airdome 150
ST. CHARLES
Family
Hollywood
(Port.)Cl Ritz 450
OVERLAND Strand 950
Overland 500 ST. CLA1KE
OWENSVILLE Ozark 280
Gasconade 410 ST. GENEVIEVE
OZARK Missouri
Ozark 300 Orris 500
PACIFIC ST. JAMES
Royal 500 Lyrjc 300
PALMYRA
Pal 354
PARMA
Parma
PARIS ST. JOSEPH
Main Street 425 Crystal 700C1
Roxy 400C1 Electric 1616
Grand 50?
ST. JOHN'S STATION
(St. Louis P. O.)
Gem 411
Grand Florissant ..1850
(Florissant)
Grand Opera House
1600C1
(6th & Market)
Grant 500C1
Gravois 1116
(S. Jefferson)
Hi-Pointe 750
(McCausland)
Hi-Way 1424
( 15th & Montgomery)
Hollywood 501
(St. Charles)
Ivanhoe 678
(Ivanhoe)
King Bee 1100
(Jefferson & Howard I
Kingsland 900
(Gravois)
Lafayette 756
(S. Jefferson)
Lee 665
(Newstead & Lee)
PARNELL
Parnell Hickory 600 LeMay 500
PATTONSBERG Lincoln 460C1 Lexington 698C1
Binney 400 Louis 310 (Union)
S80
lindell 1660
(N. Grand)
Loew's State 3073
(Washing-ton)
Longwood 550
(S. Broadway)
Lowell 650
(N. Broadway)
Lyric 555
(N. 6th)
Macklind 645
(Arsenal)
Maffitt 955
(N. Vandeventer)
Manchester 1542
(Boule & Manchester)
Maplewood 1500
Marquette 650
(Franklin Ave.)
Maryland 594
(13th & Calhoun)
McNair 607
(McNair & Pestalozzi)
Melba 1190
(Grand & Miami)
Melvin 500
(Chippowa)
Merry Widow 485
(Chouteau )
Michigan 1200
(Michigan & Koeln)
Mikado 1493
(Easton Ave.)
Missouri 3558
(Grand & Lucas)
Movie 268C1
(Market St.)
New
New Granada 500
New Shenandoah ..1381
(S. Bway.)
Norside 1319
(Natural Bridge & Grand)
O'Fallon 900
( W. Florissant)
Orpheum 2000C1
(9th & St. Charles)
Pageant 1400C1
(Delmar Blvd.)
Palm 901
(N. Union)
Pauline 750
(Lillian & Clayton)
Peerless 697
(S. Broadway)
Plymouth 800
( Hamilton )
Princess 500
Queens 550
(Marcus & Maffitt)
Regal 900C1
(3142 Easton)
Rio 985
(5562 N. Riverview Dr.)
Ritz 1020
(S. Grand)
Rivoli 686
(N. 6th)
Robin 400
(Robin)
Roosevelt 500
(N. Leffingwell)
Roxy 559
( Lansdowne )
Salisbury 689
( Salisbury )
Senate 882
(Broadway & Pine)
Shaw 1140
(Shaw Ave.)
Shenandoah 1560
(S. Grand)
Shubert-Rialto ..1710C1
(Grand & Olive)
Strand 279
(Market St.)
Star 521
(Jefferson Market)
St. Louis 3881
( Grand & Morgan )
Tivoli 1440
( Delmar)
Union 1044C1
(N. Union)
University City . . . .250
Uptown 839
(Delmar)
Varsity 1000
( Delmar)
Venus 492C1
(Pendleton & Finney)
Virginia 881
(Virginia)
Webster 935
(Clinton)
Wellston 800
( Easton)
West End 990
(Delmar)
Whiteway 1000
(S. 6th)
Will Rogers 850
Vale 490C1
(Minnesota)
SALEM
Lyric 350
New Salem 600
SALISBURY
Lyric 350
SARCOXIE
Avalon
SAVANNAH
Globe 436
Tivoli 400
SEDALIA
Liberty 991
Sedalia 1400C1
Star 350C1
Uptown 810
SENECA
Colonial 250
SENATH
Missouri 300
SEYMOUR
Seymour 230
SHELB1NA
Clark 300
SHELDON
Main Street 245C1
SHELL CITY
Portable
SIKESTON
M alone 800
Rex 300
SKIDMORE
Skidmore CI
SLATER
Kiva 700
SMITHVILLE
Rialto 325
SOUTHWEST CITY
Cozy (Port.)225
SPRINGFIELD
Electric 1700
Gillioz 1400
Granada 650
Landers 1000
Millikin 400
Mozark 576
Plaza 1049
Princess 924
STANBERRY
Moderne 400
STEELE
New
Steele 300
STEELEVILLE
Legion 220
Melba 300C1
STOCKTON
Stockton 230
SULLIVAN
Lyric 250C1
Meremac 500
SUMNER
Community 300C1
SWEET SPRINGS
Ritz 360
Uptown 394
TARKIO
Tarkio 400
THAYER
Royal 225
TINA
Tina Hall 300
TIPTON
Tipton 260
TRENTON
Plaza 800
Ritz 400
Royal 200
TRIPLETT
Opera House 250C1
TROY
Colonial 400
UHRIC
Frazee Road Show
(Port.)
UNION
Liberty 429C1
Williams 600
UNIONVILLE
Royal 300
UNIVERSITY CITY
Beverly 700
URBANA
Electric
VALLEY PARK
Park 263
VAN BUREN
Ritz
VANDALIA
Star 450
VERSAILLES
Royal 350
WARRENSBURG
Main Street 300
Star 1000
WARRENTON
Vita 225
WARSAW
Roxy 300
WASHINGTON
Calvin's 512
Garden CI
WA VERLY
Waverly 200
WEBB CITY
Blake 500
Civic 550
Civic Junior 600
Ozark 1100
WEBSTER GROVES
Ozark 1100
WELLSVILLE
Regal 600
WEST BORO
Roof Road Show (Port.)
WESTON
Garden 350
Weston 200
WEST PLAINS
Davis 620
WHEATON
Cozv 220
WILLOW SPRINGS
Star 340
WINDSOR
Windsor 450
WINIGAN
Crook's Road Show
(Port.)Cl
WORTHINGTON
Shaffer Road Show
(Port.)
MONTANA
202 Theaters; 63,654 Seats
Closed — 36 Theaters; 5,264 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 176 Theaters; 58,390 Seats
ABSORKEE ARDLEE BAINVILLE BELGREADE
Elteb 175 Ardlee CI Civic 325 Belgrade
ASHLAND BAKER BELT
Ashland 200 Lake 300 Palace 200
AUGUSTA BALLANTINE BELTON
ANACONDA Augusta (Port.) Project 150 CCC Camp
Bluebird 750 BAIN BASIN BIG FORK
Washoe 1000 Bain Basin Big Fork 150
ALBERTON
Oriental 150
881
BIG SANDY ELLISTON Orpheum 380 ROUNDUP
Grand 250 EIIi6t«° CI Roxy 450 American 250
BIG TIMBER ENNIS KEVIN Park 250C1
S,a,e 250 Vnms 300 Kevin CI ST. IGNATIUS
BILLINGS Madison LAMEDEER Park 334
Babcock 1110 EUREKA Lamedeer OHPRTniv
Fox Billing 1000 Majestic 250 ^ameQeer „ SHERIDAN
Lyric 500 FAIRFIFln"' _ „ LANDUSKY Shendan
Empire 500 MoviPtnnP Landusky CI SIDNEY
Regent 500C1 -^o^eione LAUREL Princess 378
Rio 400 FAIRVIEW Royal 400 Roxy 238
BOULDER Orpheum 310 LEWISTOWN STANFORD
Boulder FLAXVILLE Broadway 425 Movietone
BOZEMAN Flaxville 266 Judith 737 STEVENSVILLE
Ellen 800 FORSYTH LIBBY American 412C1
Joyce Roxy 276 Kootenai 300 Rio 350
Bialto 375 FT. BENTON LIMA SACO
BRADY Capitol 175 Lirca Gem 160
Brady CI FT. MISSOULA LIVINGSTON SCOBEY
BRIDGER War. Dept 200 Park 686 Rex 250
Star 200 FT. PECK New State 685 SHELBY
BROADHUS Ft. Peck 1209 Strand 650 Orpheum 200
Macy's Hall 100 FROID LODGE GRASS Roxy 590
BROWNING Liberty 150 Star 175 STOKETT
Orpheum 245 FROMBERG MALTA Stokett CI
Park 308 Liberty 190 Palace 265 SUNRIVER
BUTTE GARDINER MANHATTAN Sunriver
American 998 Park 199 Gallatin 200C1 SUPERIOR
Broadway 1426 state 190 MARIE MONT Strand . 175
£ox 165° GLACIER PARK Marie Mont 600 Superior
rXrtv" C Glacier Cl McCONE CITY SWEETGRASS
pari 5... :::: ::::::»& Glasgow 2%\ ^ty 125
Peoples Orpheum 334 Juajesuc w TERRY
Rialto 1200 Rosy 350 MEDICINE LAKE^ Rialto 250
CASCADE GLENDIVE Lake 200 THOMPSON FALLS
Cascade Rose 600 MELROSE Rex 500
CHESTER Uptown Melrose THREE FORKS
Chester GRASS RANGE MELSTONE Ruby 400
CHIINOOK Grass Ran^e 200C1 Melstone Cl TOWSEND
Orpheum 220 GREAT FALLS MILES CITY Rex 250
CHOTEAU Grant) Cl ^erty 550 TROY'
Royal 260 *£|**jjw 1700 stated. '. '. '. '. '. '. '. '. '. '.Ill LiDC°ln 200
- . CIRCLE RiU °W. 350 MISSOULA Turner TDRNEK fl
Circle Town 726 Community 355 C1
CLYDE PARK HAMILTON Liberty _ TW1N BRIDGES
Opera House Cl Liberty 300 Rialto 600 Estlm
COLUMBIA FALLS Roxy' !..380 Roxv 600 VALIER
Park 186 HARDIN Wilma 1000 Capitol 200
COLUMBUS Gem 250 NASHUA VIRGINIA CITY
Rio 200 Harriet 800 Rio 288 Bob's 100
CONRAD HARLEM NEW DEAL WALKERVILLE
Orpheum 350 Grand 300 New Deal Cl Dream 295
CULBERTSON HARLOWTON NINE MILE WHEELER
Lyric 200 State 400 Nine M»'e 150 Majestic 340C1
CUT BANK HARRISON OPnEIM Wheeler
Orpheum 300 Y & F Hall Opheim WHITEFISH
State 500 HAVRE OUTLOOK Orpheum 300
DARBY Havre Outlook Cl WHITEHALL
Rita 240 Lyric 466 PARADISE Jeffer3on 250
DEER LODGE Orpheum 450 Libertv Cl WHITE SULPHUR
RiaI»° 800 HELENA PHILLIPSBURG «, . , SPRIXGS 9nft
DENTON dnte,s 550 Granada 300 Stra"d 200
Paramount Marlow 1279 WHITETAIL
DILON Rl° 500 Liberty ....200 VVhi,etail C1
Hartwifr 434 . t HINGHAM PI FNTVWOOn WIBAUX
Roxy 276 Hmrham 200 orpheum ^ ° . 250 £rtst0 (Port-» ~™
nlvn»j HOT SPRINGS POLSON
ri, lt DIX0N Myah 150 LaUe POLSON WILSAL
Llberty 162CI HYSHAM ^ -376 Opera House C.
DOOLEY Yucca 100 Vnr. rut^AK WINNETT
Dooley Cl INGOMAR '-' - 1 '-- Aristo 200CI
DRUMMOND Star Cl Park KED L0DGE „„- WISDOM
Pix 151 ISMAY Roman" '600 wisdom (Por, )
DUTTON ISmay C1 RFXPrtRn W0LF P0IXT
— - Joplin .J0P"N Cl — tyREXF°RD Cl //
EAST HELENA JORDAN R1CHEY WORDEN
Hartwig C1 Rio Richey 160 Project 190
EKALAKA KALISPELL RONAN ZORTMAN
Ekalaka 176 Liberty 600 Gniety 300 Zortman 126
882
— NEBRASKA —
372 Theaters; 140,215 Seats
Closed — 75 Theaters; 22,347 Seats
Operating' Jan. 1, 1940 — 297 Theaters; 117,868 Seats
ADAMS
BRIDGEPORT
CURTIS
GLENVILLE
Palm
Fox Trail
500
Star
220
AINSWORTH
BRISTAW
DALTON
GORDON
Auisworth
324
Bristaw 150C1
Dalton (Port.)
. 150
350C1
Royal
250
BROADWATER
DANBURY
GOTHENBERG
ALBION
Isis
CI
Home
286
Lake
CI
Rex
, ,400
BROKEN BOW
DAVENPORT
Sun
5iRn
ALLEN
500
Wolcott
. 200
GRAND ISLAND
Allen
180
Lyric
400
DAVID CITY
Capitol
1100
ALLIANCE
BROWNVILLE
City
375
416
Alliance
914
Brownville 2
00C1
DECATUR
Grand
ALMA
BRUNING
Princess
200
600
210
Opera House ( Port.) 2
00C1
DESHLER
Majestic 1000C1
AMHERST
BRUNO
Ritz
250
GRANT
CI
Opera House
CI
DEWITT
500
ANSELMO
BURWELL
Dewitt
200
GREELEY
Community
300C1
DODGE
.350
ANSLEY
Rodeo
300
New Dodgre
220
GRETNA
Paramount
200
BUTTE
EDGAR
Gretna
.176
ARAPAHOE
Aladdin
220
Lyric
246
GRESHAM
240
CAIRO
ELGIN
Gresham
200
ARCADIA
Cairo
200
Pivon
200
GUIDE ROCK
Gayety
250C1
CALLOWAY
ELM CREEK
Opera House . . . .
200C1
ARNOLD
Star
175
New Elm
250
HAIGLER
Rialto
400
CAMPBELL
ELWOOD
Diamond
, . CI
ASHLAND
Community
205
Elwood
, 200
HALSEY
350
CAMBRIDGE
ELMWOOD
,220
ASHTON
200
Elmwood
250
HARRISON
Colonial
200C1
CEDAR BLUFFS
EMERSON
Summit
193
ATKINSON
Emerson
200
HARTINGTON
Lyric
200
CEDAR RAPIDS
ERICSON
405
AUBURN
Hollywood
240
Ericson
200CI
HARVARD
Auburn
300
CENTRAL CITY
EUSTIS
Harvard
225C1
Booth
395
State
500
200
HASTINGS
AURORA
Sun
300
EWING
Cornhusker
. .275
Mazda
297
CHADRON
225
Rivoli
1000
Pawnee
300C1
Pace
700
EXETER
Strand
600
BANCROFT
CHAMBERS
Filmore
275
HAVELOCK
Model
200
Golden Gate 2
00C1
FAIRBURY
425
BASSETT
CHAPPELL
Banham
900
New Lyric
425C1
Kozy
200
300
FAIRFIELD
HAY SPRINGS
BATTLE CREEK
CLARKS
Joyo
.200
Star
300
Airdome
200C1
Clarks
190
FALLS CITY
HAYES CENTER
BAYARD
CLARKSON
Electric
400
White
150
Palm
200
Rivoli
500
HEBRON
Rex
285
CLAY CENTER
FARNAM
300
BEATRICE
Clay
200
200
HEMINGFORD
Pix
800
CLEARWATER
FORT CROOK
. 350
Rialto
380
Palace
200
Fort Crook
250
HENRY
Rivoli
828
CODY
FORT ROBINSON
Bishop
129
BEAVER CITY
Cody
,200
,100
HILDRETH
Oriental
250
COLERIDGE
FRANKLIN
Star
, 200
BEEMER
.300
HOLBROOK
Gem
200C1
r
COLUMBUS
FREMONT
Lyric
200
BENKELMA>
Columbus
1000
Empress
800
HOLDREDGE
Zorn
400
Pawnee 370C1
Fremont
1000
Marie
450C1
BERTRAND
400
Sun
638
Bertrand
,160
COMSTOCK
FRIEND
HOMER
BLADEN
Comstock
250
Plaza
200
Star
. ,260
COOK
FULLERTON
HOOPER
BLAIR
Cook
,200
Royal
396
300
Home
384
COZAD
GAINTON
HOWELL
RT.nfYMTTRT.TI
Rialto
300
Powers
CI
Howell
250
Star
200
CRAWFORD
GENEVA
HUMBOLDT
BLUE HILL
Sioux
500
350
Humboldt
400
Sterling-
1G0C1
CREIGHTON
GENOA
Plaza
300C1
BLUE SPRINGS
250
Grand
. 300
HUMPHREY
Strand
250C1
CRETE
GERING
Coronado
358
Isis
430
350
HYANN1S
BOELUS
Muse
300
Star
200C1
Times
400
Riviera
350
IMPERIAL
BRAINERD
CROFTON
GIBBON
Kiva
250C1
:Star
160C1
260
240
Star
. . 230
883
INDIANOLA
Rex 200
KEARNEY
Empress 900C1
Indian School
World 1000
KENKSAW
Auditorium CI
KIMBALL
American 250
LAUREL
Laurel 250
LAWRENCE
Lawrence 200C1
LEBANON
Mac's 200C1
LEIGH
Leigh 240
LEWELLEN
State 300
LEXINGTON
Majestic 450
Ralph 250
LINCOLN
Capitol 800
Colonial 700
Joyo 400
Kiva 410C1
Liberty 1350
Lincoln 1500C1
Nebraska 1500
Stuart 2000
Sun 400C1
Varsity 1200
Veteran's Hospital ....
LINDSAY
Community Hall . .200C1
LONG PINE
Pine 260
LOUISVILLE
Louisville 200
LOUP CITY
Liberty 350
LYMAN
Lyman 280
LYNCH
Lynch 250
LYONS
Plaza 210
McCOOK
Fox 1000
Fox Temple .... 1000C1
MADISON
Capitol 500
MADRID
American 250
MASON CITY
Rialto 110
MAYWOOD
Arcade 300C1
MEADOW GROVE
Community 200C1
MERRIMAN
Merriman 200
MILFORD
Auditorium 100C1
MINATARE
-Uladin 290
MINDEN
Minden 300
MITCHELL
Crystal 300
Nile 500
MORRILL
Delmar 250
MULLEN
Mullen 300
NEBRASKA CITY
Booth 625
Overland 700
Paramount 400
NEHAWKA
Auditorium 200C1
NELIGH
Moon 265
NELSON
Rialto 205
NEWMANS GROVE
Strand 300
NIOBRARA
Niobrara 200
NORFOLK PILCEK
Granada 1000 Pilger 250
Grand 600 PLAINVIEW
Lyric 300CI Plainview 325
R'alto 300C1 PLATTSMOUTH
NORTH BEND Cass 450
Bend 200 Ritz 300C1
NORTH LOUP PLYMOUTH
Stri,nd 250 Auditorium 150C1
NORTH PLATTE
Fox 700C1
Paramount 700
Pom
PONCA
PRAGUE
. 230
sta*e 700 Catholic Hall 200C1
OAKDALE
Moonlight 176C1
OAKLAND
Majestic 210
OCONTO
Princess 200
OGALLALA
Prairie 500
Princess 400
OMAHA
Arbor 600
Avenue 800 Star
Beacon 500
Prague CI
PRIMROSE
Pastime 2000C1
RANDOLPH
Orpheum 250
Rand
RAVENNA
Grand 325
RED CLOUD
Auditorium 350
RISING CITY
350
ROSALIE
Benson 625 Star ... 200C1
Brandeis 1100 ROSELAND
Circle 500 Portable
Corby 700 HiiSHViiir
Dundee 591 plalns ™SHVILLE
Fort 350 ^lalns 300
Garden 385C1 ST. EDWARDS
Gem 300C1 Lyric 250
Krug Park 400C1 ST. PAUL
Lothrop 480 Riviera 300
Maryland 500 mnrcvT
Military 953 gun SARGENT
Minnie Lusa 550 ^**u
Mueller 500 SCHUYLER
Muse 722 Avalon 250
Nebraska 315C1 Strand 300
North Star 700 Schuyler 360C1
Omaha 2500 SCOTIA
Orpheum 2975 Loup
Paramount 3000C1 s(,°TTSBLUrF
g*» i(foo g3£ta."::::::::iS8
RoseiUr.:.:.:.:1^ °«° *»
Royal ;80C1 SCRIBNER
State 1081C1 Scnbner 275
Time 350C1 SEWARD
Tivoli 500C1 Lyric 250CI
Town 1100 Rivoli 425
Winn 450 SHELBY
O'NEILL Shelby 200
Royal 300 _
ORCHARD SHELTON
Rex 200 Roxv 250
ORD SIDNEY
Ord 500 Fox 500
ORLEANS SNYDER
Strand 300 Snyder 250
.300
OSCEOLA
New Muse .....
OSHKOSH
Silver Hill 300
OSMOND
Osmond
OTOE
Moon 125C1
OVERTON
Gem 200C1
OXFORD
Granada 350
PALISADE
Oliver 400
PALMER
Opera House CI
PAWNEE CITY"
Pawnee 230
PAXTON
Paxton
PENDER
SOUTH SIOUX CITY
Soo 400
State 600
SPALDING
250 Carlin 300
SPENCER
Boyd 250
SPRINGFIELD
Springfield 140C1
STANTON
Rialto 250
STERLING
Gem 200
STROMBERG
Rialto 250
STRATTON
00 Memorial Hall 350
STUART
Pender 265 Stuart 150
PERU SUPERIOR
Peru 210 Lyric 450
PIERCE SUTHERLAND
Pierce 300 Star 280
8S4
SUTTON
Lyri'- 276
SYRACUSE
Palace 265
TABLE ROCK
New Roxy 250
TALMAGE
Talmage 300
TECUMSEH
Chief 280
Teeumseh 300
TEKAMAH
Lyric 275
THEDFORD
Thedford 200
TILDEN
Tilden 200
TOBIAS
Liberty 200C1
ULYSSES
Ulysses 190
UPLAND
Portable
UTICA
Empire 312
VALENTINE
Jewel 300
VALLEY'
Valley 275
VALPARISO
Town 200C1
VENANGO
Avalon 177
VERDIGREE
Empress 200
WAHOO
Opera House 600C1
Wahoo 400
WAKEFIELD
Strand 200
WALLACE
Lee Roy 200
WALTHILL
Sun 260
WAUNETA
Chateau 350
Crystal J00
WAUSA
Empress _>00
WAYNE
Crystal 350C>
Gay 480
WEEPING WATER
Chief 240
WEST POINT
Nebraskan 400
Rivola 280
WILBER
Moon 300
WILCOX
Crescent 300
WILSONVILLE
Rainbow CI
WINSIDE
Win side 175C1
WISNER
Royal 250
WOLBACH
Empress 200C1
WOOD RIVER
Oak 272
WY'MORE
Cozy 264
Grand 250
WY'NOT
Wynot 200
Y'ORK
Rialto 315C1
New Sun 1000
York 700
NEVADA — -
47 Theaters; 15,739 Seats
Closed — 8 Theaters; 1,400 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 39 Theaters; 14,339 Seats
AUSTIN
J. E. Rickards Trav.
Cir 150C1
BATTLE MOUNTAIN
Shovelin 150
BOULDER CITY
Boulder 725
CALIENTE
Rex 545
CARLIN
Eagle's Hall 100
CARSON CITY
Carson 400
ELY
Ely 500
ELKO
Elvada 350
Hunter 800
EUREKA
CCC Camp
Eureka 400C1
FALLON
Fallon 400
GARNERVILLE
Nevada 400
GERLACH
Gerlach 150
GOLDFIELD
J. E. Rickards Trav.
Cir 150
Lyric CI
HAWTHORNE
Desert 300
JARBRIDGE
Jarbridge (Por. iCl
LAS VEGAS
Airdome CI
El Portal 710
Palace 500
LOVELOCK
Lovelock 400
MC GILL
McGill 450
MANHATTAN
J. E. Rickards Trav.
Cir 150
Manhattan
MINA
J. E. Rickards Trav.
Cir 150
OVERTON
High School 100
PARACA
Star CI
PARADISE
CCC. Camp
PIOCHE
Gem 515
RENO
Granada 1500
Majestic 1000
Reno 300
Roxy
Wigwam 700
ROUND MT.
J. E. Rickards Trav.
Cir 150C1
RUTH
Ruth 300
SILVER PEAK
J. Richards Trav.
Cir 150
Northern
SPARKS
Sparks 300
TONOPAH
Butler 400
VIRGINIA CITY
Virginia City 214
WELLS
Nevada 200
WINNEMUCCA
American 474
YERRINGTON
Granada 300C1
Yerrington 350
NEW HAMPSHIRE
102 Theaters; 58,753 Seats
Closed — 26 Theaters; 12,011 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 76 Theaters; 46,742 Seats
ALTON
Opera House 900C1
ASHLAND
Liberty 260C1
BERLIN
Albert 1012
Princess 700
Strand 1000
BETHLEHEM
Colonial 500C1
BRADFORD
Bradford CI
BRETTON WOODS
Hall-in-Pine 500C1
BRISTOL
Bristol 300
CANAAN
Town Hall 200
CLAREMONT
Latchis 1100
Magnet 959
Tremont 600
COLEBROOK
Halcyon 400
Jax 400
CONCORD
Capital 1423
Concord 500
Star 1073
CONWAY
Majestic 760
DERRY
Plaza 576
DIXVILLE NOTCH
Balsams 200C1
DOVER
Broadway 400
State 425
Strand 991
DURHAM
Franklin 500
E. JAFFREY
Park 375
E. MANCHESTER
Empire 894
ENFIELD
Enfield 310
EPPING
Leddy's . . . (Port.)250Cl
EXETER
Ioka 500
FARMINGTON
Strand 400
FRANKLIN
Capitol 576C1
Pastime 600C1
Regal 800
GORHAM
Town Hall 300
GREENVILLE
Sawyer's 300
GROVETON
Alley
HAMPTON BEACH
Barn 300C1
Casino 00OC1
Olympia 600C1
HANOVER
Nugget b)i0
HENNIKER
Memorial 400C1
HILLSBORO
Capitol 400C1
Opera House 250C1
HINSDALE
Playhouse 260
JACKSON
Wentworth Hall . .450C1
KEENE
Colonial 1036
Latchis 1000
Scenic 800
LACONIA
Colonial 1230
Garden 600
LAKEPORT
Opera House 300C1
LANCASTER
Rialto 600
LEBANON
Opera House 1000
LINCOLN
Charkarohen 360
LISBON
Libson 400C1
LITTLETON
Premier H00
MANCHESTER
Crown 500
Globe 300
Granite Sq 300
Lyric 300
Modern 900
Palace 1000
State 1500
Strand 700
Vitaphone 700C1
MEREDITH
Premier 375
MILFORD
Strand 400
MOUNTAINVIEW
Pinland 250
NASHUA
Colonial 860
Park 750C1
State 1200
Tremont 1000
NEWHAMPTON
School 200
NEW LONDON
Memorial 400C1
NEWMARKET
Star 650
NEWPORT
Conniston 600
885
NORTH CONWAY
North Conway 760
PENACOOK
Palace 400
PETEKBORO
Gem 800
PITTSBURG
Town Hall 250C1
PITTSFIELD
Scenic 350
Strand 300C1
PLYMOUTH
Plymouth 750
PORTSMOUTH
Arcadia 852
Colonial 1256
Olympia 1000
Portsmouth 1160C1
RAYMOND
Leddy's (Port.) 250
Raymond . . . (Port.) 250
ROCHESTER
Scenic 600
SANBORN VILLE
Opera House .... 375C1
SOMERSWORTH
Somersworth 700
SUNCOOK
Opera House 600
TILTON
Tilton 300
WARNER
Ramar 400
WH1TEF1ELI)
Little 250
WILTON
Sawyer's 250
WINCHESTER
Memorial 320
WOLFEBORO
Brewster Memorial .300
WOODSVILLE
Opera House 500C1
Orpheum 600
-NEW JERSEY-
435 Theaters; 425,931 Seats
Closed — 48 Theaters; 44,489 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 387 Theaters; 381,442 Seats
ALLENTOWN
A lien town CI
ARLINGTON
Lincoln 1244
ASBURY PARK
Lyric 814
Mayfair 1800
Ocean 600
Paramount 1995
Rialto 617
St. James 17S9
Savoy 1033
ATLANTIC CITY
Alan 600
Aldine 850
Apollo 1700
Astor 800
Capitol 1200
Colonial 1200
Embassy 1000
Hollywood 1600
Lyric 700
Palace 500
Royal 750
Stanley 2200
Steel Pier Casino
Hall WOO
Steel Pier Ocean . . 1400C1
Steel Pier Music
Hall 2250C1
Strand 1088
Ventnor 500
Virginia 1000
Warner 4200C1
ATLANTIC
HIGHLANDS
Atlantic 670
AUDUBON
Century 1400
Highland 500
AVALON
Avalon 700C1
BARNEGAT
Park 350
BAY HEAD
Lorraine 300
BAYONNE
DeWitt 2708
Embassy 700
Lyceum 1100
Opera House 1400
Plaza 750
Strand ..300
BEACH HAVEN
Colonial 500C1
BELLEVILLE
Capitol 1287
BELMAR
Rialto 300
Rivoli 300
BELYEDERE
Belvedere 400
Opera House 400C1
BEKGENFIELD
Palace 1055
BERLIN
Berlin 400
Palace 480
BERNARDSVILLE
Liberty 400
BEVERLEY
Beverley 500
BLACKWOOD
Blackwood 448
BLAIRSTOWN
Roys 400
BLOOMFIELD
Broadmoor 1000
New Savoy 400
Royal 1806
BOGOTA
Queen Anne 1400
BOONTON
State 900
BORDENTOWN
Fox 916
BOUND BROOK
Brook 1262
Lyric 634
BRADLEY BEACH
Palace 750
BRANCH VILLE
Branchville CI
BRANT BEACH
Colony 600C1
BRIDGETON
Criterion 1350
Majestic 500
Stanley 1550
BURLINGTON
Fox 1428
BUTLER
Butler 800
CALDWELL
Park 1000
CAMDEN
Broadway 1100
Elm 360
Grand 1193
Liberty 750
Lyric 2145
North Camden 470
Parkside 500
Princess 860
Rio 400
Savar 1500
Stanley 2228
Star 700
Victoria 900
Walt Whitman . . .1100
CAPE MAY
City Pier 600C1
Grand CI
Liberty 600C1
CAPE MAY COURT
HOUSE
Hunts 250C1
CARNEY'S POINT
Y.M.C.A 400
CARTERET
New Palace 425
Ritz 1000
CLEMENTON
Clementon 1380
CLIFFSIDE
Rex 400C1
Savoy 600
CLIFTON
Clifton 1100
Strand 665
CLINTON
Clinton Pt 306
Topaz No. 2 300
COLLINGSWOOD
Collingswood 1533
CRANFORD
Cranford 1194
DENVILLE
Denville 750
DOVER
Baker 1594
Playhouse 800
DUNNELLEN
Dunnellen 50C
EAST ORANGE
Hollywood 1650
Ormont 600
Strand 1200C1
EAST RUTHERFORD
Rex 1000
EGG HARBOR
Colonial 400
ELIZABETH
Capitol 900
Elmora 205
Gaiety 550
Liberty 1721
Regent 2815
Ritz 2806
Royal 600
State 1200
Strand 1000
ELMER
Elmer 300
ENGLEWOOD
Englewood f-00
Plaza 1482
FLEMING TON
Palace 750
FORDS
Fords 590
FORT LEE
Metro 400
FT. MONMOUTH
Ft. Monmouth
FRANKLIN
Franklin 840
FREEHOLD
Liberty 800
Strand 899
FRENCHTOWN
Barn 450
Gem 400
GARFIELD
Ritz 500
GLASSBORO
Glassboro 750
GLOUCESTER CITY
King- 800
GUTTENBERG
Alvin 600
HACKENSACK
Eureka 917
Fox 2230
Oritani 1967
HACKETTSTOWN
Strand 400
HADDONFIELD
Little 250
HAMMONTON
Rivoli 1000
HAWTHORNE
Hawthorne 1000
HIGHBRIDGE
Highbridge 400C1
HIGHLAND PARR
Park 1367
HIGHLANDS
Auditorium 600
HIGHTSTOWN
Hights 748
HILLSIDE
Mayfair 1200
HOBOKEN
Europa 600
Fabian 3036
886
ftivoli 600
U.S 1048
HOPEWELL
Columbia 400
IRVINGTON
Castle 1495
Liberty 750
Rex 1240
Sanford 1734
ISELIN
Embassy
JAMESBURG
Star 450
JERSEY CITY
Apollo 520
Bergen 600
Cameo 1300
Capitol 1663
Central 2031
Fulton 1732
Loew's Jersey .... 5500
Majestic 1000C1
Monticello 946
Orient 600
Orpheum 1200
Palace 1100
Rialto 976
Ritz 1488
Stanley 4332
State 2226
Strand 507
Tivoli 1265
KEANSBURG
Casino 700
Fowler 600
KEARNEY
Hudson 1625
Regent 1781
KEYPORT
Strand 700
LAKEVVOOD
Palace 886
Strand 1400
LAMBERTSVILLE
Strand 512
LANDISVILLE
Lyric 375
LAUREL
Laurel 500
LAVALLETTE
Roxy CI
LINDEN
Plaza 600
St. George 600
LITTLE FALLS
Oxford 1542
LODI
American 600
LONG BRANCH
Paramount 1722
Strand 1300
LYNDHURST
Lyndhurst 1000C1
Ritz 1391
MADISON
Madison 986
MANASQUAN
Algonquin 400
Arcadia 300
MANVILLE
Manville 420
MAPLE SHADE
Roxy 450
MAPLEWOOD
Maplewood 1400C1
MARGATE
Margate 750C1
MATAWAN
Matawan 368
MAY'S LANDING
Ritz 280
MERCHANTVILLE
Park 600
METUCHEN
Forum 600
MILFORD
Rivoli 280C1
MILLBURN
Millburn 966
MILLVILLE
Levoy 1556
Peoples 450
MONTCLAIR
Claridge 1338
Wellmont 2190
MOORESTOWN
Criterion 500
MORRISTOWN
Community 1500
Jersey 1300
Palace 550
Park 1315
MT. EPHRAIM
Mt. Ephraim 774
MT. HOLLY
Fox 1064
NETCONG
Palace 700
NEWARK
Adams 1900C1
(Branford Place)
Astor 500
(Springfield Ave.)
Avon 960
(Clinton Ave.)
Branford 2966
(Branford Place)
Broad 1100
( Broad Street )
Cameo 1000
(Elizabeth Ave.)
Capitol . . .' 1027
(Market St.)
Central 1399
(Central Ave.)
Congress 600
(S. Orange Ave.)
Court 780
(W. Market St.)
Elwis 490C1
Elwood 1270
(Broadway)
Embassy 800
(Bloomfield Ave.)
Essex 1000
(Springfield Ave.)
Globe 728
(Broad St.)
Hawthorne 1068
(Hawthorne Ave.)
Ironbound 1200
(Ferry St.)
Kent
Little 299
(Broad St.)
Luxor 590
(Market St.)
Lyric 900
(Market St.)
Mayfair 1000
(S. Orange Ave.)
Metropolitan 700C1
(Montgomery St.)
Mosque 32 81 CI
(Broad St.)
Mt. Prospect . . . .1100C1
(Mt. Prospect Ave.)
National 570
(Belmont Ave.)
Newsreel 400
(Broad St.)
Orpheum 1800
(Washington St.)
Palace
(856 Mt. Prospect Ave.)
Paramount 1200
Park 1000
(Bergen St.)
Plaza 1000
(Orange Ave.)
Proctor's Palace . . 2309
Regent 1992
(Bloomfield Ave.)
Rialto 1000
(Broad St.)
Ritz 1920
(Springfield Ave.)
Rivoli 360
(Ferry St.)
Robert Treat 600
(Orange St.)
Roosevelt 1648
(Clinton Ave.)
Savoy 1472
(Springfield Ave.)
Stanley 1977
(S. Orange Ave.)
State 2600
(Broad St.)
Station 650
(Market St.)
Strand 600
(S. Orange Ave.)
Terminal 2026C1
(Park Place)
Tivoli 1946
(Orange St.)
Walnut 500C1
(Walnut St.)
West End 920
(16th Ave.)
NEW BRUNSWICK
Albany
Europa 400
Opera House 1500
Rivoli 1601
State 199
Strand 500
NEW EGYPT
Isis 400
NEWTON
Court Square 500
Newton 892
NORTH BERGEN
Embassy 2167
NUTLEY
Franklin 1200
OAKLYN
Ritz 600
OCEAN CITY
Moorlyn 1558C1
Strand 1000C1
Surf 2000C1
Village 985
OCEAN GROVE
Strand 560
ORANGE
Colonial 900
Embassy 2073
Lido 700
Palace 1500
PALISADES
Grant Lee 800
Park Lane 1421
PALMYRA
Broadway 584
PASSAIC
Capitol 3449
Lincoln 800
Montauk 2796
Palace 1000
Playhouse 1684
PATERSON
Capitol 600
Fabian 3281
Garden 1227
Majestic 800
Plaza 800
Regent 1992
Rialto 600
Rivoli 1802
State 1000
U.S 1470
PAULSBORO
Hill's 500
PEAPACK
Auditorium CI
PENNSGROVE
Broad 1013
PERTH AMBOY
Crescent 800
Ditmas 780
Majestic 2100
Roky 750
Strand 1176
PHILLIPSBURG
Main Street 492
Philmont 400
Ritz
PITMAN
Broadway 1150
PLAINFIELD
Liberty 1000
Oxford 1639
Paramount 1202
Strand 1734
PLEAS ANT VILLE
Carlton
Rialto 827
POINT PLEASANT
Arnold 400
Grove 600C1
POMPTON LAKES
Colonial 800
PRINCETON
Arcade 700C1
Garden 950
Playhouse 900
RAHWAY
Empire 980
Rahway 1827
RAMSEY
Ramsey 335
RED BANK
Carlton 1850
Strand 1000
RIDGEFIELD PARK
Rialto 600
RIDGEWOOD
Warner 1542
RIVERSIDE
Fox 1228
ROSELLE
Roslyn 1000C1
ROSELLE PARK
Park 1268
RUNNEMEDE
Runnemede 1069
RUTHERFORD
Rivoli 1754
SALEM
Fenwick 550
Palace 900
SANDY HOOK
Ft. Hancock
SAYREVILLE
Colony
SEA ISLE CITY
Braca 300
Pier 650C1
SEASIDE PARK
Colonial 400
Strand 484
Strand Annex 400
SECAUCUS
Plaza-Playhouse . . .500
SOMERS POINT
Seaside 500
SOMMER VILLE
Cort 1500
SOUTH AMBOY
Empire 600
SOUTH ORANGE
Cameo 976
SOUTH PLAINFIELD
Parke 450C1
SOUTH RIVER
Capitol 1300
SPARTA
Mohawk Club
SPRING LAKE
Ritz 450C1
STONE HARBOR
Park 400C1
887
SUMMIT
Lyric 840
Strand 1200
SUSSEX
Sussex 400
SWEDESBORO
Embassy 400
TEANECK
Teaneck 1050
TEN A FLY
Bergen 750
TOMS RIVER
Community
Trace. 843
TRENTON
Bijou 900
Broad
Capitol 1978
Gaiety 800
Garden 1500
Greenwood 740
Lincoln 2300
New Center 670
Orpheum 800
Palace 1318
Park 511
Princess 700
Rialto 650
Stacy 800
State
Strand 700
Trent 998
TUCKAHOE
Community CI
TUCKERTON
Community 384
UNION
Union 1304
UNION CITY
Capitol 2114
City 500
Colony 1000
Hudson 900
Lincoln 1882
Roosevelt 1868
State 1654C1
Strand 750
Summit 600
Temple 1000
Transfer 1000
UPPER MONTCLAIR
Bellevue 975
VINELAND
Globe 763
Grand 1273
Landis 1200
WASHINGTON
St. Cloud 400
Washington 600
W. COLLINGSWOOD
Crescent 1000
WESTFIELD
Rialto 1000
WEST NEW YORK
Mayfair 1500
Rialto 600
Rivoli 750
WEST ORANGE
State 981
Windsor 800
WESTVILLE
Embassy 400
WESTWOOD
Pascack 1701
Westwood 1200C1
WILDWOOD
Auditorium 1500C1
Blaker 700C1
Casino 1200C1
Nixon 1100C1
Regent 1000C1
Strand 700C1
WILLIAM9TOWN
Grand 400
WOODBINE
Capitol 500
WOODRIDGE
State 1000
WOODBURY
Rialto 1127
Wood
WOODCLIFFE
Broadway 1000
WOODSTOWN
Opera House 425
WRIGHTSTOWN
Camp Dix
^NEW MEXICO-
92 Theaters; 39,894 Seats
Closed — 12 Theaters; 4,425 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 80 Theaters; 35,469 Seats
ALAMOGORDO
White Sand 400
ALBUQUERQUE
Chief 1112
Coronado 400
Kimo 1300
Lobo
Mesa 350
Mission 378
Rio 382
Sunshine 1200
ARTESTIA
Ocotillo 550
Valley 400
AZTEC
Aztec 250
BELEN
Central 300
BERNALILLO
Bernalillo 150
CARLSBAD
Cactus 700
Cavern 490
Tower
CARRIZOZO
Lyric 319
CHAMA
Kelly Hall 100
CIMARRON
Cimarron CI
CLAYTON
Luna 400
CLOUDCROFT
Pavilion 300C1
CLOVIS
Lyceum 825
Main Street 650C1
Mesa 980
CONCHAS DAM
Conchas 500C1
DAWSON
Opera House 450
DEMING
Luna 600
DULCE
Indian Agency . . . 225C1
ESPANOLA
El-Cine 220
ESTANCIA
Star 200
EUNICE
Lea 350
FARMINGTON
Allen's 450
FT. SUMNER
Granada 150
GALLUP
El Morro 900
Chief 650
Navajo 900C1
Reel 460
GRANTS
Lux 450
HAGERMAN
Crystal CI
HATCH
Mission 250
Palace 150C1
HOBBS
Derrick 800C1
Fawn 500C1
Reel 460
Rig 400
Roosevelt 400
Scout
HOT SPRINGS
El Cortez 500
Rialto 240
HURLEY
Tejo 385
J AL
Rex 300
LAS CRUCES
Del Rio 360
Rio Grande 776
LAS VEGAS
Coronada 733
Fox Surf 793
Kiva 400
LORDSBURG
Mesa 400
Palace 458
LOVING TON
Mesa 400
Palace 400
MADRID
Madrid Hall 200
MAXWELL
Maxwell (Port.)
MELROSE
Rialto 250
MOGOLLON
Princess
MOUNTAINAIR
Real 250
PECOS
Pecos CI
PORTALES
Yam 402
RATON
El Raton 500
Shuler 739
ROSWELL
El-Capitan 450
Picos 650
Yucca 1140
ROY
Mesa 250
Real 250
RUIDOSO
Crystal 150
SANTA FE
Burro-Alley 500
Paris 700
Paris 750
SANTA RITA
El Cobre 317
SANTA ROSA
Pecos 400
SILVER CITY
El Sol 303
Silco 492
SOCORRO
Loma 365
SPRINGER
Zia 240
TAOS
Taos 350
TUCUMCARI
Odeon 500
Princess 600
TULAROSA
Muse U 200
VAUGHN
Studio 300
West 200
W AGONMOVN D
Wagonmound CI
888
— NEW YORK —
1,418 Theaters; 1,609,773 Seats
Closed — 78 Theaters; 62,978 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 1,340 Theaters; 1,546,795 Seats
ADAMS
State 325
ADDISON
Avon 350
AKRON
Park 450
ALBANY
Albany 651
Colonial 800
Eagle 700
Harmanus Hall ..2070
Leland 1200
Madison 1330
Paramount 900
Ritz 1134
RKO Palace 3764
RKO Proctor's Grand
1604
Royal 1000
Strand 1993
ALBION
Rialto 750
ALEXANDRIA BAY
Bay 500
ALFRED
Nevins 250
ALTAMONT
Masonic Hall 400
AM KM A
Amenia 250
AMSTERDAM
Orpheum 290
Regent 1150
Rialto 1400
Strand 1200
ANDOVER
Andover 295
Lyric 450C1
ANGOLA
Angola 500
ANTWERP
Capitol 260
ARCADE
Arcade 400
ARLINGTON
Juliet
ATHENS
Grange 195
ATTICA
Astor 500
Ausable 250
Attica 250
AUBURN
Auburn
Capitol 1100
Jefferson 1300
Palace 1075
Strand 1725C1
AUSABLE FORKS
Ausable 300
Hollywood 400
AVOCA
Temple 300C1
AVON
Park 400
BALDWINSVILLE
Palace 800
BAINBRIDGE
Town Hall 250
BALLSTON SPA
Capitol 600
BARRYTOWN
Bard College 200
BARRYVTLLE
Riviera
BATAVIA
Family 1000
JLaFayette 1000
BATH
Babcock 693
BEACON
Beacon 500
BERLIN
I.O.O.F. Hall . ...250C1
BINGHAMTON
Binghamton 1804C1
Cameo 800
Capitol 2400
Grand 378
Jarvis 372
Lyric 935
Regus 779
Ritz 550
Riveria 1695
Star 800
Strand 1200
Suburban 1015
Sun 600
Symphony 700
BOLIVER
Lyric 280
BOLTON LANDING
Rex 400
BOONVILLE
Franjo 372
BREWSTER
Cameo
Ritz 430C1
BROADALBIN
Cozy 240
BROCKPORT
Strand 600
BROCTON
Gem 450
BRONXVILLE
Bronxville 1166
BUFFALO
Academy 904
(Main St.)
Allendale 900
(Allen St.)
Artistic 384
Avon 300
(Lovejoy St.)
Broadway 1100
Broadway-Lyceum . .400
Capitol 1001
(Triangle)
Casino 400
(Genesee St.)
Cazenovia 386C1
(Seneca St.)
Central Park 850
(Main St.)
Circle 550
(Connecticut St.)
Colonial 650
(Genesse St.)
Columbia 1200
(Genesee St.)
Commodore 780
(Genesee St.)
Ellen Terry 750
(Grant St.)
Embassy 360
(Main St.)
Fillmore Palace ....350
Gayety CI
Genesee 1694
Granada 1746
(Main St.)
Grand 400
(Sycamore St.)
Girder-Kensington ..497
(Grider St.)
Jefferson 1100
(Jefferson Ave.)
Jubilee 747
(Niagara St.)
Keith's 431
(Main St.)
Lafayette 3000
(Lafayette Sq.)
Liberty 450
(Jefferson Ave.)
Lincoln 308
(Broadway)
Little 246
(Fillmore Ave.)
Little Hippodrome . .350
(Main St.)
Lovejoy 541
Marlowe 650
(Virginia St.)
Masque 300
(345 Elk St.)
Maxine 500
(Seneca St.)
Mercury 299
New Ariel 700
(High St.)
Oakdale 350
(Seneca St.)
Orpheum 312
(Genesee St.)
Palace 770
(Main St.)
Park CI
Plaza 1000
(William St.)
Regent 920
(Main St.)
Rialto 500
(W. Ferry St.)
Riverside 1000
(Tonawanda St.)
Rivoli 1600
( Broadway )
Roosevelt 1887
(Broadway)
Roxy 950
(625 Williams St.)
Senate 625
(Rhode Island St.)
Seneca 350
Shea's Bailey 1790
Shea's Buffalo . . . .3489
Shea's Court St...l640Cl
Shea's Elmwood . . 1600
Shea's Great
Lakes 3024
Shea's
Hippodrome . ...210C
Shea's Kenmore ...150C
Shea's
Kennsington . . . .1366
Shea's North Park. 1350
Shea's Seneca 1750
Sheldon 377
(Waldon Ave.)
State 1200
Strand 600
Sylvia 455
(Filmore Ave.)
20th Century 3000
Unity 640
(Grant St.)
Varsity 862
(Bailey Ave.)
Victoria 1500
(W. Ferry St.)
VValden 246
(Walden Ave.)
CAIRO
Van Buren 250
CALEDONIA
State 300
CALLICOON
Callicoon 240
CAMBRIDGE
Cambridge 360
CAMDEN
Smalleys 500
CANAJOHARIE
Strand 576
CANADAIGUA
Playhouse 1131
CANASTOTA
Avon 500
CANISTEO
Canisteo 200
CANTON
American 675
CAPE VINCENT
Strand
CARTHAGE
Strand 650
CASTLETON
I.O.O.F. Hall 203
CATSKILL
Community 850
CATTARAUGUS
Cattaraugus 395
CAZENOVIA
Town Hall 330
CHADWICKS
Standard Hall ....400C1
CHAMPLAIN
Lyceum 500
CHATEAUGAY
Ideal 500
CHATHAM
Crandall 600
CHAUTAUQUA
Higgins Hall 250C1
CHERRY VALLEY
Cherry Valley 320
CHESTERTOWN
Chester 300
CHITTENANGO
Delphia 400
CLARK MILLS
Club 300
CLAYTON
Bertram! 220
889
CLIFTON SPRINGS
Palace 350
CLINTON
Clinton 250
CLYDE
Playhouse 350
COBLESKILL
Park 500
COHOES
Regent 639
Rialto 804
COLD SPRINGS
Hudson 310
COOPERSTOWN
Smalley's 702
COPAKE
Copake 200
CORINTH
Star 346
CORNING
Fox 1358
Palace 385
Plaza 375
State 926C1
CORNWALL-
ON-HUDSON
Storm Kins 575
CORTLAND
State 1302
Temple 1800
COXSACKIE
Coxsackie 250
CUBA
Cuba 300
DANNEMORA
Dannemora 250
DANSVILLE
Star 650
DELHI
Smalley's 450
DELMAR
Delmar 480
DEPEW
Colonial 900
DEPOSIT
State 500
DOBBS FERRY
Embassy 976
DOLGEVILLE
Smalley's 677
DOWNSVILLE
Opera House 250
DUNDEE
Strand 250
DUNKIRK
Capitol 1200
State 800
EARLVILLE
Earlville 350
EAST AURORA
Aurora 724
E. DURHAM
Lawyer's 250
E. ROCHESTER
Rialto 1000
E. SYRACUSE
East 1104
EDMESTON
Edmeston 300C1
ELIZABETHTOWN
Capitol 250
ELLINVILLE
Shadowland 850
ELMIRA
Capitol 1500
Colonial 700
Keeney's 2362
Regent 850
Strand 1000
ENDICOTT
Elvin 746
Lyric 800
State 650
Strand 800
ESSEX
Haran Memorial . . 150C1
FAIRPORT
Temple 886
FALCONER
State 498
FILLMORE
Opera House 300
FLEISCHMANN8
Whipple 600
FONDA
Fonda 360C1
FT. COVINGTON
Palace 228C1
FT. EDWARD
Bradley 400
FT. NIAGARA
War Dept
FT. PLAIN
Smalley's 735
FRANKLINVILLE
Adelphi 340
FRANKFORT
Hollywood 400
FREDON1A
Wintergarden 640
FRIENDSHIP
Community 250
FULTON
Happy Hour 800
State 1200
GENESEO
Riviera 500
GENEVA
Geneva 1862
Park 400
Regent 1000
GILBERTS VI LLE
Central School 378
GLENS FALLS
Empire 982
Paramount 1100
Rialto 1291
State 875
GLOVERSVILLE
Glove 1200
Hippodrome 1200
GOSHEN
Central 400
Goshen 850
GOUVERNEUR
Gralyn 700
GOWANDA
Hollywood 997
GRANVILLE
Ritz 500
GREENE
Greene 1200
GREENWICH
Swan 309
GREENWOOD LAKE
Playhouse 350
GROTON
Corona 400
HAMBURG
Palace 700
HAMILTON
State 595
HAMMONDSPORT
Park 200
HANCOCK
Capitol 400
HARRISON
Biltmore 600
HARRISVILLE
Diane 185
HASTINGS
Hastings 525
HAVERSTRAW
Broadway 900
HEMLOCK
Hemlock 145
HENSONVILLE
Hensonville 400
HERKIMER
Liberty 1081
HIGHLAND
Highland 363
HIGHLAND FALLS
City 400
HILTON
Hiltonia CI
HOLLY
Hollywood 300
HOMER
Capitol 350
HONEOYE FALLS
Falls 390
HOOSICK FALLS
New 500
HORNELL
Hornell 630
Majestic 770
Steuben 656
Strand 300
HUDSON
Community 1500
Rialto 335
Star 300
Warren 600
HUDSON FALLS
Strand 693
HUNTER
Hunter 298
ILION
Capitol 900
INLET
Gaiety 200
1NTERLAKEN
Lakes 250
ITHACA
State 1800
Strand 1600
Temple 850
JAMESTOWN
Palace 1700
Shea's Opera
House 1300
Shea's Roosevelt . . .402
Wintergarden 1000
JEFFERSONVILLE
Maple 300
JOHNSON CITY
Enjoy 1109
JOHNSTON
Smalley's 1000
Strand 113
KEESEVILLE
Rex 200
State 300
KINGSTON
Broadway 1703
Kingston 1850
Orpheum 800
LACKAWANNA
Franklin 900
Ridge 720
LAKE GEORGE
Lake 400
LAKE PLACID
Palace 984
LAKE PLEASANT
Tamarack Playhouse . 400
LANCASTER
Lancaster 900
LARCHMONT
Larchmont 1000
LEROY
Leroy 336
LIBERTY
Liberty 1050
LITTLE FALLS
Hippodrome 800
Rialto 1200
LIVINGSTON MANOR
Manor
LOCH SHELDRAKE
Strand 517
LOCKPORT
Hi Art 700
Palace 1750
Rialto 1400
LONG ISLAND
See New York City
LONG LAKE
Strand 400
LOWVILLE
Avalon 350
LUZERNE
Burt's 280
LYONS
Ohmann 650
MA LONE
Malone 1227
Plaza 550
MAMARONECK
Playhouse 1200
MANLIUS
Lincoln 200
MARATHON
Library 400
MARCELLUS
Strand 300
MARGARET VILLE
Galli Curci 560
MARLBORO
State 280
MASSENA
Rialto 423
Schine Massena. . . .1065
Massena 1065
MAYVILLE
Carlson 300
MECHANICVILLE
State 1129
MEDINA
Diana 650
MIDDLEBCRGH
Valley 150
MIDDLEPORT
Star 210C1
MIDDLETOWN
Paramount 1482
State 1400
Stratton 1200C1
MILLBROOK
Community 251
MILLERTON
Millerton 360
MINEVILLE
Rialto 300
MONROE
Colonial 450
MONTICELLO
Broadway 490
Rialto 850
MORAVIA
Colonial 250
MORRIS
Morris-Central 500
MT. KISCO
Kisco 700
MOUNT MORRIS
Family 300
MT. VERNON
Biltmore 620
Embassy 1200
Mt. Vernon 2388
Parkway 668
Plaza 600
Proctor's 1923
NAPLES
Naples 250
NARROWSBURG H
Park 250
NEWARK
Capitol 1246
NEW BERLIN
Dakin Hall 430
NEWBURGH
Academy 1100
Broadway 1100
Cameo 500
Park 1050
Ritz 1400
Strand 500C1
NEW PALTZ
New Paltz 300
NEW ROCHELLE
Alden
Cameo 500C1
Ft. Slocum 250
New Rochelle ....2042
Proctor's 2044
Trent 600
NEWTON FALLS
Community 300
890
NEW YORK CITY
To
tal
Clos
Open
No.
Seats
No.
Seats
No.
Seats
Manhattan
228
257.210
12
9.769
216
247.441
95
123.615
6
S.350
89
115.265
Brooklyn
241
285.759
13
9.657
228
276.102
15
16.203
— none —
15
15.203
167
171.152
6.306
160
164.S46
TOTALS
746
S53.939
38
34.0S2
70S
719. S57
1 — MANHATTAN
Academy of Music. 3515
(E. 14th St.)
Alden 550
(1981 Broadway)
Alhambra 1435
(2110 Seventh Ave.*
Alpine 600
(208 Dyckman St.)
American Movies . . 592
(238 E. 3rd St.)
Apollo 1500
(256 W. 125th)
Apollo 1000
(126 Clinton St.)
Apollo
(W. 42nd St.)
Arcade 550
(1931 B'way)
Arcadia 480
(993 Third Ave.)
Arch 290
Arden . .594
(878 rc\ ambus Ave.)
Areua 953
(623 Eighth Ave.)
Astor 1141
(1531 B'way)
Audubon 2607
(3934 B'way)
Avenue B 1800
(Ave. B 4 5th St.)
Barclay 1300
(W. 23rd St.)
Beacon 2673
(2124 B'way)
Belmont 550
(123 W. 48th St.)
Beverly 450
(523 Third Ave.)
Bijou 595
1 193 Ave. B)
Blue Bird 600
11763 Amsterdam Ave.)
Bridge 500
11316 St. Nicholas Ave.)
Broadway 1500
(B'way 4 233rd St.)
Cameo 539
1 42nd St. 4 B'way)
Canal 2379
(31 Canal St.)
Capitol 5486
(1645 B'way)
Carlton 1042
(2633 Broadway)
Center 3400
(Radio City)
Central 922
(B'way 4 47th St.)
Century 1200
(Second Ave. 4 12th St.)
Chaloner 1568
(841 Ninth Ave.)
Chatham 591
(5 Chatham Sq.)
Chelsea 750
(312 Eighth Ave.)
Ciueroma 1255
(1664 B'way)
Cinema de Paris.... 265
(66 Fifth Ave.)
Circle 1671 CI
(1827 B'way)
City 1855
(114 E. 14th St.)
City Hall 531
( 3 Park Row i
Clifton 590
( 1034 Second Ave.)
Clinton 1228
(80 Clinton St.)
Coliseum 3107
(4260 B'way)
Colonial 1494
i B'way & 02nd St.)
Colony 1000
(1519 Second Ave.)
Columbia 600
(1324 Amsterdam Ave.)
Columbus 553
(981 Eighth Ave.)
Commodore 2830
(105 Second Ave.)
Continental CI
(1662 Broadway)
Cosmo 1200
(176 E. 116th St.)
Cosmopolitan 1100
(59 & B'way)
Costello 598
(23 Ft. Wash. Ave.)
Criterion 1657
(1441 B'way)
Delancy 1788
(140 Delancy St.)
Delmar 2200
(3410 Broadway)
Dorset 694
(3589 Broadway)
Dyckman 1480
(552 W. 207th St.)
Eagle 1200
(1852 Third Ave.)
Edison 680
(2700 Broadway)
Eighth St.
Playhouse 490
(52 W. 8th St.)
Eighty-First 20S5
(Broadway & 81st St.)
Eighty-Sixth St.. . .3186
(121 E. S6th St.)
Eighty-Sixth St. . . .1400
(86th St. 4 Third)
S6th St. Casino . . . .600
(210 E. S6th St.)
Eighty-Sixth St.
Gar 492
(158 E. 86th)
Eighty-Third St. . .2633
(2309 B'way)
Embassy Newsreel. . . 575
(1560 B'way)
Empress 600
(544 W. lSlst St.)
Fifty-Eighth St. ...3163
(154 E. 58th St.)
55th St. Playhouse. .253
(154 W. 55th St.)
Filmarte CI
Florence 1150
(85 E. B'way)
Forty-Second St. . . .1221
(132 E. 42nd St.)
Franklin 650
(440 Lenox Ave.)
Gaiety 824
I B'way 4 46th St.)
Gem 600
(564 W. 181st St.)
Globe 141b
11555 B'way |
Glory 510
(112 Cannon St.)
Gramercy 521
(310 First Ave.)
Gramercy Park .... 600
(23rd 4 Lexington Ave.)
Granada 540
(300 E. 72nd St.)
Grand Central 300
i Grand Central Station)
Grant
i 110th St. 4 Fifth Ave.)
Greeley 1350
(857 Sixth Ave.)
Greenwich 590
(97 Greenwich Ave.)
Hamilton 1S90
(3560 B'way)
Harlem Grand . . . .1540
(117 E. 125th St.)
Harlem Opera Hse.1540
(211 W. 125th St.)
Heights 600
(150 Wadsworth Ave.)
Hollywood 1303C!
(98 Ave. A)
Hudson 550
(1968 Amsterdam Ave.)
Hudson Pl3y Hse.. . .562
(Christopher St.)
Inwood 1860
(132 Dyckman St.)
Jefferson 18S5
(214 E. 14th St.)
Jewel 700
(11 W. 116th St.)
Lafayette 1245
(2227 Seventh Ave I
Lane 1500
(560 W. lSlst St.)
Lennox House . . . 240C1
(52 E. 7Sth St.)
Lexington 2140
(571 Lexington Ave.)
Liberty 1500
(42nd St. 4 7th Ave.)
Lincoln 830C1
(508 W. 135th St.)
Lincoln Square . . .1531
(1947 B'way)
Little Carnegie ....411
(146 W. 57th St.)
Loyal 1400
'1493 St. Nicholas Ave.)
Lucky Star 400
(79 First Ave.)
Luxor 592
(159 Bleecker St.)
Lyric (Third Ave.) .400
Lyric 2000
(42nd St. 4 B'way)
Madison 588
1 1499 Madison Ave.)
Major 599
(277 Canal St.)
Manhattan 895
( 213 Manhattan Ave. )
Mayfair 1735
(47 St. & 7th Ave.)
Mecca 1947C1
(Ave. A & 14th St.)
Miami 350
(46th St. 4 Sixth Ave.)
Midtown 562
(2626 Broadway)
Monroe 2000
(79th 4 1st Ave.)
Morningside 600
(8th Ave. 4 116th St.)
Mt. Morris 1451
( 1 E. 116th St.)
Municipal 512
(1714 Madison Ave.)
Music Hall 6200
(Radio City)
National 500
(1703 Third Ave.)
National
(208 W. 41st St.)
Nemo 950
(2834 B'way)
New Amsterdam. .. 1598
i 42nd St. 4 Seventh Av.)
New Annex 600
(334 E. 74th St.)
New Delancey ....1075
(62 Delancey St.)
New Douglas . . . 2300 CI
( 640 Lenox Ave.)
New Fourteenth St.. 600
(245 E. 14th St.)
New Yorker 3 SO
(523 Eighth Ave.)
Newsreel
(1560 Broadway)
Ninety-Sixth St....500Cl
(96th St. 4 3rd Ave.)
Normandie 5S2
Odeon S50
(256 W. 145th St.)
Olympia 1279
(2778 B'way)
175th St 3444
(175th St. 4 B'way)
116th St 1809
(132 W. 116th St.)
Orient 600
(111 W. 125th St.)
Orpheum 2230
(168 E. S6th St.)
Orpheum 596
(126 Second Ave.)
Palace 481
( 2404 Second Ave.)
891
Palace 1767
(1504 B'way)
Palestine 1228
(11 Clinton St.)
Paramount 3664
(1501 B'way)
Park 1100
(8 Columbus Circle)
Park Lane 1800
(1726 First Ave.)
Park Row 366
(223 Park Row)
Park West 580
(103 W. 99th St.)
Peoples 1069
(199 Bowery)
Photoplay 600
(1770 Third Ave.)
Plaza 620
(42 E. 58th St.)
Proctor's 125th St.. 1080
(112 E. 125th St.)
Progress 630
(1892 Third Ave.)
Public 1200
RKO 23rd St 1800
Regent 1845
(1906 Seventh Ave.)
Regent 400
(28th St. & Third Ave.)
Regun 700
(60 W. 116th St.)
Renaissance 850
(2343 Seventh Ave.)
Reo 583
(2314 3rd Ave.)
Republic
(42nd & Seventh Ave.)
Rex 600
(205 E. 67th St.)
Rialto 1750
(Times Square)
Rio 2603
(B'way & 160th St.)
Riverside 1858
(2561 B'way)
Rivera 1744
(96th St. & B'way)
Rivoli 2092
(1620 B'way)
Roosevelt 1450
(2497 Seventh Ave.)
Roosevelt 400C1
(Houston St.)
Rose 444
(182 W. 102nd St.)
Roxy 5886
(50th St. & 7th Ave.)
Royal 600
(655 Tenth Ave.)
Ruby 580
(105 Rivington St.)
St. Marks 485
(133 Second Ave.)
Sam Harris 1040
Savoy 718
(112 W. 34th St.)
Schuyler 580
(504 Columbus Ave.)
Selwyn 1100
(229 W. 42nd St.)
Seventy-Second St. 3200
(180 E. 72nd St.)
Seventy-Seventh St. 600
(2182 B'way)
Sheridan 2512
(7th Ave. & 12th St.)
68th St. Playhouse. .311
(68th St. & 3rd Ave.)
Squire 598
(44th St. & Eighth Ave.)
Stadium 1202
(2180 Third Ave.)
Stanley 621
(586 Seventh Ave.)
Star 390
(1714 Lexington Ave.)
Star 290
(136 Third Ave.)
State 3327
(1540 B'way)
Stoddard 1473
(2431 B'way)
Strand 2768
(1577 B'way)
Sunset 600
(316 W. 125th St.)
Sunshine 455
(141 E. Houston St.)
Superior 880
(443 Third Ave.)
Sutton 575
(205 E. 57th St.)
Symphony 1411
(2537 B'way)
Teatro Hispano . . . 1200
Terrace 600
(361 W. 23rd St.)
Thalia 300
(B'way & 95th St.)
Thirty-Fourth St. ..600
(162 E. 34th St.)
Times 579
(653 Eighth Ave. I
Times Square ....1040
(W. 42nd St.)
Tivoli 1400
(839 Eighth Ave.)
Towne looo
(841 Ninth Ave.)
Town Playhouse ..278C1
(1439 Third Ave.)
Trans-Lux 500
(52nd St. & B'way i
Trans-Lux 500
(650 Madison Ave.)
Triboro CI
(125th St. & Third Ave.)
Tribune 600
(170 Nassau St.)
Tudor 600
(050 Third Ave.)
Universal 460
(93 Bowery)
Uptown 1500
(170th St. & B'way)
Variety 600
(112 Third Ave.)
Venice 600
(209 Park Row)
Victory 1165
(2094 Second Ave.)
Victoria 2345
(233 W. 125th St.)
Village 280
(8th Ave.)
Waldorf 970
(116 W. 50th St.)
Wallack 900
(254 W. 42nd St.)
Washington 1200
(1803 Amsterdam Ave.)
Waverly 550
(325 Sixth Ave.)
West End 670
(125th St. &
St. Nicholas Ave.)
Windsor 40')
(412 Grand St.)
World 299
(153 W. 49th St.)
York 545
(1187 First Ave.)
Yorktown 953
(2409 B'way)
Yorkville 494
(3rd Ave.)
Ziegfeld 2000
(54th & Sixth Ave.)
YMCA 250
(Governors Island)
2 — BRONX
A<t 950
(544 So. Boulevard I
Allerton 1232
(744 Allerton Ave.)
Art 600
(1077 South Blvd.)
Ascot 594
(Concourse & 183rd St.)
Avalon 1200
(275 E. Burnside Ave.)
Barnes 1 300C1
Beach 577
(Randall & Beach Ave.)
Bedford 600
(3119 Webster Ave.)
Blenheim 1800
(460 E. 169th St.)
B010 592
(762 Melrose Ave.)
Boston Road 1500
(1472 Boston Rd.)
Boulevard 1975
( 1032 So. Blvd.)
Bronx 1500
(440 E. 149th St.)
Bronxdale 1500CI
Burke 1078
(3210 W. Plains Ave.)
Burland 1896
(985 Prospect Ave.)
Burnside 3178
(57 E. Burnside Ave.)
Castlehill 1454
(1321 Castlehill Ave.)
Central 1200
(Millrose Ave. & 150 St.)
Chester 2341
(Tremont & W. Farms)
Community ....1200C1
(3911 White Plains Rd. 1
Concourse 571
(207 E. Fordham Rd.)
Craft 562
(238th St. &
White Plains Road)
Crest 950
(167th & Ogden Ave. 1
Crotona 2245
(453 E. Tremont Ave.)
Dale 590
(231st St. & Broadway)
Decatur 950
?715 Webster Ave.)
DeLuxe 1400
(648 E. Tremont Ave.)
Devon 596
(E. Tremont & Cone.)
Dover 600
(1773 Boston Rd.)
Earle
(161st & River Ave.)
Elsemer 1975
(1924 Crotona Pway.)
Empire 1800
(864 Westchester Ave.)
Fairmont 2504
(708 E. Tremont Ave.)
Fenway 1400
(1576 Wash'gton Ave.)
Fleetwood 1650
( 165th St. & Morris Ave.)
Fordham 2398
(215 E. Fordham Rd.)
Forum 2268
(138th S. & Brook Ave.)
Franklin 2951
(Prospect Ave. & 161 St.)
Freeman 1540
(1232 So. Blvd.)
Grand 2430
(2463 Jerome Ave.)
Haven 563
(310 E. 138th St.)
Interboro 1450
(3462 E. Tremont Ave.)
Jackson 599
(745 Westchester Ave.)
Jerome 1647
(1 W. Tremont Ave.)
Kameo 500
(4376 Third Ave.)
Kent 689
(167 St. & Sheridan Ave.)
Kingsbridre 1116
( 15 E. Kingsbridge Rd.)
Laconia 1160
(224th St. & W. PI. Ave.)
Lido 600
(15 E. Fordham Rd.)
Luxor 1480
(208 E. 170th St.)
Marble Hill 1638
(5615 B'way)
Melba 594
(Boston Rd. & Fish Ave.)
Melrose 400C1
(417 E. 161st St.)
Metro 1320
(2269 Webster Ave.)
Mosholu 850
(270 E. 204th St.)
Mount Eden 1745
(Mt. Eden & In wood Ave.)
National 2333
(570 Bergen Ave.)
Newsreel
Ogden 1379
(1431 Ogden Ave.)
167th St 2321
(48 E. 167th St.)
Osceola 600
(258 St. Anns Ave.)
Oxford 1950
(2264 Jerome Ave.)
Paradise 3840
(2403 Grand Con.)
Park Plaza 2061
( 1746 University Ave. )
Parkway 1800C1
(3rd Ave. & 172nd St.)
Pelham 1300
(Lydig Ave. W. P. Rd.)
Pilgrim 1060
(Pilgrim & West.)
Post Road
(Post Rd. & Corsa Ave.i
President 1000
(827 Westchester)
Prospect 1*00
(161st & Prospect)
Radio 600
(1348 So. Blvd.)
Rex 550
( Westchester Ave. )
Ritz 768
(1014 E. 180th St.)
Rosedale 1285
(Rosedale & West. Ave.)
Royal 2196
(423 West. Ave.)
Savoy 1000
(604 E. 187th St.)
Spooner 1807
(963 So. Blvd.)
Square 568
(58 Westchester Sq.)
Star 600
(960 So. Blvd.)
Surrey 500
(Mt. Eden Ave.)
Tiffany 582
(1077 Tiffany St.)
Tower 1693
(1175 Boston Rd.)
Tremont 955
(1942 Webster Ave.)
Tuxedo 1720
(3464 Jerome Ave.)
University 600
(33 W. Fordham Rd.l
Valentine 1224
(237 E. Fordham Rd.)
Victory 1772
(3024 Third Ave.)
Vogue 1392
(892 E. Tremont Ave.)
Wakefield 1330
(4214 W. Plains Rd.l
Ward 1831
( 1546 West. Ave.)
892
Willis 2150CI
(138 St. & Willis Ave.)
Windsor 1600
(315 E. Fordham Rd.)
Yorke 1260
(723 Morris Pk. Ave.)
Zenith 600
(170th & Jerome Ave.)
3 — BROOKLYN
Academy of Music 3600
(30 Lafayette Ave.)
Acme 550
(2746 Myrtle Ave.)
Alba 1681
(750 Flushing- Ave.)
Albee 3246
( DeKalb Ave. & F't'n St.)
Alben 450
(6406 Third Ave.)
Albermarle 2700
(973 Flatbush Ave.)
Alhambra 1401
( 783 Kn'k'rb'cker Ave. )
Alpine 2163
(6815 Fifth Ave.)
Ambassador 2046
(776 Saratoga Ave.)
American 560
(910 Manhattan Ave.)
Apollo 1327
(1531 Fulton St.)
Art 550
(958 Marcy Ave.)
Astor 500
(Flatbush Ave.)
Atlantic
(Flatbush Ave.)
Avalon 2119
(1720 Kingrs H'way
Avenue D 599
(4301 Ave D)
Avenue U 500
(1602 Avenue U)
Avon 550
(291 — 9th St.)
Bay Ridge 1796
(7120 Third Ave.)
Bedford 2208
(1372 Bedford Ave.
Belvedere 850
(64-28 Myrtle Ave.)
Bellcinema 600
(Washington Ave.)
Benson 1317
(2005 — 86th St.)
Berkshire 980
(5913 — 8th Ave.)
Beverly 1394
(111 Church Ave.)
Billmore 1711
( New Lots & Wyona St. )
Bobby 400
(1160 B'way)
Borough Hall 598
(102 Court St.)
Boro Park 2395
(5102 N. Utrecht Ave.)
Brevoort 2059
(1274 Bedford Ave.)
Broadway 2088
(912 B'way)
Bushwick 2236
( B'way & Howard Ave.)
Canarsie 1100
(Ave L & 93rd St.)
Capital 1781
(286 Saratoga Ave.)
^arlton 1383
(292 Flatbush Ave.)
Carroll 1864
(Utica Ave. & Crown)
Center 510
Century 1477
(1260 Nostrand Ave.)
Cinema 535
(597 E. ICIh St.)
Claridge 925
(433 Avenue P)
Classic 600
(180 Tompkins Ave.)
Clinton
(Mills & Clinton St.)
Coliseum 1000
(5205 Fourth Ave.)
College 599
( 1584 Flatbush Ave. I
Colonial 2222
(1746 B'way)
Colony 410
(6502 18th Ave.)
Comet 500
(856 Gates Ave.)
Commodore 1436
(329 B'way)
Coney Island 2500
(Surf & Stillwell Ave.)
Congress 2223
(1561 St. John's PI.)
Culver 1445
(Gravesend & 18th Ave.)
Cumberland 640
(327 Cumberland St.)
Decatur 578
(1674 B'way)
De Luxe 599
(2001 Bath Ave.)
Dewey 390
(2384 Coney Is. Ave.)
Duffield 964
(249 Duffield St.)
Dyker 2151
(Shore Rd. & 86th St.)
Eagle 550
(431 Central Ave.)
Earl 700
(1114 Liberty Ave.)
Echo 500
(368 Bushwick Ave.)
Electra 700
(7418 Third Ave.)
Elm 800
( Avenue M )
Elton 1900
(4217 N. Utrecht Ave.)
Embassy 1437
(3208 Fulton St.)
Empire 1810
(Ralph Ave. & B'way)
Empress 1595
(529 Empire Blvd.)
Endicott il02
(13th Ave. & 70th St.)
Euclid 515
(2701 Pitkin Ave.)
Fair 420
(1830 Coney Island Av.l
Farragrut 1976
(1401 Flatbush Ave.)
Flatbush 1695
(2207 Church Ave.)
Flora 500C1
(201 Atlantic Ave.)
Folly 1570
(15 Debevoise Ave.)
Fortway 1570
(6720 Ft. Hamilton Py.)
Forty-Sixth St. ...2675
(46 St. & N. Utrecht Ave.)
Fox 4088
(10 Flatbush Ave.)
Garden 600
(4601 N. Utrecht Ave.)
Garfield 593
(269 Fifth Ave.)
Gates 2868
(1340 B'way)
Gem 600
(3355 Fulton St.)
Glenwood 500
(1475 Flatbush Ave.)
Glenwood 1300
(2408 Myrtle Ave.)
Globe 862
(226 — 15th St.)
Gloria 550
(395 Court Ave.)
Gold 544
(176 Sand St.)
Grace 400
(2 Whipple St.)
Graham 500
(279 Graham Ave.)
Graham 1100
( Gerrittsen Beach )
Granada 1548
(2819 Church St.)
Grand 600
(743 Grand St.)
Grand Art 500
(4805 Third Ave.)
Grandview 550
(659 Grandview Ave.)
Greenpoint 1822
(825 Manhattan Ave.)
Grove 600
(474 Wilson Ave.)
Halsey 2100
(928 Halsey St.)
Happr Hour 599
(234 Columbia St.)
Harbor 900
(9215 Fourth Ave.)
Heights 885
( 159 Washington St.)
Highway 940
(283 Kings Highway)
Hollywood 970
(7725 N. Utrecht Ave.)
Howard 1100
1 1927 Fulton St.)
Imperial 500
(869 Halsey St.)
Imperial 560C1
( 157 Irving Ave. )
Irving 595
(1525 Myrtle Ave.)
Jefferson 390
(811 Myrtle Ave.)
Jewel 600
(Kings Hway.)
Kameo 1458
1540 Eastern Pkway)
Kenmore 3025
(Church & Kenmore PI.)
Kent 570
I Ave. H & Coney Isl.)
Kinema 1180
(2505 Pitkin Ave.)
Kings 3609
(FHtbush & Tilden Ave.)
King>way 2222
(94^ Kings Hway.)
Kismet 1152
(785 DeKalb Ave.)
Lakeland 420
( 273 Brighton Beach
Ave 1
Leader 1631
(947 Coney Islard Ave.)
Lido 500
(265 Court St.1
Lincoln •"'OO
(1519 Bedford Ave.)
Lindy 600
(118 Graham Ave.)
Livonia 500
(382 Livonia Ave.)
Luna 475
(211 Columbia St.)
Lyric 400
I 2245 Pitkin Ave.)
Madison 2771
( 1562 Myrtle Ave.)
Majestic 600C1
(651 Fulton St.)
Majestic 600
( 424 Seneca Ave.)
Marboro 2252
( 70th St. & Bay Pkway.)
Marcy 765
(302 Bway.)
Mardi Gras 1000
( 1221 Surf Ave.)
Marine 2153
( 1956 Flatbush Ave.)
Marvin 453C1
(1216 Bway.)
Mayfair 1813
(912 Avenue U)
Melba 2256
(300 Livingston Ave.)
Mermaid 571
(2816 Mermaid Ave.)
Meserole 1978
(725 Manhattan Ave.)
Metro 990
(194 Grand St.)
Metro 599
(6409 20th Ave.)
Metropolitan 3618
(392 Fulton St.)
Midway 681
(1059 Manhattan Ave.)
Midwood 1953
(1307 Avenue J)
Miller 600
(747 Sutter Ave.)
Minerva 398
(419 Seventh Ave.)
Model 500
(131 Lee Ave.)
Momart 600
(590 Fulton St.)
Monroe 585
(4 Howard Ave.)
Nassau 450
(337 Grand St.)
Nassau 600
(88 Nassau St.)
National 1262
(720 Washington Ave.)
New Atlantic 900C1
(205 Flatbush Ave.)
New Brighton ...1000C1
(Ocean Pkway.)
New Casino 1600C1
(Broadway & De Kalb)
New Plaza 450
(156 High St.)
New Singer 560
(375 Stone Ave.)
New United 1600
(207 Myrtle Ave.)
Nostrand 1000
(276 Nostrand Ave.)
Oasis 1876
(Fsh. Pd. Rd. & Grove)
Oceana 2100
( Brighton Beach Ave. )
Oriental 2753
(86th St. & 19th Ave.)
Orpheum 1865
(Fulton St. & Rockwell
PI.)
Oxford 648C1
(552 State St.)
Palace 1644
(1823 Douglas St.)
Palace 535C1
(5602 Sixth Ave.)
Paradise 585
(810 4th Ave.)
Paramount 4084
(385 Flatbush Ave.)
Paras Court 570
(292 Court St.)
Park 1182
(4322 5th Ave.)
Parkside 600
(728 Flatbush Ave.)
Parthenon 1503
(329 Wyckoff Ave.)
Patio 2606
(574 Flatbush Ave.)
Peerless 560
(433 Myrtle Ave.)
Peoples Cinema .... 560
(Saratoga &
Livonia Aves.)
Pioneer 524
(83 Pioneer St.)
Pitkin 2817
(1501 Pikin Ave.)
893
Premier 2660
(609 Sutter Ave.)
Prospect 2400
(0th St. & 6th Ave.)
Quenton 560
(Quenton Ave.)
Rainbow 1000
(166 Graham Ave.)
Regent 630
(1215 Fulton St.)
Republic 2601
(402 Reap St.)
Rialto 1542
(1085 Flatbush Ave.)
Ridgewood 1966
(Myrtle & Cypress Ave.)
Ritz 808
(4509 8th Ave.)
Rivera 2292
(1060 St. Johns PI.)
Rivoli 860
(1374 Myrtle Ave.)
Rogers 660
(333 Rogers Ave.)
Rogers 50C
(835 Bway.)
Royal 420
(4113 13th Ave.)
Rugby 868
(823 Utica Ave.)
St. George Playhouse.978
(100 Pineapple St.)
Sanders 1517
(188 Prospect Pkway.)
Savoy 3578
(1550 Bedford Ave.)
Scott 452C1
(70 Atlantic Ave.)
Senate 1163
(7311 18th Ave.)
Sheepshead 1898
(1722 Sheepshead Bay
Rd.)
Sheffield 1326C1
(308 Sheffield Ave.)
Sheldon 570
(1648 Sheepshead Bay
Rd.)
Sheridan 600C1
(1140 Liberty Ave.)
Shore Rd 1414
(436 86th St.)
Sixteenth St 490
(162 16th St.)
Skillman 378
(665 Myrtle Ave.)
Square 400
(246 Broadway)
Stadium 1761
(102 Chester St.)
Stanley 560
(74-15 5th Ave.)
Star 650
(389 Jay St.)
Starr 900
(233 Knickerbocker
Ave.)
State 938
(500 DeKalb Ave.)
Stillwell 1854
(2402 86th St.)
Stone 1522
(389 Stone Ave.)
Strand 2870
(647 Fulton St.)
Subway 580
(158 Myrtle Ave.)
Sumner 802
(265 Sumner Ave)
Sun 800
(637 Bway.)
Sunset 600
(4705 Fifth Ave.)
Supreme 1724
(530 Livonia Ave.)
Surf 1300
(3117 Surf Ave.)
Sutter 1710
(1 Sutter Ave.)
Terminal 1700
(49 Fourth Ave.)
Tiffany 680
(357 Chester St.)
Tilyou 2264
(1607 Surf Ave.)
Tivoli 1900
(365 Fulton St.)
Tompkins 600
(634 Gates Ave.)
To win- 540
(327 Washington St.)
Translux 660
(927 Flatbush Ave.)
Traymore 600
(46-11 Ave. N)
Triangle 542
(Kings Hway.)
Tuxedo 1812
(3050 Ocean Pkway.)
Utica 1508
(1410 St. Johns PI.)
Vanity 520
(66-12 Fifth Ave.)
Venus 500
(1224 Prospect Ave.)
Vogue 1759
(Coney Island Ave. &
Ave. K)
Waldorf 826
(94-01 Church Ave.)
Walker 2298
(6401 18th Ave.)
Warwick 1446
(132 Jerome St.)
Washington 484C1
(344 5th Ave.)
Williamsburg 650
(279 Broadway)
Willoughby 580
(260 Knickerbocker
Ave.)
Wilson 966
(27 Lee Ave.)
Windsor 1300
(4001 15th Ave.)
Winthrop 600
(135 Driggs Ave.)
Wyckoff 500
(247 Wyckoff Ave.)
4 — STATEN ISLAND
FT. WADSWORTH
Ft. Wadsworth
GREAT KILLS
Strand 1000
NEW BRIGHTON
Star 450
NEW DORP
Lane 600
New Dorp 496
POUT RICHMOND
Empire 775
Palace 950
Ritz 2170
ST. GEORGE
St. George 2902
STAPLETON
Liberty 1157
Paramount 2274
Rex 565
TOMPKINSVILLE
Victory 804
TOTTENVILLE
Stadium 1037
WEST BRIGHTON
Capitol 933
5 — LONG ISLAND
AMITYVILLE
Amityville 480
Star 600
ARVERNE
Arverne 1000
Boardwalk 1500
ASTORIA
\storia 2763
Astoria Grand .... 2187
(Ditmars & Second)
Broadway 1328
Crescent 1903
Ditmars 600
Meridan 400
Steinway 904
Triboro 1387
BABYLON
Babylon 1050
BALDWIN
Baldwin 756
BAYSHORE
Bayshore 2000
Regent 800
BAYSIDE
Bayside 1500
Ft. Totten
(U. S. Army)
BAYSIDE WEST
Victory 1330
BELLAIRE
Bellaire 1024
BELLEROSE
Bellerose 1204
BELLMORE
Bellmore 350
CEDARHURST
Central 1100
Playhouse 436C1
CENTER MORICHES
Center Moriches . . . .350
COLLEGE POINT
College Point 1200
CORONA
Corona 1228
Granada 1726
Palace 600
Plaza 2122
E. HAMPTON
Edwards 1026
E. ISLIP
East Islip 300
E. ROCKAWAY
Criterion 981
EDGMERE
Edgmere 1500C1
ELMHURST
Newtown 570
Queensboro . . . 2200C1
FARMINGDALE
Strand 375
FAR ROCKAWAY
Columbia 1338
Gem 600
Strand 1775
FLORAL PARK
Floral 1682
FLUSHING
Prospect 2332
RKO Keith's 2944
Roosevelt 1758
Taft 1200
FOREST HILLS
Forest Hills 928
Inwood 1270C1
FRANKLIN SQUARE
Franklin 955
FREEPORT
Freeport 1823
Grove 1933
Plaza 526
GLEN COVE
•"ove 1658
Glen 600
GREAT NECK
Playhouse 1160
GREENPORT
Greenport 900
Strand
HAMPTON BAY
Bays B10
HEMPSTEAD
Hempstead 1643
Rivoli 1989
State 460
HICKSVILLE
Hicksville 900
Playhouse 1226
HOLLI8
Hollis 814
Island 600
HOWARD BEACH
Howard 625
HUNTINGTON
Huntington 1656
HUNTINGTON
STATION
Huntington Station.. 620
JACKSON HEIGHTS
Boulevard 1839
Colony 500
Earl 600
Fair
Jackson 1404
JAMAICA
Alden 1855
Carlton 1200
Hillside 2584
Jamaica 1781
Linden 800
Merrick 2490
Savoy 1893
Valencia 3544
KEW GARDENS
Austin 600
KINGS PARK
Park 300
LAURELTON
Laurelton 600
LINDENHURST
Wellwood 350
LITTLE NECK
Little Neck 600
LONG BEACH
Laurel 1540
Lido 560
West End 600
LONG ISLAND CITY
Bliss 2000
43rd St 600
Idle Hour 500
Polk Ave 570
Vernon 550
LYNBROOK
Arcade 549
Lynbrook 1731
MANHASETT
Manhasett 1040
MASPETH
Maspeth 1161
MATTITUCK
Mattituck 250C1
MERRICK
Gables 600
MIDDLE VILLAGE
Arion 1000
MINEOLA
Mineola 1400
Williston 545
MITCHELL FIELD
Mitchell Field 250
MONTAUK POINT
Montauk 350C1
NEW HYDE PARK
Park 300C1
NORTHPORT
Northport 686
OCEAN BEACH
Community 475
OYSTER BAY
Lyric 550
OZONE PARK
Cross Bay 1452
New Ozone 400
State 675
PATCHOGUE
Granada 680
Patchorue 1500
Rialto 1000
PORT JEFFERSON
Port Jefferson 500
PORT WASHINGTON
Beacon 1613
894
QUEENS VILLAGE
Community 1074
Queens 2168
REGO PARK
Drake 600
RICHMOND HILL
Casino 1000
Garden 980
Jerome 887
Lefferts 1613
RKO Keith's 2226
Willard 2300
RIDGEWOOD
Belvedere 758
Grandview 600
Majestic 600
RIVERHEAD
Riverhead 1100
Suffolk 1012
ROCKAWAY BEACH
New 826
Rivoli 600
ROCKAWAY PARK
Park 939
ROCKAWAY POINT
Colony 500
ROCKYILLE CENTRE
Fantasy 1584
Strand 1368
ROOSEVELT
Nassau 590
ROSLYN
Roslyn 500
ST. ALBANS
Cambria 600
St. Albans 800
ST. JAMES
St. James 306
SAG HARBOR
Sap Harbor 800
SAYVILLE
Sayville 500
SHELTER ISLAND
Casino-Open Air ...300
SMITHTOWN
Smithtown 605
SO. HAMPTON
So. Hampton 1000
SOUTH JAMAICA
Malboe 690
Plaza 600
SO. OZONE PARK
Farrell 519
Park 1028
SPRINGFIELD
GDNS.
Garden 600
SUFFOLK
Suffolk 1012
VALLEY STREAM
Drive In
Valley Stream 1248
WESTBURY
Westbury 1700
WEST HAMPTON
Star 600
WESTHAMPTON
BEACH
Westhampton 600
WHITESTONE
Rialto . '. 550
WILLISTON
Williston 550
WINFIELD
Fisk 500
\VOODHAVEN
Haven 470
Roosevelt 1300
WOODSIDE
Deluxe 518
Hobart 600
Sunnyside 2030
Woodside 1800
NEW YORK STATE
(Continued)
NIAGARA FALLS
Capitol 1000
Cataract 1434
Colonial 700C1
Hippodrome 375
La Salle 820
Rainbow 900
Shea's Bellevue ...1500
State 812
Strand 2061
NORFOLK
Empress 250
NORTH COLLINS
Olympic 350
NORTH CREEK
Happy Hour 296
NO. TARRYTOWN
Strand 700
NO. TONA WANDA
Avondale 789
Shea's Riviera .... 1249
NORTHVILLE
Star 300
NORWICH
Colonial 800
Sm alley 854
NORWOOD
Star 250
NUNDA
Nunda 350
NYACK
Broadway 1114C1
Rockland 1628
OAKFIELD
High School 800
OGDENSBURG
Pontiac
Strand 1092
OLD FORGE
Strand 550
OLEAN
Havens 1118
Palace 1500
State 481
ONEIDA
Kallet 1200
Madison 960C1
ONEONTA
Oneonta 450
Palace 700
OQUAGA LAKE
Casino 200
ORISKANY FALLS
Star 300
OSSINING
Cameo 450C1
Victoria 1220
OSWEGO
Capitol 700
Strand 895
OWEGO
Tioga 793
OXFORD
Smalley 450
PALMYRA
Strand 674
PAWLING
Albermac 400
PEARL RIVER
Central 560
PEEKSKILL
Colonial 1359C1
Paramount 1000
Peekskill 1000
PELHAM
Pclham 500
PENN YAN
Elmwood 700
PERRY
Auditorium 620
PHELPS
Phelps 400
PHILMONT
Strand 295
PHOENICIA
Phoenicia 206
PHOENIX
Strand 255
PINE PLAINS
Pine Plains 300
PLATTSBURGH
Barracks
Champlain 600
Strand 1298
PLEASANTVILLE
Rome 490
POLAND
Poland
PORTCHESTER
Capitol 1800
Embassy 1100
Strand 600C1
PT. HENRY
Empire 500
I'ORT JERVIS
Ritz 779
Royal 600C1
Strand 1000
PORT LEYDEN
Port 240
POTSDAM
Rialto 800
POUGHKEEPSIE
Bardavon 1500
Liberty 350
Playhouse 600C1
Rialto 1400
State 1200
Stratford 1410
PULASKI
Kallet 558
RANDOLPH
Center School . . . 1498C1
Randolph
RAVENA
Ravena 400
RED HOOK
Lyceum 399
RENSSELAER
Brightspot 276
RHINEBECK
Star 275
RICHFIELD
SPRINGS
Capitol 400
ROCHESTER
Arnett 711
Aster 462
(267 Bay St.)
Cameo 1200
Capitol 1800
Century 2250
Clinton 540
Dixie 860
Eastman 3500C1
Embassy 1000
Empress 600
Grand 800
Hudson 600
Lake 700
Liberty 950
Lincoln 700
Little 600
Loew's Rochester ..4000
Lyric 500
Madison 1200
Majestic 510
Monroe 1197
Murray 900
Regent 1600
Rexy 500
Riviera 1051
Rivoli 475
(427 Jefferson Ave.)
RKO Palace 3000
State 923
Strand 1300
Sun
Temple 1496
Webster 900
West End 860
World 1200
ROME
Capitol 1500
ROSCOE
Roscoe 300
ROUSES POINT
Lyric 360
ROXBURY
Capitol 300
RYE
Playhouse 750
SACKETTS HARBOR
Madison Barracks . .360
ST. HUBERTS
Ausable Club
ST. JOHNSVILLE
Smalley's 900
SALAMANCA
Andrews 807
SALEM
Star 250
SARANAC LAKE
Pontiac 1026
SARATOGA
Community 1250
Congress 996
SAUGERTIES
Orpheum 600
SCARSDALE
Scarsdale 300
SCHENECTADY
American 450
Cameo 600
Colony 900
Lincoln 600
Mt. Pleasant . . . .700C1
Palace 400
RKO Plaza 1800
RKO Proctors 2738
Rivoli 608
State 1701
Strand 1300
SCHOHARIE
Schoharie 400
SCHROON LAKE
Paramount 396
Strand 350C1
SCHUYLERVILLE
Broadway 500
SCOTIA
Ritz 700C1
SEABREEZE
Hub 400
SENECA FALLS
Strand 987
SHARON SPRINGS
Smalley's Sharon. . . .395
SHERBURNE
Sherburne 350
SHERMAN
Ritz 400
SIDNEY
Smalley's 600
SILVER CREEK
Geitner 695
SKANEATELES
Huxf ord 330
SNYDER
Amherst H. S. . . .1300
SODUS POINT
Arcade 700
SOLVAY
Allen 500
Community 525
SO. FALLSBURG
Rivoli 700
SPECULATOR
Adirondack 400
SPRING VALLEY
Valley 750
SPRING VILLE
Joylan 220
STAMFORD
Smalley's 600
SUFFERN
Lafayette 1100
Strand 389
SYRACUSE
Acme 800
Alcazar 400
Avon 700
(443 Hawley Ave.)
Brighton .< . .2000
895
Cameo 900
Civic
Eckel 1452
Elmwood 650
Empire 800
Franklin 400
Globe +00
Happy Hour 500
Harvard 750
Hollywood 600
James 355
Liberty 350
(Park Ave.)
Loew's State 2908
Lyric 225
Mayfair 500
Novelty 550
Palace 830
Paramount 1500
IS. Salem St.)
Resent 1000
Ritz 1100C1
Riviera 950
Rivoli 1250
RKO Keith's 2514
Schiller Park 750
Star 312
Strand 1621
IN. Salina & Harrison St.)
Turnhall 650
TANNERS VILLE
Orpheum 350
TARRYTOWN
Music Hall 1500
THOUSAND ISLAND PK.
Auditorium
TICONDEROGA
State 700
TIVOLI
Masonic Hall 270
TON A WANDA
Star 700
TROY
American 750
Bijou 600
Griswold 1 126C1
Lincoln 976
Palace 640
Proctors 2488
Rivoli 400
State 540
Troy 967
TUCKAHOE
Lyric 294
TIPPER LAKE JUNCT.
Lyric 250
TUPPER LAKE
State 500
UTICA
Avon 2000
Colonial 1200
Family 650
Highland 500
James 500
Lincoln 800
Olympic 1500
Oneida Sq 1061
Orpheum 725
Rialto 600
Rivoli 540C1
Stanley 2800
Uptown 1083
Utica 2000
VALATIE
Valatie 300
VERNON
Vernon 210
WADDINGTON
Colonial 200
WALDEN
Didsbury 600
WALTON
Smalley 750
WAPPINGER FALLS
Academy CI
WARRENSBURG
Fairyland 300
WARSAW
Farnum 1000
O-At-Ka 444
WARWICK
Oakland 595
WATERLOO
State 327
WATERFORD
Casino 400
WATERTOWN
Avon 702
Liberty 1000
Olympic 1000
Palace 300
Strand 400
Victoria 300
WATER VILLE
Strand 334
WATER VLIET
Family 400
Grand 500
Strand 300C1
WATKINS GLEN
Glen 500
WAVERLY
Capitol 1400
WAYLAND
Leg-ion 490
WESTPORT
Library Hall 250
WEEDSPOKT
Weedsport 250
WELLSVII.LE
Babcock 450
Temple 400
WESTFIELD
Grand 748
W. WINFIELD
Bisby Hall 300
WHITEHALL
Capitol 800
WHITE PLAINS
Colony 600
Keith's Albee 3016
Pix 300C1
State 1548
Strand 1100
WHITNEY POINT
Point 225
WILLIAMSON
Williamson 300
WILLIAMS VILLE
Glen 424
WILSON
Wilson 238
WINDSOR
Park 250
WOLCOTT
Palace 339
WOODRIDGE
Lyceum 300
WOODBURNE
Center
WOODSTOCK
Woodstock 250
WORCESTER
Worcester 350
YONKERS
Broadway 700C1
Cameo 615
Central 880
Elm Street 280
Kimball
Lido 268
Park Hill 1000
Proctor's 2030
Strand 1344
Terrace 580
Warburton 600C1
Yonkers 2612
YOUNGSTOWN
Ft. Niagara 250
= NO. CAROLINA
387 Theaters; 172,787 Seats
Closed — 17 Theaters; 5,650 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 370 Theaters; 167,137 Seats
ABERDEEN
Aberdeen 300
AHOSKIE
Richard 400
ALBEMARLE
Alameda 350
Stanley 660
\NDREWS
Andrews 156
ANGIER
Comot 250
Piquant 350
APEX
Apex 300
ASHEBORO
Capitol 400
Carolina 408
Sunset 5°°
ASHEVILLE
Eagle 350
Imperial 1000
Old Booker T 300
Palace 260
Paramount 1000
Plaza 1320
State 350 Rex
BESSEMER CITY
ATLANTIC
Atlantic 300
AULANDER
Aulander 250C1
AURORA
Holidays 300
AYDEN
Princess 300
BADIN
Badin 250
BERNARDS VILLE
CCC Camp 200
BEAUFORT
Beaufort 252 Pastime
250
Roxie 300
BETHEL
Bethel 300
BISCO
Bisco 250
BLACK MOUNTAIN
New 300
BLADENBORO
Lyric 200
BLOWING ROCK
Yonahlossee 300C1
BOONE
Appalachian 300
.400
BREVARD
Clemson 530
Sea Breeze 325
BELHAVEN
Cameo 300 Co-ed 400
BELMONT BRYSON CITY
300 Bryson 252
Gem
Iris 400 Frymont
BENSON
Princess
BURGAW
50C1
200 Pender 300
BURLINGTON
Alamance 600
Carolina 400
Lincoln 300
Paramount 800
State 625
BURNS VILLE
Yancey 300
CANDOR
Candor 250
CAMDEN
Camden 250
CANTON
Colonial 500
Strand 300
CAROLINA BEACH
Carolina Beach ..600C1
CARTHAGE
William Penn 300
CHADBOURNE
Chadbourne 300
CHAPEL HILL
Carolina 850
Hollywood 200
Pick 300
Standard 250
CHARLOTTE
Broadway 1400
Carolina 1500
Charlotte 4S2
Grand 300C1
Imperial 900
Lincoln 400
Savoy 600C1
State 1400
Tryon 450
Visulite 500
CHERRY VILLE
New 250
Strand 300
CHINA GROVE
China Grove 300
CLAYTON
Clay 300
CLIFFSIDE
Cliff side 400
CLINTON
Gem 300
State 326
COLUMBIA
Columbia 475
CONCORD
Cabarrus 700
Paramount 450
Pastime 300
State 700
COOLEEME
Peerless 700
CRAMERTOWN
Midway 272
CREEDMOOR
Granville 200
DAVIDSON
Davidson 350
DENTON
Anchor 300
DRAPER
New 300
Y. M. C. A 350
DUNN
Dunn 350
Harnett 300
DURHAM
Carolina 1800
Center 1000
Criterion 800
Erwin Auditorium ... 600
Quadrangle
Pictures 1500
Regal 350
Rialto 750
State 265
Uptown 500
Y.M.C.A
EDENTON
Taylor's 850
ELIZABETH CITY
Alkrama 300
Carolina 900
Gaiety 200
ELIZABETHTOWN
Bladen 300
ELKIN
Elk 300
Lyric 400
ELON COLLEGE
Elon College
ENFIELD
Enfield 400
ENGLEHARD
Skeet 250
ERWIN
Peerless 400
FAIR BLUFF
Scotty 350
FAIRMONT
Capitol 300
FARMVILLE
Paramount 400
FAY'ETTEVTLLE
Broadway 475
Carolina 750
State 350
FOREST CITY
Pastime 400
Romina 550
FORT BRAGG
Fort Bragg 500
FRANKLIN
Macon 200
FRANKLINTON
Community 200
FRANKIN VILLE
Community 200C1
FKEEMONT
Freemont
FUQUAY SPRINGS
Wades 300
GASTONIA
Carolina 400
Ideal
Loray 200
Lyric 620
New 750
State 300
Temple 750
Webb 826
GIBSONVILLE
Gibsonville 350
State
GLOBE
CCC Camp 200
GOLDSBORO
Carolina 500
James 325
Paramount 900
GRAHAM
Alco 300CI
Graham 300
GRANITE FALLS
Lyric 250
GREENSBORO
Carolina 2400
Central 300
Criterion 550
Imperial 700
National 1800
Palace 300
State 480
GREENVILLE
Lyric
Pitt ' 400
Plaza 400
State 300
HAMLET
Hamlet 73S
HATTERAS
Austin 250
HAYESVILLE
Hayesville 200
HEMP
Village 375
HENDERSON
New 250
State 300
Stevenson's 650
Vance 700C1
HENDERSON VILLE
Carolina 1000
State 450
HENRIETTA
New 250C1
HERTFORD
State 496
HICKORY
Carolina 430
Paramount 900
Pastime 300
Rivoli 430
HIGH POINT
Broadhurst 800
Carolina 366
Center 1000
Paramount 1200
Rialto 350
Ritz 400
HIGHLANDS
Highland
High Schol .... 200C1
HILLSBORO
Hollywood 250
Osburn 200
HOT SPRINGS
CCC Camp 200
JACKSON
Jackson 350
JACKSONVILLE
Camp
Onslow 250
K ANNAPOLIS
Colonial 500
Dixie 500
Gem 700
Palace 300
KERNERSVILLE
Pickfair 300
KING
Palmetto 190
KINGS MOUNTAIN
Dixie
Imperial 300
KINSTON
Carolina 400
Oasis 400
Paramount 650
State 285
LA GRANGE
Paramount 300
LAKE LUKE
Coliseum 300C1
LAURINBURG
Scotland 500
LEAKSVILLE
Boulevard 300
Colonial 350
Grand 300
LENOIR
Avon 400
Imperial 300
State 400
LEXINGTON
Carolina 400
Granada 285
LIBERTY
Curtis 250
LILLINGTON
Lyric 300
LINCOLNTON
Grand 300
Rivoli 300
LITTLETON
Haliwar 300
LOUISBEKG
Louisberg 200
LUMBARTON
Carolina 800
Riverside 400
MADISON
Patovi 400
MAIDEN
Carolina 300
MANNING
Hollywood 250
MANTEO
Pioneer 200
MARION
CCC Camp 200
Marion 600
MARSHALL
Princess 200
MARSH VILLE
Blair 300
MARSHALLBERG
Lyric 250
Maxton 500
MAYODAN
Pickwick 250
MEBANE
Hollvwond 400
MOCKSVILLE
Princess 300
MONROE
Pastime 250
State 400
MOORESVILLE
Carolina 300
Moore 300
State 500
MOREHEAD CITY
Royal 250
Wade's 500
MORGANTON
Alva 275
Carolina 350
CCC Camp 200
Mimosa 600
.MORTIMER
CCC Camp 300
MOUNT AIRY
Center 600
Earle 400
Grand 740
MOUNT HOLLY
Gaston 456
Holly 300
Paramount 200
MOUNT OLIVE
Wayne 300
MURPHY
Henn 225
Strand 275
MURPHYSBORO
Pastime
NASHVILLE
Myers 300
NEW BERN
Masonic 750
Palace 300
Show Shop 500
NEWTON
Catawba 400
State 300
NORTH NEWTON
North Newton 200
NORTH WILKESBORO
Liberty 400
Orpheum 450
OAKBORO
Oakboro 200
OTEEN
Vet. Hospital 500
OXFORD
Carolina 300
Orpheum 300
PEMBROKE
Pembroke 300
PILOT MOUNTAIN
Pilot 175
PINEHURST
Carolina 530
PINEVILLE
Pineville 200
PITTSBORO
Chatham 300
PLYMOUTH
Plymouth 700
RAEFORD
Raeford 300
RALEIGH
Ambassador 1472
Capitol 500
Palace 900
Royal 350
State 1200
Wake 800
KAMSEUR
Royal 400
RANDLEMAN
Fox 300
RED SPRINGS
Red Springs 400
REIDSVILLE
Penn 260C1
Rockingham 800
RICHLAND
Richland 300
RICH SQUARE
Myers 750
ROANOKE RAPIDS
Imperial 1200
People's 1000
Royal 500
ROBBINS VILLE
Robbinsville 250
ROBERSON VILLE
Trio 300
ROCKINGHAM
Hanna Picket 300
Little
Richmond 400
Strand 300
897
ROCKY MOUNT SMITHFIKLD
, 600
Howells
.400
SNOW HILL
.;<oo
mi j
SOUTHERN PINES
330
'inn
SOITTHPORT
1 ' ( 1 v 1' IITT T
Amiizu
226
IrlOOe
. . oOO
SPARTA
ROWLAND
Spartan
250
Rowland
460
SPENCER
ROXBORO
.400
426
SPINDALE
RUTHRRFORDTOV
300
. .450
SPRAY
ST. PAULS
Central Y. M. C. A.
.350
St. Pauls
. 300
SPRING HOPE
SALISBURY
.300
. ,600
SPRUCE PINE
1000
Carolina
304
700
Piedmont anoni
SANFORD
STAR
, 346
.300
400
STATESVILLE
SCOTLAND NECK
.300
. ,400
1000
SELMA
State
.600
250C1
SWANNANOA
Selma
. ,300
.300
SHELBY
SYLVA
500
.400
900
TABOR CITY
. 550
Ritz
320
Webb'?
300
TARBORO
SILER CITY
.450
Elder
. 300
300
TAYLORS VILLE
WEST END
250
Pine
THOMASVILLE
WEST JEFFERSON
800
Parkway
.300
400
WHITEVILLE
.375
299
TROY
New Columbus
350
326
WILLIAMSTON
TRYON
800
300
Watt's
600
VALDESE
WILMINGTON
400
,800
VANCEBORO
,750
250
800
WADESBORO
Thalian Hall
600
300
WILSON
WAKE FOREST
600
400
Oasin ___________
Rnn
WALLACE
Ritz 500C1
300
800
WALNUT COVE
WINDSOR
275
Pal are
WARRENTON
WINSTON-SALEM
400
2600
WARSAW
800
250
,600
WASHINGTON
,250
500
450
Turn aire
600
WAYNES VILLE
,364
Park
500
State
1600
. ,C1
YADKINVILLE
WELDON
Yadkinville
,400
400
YANCEYVILLE
Weldon
200
260
WENDELL
ZEBULON
220
Wakelon
300
-NO. DAKOTA-
185 Theaters; 50,739 Seats
Closed — 20 Theaters; 3,875 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 165 Theaters; 46,864 Seats
ADAMS
Opera House
AMBROSE
S. of N. Hall 300C1
ANAMOOSE
Annex 147
ANETA
Aneta 102
ANTLER
Roxy 200
ARTHUR
Arthur 150
Community
ASHLEY
Ash 230
BEACH
Bijou 200
BELFIELD
Auditorium 150
BEULAH
Roxy 300
BISBEE
Legion 233
BISMARCK
Bismarck 700
Capitol 600
State Penitentiary ..600
BOTTINEAU
State 275
BOWBELLS
Roosevelt
Roxy 160
BOWMAN
Palace (Port.) 250
BUFORD
Lyric CI
CANDO
Auditorium 250
CARRINGTON
Grand 300
CARSON
Grant 300C1
CASSELTON
Castle 260
CAVALIER
Roxy 200
CLYDE
K. of P. Hall CI
COGSWELL
Opera House 199
COLUMBUS
New Columbus 260
COOPERSTOWN
Strand 300
CROSBY
Crosby 300
Divide 300
DEVILS LAKE
Grand 700
400
781
DICKINSON
.422
400C1
DRAKE
, 160
DRAYTON
Star
125
DUNN CENTER
DUNSEITH
Althea
. ,250
EDGELEY
. .300
EDMORE
300C1
ELGIN
Elpin
275C1
ELLENDALE
,226
ENDERLIN
. 300
FAIRDALE
200C1
FAIRMONT
State
200
FARGO
1124
. .700
Isis 300
Park 300
Princess 400
Roxy 300
State 1200
FESSENDEN
Auditorium 300
FINLEY
New Finley 200
FLAXTON
Flaxton 200
FORBES
Auditorium 125
FORT LINCOLN
Fort Lincoln
FORT YATES
Fort Yates 200
FULLERTON
Auditorium 160
GACKLE
Auditorium 125
GARRISON
Roxy 200
GLEN ULLIN
Roxy
GOODRICH
K. P. Hall
GRAFTON
Strand 626
898
GRAND FORKS
Dakota 816
Forx 542
Metropolitan 900
Paramount 900
GRENORA
Orpheum 200
HALLIDAY
Lyric 190
HANKINSON
Avon 250
HANNAH
Arcadia 160
HARVEY
State 280
HATTON
State
HAZELTON
Roxy 160
HAZEN
Roxy 200
HEBRON
Lyceum 278
HETTINGER
Strand .... (Port.) 250
HILLSBORO
Gem 260
HOPE
Hope 250
HUNTER
Hunter 176
JAMESTOWN
Opera House 648
Star 800
State 400
KENMORE
Lyric 275
KENSAL
Kensal 200
KILDEER
Auditorium 195
KULM
Roxy 300
LAKOTA
Capitol 250
LAMOURE
Rex 225
LANGDON
Roxy 200
LANKIN
Gem 183
LANSFORD
Best 200
LARIMORE
Avalon 300
LEEDS
Empress 200
LEITH
Opera House 150
LIDGERWOOD
Wiley 330
LINTON
Linton 450
LISBON
Scenic 204
LITCHV'ILLE
Community 260
McCLUSKY
Roxy 200
McHENRY
McHenry 176
McVILLE
Hollywood 214
MADDOCK
Home 284
MANDAN
Palace 600
MARION
Roxy 200
MARMARTH
Palace 220
MAXBASS
Alamo 260
MAYVILLE
Delchar 300
MEDORA
Roxy 200C1
MICHIGAN
Legion
MILNOR
Iris 200
MILTON
Star 260
MINNEWAUKAN
Roxy
MINOT
Orpheum 461
State 800
Strand 431
MINTO
Strand 120
MOFFITT
Benz CI
MOHALL
Grand 250
MOTT
Sun 200
NAPOLEON
Miller 300
NECHE
Neche
NEW ENGLAND
State (Port.) 250
NEW LEIPZIG
Auditorium
NEW ROCKFORD
Blackstone 400
NEW SALEM
Grand 200
NOME
Nome CI
NOONAN
Memorial 250
NORTH WOOD
Roxy 300
OAKES
Grand 600
OBERON
Community 250C1
OSNABROOK
New 150C1
PAGE
Page 200
PARSHALL
Grand 200
PARK RIVER
Lyric 200
PEMBINA
Paramount 200
PORTAL
Portal 200
POWERS LAKE
Lyric 150
RAY
Bijou 200
RICHARDTON
Roxy 200C1
ROCK LAKE
Rock Lake 200
ROLLA
Munro 250
ROLETTE
Rolette 204
RUGBY
New Lyric 360
RYDER
Roxy
ST. THOMAS
Opera House 200C1
SANISH
Crescent 200
SARLES
Sarles CI
SCRANTON
Pastime 284
SENTINEL BUTTE
School CI
SHERWOOD
New White 300
Star .
Roxy
STANLEY
STEELE
.260
.235
STRASBURG
Mattray 200
STREETER
Auditorium 150
Roxy 200
TAPPEN
Tappen 200C1
TIOGA
Tioga CI
TOLLEY
Tolley 200
TOWER CITY
Movies 150
TOWNER
Roxy
TURTLE LAKE
Roxy 200
TUTTLE
Roxy 200
VALLEY CITY
Piller 600
Rex 300
VAN HOOK
Ultra 200
VELVA
Iris 150
WAHPETON
Gilles 350
Valley 750
WALHAI.LA
Opera House 200
WASHBURN
Roxy
WATFORD CITY
Park 100
WESTHOPE
Arcade 200
WILDROSE
Palace 200
WILLISTON
New Grand 600
Orpheum 300
WILLOW CITY
Palace 200C1
WISHEK
Lyric
WYNDMERE
New 197
ZEELAND
Movies 200
OHIO
942 Theaters; 595,530 Seats
Closed — 68 Theaters; 27,623 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 874 Theaters; 567,907 Seats
ADA Circle 560 Ideal 430 Nixon 400
Ada 500 (1459 Astor Ave.) (WoosterSt.) (E. Cuy. Falls)
Odeon 280 civic 900 Liberty 800 Norka 693
ADDYSTON
Ohio 190
ADENA
Pastime 300
AKRON
Allen 500
(S. Main St.)
Cameo 300
(S. Arlington St.)
Dayton 500
(Cuy. Falls)
Five Point 300
Forum 600
Gem 360
(Brown St.)
(W. Market)
Loew'e 2982
(S.Main)
Majestic 900
(S.Main)
Miles-Royal ....1500C1 Paramount
(E. Market)
Orpheum 980
(S. Main St.)
Palace 2080
(S. Main St.)
.300
(S. Case)
Highland 1700 National 300
(W. Market St.)
(S.Main)
(Manchester)
Peoples 380
(E. South)
899
Regent 300
(S. Arlington)
Rialto 800
(Goodyear St.)
Royal 376
(Johnson St.)
Shea's Colonial . . . .1710
(Mills St.)
Southern 300
(Coles & Grant)
Spicer 350
(E. Exchange St.)
State 500
(Main St.)
Strand 1180
(3. Main St.)
Thornton 600
Main St.)
Tivoli 650
(S. Main St.)
ALLIANCE
Columbia 1200
Morrison 812
Strand 656
(Main St.)
AMELIA
Playtime 220
AMHEKST
Mary Jane 240
AMSTERDAM
Star 300
ANDOVER
Andover 300
ANTWERP
Star 187
ARCANUM
Ritz 149
ASHLAND
Ohio 275C1
Opera House 750
Palace 650
ASHTABULA
Bula 500
Casto 473
Harbor 600
Palace 1050
State 600
ATHENS
Athena 892
Cort 254C1
Ohio 320
ATTICA
Attica 200
BAINBRIDGE
Paxton 450
BALTIMORE
Ohio 300
BARBERTON
Lake 999
Lyric 510
(2nd St.)
Park 630
(Tuser St.)
Pastime 250
(Tuser St.)
BARNESVILLE
Ohio 400
State 912
BARTON
Pastime 173
BATAVIA
Town Hall 300
BAY VILLAGE
High School CI
BEDFORD
Bedford 500
BELLAIRE
Capitol 680
Ohio 400
Roma 290
Temple 900
BELLEFONTAINE
Court 450
Sehine's Holland ... 1400
Strand 480C1
BELLEYUE
Ohio 264
State 400
BELLVILLE
Park 250C1
BEREA
Berea 900
Pastime 450C1
BERGHOLZ
City 230
BETHEL
Midway 400
BETHESDA
Bethesda CI
Park 200C1
BEVERLY
Dixon 300
BLANCHESTER
Clinton 200
BLUFFTON
Star 186
BOWERSTON
Alamo 260C1
BOWLING GREEN
Cla-Zel 750
Lyric 240
BREMEN
Park
BREWSTER
Brewster 400
BRIDGEPORT
Family 186
New Home 227
BRILLIANT
Garden 212C1
BROOKVILLE
James 300
BRYANT
Temple 498
BUCYRUS
Schine's Bucyrus ..1100
Southern 800
BYESVILLE
Luna 640
CADIZ
Community 600
CALDWELL
Noble 260
Roxy 400
CAMBRIDGE
Colonial 1100
Cort 300
Ohio 360
State
Strand 787
CAMDEN
Dover 200
Majestic 208
CAMPBELL
Palace 300
CANFIELD
Roxy 250
CANTON
Loew's 3000
(N. Market St.)
McKinley 650
(W. Tuser. St.)
Mozart 790
(Tuser. St.)
Ohio 912
(New Market St.)
Palace 2000
(6th & N. Mkt. St.)
State 900
(E. Tuser.)
Strand 620
(S. Market)
Valentine 740
(S. Market St.)
Windsor 498
(Manoning Rd.)
CARDINGTON
Cardington
CAREY
Strand 280
CARTHAGE
Idle Hour 550
CARROLLTON
Virginia 700
CEDARYILLE
Cozy 170
CELINA
Fayette
Lake 300
Ohio 270
CENTERBURG
Seville 270
CHAGRIN FALLS
Falls 600
CHARDON
Chardon 400
Geauga
CHESTER HILL
Chesterhill 350
CHEVIOT
Chevwood 400
Westwood
Woodlawn 600
CHILLICOTHE
Majestic 638
Royal 360
Sherman 760
CINCINNATI
Albee 3292
(6th St.)
Amerieus 608
(Hamilton Ave.)
Avenue 335
(122 W. 5th St.)
Avon ,
Beecher 760
(Beecher St.)
Bellevue
Bond 670
(Dalewood Ave.)
Broadway 300
Capitol 1794
(7th & Vine)
Casino 1400
(Clark & Linn)
Center 250
( Winton Place)
Clovernook 585
(Hamilton Ave. &
Goodman St.)
Crescent 290
(4600 N. iildgewood)
Dixie 300
(5th St.)
Eden 291
(72 East McMillan)
Elm 400
Elstun 450
(Mt. Washington Ave.)
Empire 400
(Vine St.)
Empress 632
Esquire 450
(Ludlow St.)
Evanston 350
(Montgomery Rd.)
Fairmont 288
(Carrol St.)
Family 1085
Fairview 400
(3349 Whitfield Ave.)
Forest 1100
(Forrest Ave.)
Freeman 447
(Freeman & Wade)
Gayety
Gifts 550
(W. 6th St.)
Glenway 500
(3821 Glenway Ave.)
Grand 1451
Hollywood College
Hill 750
(Hamilton Ave.)
Hyde Park 400
2718 Erie AveJ
Imperial 700
(McMicken & Centl.)
Jackson 680
(Eastern Ave.)
Keith's 1500
(5th & Walnut)
Lincoln 475
(5th & John)
Lyric 1430
(5th & Vine)
Madison 735
(Madison Rd.)
Main 900
(Woodward & Main)
Marvel 800
(Find! ay & Elm)
Mayfair 348C1
(1635 Central Parkway)
Monte Vista 760
(W'dmont iM'tgomery)
Mt. Lookout
Music Hall
National 292
(Freeman)
New Liberty 300
(W. Liberty)
Nordland 900
(Vine St.)
Oakley 700
(Madison Rd.)
Ohio
Orpheum 1200
(E. McMillan)
Overlook 400
(Price Hill)
Palace 2696
(E. 6th St.)
Park 594
(Hamilton)
Parkland 287
(Sayler Park)
Pekln 299
(336 W. 5th St.)
Queen Anne 600
(Colerain Ave.)
RKO Paramount ..2160
(E. McMillan)
Rex 254
(W. 6th St.)
Rialto 1000
(Vine St.)
Riverside 450
(3030 Riverside Dr.l
Roosevelt 800
(Central Ave.)
Royal 300
(Vine St.)
Schubert 1500
State 1000
(15th & Central)
Strand 1200
(Walnut St.)
Taft
Uptown 490
(18 E. McMicken St.)
Valley 180
(1706 Queen City Ave.)
Victor 600
(Harrison Ave.)
Western Plaza 700
( Price Hill )
CIKCLEVILLE
Cliftona 740
Circle 280
Grand 600
CLARKSBURG
Clarksburg
Community 300
CLEVELAND
Abbey 750
(Waterloo Road)
Allen 3003
(Euclid)
Alhambra 1600
(Euclid & E. 105)
Almira 900
(W. 105 St.)
Ambassador 1000
(Superior St.)
Arion 562C1
(Kinsman Rd.)
Astor 999
(Hough St.)
Avalon .". 1500
Beach Cliff 1000
(Detroit Road)
Broadvue 1585
(Pearl Rd.)
Capitol 1300
(65th St.)
Carter 700
Cedar 850
(Cedar St.)
900
Cedar-Lee 1200
(Lee Road)
Center May field . . . 1400
(Cleveland Heights)
Circle 1875
(Euclid St.)
Clark 400
(Clark Ave.)
Colony 1542
(Shakers Square)
Commodore 1293
(E. 152nd St.)
Corlett 789
(Miles St.)
Crown 604
(E. 105th St.)
Denison Square . . . .784
(W. 25th St.)
Detroit 1100
(Detroit Ave.)
Doan 1320
(St. Claire St.)
Drive-In CI
Eclair 450
(St. Clair)
Embassy 1200
Erie 450C1
(Columbia Ave.)
Euclid 900
(Euclid)
Ezella 600
( Superior St.)
Five Points 1200C1
(St. Clair St.)
Fountain 600C1
(Woodland Ave.)
Franklin 800
(1775 W. 25th St.)
Garden 1400
(W. 25th St.)
Garfield 1000
(Turney Rd.)
31obe 450
(Woodland Ave.)
3ranada 2500
(Detroit & W. 117)
Grand 750
(Broadway)
Grand Central 400
(Central)
Haltnorth 1355
(E. 56th St.)
Hanna
(15th & Euclid)
Heights 1200
(Euclid Hts. Blvd.)
Hilliard Square . . . .1500
(Hilliard Rd.)
Hippodrome 3561
(Euclid Ave.)
Homestead 800
(Detroit)
Hough 700
(E. 79th St.)
Imperial 1256
(Kinsman)
Jennings 800
(W. 14th St.)
Jewel 800
(St. Clair)
John Adams
High School . . 1 500C1
John Hay High School..
(105th St.)
Keiths 2818
(105th St.)
Knickerbocker . . . .1022
(Euclid St.)
Lake S00C1
(Euclid Ave.)
LaSalle 1400
(E. 185th & Kildeer)
Lexington 1000
(1779 E. 55)
Liberty 1400
(Superior)
Lincoln ' 400
(Madison St.)
Lorain 550
(4601 Lorain St.)
Lorain-Fulton 1480
(3405 Lorain St.)
Lucier 780C1
(Detroit St.)
Lyceum 1800
(Fulton Rd.)
Lyric 1050
(Lorain Ave.)
Madison 800
(Madison St.)
Mall 1350
(Euclid Ave.)
Manhattan 500
Market Square 485
(Broadway)
Marvel 700
(W. 25th St.)
Mayfield 500
(Mayfield St.)
Melrose 380C1
(Wade Park)
Memphis 600
(W. 49th & Memphis)
Metropolitan 790
(Euclid Ave.)
Miles 999
(E. 9th St.)
Milo 390
Moreland 1300
( Buckeye)
Mt. Pleasant 980
(E. 131st St.)
National
New Broadway . . . .1398
(Broadway)
New Victory 780
(E. 71st St.)
New Y 650
(Pearl & State Rd.)
Norval 750
(Storer)
Norwood 740
(St. Clair)
Olympia 1400
(E. 55th & Broadway)
Palace 3200
(Euclid & E. 17th)
Park 3340
(Euclid)
Penn Square .... 600CI
(Euclid St.)
Plaza 999
(E. 152nd St.)
Quincy 700
(Quincy St.)
RKO 105th St 2795
Regrent 1602
(E. 116th St. & Buckeye)
Rex 370
Rialto 1000
(W. 25th St.)
Ridge 590
(W. 73rd St.)
Ritz 1000
(E. 23rd St.)
Riverside 1650
(16975 Lorain Ave.)
Royal 350
(Madison St.)
Savoy 986
(St. Clair)
Shaker 1500
(Lee Road)
Shaw-Hayden 1000
(Hayden St.)
Southern 695
(W. 25th St.)
Standard 704
(Prospect)
State 3570
(Euclid St.)
Stillman 1872
(Euclid St.)
Stork 600
(Lorain St.)
Strand 014C1
(Prospect & E. 9)
Sun 789
(Buckeye Rd.)
Sunbeam 700
(Kinsman)
Superior 525
(Superior St.)
Temple 580
(E. 55th St.)
Terminal 499
(Superior St.)
Tivoli 550
(Lorain & 117th St.)
Union 450
(Union St.)
Union Square 1600
(Union St.)
University 937
(Euclid)
Up-Town 3200
(St. Clair)
Variety 1600
(Lorain St.)
Waldorf 845
West Park 936
(Lorain St.)
Windemeer 800
(Euclid St.)
Yale 700
(St. Clair)
CLEVES
Avalon 209
CLYDE
Clyde 300
COLDWATER
Columbia 325
COLUMBIA
Bremen 300
COLUMBIANA
Globe 400
COLUMBUS
Alhambra 400
(Hig-h St.)
Arlington 500
(1800 W. 5th Ave.)
Avondale 500
( W. Broad)
Bexley 560
(2484 E. Maint St.)
Cameo 500
(1000 Mt. Vernon St.)
Cleve 500
(E. 18th & Cleveland
Ave.)
Champion 600
(E. Livingston &
Champion)
Clinton 1000
(3379 N. High St.)
Columbia 500
(383 E. Whittier)
Dixie 350
Drexel 750
(Drexel & Main St.)
Eastern 800
(1624 E. Main St.)
Empress 600
(770 E. Lang St.)
Exhibit 600
(High St.)
Fifth Ave 365
(E. 5th Ave.)
Florence CI
Garden 643
(Hig-h St.)
Goodale 290
(Dela. & Goodale)
Grand 1200
Grandview 561
(Grandview Ave.)
Hartman 1500
Hollywood 485
(E. Main)
Hudson 600
Ideal 500
Indianola
(3055 Indianola Ave.)
Innis 800
Knickerbocker 975
(Hig-h St.)
Lincoln 800
(771 E. Long St.)
Linden 500
(Cleve. Ave.)
Loew's Broad 2800
Main 1483
(E. Main St.)
Majestic 1000
Markham 1500
(1320 S. High St.)
Neth's Hartman . . .1500
New 470
(Main St.)
Northern 467
Oak 325
(1187 Oak St.)
Ohio 2800
Parsons 600
(Parsons Ave.)
Olentangy 200
(N. High St.)
Pythian 400
(Mt. Vernon Ave.)
RKO Palace 3016
Ritz 600
(Sullivan Ave.)
Rivoli 650
(W. Broad)
Royal 298
Southern 800
Southland 493
State 1600
(2272 N. High St.)
Thurmania 626
(High St.)
Uptown 736
Victor 900
(Livingston Ave.)
Westmont 700
(2686 Broad St.)
Wilmar 750
(W. Third Ave.)
COLUMBUS GROVE
Grove 250
CONNEAUT
La Grande 438C1
Ohio 600
State 550
CONTINENTAL
Palace 250
CORNING
Corning 300
COSHOCTON
Mu-Wa-Tu 460
Pastime 677
Sixth Street 600
COVINGTON
Cove 200
Favorite 200
CRESTLINE
Crest 500
Hippodrome 250
CROOKESVILLE
Majestic 225
CUYAHOGA FALLS
Alhambra 385
Falls 800
Ohio 802
DAYTON
Alhambra 500
Classic 500
Colonial 1800
Columbia 750
Dale 900
Elite 350
Far Hills 500
Federation 500
Grand 300
Ideal 200
Keith's 2000
Little Playhouse ...361
Loew's Dayton . . .2600
Mayfair 1300
Mecca 600
Ohio 350
Palace 600
Park 300
Peoples 720
(W. 3rd)
Rialto 500
Riverdale 500
St. Paul 300
Salem 600
Sigma 400
901
State 900
Strand 1600
Victory 1460
Wayne 300
DEFIANCE
Si rand 650
Valentine 900
DE GRAFF
Roxy 849
DELAWARE
Slur 265
SI rand 800
DELPHOS
Capitol 500
Star 288
DELTA
I-yric 212C1
DENNTSON
Lincoln 320
Palaee 830
DESIILEK
Star 300
DII.LONVALE
A rcude 270
Rex 200
DOVER
Bexlry 600
Nugent CI
Slate 370
DRESDEN
Midway 150C1
DUNKIRK
Grand 125
EAST COLUMBUS
Star 185
E. LIVERPOOL
American 778
Ceramic 1200
Columbia 400
Star 248
Stale 600
Ifi. PALESTINE
E. Palestine 500
Grand 250
EATON
Gale
Star 258
EI.MWOOD
Elniwood
ELYRIA
Capitol 900
High School
Lincoln 460
Riallo 1100C1
Rivoli 440
EUCLID
Shore
FAIRPOINT
Roxy 300
FA1RPORT HARROR
Lyric 495
FAYETTE
Fayette 220
FELICITY
Rex 250
FINDLAY
Harris 1010
Lyceum 250
Royal 286
Stale 739
FLUSHING
Flushing 280
FORT RECOVERY .
Royal 200C1
FOSTORIA
Civic 600
Roxy 250
State 700
FRANK FORT
Frankfort 260
FRANKLIN
Ohio 300
FRAZEYBCRG
Strand 170
FKEDERICKTON
Neil 243C1
FREMONT
Fremont 600C1
Paramount 1278
Strand 668
GALION
Ohio 270
State 700
GALLIPOLIS
Colony 575
Gallipolis 480
GARRETTSVILLE
Opera House 480
GENEVA
Liberty 430C1
Shea's Geneva 523
GEORGETOWN
Arcade 350
Grant 600
GERMANTOWN
By -Jo 285
GIBSONBURG
Del-Lu 250
GIRARD
New Mock 637
Wellman
GLOCSTER
Crawford 450C1
Palace 400
GRAFTON
Grafton 230
GRAND RAPIDS
Photoplay 250C1
GRANVILLE
Opera House 300
GREENFIELD
Lyric 265
Rand 380
GREENVILLE
Ohio 195
State 630
Wayne 460
GREENWICH
City Hall
GROVE CITY
Kingdom 228
HAMILTON
Lyric 300
Palace 840
Paramount 1767
Rialto 860
HARRISON
State 270
HARRISONVILLE
Capitol 100C1
HICKSVILLE
Huber 250
HILLSBORO
Bell's 750
Colony 749
Forum 211
HOLGATE
Palace 240
HOLLOWAY
Grand . . 221C1
HOPEDALE
Hopedale 200
HUBBARD
Palace 190
HURON
Ritz 176
IRONTON
Grand 400
Lyric 600
Marlow 700
Southside 300C1
State 360
JACKSON
Kaymar 400
Markay 583
JAMESTOWN
Venard 200
JEFFERSON
Ames 380
JEFFERSON VILLE
Jefferson 435
JEROMESVILLE
Jerome CI
JOHNSTOWN
Dorsey 334
KENMORE
(Akron, P. O.)
Boulevard 500
Rialto 300
KENT
Kent 968
Opera House 600C1
KENTON
Kenton 1200
Ohio 280
KILLBCCK
Duncan 365
KINSMAN
Kinsman 224
LAFERTY
Star 300C1
LAKE SIPE
Auditorium 300C1
LANCASTER
Broad 600
Liberty 400
Lyric 675
Palace 986
LANSING
Lansing 394
LARUE
Larue 270
LEBANON
Grand 200
Town Hall 800
LEESBURG
Roxy 200
LEETONIA
American 350
LEIPSIC
Ohio 275
LEWISBURG
Lyric 300
LIMA
Faurot 750
Lyric 575
Majestic 420C1
Ohio 1800
Quilna 900
Rialto 300
Sigma 800
State 1000
LISBON
Lincoln 600
Manos 760
Rex 300
LITHOPOLIS
Wagnalls 300
LOCKLAND
Dunbar 275
LODI
Idol 300
LOGAN
Logan 600
Ruble 400
LONDON
Majestic 200
Princess 200
State 600
LORAIN
Dreamland 350
(1930 Broadway)
Elvira 290
(1352 Broadway)
Grove 275C1
Lorain 700
Ohio 700
(Broadway)
Palace 1800
Pearl 347
(Pearl Rd.)
Tivoli 675
(Broadway)
LOUDONYILLE
Ohio 650
LOUISVILLE
Louis 228
LOVELAND
Crist 450
Loveland 325
LOWELLVILLE
Liberty 248
LYNCHBURG
Highland 200C1
Rand 190
McARTHUR
Vinton 400
MeCONNELSVILLB
Twin City Opera
House 600
MANCHESTER
Lyric 288
MANSFIELD
Madison 1500
Majestic 942
Ohio 1783
Park 1300
Ritz 726
MANTUA
Mantua 240C1
MAPLE HEIGHTS
Maple Heights 360
MARIETTA
Auditorium 400
New Hipp 1160
Ohio
Putnam 597
Strand 280
MARIEMONT
Mariemont 600
MARION
Marion 685
Oakland 320C1
Ohio 800
Palace 1540
State 300
MARTINS FERRY
Elzane 666
Fenray 701
MARYSVILLE
Avalon 500
Strand 200C1
MASON
Dream 235
MASSILLON
Grand 421
Lincoln 979
Weslin 800
MACMEE
Strand 250
MAYNARD
New 210C1
MECHANICSBURG
Rainbow 250
MEDINA
Medina 870
Princess 300
MIAMISBURG
Plaza 400
MIDDLEPORT
Liberty 250
Temple 426
MIDDLETOWN
Family 300
Gordon 666C1
Paramount 1900
Sorg's O. H 750
State 400
Strand 1900
MILAN
Dreamland 160
Star
MILFORD CENTER
Family 275
Lux -Mar 175
MILLERSBURG
Opera House 426
MINERVA
Roxy 480
MINGO JUNCTION
Mingo 648
MINSTER
Crescent 350
MONTPELIER
Kaufman 300
Paramount 300
MORROW
Miami 200
MOUNT GILEAD
Capitol 296
MT. HEALTHY
Main 260
MT. ORAB
Marvel 294
MT. STERLING
Pass water 360
902
MOUNT VERNON
Lyric
Memorial 1000
Vernon 1205
Vine 600
NAPOLEON
New State 686
NEFFS
Strand 200
NELSONVILLE
Majestic 400
Orpheum 240
Vinton
NEWARK
Auditorium 1200
3rand 400
Midland 1200
New Arcade 375
NEW BOSTON
Lyric 400
NEW BREMEN
Roosevelt 190
NEW CARLISLE
Carlisle 235
NEWCOMERSTOWN
Ritz 584
NEW CONCORD
Roy 200
NEW HOLLAND
New Holland 240
NEW LEXINGTON
New Lex 280
Perry 250
NEW LONDON
Family
Karolyn 350
NEW PHILADELPHIA
New House
Union O. H 950
NEW RICHMOND
Dodge 400
NEW STRAITSVILLE
Delyn 350
NEW VIENNA
Avon 280
NEWTON FALLS
Carol 375
NILES
Butler 1120
McKinley 900
Main Street
Warner 800
NORTH BALTIMORE
Virginia 350
NORTH CANTON
Park 600
NORTHFIELD
Northfield 250
NO. LEWISBURG
New 240
NO. OLMSTED
Auditorium 700C1
No. Olmsted 700
NORWALK
Forum 600
Moose 800
NORWOOD
Norwood 1000
Ohio
Plaza 640
OAK HARBOR
Portage 200
Royal 300
OAK HILL
Liberty 450
OBERLIN
Apollo 290
ORRVILLE
Grand 400
ORWELL
Temple
OSBORN
Midway 300
OTTAWA
Hollywood 438
Rex 300
OXFORD
Miami-Western . . . .750
New
Oxford 398C1
PAINSVILLE
Lake
Park 400
Utopia 700
PARMA
Parma 1050
PATASKALA
Sterling 300
PAULDING
Grand 600
PEEBLES
Palace 287
PERRYSBURG
Palace 240
PIQUA
Miami 860
Piqua 1175
PINEY FORK
Liberty 260
PLAIN CITY
Rialto 500
PLEASANT CITY
Town Hall 200C1
PLYMOUTH
Plymouth 220
POINT PLACE
Shoreway 700
POINT PLEASANT
State 250
POMEROY
Bendvue 500
Electric
PORT CLINTON
Erie 451
Lion 451C1
Madrid 400
Ohio
PORTSMOUTH
Columbia 1000
Eastland 492
Empress 250
Garden
LeRoy 775
Lyric 757
Stanley 375
(Sciotoville Sta.)
Strand 265
Westland 460
POWHATAN POINT
Point 300
Taplin 400
RAVENNA
Ravenna 900
READING
Emery 1200
RICHWOOD
Union O. H 300
RIPLEY
Ripley 408
RITTMAN
Diana 300
ROCKFORD
Rockford
State 185
ROSEVILLE
Times 175
ROSSFORD
Ross 320
SABINA
Sabina 246
ST. BERNARD
Andalus 1600
SAINT CLAIRSVILLE
Old Trail 286
ST. MARYS
New Broad 500
Regent 275
ST. PARIS
Gem 196C1
SALEM
Grand 650
State 700
SALINEVILLE
Alpine 400
SANDUSKY
Ohio 700
Plaza 600
Sandusky 750
State 1800
SARDINA
New Community ...240
SCIO
Scio 334
SEAMAN
Ace 250
SEBRING
Strand 640
SENECA VILLE
Seneca 250C1
SHADYSIDE
Ritz 250
SHARONVILLE
Sharon 285
SHAWNEE
Linda 225
SHELBY
Castamba 480
Opera House 600
Shelby 600
State 450
SIDNEY
Capitol CI
Ohio 1300
SILVERTON
Silvertone
SMITHFIELD
Smithfleld 200
SOMERSET
Russell 290
SOUTH WEBSTER
Webster 192
SPENCERVILLE
Ohio 200
SPRINGFIELD
Fairbanks 1300
Hippodrome 400
Liberty 200
Lincoln 300
Majestic 750
Ohio 700
Princess 292
Regent 1450
State 800
Southern 300
STEUBENVILLE
Capitol 2000
Grand 1000
Olympic 690
Paramount 1600
Rex 700
STOCKPORT
Vondell 321
STRAUSBURG
Auto ... 400
STRUTHERS
A-Musu 275C1
Ritz 465
SUGAR CREEK
Community 250
SWANTON
LaFrance 380
SYLVANIA
Princess 280
Sylvan 400
TIFFIN
Grand 725C1
Lyric 250C1
Ritz 1325
Tiffin 900
TILTONSVILLE
Palace 280C1
TIPPECANOE CITY
Tipp 500
TOLEDO
Alan 625
(Stickney St.)
Atlas 970
(Door St.)
Avalon 750
(Monroe St.)
Bijou 400
(South & Spencer)
Capitol 900C1
(Orange & St. Clair)
Dixie 560
East Auditorium ...550
(Main St.)
Eastwood 800
(E. Broadway)
Granada 1800
(St. Clair St.)
Liberty 625
(Detroit Ave.)
Loew's Valentine . .2500
(St. Clair)
Loop 750
Lyric 619
(Broadway)
Mystic 500
(Bush St.)
Ohio 1356
(LaGrange)
Palace 1158
(St. Clair St.)
Pantheon 900
(St. Clair)
Paramount 3500
Park 850
(Sylvania Ave.)
Princess 940
(St. Clair)
Priscilla 300C1
(Summit)
Rex 300C1
(Superior St.)
Rivoli 2700
(St. Clair)
Royal 800
(Superior)
Savoy 600
( LaGrange )
Star 400
(Paine)
State 1928
(Collingwood)
Strand 390
( Summit)
Superior 750
Tivoli 550
(Consaul)
Westwood 650
World 1754
(Dorr St.)
TORONTO
Manos 650
Rex 500
TROY
Jewell 300
Mayflower 600
UHRICHSVILLE
Ohio 320
State 746
UPPER SANDUSKY
Star 268
Upper 225
URBANA
Clifford 600
Lyric 600
UTICA
Mystic 300
VAN WERT
Ohio 360
Strand 700
Van Wert 300
VERSAILLES
Opera House 300
VERMILION
Liberty 250
WADSWORTH
Star 430
Strand 585
WAPAKONETA
Wapa 690
WARREN
Ohio 750
Post 800
Robins 1346
Warren 850
WARSAW
Walhondiner 150C1
WASHINGTON
COURT HOUSE
Fayette 700
Palace 200
Roxy 210
WAUSEON
Princess 500
WAVERLY
Waverly 300
903
WAYNESVILLE
Twins 240
WELLINGTON
Emboyd
LoNet 300
WELI.STON
Civic 650
Louvee 500
Virginian 500C1
WELLSVILLE
Liberty 500
WEST ALEXANDRIA
Savoy 200
WESTERVILLE
State 450
WEST JEFFERSON
Orient 300
WEST LAFAYETTE
Lafayette 198
WEST MANSFIELD
Grand 300
WEST MILTON
Roxy 230
WEST SALEM
Opera House 256C1
WEST UNION
Majestic
Strand 800
WHITEHOCSE
Empress 299
WILLARD
Temple 461
WILLIAMSBURG
Pastime 240
WILLOUGHBY
Willoughby 1000
WILMINGTON
New LaMax 483
Murphy 855
WINCHESTER
Arcano 230
WILLIAMS l-ORT
Castle 200
WITHAMSVILLE
Hiway 260
WOODSFIELD
Life 492
Monroe 458
Swissland 250
WOODSVII.LE
Limelite 400
WOOSTER
City O. H 820C1
Hillside
Wayne 600
Woosler 1124
XENIX
Chakeres' Xenia ...645
Ohio 500
Orpheum 300
YELLOW SPRINGS
Little 290
YORKVILLE
Ohio 575
YOUNGSTOWN
Cameo 608C1
Foster 750
Mahoning' 375
1 1498 Mahoning)
Ohio 575
'Market St.)
Palace 2270
(Wick Ave.)
Paramount 1505
' Federal )
Park 1577
'E. Federal)
Plaza 287
Regent 450
IE. Federal)
State 1500
(W. Federal)
Strand 860
i Centra) Square)
Uptown 550
'Market St.)
Warner 2600
ZANKSVILLE
Grand 275
Imperial 700
Liberty 1200
New Weller 910
Q nimby 650
OKLAHOMA
433 Theaters; 195,973 Seats
Closed — 34 Theaters; 14,037 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 399 Theaters; 181,936 Seats
ADA
Ada 420
Kiva 448
MeSwain 005
Ritz 771
Strand 300
A FT ON
Tivoli 300
ALINE
Community 300
ALLEN
Majestic 30O
Palace CI
ALT US
Delta 492
Plaza 768
Ritz
ALVA
Liberty 600
Ranger 400
Rialto 400
Rilz 400
ANADARKO
Broadway 340
Columbia 300
Moore 500
ANTLERS
Okla 300
APACHE
Opera House 200
A R DAI ORE
Main
Paramount 369
Ritz 880
Temple 960C1
Tivoli 989
ATOKA
Atoka 300
Pix 300
BARNSDALL
Ritz 300C1
Runyan 750
BAKTLESVILLE Best 300C1
Crown 340C1 Tower
Liberty 763 BUFFALO
kync 800 Buffalo 350
Odeon 902 sooner
Rex 475
BEAVER
Beaver 200
BEGGS
State 300
BILLINGS
Roxy 250C1
Star 250
BINGER
Binger
BIXBY
BYARS
Ritz 250C1
CANTON
Grand 300
CARMEN
Rialto 200
CARNEGIE
Liberty 400
CARTER
300 Liberty 300C1
CEMENT
Nil Sl HI
.300 Harry'
BLACKWELL
(HANDLER
. 250
Midwest 404 H & S 414
New Bays 600C1 Odeon 400
Palace 672
Plaza 800C1
Rivoli 800
BLAIR
Palace 250C1
BLANCHARD
Ritz
BOISE CITY
Cozy
Lyric
CHECOTAH
CHELSEA
CHEROKEE
.630
.381
Max 350
200 Ritz 350
CHEYENNE
Palace 400 Lyric
.250
BOKOSIII
New 280
BRISTOW
Princess 446
CHICKASHA
Midwest 400
Rialto 621
Ritz 328
Walmur 400 Washita 768C1
BRITTEN CLAREMORE
205 Palace 376
Ritz 2
BROKEN ARROW
Arrow 250
Crystal
Nusho
BROKEN BOW
Arrow 250 Nusho
904
Yale 636
CLAYTON
300 New 160
400 CLEVELAND
Melba 273
250
(LINTON
Del Rio 500
Rex CI
Rialto 653
Ritz 300
COALGATE
Wigwam 145
COLBERT
Thompson 300
COLLI NSVILLE
Nusho 102
COMMANCHE
Ritz 487
COMMERCE
Lyric 350
Nusho 300
CORDELL
Amuzu 400
Washita 410C1
COVINGTON
Covington 300
COWETA
Palace 200
COYLE
Coyle 200
CRESCENT
Ritz 108
CUSHING
American 500
Dunkin 553
Paramount 426
CUSTER CITY
Rex 200
CYRIL
Roxy 250
DAVIS
Kerr 350
DEWEY
Paramount 265
DISNEY
Disney 400C1
DRUMRIGHT
Midwest 440
Rex 750
Strand 750
Tower 702
DUNCAN
Folly 432
Palace 750
Ritz 250
DURANT
Metro 300
Plaza 719
Ritz 450
Savage 420
EDMONI)
Bronco ti()0
Gem 440
ELDORADO
Rex 300C1
ELK CITY
Elk 747
Lamar 400
Rex 450
EL KENO
Broadway 350
Criterion 850
EI Caro 400
Empress 300
Royal 400
ENID
Arcadia 441
Aztec 815
Cherokee 1000
Criterion 900C1
Mecca 500
Rivoli 300
Royal 300
EKICK
Rogue 300
Gay 350
Max 350
EUFAULA
Chief 399
Palace 303
Pix 290
FAIRFAX
Tall Chief 914
1 AIRLAND
Pix 250
FAIRVIEW
Royal 308
FITTSTOWN
Fox 300
FLETCHER
Quannah 300CI
FORGAN
Alta 300
FORT CORK
Rialto 200
FT. SILL
Ft. Sill 1000
FREDERICK
Grand 400
Ramona 975
Ritz 400
FREEDOM
Fredom 250C1
GAGE
Toy 230C1
GARBER
New Moon 308
GEARY
Broadway 350
GRANDFIELD
Rio 350
GRANITE
Cozy 300
GROVE
Grove 250
GUTHRIE
Melba 883
State 436
GUYMON
American 350
Royal 300
HAMMON
Hut 320
HARRAH
State 240
HARTSHORNE
Liberty 500
400
400
HASKELL
Palace
HEALDTON
Nusho
Thompson
HEAVENER
Liberty 400
HELENA
Palace 200C1
HENNESSEY
Ortman 250
HENRYETTA
Blaine 850
MARIETTA
(00 King: 450
MARLOWE
Alamo 400
Whiteway 360
MAUD
Arcadia 980
MAYSVILLE
Rex 230
MEDFORD
Alvo 250
MEEKER
Rex 250
MIAMI
Morgan . .... 835 Coleman 1547
Hinton 250
HOB ART
Kiawo 878
Oklahoman 500
Palace 400
HOLDENVILLE
Dixie 600
Grand 850
Liberty 360C1
HOLLIS
LaVista 900
Glory B 655
MINCO
Fox 250
MOORELAND
Mooreland 250
MORRIS
Ritz 300
MT. PARK
Park
MT. VIEW
Royal 300
MUSKOGEE
Wa" 40001 Broadway 900
HOMINY
Pettit 1026
Ritz
HOOKER
Mission 220
HUGO
Erie 648
Hug-o
HYDRO
Hydro 202
IDABEL
Lyric 450 University
State 300
JET
Jet 200 Rainbow
Grand 423
, Ritz 1480
Roxy 400
Yale 380C1
NEWKIRK
O. K 240
NORMAN
Campus 500
Oklahoman 400
Sooner 1100
832
Varsity 425
NOWATA
KAW CITY
Kaw 200
Tivoli 250
KINGFISHER
State 250
350
075
Thomas 400 Roberta
KONOWA
Rex 300 Crystal
Rex
Royal
OILTON
Ritz 450
OKEENE
300
OKEMAH
.225
.220
LAMONT
Meta
LAVERNE
Laverne
LAWTON
Dome 800
Lawton 1050
Murray 500
Palace 560
Ritz 800
LEEDY
Rex 240
LEXINGTON
Siginond 250 Mayflower
.600
Jewel 400
OKLAHOMA CITY
Aklridge 900
Blue Moon 400
Circle 964
Criterion 1500
Empress 1300
Gem 400
Jsis 328
Jewel 405
Joy 400
Liberty 1300
Majestic 550
. (Kill
LINDSEY
Midwest 1000
Blue Moon 350 Pix 472C1
LOCUST GROVE
Locust Grove 150
LONE WOLF
Liberty 250 R"z
Wolf CI State
LOYAL
Plaza 761
Reno 480
Rialto 480
'50C1
1 200
Tower 978
Loyal 250 Victoria
806
Villa 482
Mecca T."77 '. ~~ . . 450 Warner 1950
Oklahoma 750 Yale 500
McALESTER
Rex 300
McLEOD
Chief 250
MADILL
Majestic 300 Yale
Ritz 300
MANCHESTER
Franklin 200C1
MANGUM
OKMULGEE
Inca 464
Orpheuni 1050
Rex 300C1
1450
PANAMA
Massey
PAULS VALLEY
Folly 300
Greer 400 Royal 1100
Ortman Sun
Rialto 400C1
Temple 800 Circle
90S
PAWHUSKA
.250
.400
Ki-HeKah 750
State 640
PAWNEE
Buffalo 350
Ritz 400
PERKINS
Lyric 300
PERRY
Annex 300
Roxy 300
PICHER
Mystic 800
Plaza 600
Roxy 400
PINE VALLEY
Pine Valley 400
PONCA CITY
Murray 900
Poncan 1100
Ritz 750
Roxy 400
POND CREEK
New 300
POTEAU
Victory 400
PRAGUE
Savoy 200
PRYOR
Allred 265
Pryor 400
PURCELL
Dooley 450
Metro 250
Ritz 300
PUTNAM CITY
Coronado 420
QUINTON
Liberty 250
RINGLING
Joy 320
ROOSEVELT
Rex 200C1
RUSH SPRINGS
Home 300
RYAN
Gem 300
SALLISAW
Ritz
Wonderland 300C1
SAND SPRINGS
Harmony 300
Star 300
SAPULPA
Criterion 500
State
Yale 400
SASAKWA
Wigwam 220C1
SAYRE
Rio 300
Ute 430
SEILING
Tower 220
SEMINOLE
Chief 400
Rex 750
Rialto 332
Seminole
State 750
SENTINEL
Rex 550
SHATTUCK
Empress 250
SHAWNEE
Avon 500
Bison 1080
Criterion 436
Odcon 281
Ritz 580
State 405C1
S1UDLER
Osage 300
SKIATOOK
Palace 340
Ritz 300
SNYDER
Alamo 400
STERLING
Sterling 250
STIGLER
Lyric 268
STILLWATER
Aggie 724
Camera yso
Campus 600
Mecca 408
STILWELL
Eagle 250
STONEWALL
Maine 478
STRATFORD
Rex 230
STROUD
Cozy CI
Rilz 600
SULPHUR
Gem 300
May fair 300C1
Piatt 300
Ritz . . A 300
TAHLEQUAH
New 240
Sequoyah 600
TALIHINA
Ritz 250
TALOGA
Taloga 300
TECUMSEH
Pine 180
TEMPLE
Majestic 300
TEXHOMA
Strand 300
THOMAS
Palace 250
TIPTON
Nira 300
Ritz
Rogue 275
TISHOMINGO
Princess 330
Thompson 300
TONKAWA
Ray 250
Rialto 500
TRYON
Liberty 340
TULSA
Akdar 2000C1
Circle 412
Cozy 500
Delman 1186
Dreamland 300
Gem 418
Lyric 700
Main St 580
Majestic 570
Orpheum 1800
Palace 410
Plaza GOO
Rex 400
Rialto 1250
Ritz 2000
Strand 350
Tower 3<J2
TUTTLE
Tuttle 260
VINITA
Aztec 404
Lyric 785
VIAN
Joy 275
WAGONER
Cozy 300
Kemble 304
WAKITA
Wakita 300
WALTERS
Grand 300C1
Woolam 600
WATONGA
Ann
Rook 6G0
WAUKIKA
Empress 400
WAYNOKA
Waynoka 204
WEATHERFORD
Bulldog 300
Bungalow 300
WELEETKA
Avon 288
WEST TULSA
Cameo 300
WESTVILLE
New 302
WETUMKA
Nusho 390
Rogrue 300
WKWOKA
Key 800
Paramount 000
Pittman 276
Pi* 362
State 600
WILBURTON
American 600
WILSON
Empress 300
Thompson 400
WOLF CITY
Criterion
WOODWARD
Terry 360
Woodward 600
WRIGHT CITY
Choctaw 260
WYNNEWOOD
Deal 300
Sun
YALE
Rex 385
YUKON
Ritz 380
OREGON
239 Theaters; 113,084 Seats
Closed — 16 Theaters; 4,772 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 223 Theaters; 108,312 Seats
ALBANY
Granada 440
Rialto 300
Venetian 560
AMITY
Amity
ARLINGTON
Arlington (Port.) ....
ASHLAND
Lithia 450
Varsity 729
ASTORIA
Liberty 700
Riviera 600
ATHENA
Athena 260
BAKER
Empire 300
Orpheum 550
BANDON
Hartman
New Bandon 300
BEAYERTON
Ritz 300
BEND
Capitol 600
Liberty 600
BLY
Bly
BONNEVILLE
Roosevelt 500C1
BROOKINGS
Redwood (Port.)
BROWNSVILLE
Hickman Circ.
(Port.) 250
BURNS
Ideal 390
Liberty 300
CANBY
Canby 200
CANYON CITY
Canyon (Port.)
CARLTON
Goodwin 200
CASCADE LOCKS
Community 292
CAVE JUNCTION
Cave 288
CHILOQUIN
Gem 290
CLATSKANIE
Avalon 324
CLOVERDALE
New
CONDON
Liberty 250
COQUILLE
Liberty 600
Roxy 514
CORVALLIS
Majestic 600
Oresron State 582
Whiteside 1100
COTTAGE GROVE
Arcade 600
Diane
CRESCENT
Pine 300
DALLAS
Majestic 400
DAYVILLE
Community (Port.)
DRAIN
Edwards 200
DCFUR
Legion (Port)
ECHO
Echo 150
ELGIN
Elgin 150C1
Rex 260
ELKTON
Edwards 295
ENTERPRISE
Vista 150
ESTACADA
Esta 285
EUGENE
Heilig 800
Mayflower 654
McDonald 1200
Rex 850
State 400
FLORENCE
Florence 230
FOREST GROVE
Grove 450
FT. STEVENS
War Dept 194
FOSSIL
Fossil (Port.)
FREEWATER
Rose 300
GARIBALDI
Rose 150
GILCnRLST
Gilchrist 400
GLEN DALE
Glenda ( Port.) .... 259
Rex 250
GOLD BEACH
Gold Beach 120
GRANTS PASS
Rivoli 190
Rogue 700
State 380
GRASS VALLEY
Masonic Hall (Port.) ..
GRESHAM
Gresham 300
HALFWAY
Lyric 250
HEPPNER
Star 345
HERMISTON
Oasis 250
HILLSBORO
Hill 490
Venetian 050
HOOD RIVER
Cascadian (Port.) .400
Rialto 800
HUNTINGTON
Lyric 150
INDEPENDENCE
Isis . . . . . . 400
JEFFERSON
Jefferson 200
JOHN DAY
Orphpum 335
JUNCTION CITY
Rialto 350
KINZUA
Communitv (Port.) ....
KLAMATH FALLS
New Vox 450
Pelican 1800
Pine Tree 006
Rainbow 750
Rex 300
906
LA GRANDE
Granada 480
Liberty 660
LAKE VIEW
Marius 600
LEBANON
Kuhn 612
MADRAS
Community (Port.) ...
HALES
Broadway 390
MARSHFIELD
Egyptian 1100
Noble 600
McMINVILLE
Gaiety 200
Lark 650
MEDFORD
Criterion 1000
Holly 1200C1
Rialto 750
Roxy 350
MERRILL
Broadway CI
MILL CITY
Mill City (Port.) . .200CI
MILTON
Vogue 243
MITCIIELL
Cornmunitv I Port.) ....
MTJLLALA
Lyric 200
MONMOUTH
Ross 200
MT. ANGEL
Auditorium 450C1
MONUMENT
Community (Port.) ....
MULTNOMAH
Capitol 250
MYRTLE CREEK
Hickman (Port.) . . . .CI
MYRTLE POINT
Hiland 600
NEWBERG
Cameo 400
Francis 300
NEW PINE CREEK
New Pine Creek CI
NEWPORT
Midway 400
NORTH BEND
Liberty 800
NYSSA
Nyssa 300
OAKRIDGE
Peoples (Port.)
OCEAN LAKE
Lakeside 285
ONTARIO
Pix 600
Roxy 450
OREGON CITY
Liberty 800
Star 300
State 500
OSWEGO
Lake 175C1
PAISLEY
Green Tree CI
PARKDAI.E
Parkdale 235
PENDLETON
Alta 600
Rivoli 800
United Artists 600
PT. ORFORD
Colonial 209C1
PORTLAND
Aladdin 714
Alberta 650
Ames 600
Avulon 425
Basrdad 1000
Blue Bird 300
Blue Mouse 700C1
Bob Whit* 712
Broadway 1800
Capitol 750
Circle 650
Clinton 300
Colonial 850
Crest 350
Downtown 82.8
Egyptian 1000
Esquire 450
Firefly 550
Fox Liberty 1837
Gaiety 700
Geller's 350
Granada 725
Highway 750
Hollywood 14!>1
Irving-ton 640
Jefferson 376
Kenton 500
Laurelhurst 050
Lincoln 400
Mayfair 1500
Moreland 675
Mt. Tabor 498
Music Box 1000
New Sellwood 680
Novelty 185
Oregon 700
Oriental 2540
Orpheum 1750
Paramount 3400
Playhouse 1200
Plaza 439
Rex 300
Rio 375
Rivoli 1125
Roxy 216
Rospway 670
St. Johns 500
Star 331
State 730
Taylor St 450
Third Ave 300
Thirtieth Ave 700
United Artists 962
Walnut Park 750
Yeager 800
POWERS
Pioneer 200
PRAIRIE CITY
Orpheum 100
PRINEVILLE
Lyric 350
Pine 400
RAINIER
Rainier 336
REDMOND
Mayfair 255
Odem 262
REEDSPORT
Edward 300
RICHLAND
Richland (Port.) . . .140
ROSEBURG
Hunts Indian 761
Rose 400
ST. HELENS
Columbia 400
Roxy
SALEM
Capitol 1000
Elsinore 1400
Grand 500
Hollywood 496
State 407
SCIO
Scio 200C1
SEASIDE
Strand 420
SENECA
Olive 216C1
SHERIDAN
Hi- way 300
SILVERTON
Palace 496
SPRINGFIELD
Playmore 400
STANFIELD
Stanfield 150C1
STAYTON
Star 256
SWEETHOME
Roxy 346
TAFT
Lincoln 285
THE DALLES
Columbia 500
Granada 843
TIGARD
Joy CI
TILLAMOOK
Castle 400
Coliseum 600
TOLEDO
Ross 435
TYGH VALLEY
Communitv (Port.) ....
UNION
Roxy 300
VALE
Rex 350
VERNONIA
Joy 300
WALDPORT
Waldport 222C1
WALLOWA
McLean 275
WENDLING
Booth Kelly (Port.) . . .
WESTFIR
Westflr 200
WESTPORT
Westport 760
WHEELER
Wheeler 150
WILLAMINA
Gem 160
WOODBURN
Bungalow 240
YONCALLA
Hickman (Port.)
Leswell (Port.)
PENNSYLVANIA
1,358 Theaters; 882,052 Seats
Closed — 49 Theaters; 35,114 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 1,209 Theaters; 846,938 Seats
ACOSTA
Acosta 175C1
ALBION
Albion 350
ALLENTOWN
Cameo 650
Colonial 19(18
Earle 877
Boyd 1050
Franklin 750
Hamilton 420
Lyric 1148
New Allen 600
New Astor 700
New Midway 900
19th St 900
Park 370
Rialto 1910
State 1419
Strand 1000
Towne 860
ALIQUIPA
State 1273
Strand 604
Temple 718
ALTOONA
Capitol 1000
Logan 700
Lyric 400
Mischler 1150
Olympic 1100
Penn 900
Rivoli 625
State 1800
Strand 1500
Vernon 400
AMBLER
Ambler 1227
AMBRIDGE
Ambridge 1360
Penn 600
Prince 1200
ANNVILLE
Astor 260
APOLLO
Strand 360
Woodies 300
ARCHBALD
Grand 325
ARDMORE
Ardmore 1424
Suburban 800
ARNOLD
Kent 600
Star 260
ASHLAND
Rory 1100
Temple . . . , 1000
907
ASHLEY
Ashley 275
ASPINWALL
Embassy 220
ATHENS
Morley 400
AUSTIN
Austin 320
AVELLA
Brozier 360
AVOCA
Palace 400
AVONMORE
Delmore 360
BALA CYNWYD
Egyptian 1450
BANGER
Music Hall 500
Strand 580
BARNESBORO
Smith DeLux 700
Vernon 400
BEAVER
Beaver 400
BEA VERB ALE
Palace 248
Rivoli 500
BEAVER FALLS
Granada 1000
Regent 1020
Rialto 900
BEAVER MEADOWS
Howells 239
BEDFORD
Bedford 400
Pantages fioo
Pitt 600
BELLEFONTE
Plaza 900
State 700
BELLE VERNON
Ritz 500
Verdi 470
BELLEVUE
Bellevue 1000
Linden 400
BELLVVOOD
State 300
BENTLEYVILLE
Roosevelt 380
BENTON
Ritz 300
BERLIN
Blue Ridge 240
BERNVILLE
Community 395
BERWICK
Strand 800
Temple 800
BERWYN
Berwyn 700
BESSEMER
Bessemer 400
BETHLEHEM
Boyd 1500
College 1400
Globe 1600
Lehigh 700
Nile 1100
Palace 1000
BIKDSBORO
Diamond 450
Strand 320
BLAIR STATION
Park
BL AIRSVILLE
Manos 600
BLAWNOX
Maryland 220
BLOOMSBURG
Capitol 911
BLOSSBURG
Victoria 232
BOBTOWN
Circle 250
BOSWELL
Mary Lee 440
Vernon 400
BOYERTOWN
State 474
BRACKENRIDGE
Avenue 450
BRADDOCK
Capitol 1500
Paramount 652
Times 600
BRADFORD
Bradford 1200
Grand 860
New Bradford .... 1200
Shea's 1456
BRADY
St. Anthony's
Auditorium 200
BRIDGEPORT
Broadway 500
Mother of Sorrow
Auditorium 400
BRIDGE VILLE
Granada 500C1
New Rankin 500
Strand 300
BRISTOL
Bristol 500
Grand 1100
BROCKWAY
Brock way 450
BROOKVILLE
Columbia 600
BROUGHTON
New Broughton ....300
BROWNSVILLE
Bison 300
Plaza 700
Strand 416
BRYN MAWR
Seville 1000
BUCKHILL FALLS
Auditorium 950
BURGETTSTOWN
Arco 280
Keith 300
Maryann 400
BUTLER
Butler 1500
Capitol 900
Harris 600C1
Majestic 700
New
Penn 850
BUTTONWOOD
Buttonwood 300
CADOGAN
Cadogan 220
CA1RNBROOK
Vernon 240
CALIFORNIA
Capitol 578
Grand 349C1
Hollywood 900
CAMBRIDGE SPRINGS
Cambridge 300
CANNONSBURG
Alhambra 787
Continental 400
CANTON
Rialto 280
CARBONDALE
Irving- 1600
Majestic 450
CARLISLE
Carlisle Barrieks
Comerford 1320
Strand 1095
CARMICHAELS
Ross 250
CARNEGIE
Dixie Family 542
Grand 500
Liberty 558
New Carnegie 750
CASTLE SHANNON
Castle 312
( ATASOUQUA
Savoy 672
CATIWISSA
Andrea 4(58
CECIL
Cecil 324
CENTRAL CITY
Central City 300
CHAMBERSBURG
Capitol 1000
Rosedale 1400
CHARLEROI
Coyle 1000
Menlo 499
Palace 500
CHESTER
Apollo 700
Boyd 634
Lyric 700
R>o 685
Stanley 2344
State 1200
Strand 700
Washington 1576
CHICORA
Chieora 226
CLAIRTON
Capitol 440
State 500
CLARENCE
Clarence 175
CLARION
Garby 600
Orpheum 442
CLARK'S SUMMIT
Summit 250
CLAYSBURG
Casino 275
CLAYS VILLE
Clay 275
CLEARFIELD
Lyric 850
Ritz 1000
Roxy 500
CLIFTON HEIGHTS
Clifton 638
CLYMEK
State 300
COALDALE
Ritz 250
COALPORT
Dixie 600
COATES VILLE
Palace 700
Y. M. C. A 1600
COLUMBIA
Alto 649
Opera House 780
State 900
COLVER
Colver 400C1
Rivoli 375
CONEMAUGH
Penn 400
CONFLUENCE
Liberty 220
< ONNEAUT LAKE
Park 350C1
Temple of Music. 1500CI
CONNEAUTVILLE
Palace 200
CONNELLS VILLE
Orpheum 1200
Paramount 650
Soisson 1000
CONSHOHOCKEN
Forrest 600
Riant 862
COPLAY
Park 500C1
Ritz 400
CORAOPOLIS
Coraopolis 700
Lyric 350
CORRY
Grand
Rex 875
COUDERSPORT
Coudersport 500
COVERDALE
Colonial 200
CRAFTON
Chartiers 600
Crafton 400
CRESSON
Rivoli 446
eRESSONA
Lyric 250
CROVI) \\
Ritz 250
CO K WENSVILLE
Rex 350
DAISYTOWN
Rialto 200
DALLAS
Himmler 320
DALLASTOWN
Auditorium 350
Lyric 300
DANVILLE
Capitol 500
DARBY
Darby 1000
Parker 2050
DAYTON
Dayton CI
DERRV
Gem 400
DICKSON CU V
Rex 500
DILLSBURG
Community 275
Dillsburg' 371
DIXONVILLE
Dixon 225
DONORA
Harris 1000
Liberty 400
Princess 400
DORMONT
Hollywood
DOWNING TON
Roosevelt 600
DOYLESTON
County 700
DREXEL HILL
Waverly 1562
Wynne 790
DU BOIS
Avenue 800
Carlton 600
DuBois 900
DUNBAR
Strand 200
DUNCANNON
Fox 245
DUNLO
Dunlo 300
DUPONT
Lincoln 500
DUQUESNE
Grand 400
Plaza 1100
DURYEA
Pastime 620
E AGLESMERE
Eaglesmere 450C1
EAST BERLIN
Berlin Community ..250
EAST BRADY
State 285
EAST GREENVILLE
Grand 496
EAST LIBERTY
Family 900
EAST PITTSBURGH
Frederick 725
Rivoi 800
Terrace 460
EAST STROUDSBURG
Grand 500
Plaza 600
EASTON
Berwick 500
Boyd 1800
Easton 900
Embassy 1114
Fourth St 450C1
State 1824
Strand 700C1
Wil-Bor 500
EBENSBURG
Rivoli 550
EDDYSTONE
Eddy 300
908
EDGEWOOD
Regent Sq 600
EDWARDSVILLE
Grand 500
ELIZABETH
Grand 450
ELIZABETHTOWN
Moose Hall 600
ELIZABETHVILLE
Hollywood 400
ELKLAND
Lyric 300
ELLSWORTH
Ellsworth 230
KLLWOOD CITY
Manos 1400
Majestic 842
EMAUS
State 442
EMLENTON
Emlen 400
EMPORIUM
Emporium 480
EPHRATA
Main 850
Roxy 600
EXETER
Liberty 400
ERIE
American 500
Aris 500
Avenue 400
Colonial 900
Peach Street
Columbia 1000
Folly 280
Gem 300
Hippodrome 285
Lyric 300
Park 900C1
Regent 600
Roosevelt 300
Strand 1250
Shea's 1180
State 700
Warner 3500
ETNA
Harris 1546
EVANS CITY
Rialto 200
EVEBETT
Stuckey 500
EYNON
Eynon 450
EXPOBT
Ritz 250
FAIRCHANCE
Louis 300
FABRELL
Capitol 500
Colonial 400
FAYETTE CITY
Bell 300
FINLEYVILLE
Olympic 268
FLEETWOOD
Auditorium 328
FORD CITY
Ford 456
Ritz 225
FOREST CITY
Freedman 650
FORTY FORT
Forty Fort 983
Institute 1000
FRACKVILLE
Garden 700
Victoria 400
FRANKLIN
Orpheum 700
Park 380
FREDEBICKTOWN
Frederick 300
Grand 500
FBEELAND
Refowich 700
Rialto 400
Strand 500C1
St. Mary Auditorium...
FREEDOM
Freedom 445
FREEPORT
Ritz 225
GALETON
Main St 300
GALLITZIN
Victoria 420
GEORGETOWN
(Wilkes-Barre P. O.)
Diamond 250
GETTYSBURG
Majestic 1150
Strand
GILBERTON
Kerrigan 148C1
GIBABD
Denman 375
GIRARDVILLE
Girard 500
GLEN LYON
Family 539
Newport 540
GLEN ROCK
Glen 400
GLENSIDE
Glenside 966
Keswick 1680
GRASSFLAT
Photoplay 240
GREENCASTLE
State 300
GREENSBOBO
Vox 400
GBEENSBURG
Grand 1035
Manos 2000
Strand 1200
GREENVILLE
Main 380
Mercer Sq 600
GROVE CITY
Guthrie 600
Kayton 460
HALLSTEAD
Capitol 300
HAMBURG
Strand 500
HANOVER
Park 736
State 960
Strand 490
HARRISBUBG
Broad 600
Capitol 500
Colonial 1176
Grand 900
National 900
Penway 650
Regent 1600
Rialto 900
Rio 1200
Roxy 520
Senate 1204
Star 475
State 2074
Victoria 1798
HASTINGS
Hollywood 385
HATBOEO
Hatboro 500
HAWLEY
Ritz
HAZLETON
Alton 500
Capitol 2344
Diamond 443
Family 500
Feeley 1058
Grand 891
Roxy 500
HELLERTOWN
American Legion . . . 700
HERMINE
Cove 225
HERSHEY
Community 1904
HIGHLAND PARK
Park 431
IIOLLIDAYSBURG
Blair 600
Manos 464
HOLLSOPPLE
Vernon 240
HOMER CITY
Empire 400
HOMESTEAD
Elite 600
Leona 1800
Stahl 1200
HONESDALE
Lyric 820
HOOVERSVILLE
Savoy 248
HOUTZDALE
Sherkel 500
HUGHESVILLE
Community
HUMMELSTOWN
Royal 300
HUMMEL'S WHARF
Rolling Green Park. . . .
HUNTINGDON
Clifton 1000
Grand 700
Penn. Training
IMPERIAL
Imperial 240
INDIANA
Indiana 650
Manos 1100
IRWIN
Aladdin 682
Lamp 475
JEANETTE
Harris 400
Harris Manos
Oakford Park
Princess 600
JENKINTOWN
York Road 600
JEBMYN
Peoples 300
JEROME
Jerome 294
JERSEY SHOBE
Victoria 660
JESSUP
Favini 500
JOHNSONBUEG
Palace 550
JOHNSTOWN
Cambria 1200
Dale 400
Embassy 1000
Hollywood 450
Ideal 400
Laurel 400
Lyric 800
Majestic 1500
Park 650
Rialto 518
Rivoli 400
Roxy 400
State 1900
Strand 500C1
JUNIATA
Juniata 416
KANE
Kane 500
Temple 1000
KEISER
Auditorium 300
KENNETT SQUARE
Auditorium 650
KINGSTON
Kingston 1000
KITTANNING
Columbia 720
Lyceum 340
State 400
KNOX. .
Knox 300
KOPPEL
Koppel 206
KULPMONT
Imperial 900
KUTZTOWN
Strand 400
LACEY VILLE
Uncle Ben 250
LAKWAKSEN
Casino
LANCASTER
Capitol 1214
Colonial 1500
Fulton O. H 1350
Grand 990
Hamilton 1120
Strand 700
LANDISBURG
Yankee 250
LANDSDALE
Lansdale 900
Music Hall 400
LANSDOWNE
Lansdown 1662
LANSFORD
Palace 800
Victoria 900
LABKESVILLE
Larkesville 250
LATKOBE
Grand 400C1
Olympic 400
Manos 600
LAURELDALE
Laurel 250
LAURELTON
(Hills Station)
Laurel CI
LAWRENCE
Grand 275
LEBANON
Academy 900
Capitol 844
Colonial 1300
Jackson 640
State 975
LEECHBUBG
Palace 350
Penn 650
LEIGHTON
Park 450
LEMOYNE
Lemoyne 678
Willow Park CI
LEWISBURG
Bueknell University .450
Roxy 400
LEWISTOWN
Embassy 600
Pastime 600
Rialto 760
LIBRARY
State 30°
LIGONIER
Lisonier ™"
Wilt 250
LILLY
Liberty 300
LINESVILLE
Regent 450
LITITZ
Lititz 600
LITTLESTOWN
Regent 286
LIVERPOOL
Community 200
LOCK HAVEN
Garden 900
Martin 600
Roxy 000
LUZERNE
Luzerne 847
LYKENS
Theatorium 500
MADERA
Capitol 260
MAHONINGTOWN
Crescent 400
MAHONOY CITY
Elks 650
State 983
Victoria 1500
MANHEIM
Auditorium 400
909
MANOR MILL VALE State 600 PECKVILLE
Manor 187 Grant 550 Victor 000 Favini 600
MANSFIELD MILTON NEW CUMBERLAND Ppv ARfiVI
Star 350 Bijou-Dream 700C1 Cumberland 260 Liberty Knn
Twain 308 Capitol 800 NEWFOUNDLAND „„
MARCUS HOOK Legionnaire 600 Hauhert 380 PENNSBURQ
Globe 700 MINERS MILLS NEW FREEDOM Aurora 420
Spielmont 900 Capitol 290C1 Sylvania . .. 225 PERKASIE
MARIANNA MINERS VILLE NEW HOLLAND \~ 638
Arcadia 250 Lyric 600 New Hol'and 400 t, PERR1 Ol'OLIS
MARIETTA Opera House 550 NEW KENSINGTON Perry 417
Marietta 488 MINOOKA Dattola 300 „ , PETROLIA
MARS Garden CI Liberty 1000 Mark 300
Marsboro 200 MONACA Paramount 700 PHILADELPHIA
MARTINSBURG New Penn 350 Ritz 000 ,„ 900
Roxy 312 Roxy 400 NEW PHILADELPHIA (Kensington Ave.)
MARYS VILLE MONESSEN Lyric 400 Adelphia 478
Galen 240 Manos 600 NEWMANSTOWN (52nd & Media)
MASONTOWN Star 600 Fire Co. Aud 400 Admlral !340
Liberty 496 MONONGAHELA NEW OXFORD ... < Somerset St.)
Rex 495 Anton 600 Earl 300 Aldlne ■ • lila
MATHERS Bentley 600 NEWPORT (Chestnut St.)
Family 320 MONTGOMERY Newport 260 Alnambra 1609
MAUCH CHUNK Clinton 650 NEWTOWN „ (Morris St.)
Capitol 902 MONTROSE New Town Hall ...375 Allegheny .... . 2856
MAYFIELD Ideal 310 NEWVILLE (Allegheny St.)
Walker 300 MORRISDALE Newville 300 Alle" - '' ".' ' \
McADOO Morris 250 NICHOLSON ( E. Chelton Ave. )
Palace 650 MORRISVILLE Palace 200 Ambassador . . ...1000
Roxy 385CI Community 400 NORRISTOWN ' Baltimore Ave.)
Strand 450 MOSCOW Garrick 850 Apollo .. . . . . . . . . . 1200
McCLURE Moscow 300 Grand 900 (N.5~ndfat.)
Star 310 MT. CARMEL Norris 2500 Arcadia ........... 650
McCONNELLSBURG Hollywood 400 Towers 600 (Chestnut fat.)
Fulton 300 State 650 Westmar 800 AstoI • -1391
McDonalds victoria ieoo Northampton ( Frank i m & Girardi
Dreamland 318 MT. JEWETT Lyric 500 Audlt°7"™. ' i; V
Grand 400 Palace 434 Roxy 666 (N. 8th fat.)
McKEESI'ORT MT. JOY NORTH EAST Aurora ......... 000C1
Capitol 700 Mt. Joy 700 Kellers 450 . (Germantown Ave.)
J. P. Harris Mem. 2000 MT. LEBANON NORTHUMBERLAND A.v„e"u| - ' ! Y „ " V • 6?°
Liberty 1100 Dennis 1250 Savoy 600 ( 2713 Ger ntown Ave
Fifth Ave MT. OLIVER NORWOOD Avon fV T " -817
Victor 775 Rialto 390 Manor 1248 bU snn
McKEES ROCKS MT. PENN NOXEN Zim;rVi;;V
Colony 300 Majestic 500 Noxen 325 „ '.faUi more Av e.)
Orpheum COO MT. PLEASANT NuMINE B and bo( x • • ■ •• ■• • -220
Parkway 350 Cox 350 NuMine 238 „ol <Armot SU ,nft
Regent 300 Grand 667 NUREMBERG ^^L";^ " w Y
Roxian 1200 MT. POCONO Liberty 200 (Belgrade fat.)
MEADOWLAND Casino 400 OAKMONT
Bell 600
Crystal 300 MT. UNION Lehigh 350 (Wharton St.)
MEAD VILLE Shapiro 500 Oaks 550 Belmont . . . 800
Academy 712 MUNCY OIL CITY (N. 62nd St.)
Park 1200 Ritz 350 Drake 1500 Benn . . . . . . . . . . . .1346
Penn 360 MYERSTOWN Latonia 1600 < Woodland Ave. )
MECHANICSBURG Hi-Way 432 Lyric 700 Benso" Ll-'LViilY
Paramount 390 NANTICOKE OLD FORGE < Woodland A ve.)
Wm. Grove Park... 500 Family 450 Holland 959 Bluebird ..... . . . . . 500
MEDIA Rex 000 Home 400 (N. Broad St.l
Media 1100 State 1000 OLYPHANT 'rowmit si V
MEISER VILLE NANTYGLO Granada 1437 unesmui oi.i
Keystone 291 Capitol 450 Roxy 308 Broad ••••••• •■••o00
MERCER Grand 400 ORBISONIA <N Broad St.)
Liberty 400 NARBERTH Strand 250 Br™?w*yx, ; *~ A »l f
MERCERSBURG Narberth 850 ORWIGSBURG (Broad & Snyder Ave )
Star 350 NATRONA Orpheum 350 Bromley OoO
MEYERSDALE Keystone 350 OSCEOLA MILLS < Old York Road )
Roxy 500 Roxy 250 State 300 Byrf .. . ...... ...1800
State 400 NATRONA HEIGHTS OXFORD Cadet 700
MIDDLEBURG HUand ..... ... .350 Met 700 (N.' second St.) '
Bandbox 200 NAZARETH Oxford 600 Cambria 850
MIDDLETOWN Broad .rnYiv ' " 6°° PALMERTON (Cambria St.)
Elks 700 NEMACOLIN Colonial 600 Cameo 600
Majestic 369 Nemacolln 500 Palm 630 ( Frankford Ave.)
MIDLAND NESQUEHON1NG PALMYRA Capitol 576
Liberty .. 400 Newton 210 Seltzer 928 (Market St.)
MIFFLIN Rox-v 350 PARKERS LANDING Carman 2000
Mifflin .....300 NEW BETHLEHEM Parker 250 ( Ger'ntown & Hilton )
MIFFLINBURG Arcadia 400 PARKESBORG Casino 420
Bandbox 387 NEW BLOOMFIELD Opera Hou=e 431 ( Haverford Ave.)
MILDRED Perry 290 PARSONS Castle 700
Mildred 300 NEW BRIGHTON Parsons 742 ( Frankford & Amber Av. )
MILLHEIM Brighton 460 PATTON Cayuga 450
Municipal 500 NEW CASTLE Grand 600 ( Ger'ntown & Cayuga )
MILLERSBURG Cathedral 3000 PAXTANG Cedar 868
Colonnade 500 Paramount 390 Paxtang (Cedar Ave.)
MILLERSTOWN Penn 1136 PAXTONVILLE Center 600
Millerstown 200 Regent 400 Roxy 245 (16th & Market)
910
Century 980
(Erie Ave.)
Chelton 708
(Chelton & Anderson)
Circle 2!)91
(Frank ford Ave.)
Clearfield 735
(Clearfield & Belgrade)
Colney 1085
(Colney Ave.)
Colonial 500
( Lancaster Ave.)
Colonial 2552
(Ger'ntown & Maplewood)
Columbia 884
(Columbia Ave.)
Commodore 1416
(Walnut St.)
Crescent 500
(Eastwick Ave.)
Crest 900
(Rising Sun Ave.)
Cross Keys 1995
(Market St.)
Dante 300
(So. Broad)
Dewey 476
(10th & Snyder)
Diamond 927
(Germantown Ave.)
Douglas 490
(Fairmount Ave.)
Eagle 450
(Kensington Ave.)
Earl 1004
(Reed St.)
Earle 2770
(Market St.)
Edgemont 400
(Edgemont)
Elite 611
(Girard Ave.)
Embassy 500
( Elmwood Ave.)
Empress 470
(S. 7th St.)
Erlen 1700
(19th & Cheltham)
Eureka 450
(Market St.)
Europa 350C1
(Market St.)
Fairmont 1297
(Girard Ave.)
Falls 500
(Midvale Ave.)
Family 547
(Market St.)
Fay's 1800
(Market St.)
Felton 1362
(Rising Sun Ave.)
Fern Rock 1250
(N. 5th St.)
Fifty-Sixth St 751
(N. 5th St.)
Forepaughs 700
(N. 8th St.)
Forest 500
(Girard Ave.)
Forum 1777
(Frankfort & Ridge St.)
Fox 2457
(Market St.)
Frankford 1600
(Frankford Ave.)
Frolic 500
(Wyalusing St.)
Gem 375
(Germantown Ave.)
Germantown 1168
(Germantown Ave.)
Girard 900
(Girard Ave.)
Globe 455
(Annin St.)
Grand 883
(Snyder Ave.)
Grange 499
(Broad & Grange)
Grant 786
(Girard Ave.)
Great Northern ...1050
IN. Broad St.)
Green way 500
( Grcenway Ave. )
Hamilton 600
(Lansdowne Ave.)
Harrowgate 1150
(Russell St.)
Haverford 480
(Haverford Ave.)
Hill 550
(Germantown Ave.)
Hollywood 480
(22nd St.)
Holme 1690
(Frankfort Ave.)
Howard 900
(2614 N. Front St.)
Ideal 500
(Columbia Ave.)
Ideal 700
(Jackson St.)
Imperial 1040
(N. 2nd St.)
Imperial 1500
(S. 60th St.)
Iris 1400
(Kensington Ave.)
Italia 680
(Christian St.)
Jackson 1083
(Jackson St.)
Jeffries Roxborough . . 500
(Manayunk St.)
Jerry 500
(S. Third St.)
Joy 464
(Haverford)
Karlton 1066
(Chestnut St.)
Keiths 1600
(Chestnut St.)
Kent 1900
(Cumberland St.)
Keystone 1884
(Lehigh Ave.)
Lane
Lawndale 1000
(Rising Sun & FanShaw)
Leader 1020
(Lancaster Ave.)
Lehigh 486
(W. Lehigh Ave.)
Lenox 994
(Chester Ave.)
Liberty 1662
(Columbia St.)
Liberty 1550
(Torresdale Ave.)
Lincoln 1400C1
( Broad & Lombard )
Lindley 1204
(Rockland St.)
Lindy 1429
(Elmwood Ave.)
Locust 700
(Locust St.)
Locust St 1400
(Locust St.)
Logan 1920
(N. Broad St.)
Lorraine 500
(Fairmont Ave.)
Lyric 500
(Morris St.)
Mastbaum 4692C1
Manor 1146
Mayfair 1100
(Market St.)
Metropolitan . . .2750C1
(Broad & Poplar)
Midway 2780
( Kensington St.)
Model 960
(South St.)
Montgomery 600C1
(E. Girard Ave.)
New Alden 750
(Midvale & Crescent)
New Bro;idwav 907
(York St.)
New Colonial 900
( Moyamensing Ave.)
New Dixie 500
(Pt. Breeze)
New Doris 776
(Woodland Ave.)
New Garden 800
(8th & Vine)
New Jewell 500
(Morris St.)
New Jumbo 1300
(Girard Ave.)
New Lyric 1000
(Germantown Ave.)
New Mayfair 1000
(Frankfort)
New Palace 650
(South St.)
New Penn 600
(24th & Brown)
News 384
(13th & Market)
Nixon 1870
(Market St.)
Grand 3000C1
(Broad & Montgomery)
Northeastern 950
(Torresdale Ave.)
Ogantz 1750
(Organtz Ave.)
Orient 600
(Woodland Ave.)
Orpheum 1683
(Germ'town & Chelton)
Overbrook 1000
(Haverford Ave.)
Oxford 1600
(Burholme St.)
Palace 1100
(Market St.)
Palm 1000
(Frankford Ave.)
Park 1657
(Diamond St.)
Pastime 800
(Pt. Breeze Ave.)
Pearl 1400
(Ridge Ave.)
Penn 500
(S. 4th)
Pike 600
(Pike St.)
Plaza 1472
(Porter St.)
Point Breeze 1200
( Pt. Breeze Ave.)
Poplar 858
(N. 6th St.)
President 238
(Synder)
Princess 450
(Market St.)
Regal
(Oxford & Sanger)
Regis 500
(Cumberland St I
Renel 800
(7238 Ogantz Ave.)
Rex 475
(Ridge Ave.)
Rexy 2063C1
(South St.)
Rialto 800
(6152 Germ'town Ave.)
Richmond 1026
(Richmond St.)
Ridge Ave 780
(Ridge Ave.)
Rio 600
(Frankford Ave.)
Ritz 499
(Marshall St.)
Ritz 480C1
(Orthodox St.)
Riviera 1224
(Manayunk)
Rivoli 716
(52nd St.)
Rockland 758
(N. Broad St.)
Roosevelt 2000
(Frankford St.)
Roxy 1800
(Ridge Ave.)
Royal 1100
(South St.)
Ruby 660
(Fairmont Ave.)
Savoia 396
(S. Broad St.)
Sedge wick 1636
(Germantown Ave.)
Senate 500
(Susquehanna Ave.)
Sherwood 600
(Baltimore Ave.)
Sixty-Ninth 1796
(Westchester Pike)
Southern 475
(Broad & Reed St.)
Spruce 480
(Spruce St.)
Standard 1500
(South St.)
Stanley 3013
(Market St.)
Stanton 1500
(Market St.)
Star 600
(Kensington St.)
State 3030
(Chestnut St.)
Stone Hurst 1400
Strand 1690
(Germantown Ave.)
Strand 450
(W. Girard Ave.)
Stratford 750
(Dickinson St.)
Temple 500
(Tioga)
Terminal 900
(69th St.)
333 Market 952
(333 Market St.)
Tioga 1000
(N. 17th St.)
Tower 3300
(69th St.)
Towne 500
(Germantown Ave.)
Trans-Lux 493
(Chestnut St.)
Tyson 750
(Tyson Ave.)
Unique 900
(36th St.)
Upsal 470
(Germantown Ave.)
Uptown 2146
(N. Broad St.)
Venice 500
(Snyder Ave.)
Victoria 917
(Market St.)
Viola 500
(Germantown Ave.)
Vogue
(Market St.)
Walnut
(Walnut St.)
Walton 650
(Chelton & Chew)
Wayne 500
(Wayne Ave.)
West Allegheny ....850
(Allegheny Ave.)
Wishart 904
(Allegheny Ave.)
Wissahickson 400
(Ridge Ave.)
911
York 400
(York St.)
Yorktown 650
(Elkins Park)
PHILLIPSBURG
Majestic 400
Rowland 750
PHOENIXVILLE
Colonial 1000
Rialto 600
PINE GROVE
Hippodrome 460
PITCAIRN
Nemo 300
Strand 275
PITTSBURGH
AJVJn 200
(Sixth St.)
Arcade 600
(Corson St.)
Arcadia 476
(Ohio St.)
Arsenal 882
(Butler St.)
Art. Cinema 374
(Liberty Ave.)
Avenue 300
Avenue 200
(1108 — 5th Ave.)
Barry goo
(Penn Ave.)
Beacon 500
(Murray Ave.)
Belmar 600
(Homewood St.)
Boulevard 600
(Brookline Blvd.)
Brighton 700
(Brighton PI.)
Brookline 300
(Brookline Blvd.)
Brushton 400
( Brushton Ave.)
Camperophone 850
(Penn Ave.)
Capitol 690
(Beltzhoover Ave.)
Carlton 210C1
(Penn Ave.)
Casino 1600
(Diamond St.)
Central 600
(1851 Center Ave.)
Century -Family ....350
(Ohio St.)
Colonial 600
(Carson St.)
Dome 225
(Butler St.)
Enright 3225
(Penn Ave.)
Fulton 1800
(6th St.)
Garden 920
(North St.)
Grand 400
(2nd Ave.)
Grand 497
(Hazel wood)
Grandview 300
(Grandview Ave.)
Harris 1440
(Mt. Oliver)
Harris-Beaehview ..400
(Beachview Ave.)
Hazelwood 600
(Hazel wood Ave.)
Hiland 276
(Homewood St.)
Hilltop 690
(Warrington Ave.)
Hippodrome 700
(Beaver Ave.)
Hollywood 800
(Potomac St.)
Kenyon 750
(Federal St.)
Liberty 1600
(E. Liberty)
Liberty 400 Washington 350
(Carson St.) (BoggsAve.)
Lowrie 260 Weiland 500
(Lowrie) (Center Ave.)
Manor 400 Wm. Penn 500
(Murray St.) (Federal St.)
McClure 380 PITTSTON
(McClure Ave.) American 1986
MeKee 300 Roman 878
(Arlington St.) PLAINS
Melba 300 Lincoln 400
(Lincoln Ave.) PLYMOUTH
Melrose 1100 Rialto 450
(Brownville Rd.) Shawnee 1942
Metropolitan 276 POCONO PINES
(Liberty Ave.) Casino 650
Model 475 POINT MARION
(Butler St.) Barney's 450
New Atlas 400 PT. ALLEGHANY
(Perryville Ave.) Grand 300
New Beaver 299 PORTAGE
(Beaver Ave.) Rex 460
New Elliott 280 Rivoli 600
(Lorentz Ave.) PORT CARBON
New Granada 850 Rialto
(Center St.) Ritz 420
New Oakland 300 POTTSTOWN
(AtwoodSt.) Hippodrome 935
New Sheridan 300 Strand 1032
(Chartier Ave.) POTTSVILLE
New West End 400 Capitol 2063
(Main St.) Hippodrome 1037
Novelty 300 Hollywood 1000
(Federal St.) PUNXSUTAWNEY
Ohio 275 Alpine 480
(E.Ohio St.) Jefferson 1014
Palace 300 QCAKERTOWN
(Diamond St.) Karlton 540
Palace 300 Palace 698
(Penn Ave.) QUARRYVILLE
Paramount 500 New Central 368
(Brighton Road) RAMEY
Pastime 300 Pastime 360
(HerronSt.) RANKIN
Penn 400 Ritz 500
(Penn Ave.) READING
ia ' '*L'a ' 1 ' 00 Arcadia 606C1
Perrv 1250 Ast0r 2478
tv ' \ * 't>' \ Capitol 2093
(East & Perryville) Embassy 3000
Plaza 600 Loew's Colonial ..1800
(Liberty St.) Orpheum 1100
Regent 1000 Park 1500
(Penn Ave.) Rajah 2093
Rex 472 Reo 400
(Carson St.) Rex 425
Rhumba 300 Santoy . . .... . . . 850C1
(55 Fiillerton) State 1228
Rialto 390 Strand 1705
(Brownsville Rd.)
Rialto 600
(5th Ave.)
Ritz 76S
(Fifth St.)
Roosevelt 1100
(Center Ave.)
Schenley 1642
(Forbes St.)
Senator 1600
(Liberty Ave.)
Sheridan S 2040
(Penn Ave.)
Shiloh 500
(Shiloh St.)
South Hills 1800
( Dormont )
Squirrel Hill
I Foil wood & Murray St.)
Stanley 3789
(7th Ave.)
State
(6th Ave.)
RED LION
Community 500C1
Lion 1073
RENOVA
Rialto 660
REPUBLIC
Princess 300
Roosevelt 417
REYNOLDS VILLE
Adelphi 660
RICHEYVILLE
Roxy 400
RICHLAND
Neptune 400
RIDGEWAY
Strand 910
RIMERSBURG
Lincoln 400
ROARING SPRINGS
Roaring Springs . . . .400
ROBESONIA
800 Pioneer 400
ROCHESTER
Sfand 925 Majestic 1000
(Forbes St.) Oriental 1000
Triangle 900 ROSCOE
(Frankstown Ave.) Roscoe 400
Warner 1980 ROSSITER
(6th Ave.) Victory 225C1
ROVERFORD
Penn 600
RUSSELTON
Nixon 200
SAGAMORE
Sagamore 245
ST. CLAIR
Hollywood 295
Ritz 400
ST. MARY'S
Family 550
St. Mary's 750
ST. MICHELS
Strand 300
SALISBURG
Liberty 300
SANDY LAKE
Penn Lake 300
SAXTON
Aldine 500
SAYRE
Sayre 900
SCHUYLKILL HAVEN
Rio 485
SCHWENKSYILLE
Auditorium 250
SCOTTSD ALE
Arcade 250
Strand 500
SCRANTON
Bell 535
Bull's Head 340
Capitol 1791
Comerford
Family 900
Favini 350
Globe 957
Grand 500
Manhattan 403
New Rialto 1100
Orient 720
Pine Brook 280
RCA 650
Rialto 535C1
Ritz 1720C1
Riviera 1015
Roosevelt 951
State 920
Strand 1542
West Side 1975
SELINSGROVE
Stanley 500
SEWICKLEY
Sewiekley 650
SHAMOKIN
Capitol 1200
Majestic 1000
Victoria 1600
SHARON
Columbia 1621
Gable 350
Liberty 1300
Nuluna 400
SHARPSBURG
Main 350
Strand 450
SHARPSVILLE
Ritz 300
SHAVE RTON
Shaver 350
SHEFFIELD
Utopian 308
SHENANDOAH
Capitol 500
Lyric 430
Strand 856C1
SHEPPTON
Palace 200
SHICKSHINNY
Peoples 400
SHILLINGTON
Shillington 350
SHIN<;i.EHOUSE
Shinelehouse 200
SHIPPENSBURG
Lyric 300
State 315
Victory 500
912
SHOHOLA
Casino 300C1
SHREWSBURY
Trail 390
SIMPSON
Neutral 246C1
SIX MILE RUN
Shapiro 500
SLATING TON
Arcadia 600
SLICKVILLE
Rex 250
SLIGO
Liberty 206
SLIPPERY ROCK
Roxy 420
State Normal School...
SLOVAN
Perm 240
SMETHPORT
Star 300
SMITHTON
Opera House 200
SOMERSET
Governor 900
Par-K 500
SOUDERTON
Broad 700
SOUTH FORK
Palace 400
Rivoli 485
S. LANGHORNE
Casino 400
SPANGLER
Gray 300
SPRINGDALE
Happy Hour 300
Miami 450
Temple 400
SPRING GROVE
American Legrion
STAR JUNCTION
Star 275
STATE COLLEGE
Cathum 600
Nittany 440
State
STEELTON
Standard 294
Strand 500
STEWARTSTOWN
Ramsey 350
STROUDSBURG
Sherman 1040
Stroud 700C1
SUMMIT HILL
Capitol 400
Long's 260
SUNBURY
Chestnut St 600
Rialto 680
Strand 1090
SUSQUEHANNA
Opera House 600
SUTERVILLE
Rex 300
SWISSVALE
Washington 800
SWOYERSVILLE
Roosevelt 400
Strand 500
SYKESVILLE
Ideal 450
TAMAQUA
Majestic 1050
Victoria 700
TARENTUM
Grand
Harris 965
New Peoples CI
Palace 600
TAYLOR
Thomas 620
THROOP
Lyric 300
TIDIOUTE
Tidioute 200
TITUSVILLE
Grand 624C1
Orpheum 600
Penn
TOPTON
Palace 500
TOWANDA
Keystone O. H 847
TOWER CITY
Tower 481
TRAFFORD CITY
McBride 380
TREMONT
Tremont 400
TREVERTON
Ritz 264
TROY
Band Box 1189
TUNKHANNOCK
Dietrich
Savoy 250C1
TURTLE CREEK
Olympic 400
TYRONE
El Patio 628
Wilson 910
UNION CITY
Palace 400
UNIONTOWN
Capitol 495
Penn 1000
State 1500
West End 960C1
UPLAND
Saint 400
UPPER DARBY
Boulevard 600
VALLEY VIEW
Midland 350
VANDERGRIFT
Arcadia 400
Bandbox 360
Casino 550
VERONA
Liberty 380
Olympic 350
VESTABURG
American 400
VINTONDALE
State 300
WAMPUM
Wampum 250
WARREN
Columbia 800
Library 1052
WASHINGTON .
Basle 700
Court 400
State 1276
Washington 840
WATSONTOWN
Lyceum
WAYNE
Anthony Wayne ...1318
WAYNESBORO
Arcade 1000
Strand 444
WAYNESBURG
Eclipse 648
Opera House 472
Wayne 500
WEATHERLY
Roxy 500
WELLSBORO
Arcadia 880
WESLEYVILLE
Penn 780
WEST ALIQUIPPA
Aliquippa 400
WEST CHESTER
Garden 500
Rialto 600
Warner 1640
WESTFIELD
Clark 460
WEST GROVE
Roselyn 495
WEST HAZLETON
Hersker 500
WEST NEWTON
Grand 400
WEST TARENTUM
Dattola 650
WESTVIEW
Westview 600
Gerard 500
WHITE HAVEN . .
Legion 420
WILKES BARRE
Capitol 2009
Comerford
Crystal 500
Family 400
Hart 89!)
Irving- 1553
Orpheum 848
Palace 22 a
Penn 1953
Sterling 641
Strand 480
WILKINSBURG
Princess 700
Reg-al 400
Rowland 1129
State 500
WILLIAMSBURG
Dean 300
WILLIAMSPORT
Capitol 2421
Knrlton 1200
Keystone 1398
Park 1400
Rialto 1230
Roxy 600
WILLIAMSTOWN
Academy of Music . 400
Lyric 500
WILLOW GROVE
Grove 798
WILMERDING
Valley 300C1
Wilmer 450
YMCA 460
WINDBER
Arcadia 600
Opera House 400
WYALUSING
Wyalusing 450
WYOMING
Wyoming- 500
YEADON
Yeadon 800
YORK
Capitol 1024
Hi-Way 750
Rialto 798
Ritz 525
Southern 415
Strand 1327
York 1000
YOUNGSVILLE
State 499
YOUNGWOOD
Pearl 320
ZELIENOPLE
Strand 250
=- RHODE ISLAND =
61 Theaters; 60,039 Seats
Closed — 9 Theaters; 8,567 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 52 Theaters; 51,472 Scats
APPONAUGH CENTERDALE
Rainbow 280C1 Community 800
ARTIC CENTRAL FALLS
E. GREENWICH
Greenwich 726
E. PROVIDENCE
MANVILLE
Central 500
MT. PLEASANT
Gem 850C1 Belleview Hollywood 900 Castle 900
AUBURN Lafayette 600
Park 1200 CRANSTON
BRISTOL Palace 800
HARRISVILLE
Assembly Hall 300
JAMESTOWN
NARRAGANSETT PIER
Casino 625C1
NEWPORT
Pastime 600 Rainbow 275 Palace 500C1 Colonial 1200
913
Opera House 1180
Shea'8
Paramount . . . 1212C1
Strain] 800
OI.NEYVILLE
(Providence P. 0.)
Olympia 1000
PASCOAG
Star 400
PAWTUCKET
Box's Club
Broadway 600
Capitol 1400
Leroy 2500
Strand 1900
PROVIDENCE
Albee 2314
Avon 450
Bijou 1120
Capitol 800
Carlton 1500
Columbia 300
Drive-In CI
Empire 1700
Fays 1038
Hope 034
Liberty 800
Loew's State 2500
Majestic 2262
Metropolitan ....3000C1
Playhouse 1400C1
Strand 1552
Uptown 1402
RKO Victory 1010
RIVERSIDE
Lyric 400
THORNTON
Ferri Casino 400
Myrtle 200
VALLEY FALLS
Roosevelt 600C1
WAKEFIELD
Community 500
WARREN
Lyric 680
WESTERLY
Central 600
Unimd 1000
WEST WARWICK
Palace 750
Thornton's 000
WOONSOCKET
Bijou 000
Laurier 1000
Olympia 800
Park 1200
Rialto 000
Stadium 1274
- SO. CAROLINA -
169 Theaters; 69,908 Seats
Closed — 16 Theaters; 6,650 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 153 Theaters; 63,258 Seats
ABBEVILLE
Opera House 800
AIKEN
Patricia 700
ALLENDALE
Carolina 300
ANDERSON
Carolina 400
Criterion 800
Lyric 274C1
State 1000
Strand 600
ANDREWS
Andrews 300
BAMBERG
Little 300
BARNWELL
Ritz 300
Teal 350
BATESBURO
Carolina 300
BATH
Aiken Countv Stores 300
BEAUFORT
Breese 200
BELTON
Belton 260
BENNETTSVILLE
Carolina 700
Palace 300C1
Palmetto 250
BISHOPVILLE
Lyric 300
RLACKSBURG
Blacksburg- 200
BLUE RIDGE
Rid&e 200
BRANCHVILLE
Edisto 200
BUFFALO
Buffalo 350C1
CAMDEN
Camden 400
Hagrler 550
CHARLESTON
Garden 1000
Gloria 1000
Lincoln 450
Majestic 400
Palace 1000
Riviera 500
Victory 900
CHERAW
Cheraw 300
CHESNEE
Colonial 119
CHESTER
City 450
CHESTERFIELD
Chesterfield 300
CLEARWATER
Aiken County Stores 300
CLINTON
Broadway 300
Casino 325
CLOVER
Carolina 294
COLUMBIA
Capitol 250
Carolina 1428C1
Pacific Y.M.C.A.. .450C1
Palmetto 1454
Ritz 675
State 734
Strand 800
War Dept. Camp
Jackson 900
CONWAY
Carolina 500
DARLINGTON
Liberty 800
DENMARK
Dulamae 300
DILLON
Broadway 300
Dillon 250
EASLEY
Avalon 300C1
Lyric 300
EDGEFIELD
Towne 200
ELLOREE
Playland 250
ESTILL
Anne 300
FAIRFAX
Pal 300
FLORENCE
Carolina 850
Colonial 650
Lincoln 300
Roxy 300
FORT MILL
Majestic 200C1
FORT MOULTRIE
Fort Moultrie
FOUNTAIN INN
New 300
GAFFNEY
Cherokee 517
Hammerick 500
Strand 500C1
GEORGETOWN
Palace 360
Peerless 350
GRANITVILLE
Granitville 250
GREAT FALLS
Republic 450
GREENVILLE
Bijou 400
Branwood 500
Carolina 500
Center 783
Liberty 300
Lyric
Paris 500
Ritz 450
Rivoli 500
Roosevelt 400C1
GREENWOOD
Carolina 450
State 1000
GREER
Grand 400
Rialto 200
HARTSVILLE
Center 700
Temple 250C1
HEMINGWAY
Anderson 466
HONEA PATH
Lyric 300
INDIAN
Amuzu 250
JOHNSONVILLE
Ritz 250
Prosser's 200
JOHNSTON
Liberty 200
KERSHAW
Kershaw 175
State 300
KINGSTKEE
Anderson 400
LAKE CITY
Ritz 350
LAKEVIEW
Lakeview 300
LANCASTER
Imperial 400
LANGLEY
Aiken County Stores 300
LAURENS
Capitol 400
Echo 300
LEXINGTON
Carolina 300
LIBERTY
Roxy 300
LORIS
State 300
LYMAN
Lyman 350
McCOLL
Broadway 418C1
McColl 260
Mccormick
Hollywood 200
MANNING
Hollywood 250
MARION
Rainbow 638
MONKS CORNER
Berkley 300
MULLINS
Anderson 500
MYRTLE BEACH
Broadway 200
Glory 600C1
NEW BROOKLAND
Dixie 300C1
NEWBERY
Opera House 500
Ritz 300
NEW BROOKLAND
Dixie 300C1
NINETY-SIX
Gloria 300
NORTH
New 250
ORANGEBURG
Carolina 1000
Reliance 350
PAGE LAND
Page Land 250
PARIS ISLAND
Lyceum
PEI.ZER
Dixie 710
PICKENS
Jefferson 375
PIEDMONT
Star 400CI
914
RIDGELAND
Coastal 300
ROCK HILL
Capitol 418
Carolina 300
Stpvpnsnn's 500
Winthrope College.. 800
nr. OEUKGB
St. George 300
ST. MATTHEWS
Calhoun 300
SALLEY
Salley 225
SALUDA
Saluda 300
SENECA
Richardson 480
SPARTANBURG
Carolina 1000
Criterion 350
State 400
Strand 000
Union 300
SPRINGFIELD
Springfield 200
SUMMERVILLE
Summerville 300
SUMTER
Lyric 300
Rex 400
Sumter 916
TIMMONSVILLE
State 233
TUCAPAU
Startex
UNION
New
Rialto 350
Union 300
VARNVILLE
Varnville 200
WAGENER
Cozy 200C1
WALHALLA
Strand 300
WALTERBORO
Ritz 363
WARE SHOALS
Y.M.C.A 500
WESTMINSTER
Capitol 280C1
WHITMIRE
Strand 300
WILLIAMSTON
New 250
WILLISTON
Williston 250
WINNSBORO
Carolina 260
Fairfield 250
WOODRUFF
Hollywood 350
YORK
Sylvia 300
— SO. DAKOTA —
199 Theaters; 60,163 Scats
Closed — 15 Theaters; 4,625 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 184 Theaters; 55,538 Seats
ABERDEEN
Capitol 822
Lyric 350
Majestic 400
Orpueum 650
Pix 360
Time 300
ALCESTER
Barrymore 225
ALPENA
Dreamland 200
ARDMORE
Caylor
ARLINGTON
Arlington 240
ARMOUR
Lorraine 216
ARTESIAN
Silkey's 200
AVON
Avon 170
BELLE FOURCHE
Belle 650
BERESFORD
Empress 300
BISON
Bison 200C1
Lyric
BONESTEELE
Boneeteele 200
BOWDLE
H & H 200
IlltlDC.EWATER
Bridgewater 250
BRISTOL
Capitol 250
BRITTON
Strand . . .300
BROOKINGS
Fad 350
State 800
BRUCE
Bruce 200
BRYANT
Bryant 300
BUFFALO
Buffalo (Port.) 150
Legion 150
BURKE
Burke 150
CAMP CROOKS
Patton 300
CANTSTOTA EMERY
Elks 300 Sun
CANOVA ESTELUNE
Canova 160 State 200
.200
CANTON
EUREKA
Canton 400 Lyric 200
CARTHAGE
FAIRFAX
Carthage 170 Fairfax 300C1
FAITH
CASTLEWOOD
Justright 200 Wapazo
CENTERVILLE FAULKTON
Broadway 250 New
CHAMBERLAIN FLANDREAU
State 350 Crystal 460
.172
.200
CLARK
Clark 225
CLEAR LAKE
Majestic 200
COLTON
Colton
Indian School
FT. MEADE
Ft. Meade 300
New 365
FT. PIERRE
(Port.) Teton 210
FRANKFORT
Majestic 160
FREEMAN
Met 130
GARRETSON
New
Princess 100
GARY
COLUMBIA
Plaza 160C1
CONDE
Community 400
CUSTER
Garlock 360
DAKOTA
Seneca 200
DEADWOOD
Deadwood 708 Garden ^i." ™ • •105
Ritz
Isis 300C1
DELL RAPIDS
Dell
DELMONT
New
DESMET
Ritz 300
DOLAND
Palace 260
DRAPER
Diaper (Port.) 176
DUPREE
Lyceum New
EAGLE BUTTE
Strand 176
EDGEMOXT
GEDDES
.200
4nn Temple 300
GETTYSBURG
Palace 400
GREGORY
Lyric 295
GROTON
State 240
HARROLD
Playhouse 200C1
HARTFORD
Hartford 300
HAYTI
300
HECLA
Viva 200
HENRY
HIGHMORE
200
180
Iris 200 Rialto
ELK POINT
State 400 Grand
ELKTON HILL CITY
Elk 260 Gem 290
915
HOT SPRINGS
Cozy
Hot Springs 800
Battle Mt. Sanitarium
400
Soldiers Home .... 160
HOWARD
Paradise 276
HUDSON
Hollywood 250
HURLEY
State 200
HURON
Bijou 460C1
Huron 460
State 450
IPSWICH
State 200
IRENE
Irene 190
ISABEL
Strand
JAVA
Grand 250C1
KENNEBEC
Gala 160
Rex 474
KIMBALL
Gem 390
KODOKA
State 160
LAKE ANDES
Okay 250
LAKE NORDEN
Norden 200
LAKE PRESTON
Rex 215
LEAD
Homestake 800
LEMMON
Grand 400
Palace 300
LENNOX
State 250
LEOLA
Century 200
LETCHER
Letcher
McINTOSH
Lyric 200
MADISON
L.vric 426
State 450
MARION
Marion 400
MARTIN
Allen 150
Inland 307
MENNO
Roxy 200
MIDLAND
Legion 250
MILBANK
Chateau 350
MILLER
Princess 300
MISSION
Rosebud School
MITCHELL
Paramount 1000
Roxy 500
Time 400
MOBRIDGE
Mascot 700
MURDO
Murdo 200
NEW EFFINGTON
Hollywood 200
NEWELL
Arcade 200
OLDHAM
Strand 250
ONEIDA
Roxy 175
PARKER
Capitol 300
PARKSTON
Royal 285
PHILLIP
Gem 800
PIERRE
Bijou 360
Grand 600
PINE RIDGE
Indian Schoo 200
PLANKINTON
Anjune 350
PLATTE
Lyric 200
POLLACK
Movies 200C1
PRESHO
Lyric 200
QUINN
Sunset
RAPID CITY
Elks 400
Rex 350
State 450
REDFIELD
Lyric 400
REVILLO
Auditorium 300
ROSCOE
Auditorium 200
ROSHOLT
Rosholt 219
ST. FRANCIS
Mission
SALEM
Reg-ale 300
SANATOR
Sanitarium 100
SCOTLAND
Royal 300
SELBY
Opera Houee 200
SIOUX FALLS
Capitol 400
Dakota 400
Egyptian 600
Granada 600
Hollywood 700
Orpheum 900
State 1000
Time 350
SISSETON
Siston 300
SPEARFI8H
Vita 400
SPRINGFIELD
Strand 173C1
STICKNEY
Ritz 198
STURGIS
Majestic 250
SUMMITT
Community 350C1
Orpheum 254
TORONTO
Auditorium 392C1
TRIPP
Tripp 300
TYNDALL
Cozy 300
VEBLEN
Ritz 240
VERMILLION
Coyote 500
March 600
VIBORG
Gliul 240
WAGNEK
Cozy 400
WALL
Wall 100
WATEKTOWN
Colonial 750CI
Lyric 607
State 260
WAUBAY
Waubay 225
WEBSTER
Liberty 460CI
Lyric 400
WESSINGTON
Scenic 200
WESSINGTON SPRINGS
Rialto 230
WHITE LAKE
Aurora 250
WHITE RIVER
White River
WILLOW LAKE
Lake 200
WILMOT
Wilmot 180
WINNER
Ritz 350
WOLSEY
Opera House .... 200C1
WOOD
Paradise 250C1
WOONSOCKET
Gem 250
Rex 250
YANKTON
Moon 600
Dakota 600
— TENNESSEE —
254 Theaters; 118,119 Seats
Closed — 17 Theaters; 6,834 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 237 Theaters; 111,285 Seats
ADAMSVILLE
Dixie 648
ALAMO
Alamo 200
Roxy 200
ALCOA
Alcoa 250
ATHENS
Strand 350
BEACH BLUFF
School Auditorium ....
BELLS
Bells 445
BEMIS
Y.M.C.A 863
BOLIVAR
Luez 300
BRISTOL
Capitol 1250
Paramount 1250
State
BROWNSVILLE
Capitol S50
Harlem 218
Southland 200C1
BRUCETON
Ritz 300
CAMDEN
Dixie 350
CARTHAGE
Princess 175
CENTERVILLE
Court House (Port.) ....
K. L. S. (Port.) . . . .200
Rex 224
CHATTANOOGA
American 1000
Amusu 400
Bijou 990
Cameo 511
Dixie-Bonita
Grand 644
Park 400
Rialto 800
Ritz 600
Riviera
Rivoli
State 900
Tivoli 1200
Volunteer 800
CLAIRFIELD
Little Tennessee . . . .250
CLARKSVILLE
Capitol 800
CLEVELAND
Bohemia 200
Princess 750
Roxy 250C1
CLINTON
Clinton 275
Strand
COAL CREEK
Norris 150
COLLIERVILLE
Collierville 600
COLUMBIA
Lyric 522
Princess 750
COOKEVILLE
Princess 600
Strand 300
COPPERHILL
Doradele 216
COVINGTON
Ruffin 650
COWAN
Rex
CROSSVILLE
Mecca 219C1
Palace
DAYTON
Dayton 250
DICKSON
Roxy 275
DRESDON
Uptown 350
DYER
Dixie 230
Palace 676
DYERSBURG
Frances 400
EAGAN
Eagan
ELIZABETHTON
Bonnie Kate 695
Grand 250
Ritz 400
ERIN
Community
House (Port.)
ERWIN
Capitol 300
Lyric 400C1
Palace 250
ETOWAH
Gem 550
FAYETTEVILLE
Capitol 400
FRANKLIN
Franklin 300
GALLATIN
Palace 265
Roxy 500
GATLINBURG
Gatlinburg- 300
GREENFIELD
Palace 300
GIBSON
School
Auditorium ..(Port.)
GREENVILLE
Capital 600
Palace 400
Princess 451
HARRIMAN
Palace 600
Prince 400
HARTSVILLE
Eveska 400
916
HENDERSON
State 478
HOHENWALD
Strand 145
HUMBOLT
Rex 360
HUNTINGDON
Court 200
JACKSON
Harlem 326
Hauber 350C1
Met 400
Paramount 800
State 2600
JAMESTOWN
Star 300
JEFFERSON CITY
Jefferson 280
JELLICO
Gay 250
JOHNSON CITY
Liberty 438
Majestic 880
Servier 650
State 500
Tennessee 1000
JONESBORO
New
KINGSPORT
Gem
Hilan 200
Rialto 400
State
Strand 1000
KINGSTON
Fox 250
KNOXVILLE
Bijou 1000
Booth 800
Broadway 440
Crystal 375
Gay 278
Gem 800
Joy 200
New 300
Palace 500
Rialto 385
Riviera 1200
Roxy 475
State 250
Strand 600
Tennessee 1984
LaFAYETTE
Macon 400
LaFOLLETTE
Capitol 326
Cherokee 315
Novelty 175C1
LAWRENCEBURG
Princess 400
LEBANON
Princess 500
LENOIR CITY
Grand 400
LEWISBURG
Dixie 280
LEXINGTON
Princess 450
LINDEN
KLS (Port.) 200C1
Court House . . . (Port.)
Linden 216
LIVINGSTON
Ritz 250
LOUDON
Loudon 440
McKENZIE
McKenzie 200
MADISON
Madison
MADISON VILLE
Hollywood 350
MANCHESTER
Lyric 375
McMINNVILLE
Center 350
Dixie 300
Park 062
MARIETTA
New
MARYVILLE
Capitol 600
Park 500
MA RTIN
Capitol 300
MEDINA
School
Auditorium . . (Port.)
MEDON
School
Auditorium . . (Port. I
MEMPHIS
Ace 500
Bristol 600
Capitol 800
Daisy 500
Harlem 600
Joy 600
Lamar 1000
Linden Circle 1000
Loew's State 2600
Madison 638
Malco Palace ....2200
Memphian 800
Orpheum 2690C1
Palace 1100
Peabody 470
Princess 774
Rialto 700
Ritz 500
Roxy 800
Royal 390
Savoy 598
Strand 900
Suzore No. 1 600
Suzore No. 2 800
Warner Bros 2300
MILAN
Milan 491
MONTEAGLE
S. S. Assembly CI
MONTEREY
Palace
MORRISTOWN
Palace 300
Princess 600
Ritz
MOUNT PLEASANT
Maury 300
MINFORD
Munford 416
MOUNTAIN CITY
Strand 225
MURFREESBORO
Princess 500
NASHVILLE
Ace
Belmont 800
Bijou 600
Capitol 800
Elite 800
Fifth Ave 500
Knickerbocker ....1100
Loew's Vcndomo . . .1800
Paramount 1863
Princess 1500
Rex 400
Ritz 500
Roxy 500
State
Woodland 500
NEWBURN
Palace 250
NEWPORT
Gay 250C1
Palace CI
Park CI
Winston 350
NEW TAZEWELL
Star 400
OBION
Strand 350
OLD HICKORY
Du Pontonia 500
Old Hickory 400
ONEIDA
Capitol .250
PALMER
Palmer 350
PARIS
Capitol 300
PARSONS
Rustic 480
PIKEVILLE
City
Empress 200C1
PINSON
School
Auditorium . . (Port.)
PORTLAND
Temple 375
PULASKI
Best 400C1
Sam Davis
KIDGLY
Palace 200
RIPLEY
Dixie 250
ROCKWOOD
Lyric 200
ROGERSVILLE
Rosersville 300
SAVANNAH
Churchwell 374
SELMER
Ritz 551
SEVIERVILLE
Palace 300
SEWANEE
Sewanee Union . . . .400
SHELBY VILLE
Princess 400
SMITHVILLE
Fox 200
SOMERVILLE
Fair 350
SOUTH PITTSBURGH
Princess 600
SPARTA
Oldham's 625
SPRING CITY
City
SPRINGFIELD
Capitol
Princess 500C1
SWEETWATER
Gay 360
TIPTONVILLE
Strand 350
TRACY CITY
Dixie 300
TRENTON
Gem 248
Strand 248
TULLAHOMA
Strand 300
UNION CITY
Capitol 700
Ritz
Roxy 400C1
Strand 300C1
WATERTOWN
Rex
WAVERLY
New Waverly 218
WAYNESBORO
Wayne 400
WHITEHAVEN
Whitehaven School. 400
WHITEVILLE
Whiteville Hisrh School.
WHITWELL
Playhouse 150
WINCHESTER
Rivoli 500
WOODBURY
Ritz 325
WRIGLEY
Schoolhouse (Port.) . . .
TEXAS
1,068 Theaters; 503,294 Seats
Closed — 75 Theaters; 22,892 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 993 Theaters; 480,402 Seats
ABERNATHY Paramount 1407 ALBANY ALPINE
Rita 200 Texas 480 Aztec 400 Cactus 350C1
ABILENE ACKERLY Granada 1000
Gem 400 Majestic CI ALICE Texas
Majestic 1585 ALAMO Rex 450 ALTO
Palace 375 Alamo 250 Rialto 543 Alto 400
917
ALVARADO
Alvarado 385C1
ALV1N
Alvin 456
Grand 300C1
AMARILLO
Capitol 817
Liberty 375
Lyric 370
Paramount 1400
Rex 400
Rialto 692
Star
State 1149
Texas 476
AMHERST
MajeBtic 150
ANAHUAC
Rig: 500
ANDREWS
Wallace 300
ANOLETON
Angrleton 200
ANSON
Lyric 250
Palace 375
ANTON
LaHart 225
ARANSAS PASS
Rialto 500
ARCHER CITY
Royal 250
ARLINGTON
Aergie 300
Texan 400C1
ARP
Liberty 300
Rex 300
ASPERMONT
Queen 200
ATHENS
Dixie 500
Liberty 400
ATLANTA
State 575
Texas 475
AUSTIN
Austin
Cactus 250
Capitol 1092
Harlem 260
Paramount 1421
Queen 825
Ritz 800
State 909
Texas 455
Varsity 1027
BAIRD
Plaza 400
BALLINGER
Palace 525
Queen 300C1
Ritz 450
Texas 750
BALMORHEA
Texas 250
BANDERA
Bantex 168
BARTLETT
Alamo 250
BASTROP
Strand 250
BAY CITY
Colonial 388C1
Franklin 460
State 500
Texas
BAYTOWN
Arcadia 400
BEAUMONT
Gem 300
Jefferson 1003
Lamar 788
Liberty 958
Peoples 798
Rio 750
Tlvoll 650
BEEVILLE
Rex 450
Rialto 700
Rio 500C1
BELLVILLE
Alamo 300
BELTON
Beltonian 479
lieltex 400
BENAVIDES
Empress 360
Rita 460
BERTRAM
Globe 340
BIG LAKE
Texas 300
BIG SPRINGS
Lyric 500
Queen 600
Rltz 800
BISHOP
Texas
BLANCO
Blanco 480
BLOOMING GROVE
Grove 190C1
BOERNE
Cascade 300
BOGATA
Bog-ata 265
BOLING
Boling- ... 232
BONHAM
American 760
Best 400
Elite 300
BORGER
Crown 400
Paramount 1375
Rex 600
Riff 600
State . . . 404
BOWIE
Majestic 300
Rltz 298
BRACKETTVILLE
Ft. Clark 250
Castle 225
BRADY
Brady 750
Palace 450
R KECK EN RIDGE
National 600
Palace 536
BRENHAM
Rex 429
Simon 880
BRIDGEPORT
National 250
Yates 300C1
BRONTE
Texas 250
BROWNFIELD
Rialto 250
Rio 400
Ritz 480
BROWNSBORO
Rex 300
BROWNSVILLE
Capitol 972
Dittman 300
El Tito 400
Queen 600
BROWNWOOD
Gem 362
Lyric 825
Queen 300
BRUNI
New
BRYAN
New Dixie 325
Palace 675
Queen 650
BRYSON
Bryson 400
Liberty
BUCHANAN DAM
Tent CI
BUFFALO
Leon 400C1
Rio 360
BCRKBCRNETT
Palace 610
BURNET
Burntex 460
CALDWELL
Matsoni;iti 300
CALVERT
Elioa 400
CAMDEN
Harlem CI
CAMERON
Cameron 375
Milan 460
CAMP WOOD
Dixie 170
CANADIAN
Palace 400
CANTON
Plaza 200
CANYON
Olympic 400
CAKRIZO SPRINGS
National 125
Texas 600
CARROLLTON
Plaza 240
CARTHAGE
Cartex 300
CELINA
Ritz 250
CENTER
Crystal 400
Shelby 400
CENTERVILLE
Pix 400
CHILDRESS
Gem 350
Monogram 320
Palace 900
CHILLICOTHE
Palace 300C1
Strand 300
CISCO
Palace 480
Texas 300
CLARENDON
Cozy
Pastime 550
CLARKSVILLE
Avalon 600
State 600
CLAUDE
Gem 300
CLEBURNE
Palace 625
Roosevelt 275
Texas 425
Yale 800
CLEVELAND
Cleveland 375
CLIFTON
Cliftex 840
COLEMAN
Dixie 970
Gem 300
Howell 950
COLLEGE STATION
Y.M.C.A 1000
COLLINSVILLE
Village 250
COLORADO
Gem 200
Palace 732
Ritz 230
COLUMBUS
Orphic 400
Ritz 400
COMANCHE
Majestic 800
Ritz 300C1
COMFORT
Comfort 600
COMMERCE
Lyric 400
Palace 650
CONROE
Creiphton 700
Liberty 400
COOLEDGE
Cooledge 300
COOPER
Delta 300C1
Grand 460
CORPUS CIIRISTI
Agnes 748
Ariin-u 700
Grande 1000
Melba 1000
Palace 1260
Reo 400
Ritz 2326
Texas Drive-In
Tower 650
CORRIGAN
Corrigan 260
CORSICANA
Grand 400
Ideal 730
Palace 1250
COTULLA
Majestic 250
Trejos
CRANE
Palace 320
CRANFILLS GAP
Viking- 150C1
CROCKETT
Auditorium 800
Texas 225
CROSBY
Crosby 125
CROSBYTON
Queen 400
CROSS PLAIN
Liberty 360
CROWELL
Rialto 225
CRYSTAL CITY
Guild 700
Juarez 200
Nacional 200
CUERO
Rex CI
Rialto 800
Trot 500
CUSHING
New
DAINGERFIELD
Morris 250
DAISETTA
Daisetta 250
DALHART
La Rita 400
Mission 600
DALLAS
Arcadia 1042
Astor 600
Bison 604
Capitol 1034
Century 600
Cliff Queen 600
Cnlonia 400
Dalsec 420
East Grand 540
Fair 700
Forest 420
Fox 215
Harlem 600
Haskell 472
Joy 1000
Knox St 380
Lakewood 1000
Lawn 500
Majestic 2774
Maple 500
Melba 1845
Melrose 900
Midway 600
Mirror 920
Palace 2435
Peak 500
Queen 763
Rialto 1457
Rita 500
Rosewin 600
State 600
Sunset 450
918
Texas 920
Tower 1400
Trinity 648
Uptown 350
Varsity 005
Village 13')9
White 880
DAWSON
Ritz 330
DAYTON
Rio 500
DECATUR
Majestic 315
Ritz 350
DEKALB
Ritz 300
DELEON
Liberty CI
DEL RIO
Princess 600
Strand 400
DENISON
Rialto 766
Star 5!):)
Superba 400
DENTON
C.I.A
Dreamland 360
Palace 450
Ritz 500
Teacher's College
Texas 1000
DENVER CITY
Rhea
DEPORT
Deport 300
DEVINE
Majestic 250
DIBOLL
Timberlnwn 400
DICKINSON
Hollywood 200
DIMIT
Rio 300
DONNA
Chapultepec 315
Plaza 350
DRIPPING SPRINGS
Distex 255
DUBLIN
Lyric 300C1
Majestic 460
DUMAS
Star 190
EAGLE LAKE
Avalon 668
EAGLE PASS
Aztec 400
Yolanda 350C1
EARTH
Lyric 200
EASTLAND
Connellee 1200CI
Lyric 400
EDCOUCH
Texas 300
EDEN
Texas 300
EDINBURG
Aztec 560
Valley 350
EDNA
Edtex 300
EL CAMPO
Floyd's 600
Liberty 500
Normana 760
ELDORADO
Lone Star 250
Ritz 350
ELECTRA
Grand 500
Liberty 325
ELGIN
Eltex 250
ELLINGER
Pastime 200C1
EL PASO
Alameda 500
Alcazar 800
Colon 750
Crawford 800
Ellonay 885
Ft. Bliss
Palace 831
Plaza 2274
Texas Grand 1000
Wigwani 700
EMORY
Rains 200
ENNIS
Grand 480
Plaza 600
ESTELLINE
Pastime 250
FABENS
Rio 400
FAIRFIELD
Iris 600
FALFURRIAS
Cactus 300
Nacional 250
FAKMERSVILLE
Cornes 540
Palace 225
FAYETTEVILLE
Dawn 200C1
FERRIS
Queen 650
FLATONIA
Lyric 225
FLORENCE
Majestic 233
FLORESVILLE
Arcadia 280
Gem 276
FLOYDADA
Palace 800
Ritz 200
FOLLETT
Follett 300
FORNEY
Star 300
FORT RANDOLPH
Camp Randolph ...250
FORT STOCKTON
Cole 275
Grand 800
FORT WORTH
Avenue 600C1
Gayety 250
Grand 700
Hollywood 1700
Ideal 441
IsiH 1000
Liberty 1558
Majestic 1460
Palace 1567
Parkway 1000
Ritz 800
Rose 400
State 714
Texan 584
Tivoli 784
Varsity 700
Worth 2365
FRANKLIN
Franklin 200
FREDERICKSBURG
Longhorn 200C1
Palace 500
FREEPORT
Freeport 500
FREER
Rialto 300
Rio 400
FRIONA
Regal 250
FRISCO
Frisco 200
FROST
Frost 268
GAINSVILLE
Plaza 460
Ritz 341
State 806
Texan 300
GALVESTON
Dixie No. 1 600C1
Dixie No. 3 480
Ft. Crockett 250
Key 318
New Martini 1212
Queen 792
State 1200
Tremont 524
GARLAND
Garland 410
GATES VILLE
Palace 300
Regal 500
Ritz 600
GEORGETOWN
Palace 500
Ritz
GEORGE WEST
Rialto 350
GIDDINGS
Dixie 300
GILMER
Crystal 600
Strand 300
GLADEWATER
Cozy 512
Gregg 500
Liberty 400
Palace 300
GLEN ROSE
Palace 242
GOLIAD
Frels 300
GOLDSMITH
Ector 400C1
Wallace 450
GOLDTHWAITE
Melba 300
GONZALES
Crystal 686
GOOSE CREEK
DeLuxe 360
NuGulf 486
Texan 600
GORMAN
New Deal 260
GRAFORD
Ritz 336
GRAHAM
Liberty 550
National 400
Palace 400
GRANBURY
Palace 400
GRAND FALLS
Falls 375
GRAND PRAIRIE
Texas 312
GRAND SALINE
Grand 300
Palace
GRANDVIEW
Aztec 380
GRANGER
Grand 375
GRAPELAND
Tejas 860
GRAPEVINE
Palace 220
GREENVILLE
Colonial 400
Grand
Rialto 532
Rita 300
Texan 500
GREGGTON
Ritz 400
GROESBECK
Limestone 400
Royal CI
Yale 375
GROVETON
Grove 400
GUSTINE
Palace 400
HALE CENTER
Rits 300
II A LLETTS VILLE
Cole's 400
HAMILTON
Strand 317
HAMLIN
Fersruson 660
HANDLEY
Handley 224
HAPPY
Happy 200C1
HARGILL
Hargill 180
II A RUNG EN
Arcadia 987
Rialto 700
Strand 407
HASKELL
Rita
Texas 550
HEARNE
Chatmus 650
Queen 303
HEBBRONVILLE
Casino 350
Ritz 276
Texas 400
HEMPHILL
Sabine 225
HEMPSTEAD
Hempstead 500
HENDERSON
Liberty 300
Palace 629
Strand 600
Victory 400
HERFORD
Star 600
HENRIETTA
Dorothy 300
Ritz 460
HICO
Palace 235
HIGH ISLAND
High Island 250
Vida 200
HIGGINS
Alamo 250
HILLSBORO
Majestic 307
Ritz 600
Star 288
Texas 500
HONDO
Colonial 250C1
Raye 500
HONEY GROVE
Strand 350
HOUSTON
Alabama
Azteca 400
Bluebonnett 800
Boulevard 490
Delman 1200
Eastwood 1025
Heights 650
Iris 1114
Joy
Kirby 1468
Lincoln 488
Loew's State 2519
Lyons 480
Majestic 2140
Metropolitan 2757
Nan Grey 550
Navway 650
North Main 1025
Northside 460
Palace 940
Palace 750C1
Park 550
Pastime 350
Queen 850
Rainbow 600
Ritz 980
River Oaks 900
Roxy 400
St. Elmo 500
Stude
Texan 1400
Tower 1132
919
Union 750
Uptown 1300
Yale
HUBBARD
Crystal 250
Uptown 376
HUGHES SPRING
Village 200
HUMBLE
Lindell 300
HUNTSVILLE
Avon 300
Dorothy 400
INGELSIDE
Studio 350
IOWA PARK
Park 200
IRAAN
Texas 500
IRVING
Irving 285
ITALY
Elk 300
ITASCA
Pastime 500
JACKSBORO
Mecca 300
Opera House 380
JACKSONVILLE
Dorbrandt 500
Jackson 622
Palace 775
Rialto 450
JASPER
Lone Star 350C1
Texas
Uptown 450C1
JAYTON
Kent 200
JEFFERSON
Lyric 360
Strand .' 630
JOHNSON CITY
Texas 250
JUNCTION
Texas 300
KARNES CITY
Frels 195
KAUFMAN
Plaza 600
Uptown 300
KEMP CITY
K.M.A 300
Kemp 250
KENNEDY
Rex
Rialto 900
KERENS
Navarro 500
KERMIT
Hermit 300
Texan 350
KERRVILLE
Arcadia 933
Rialto 600
Rio 600
KILGORE
Crim 875
Ritz 450
Strand 600
Texan 800
KILLEEN
Texan 250
KINGSVILLE
Rex 360
Rialto 600
KIRBYVILLE
Palace 350
KOSSE
Kosse 250
KOUNTZE
Rex 200
KNOX CITY
Texas 300
LADONIA
Rolaine 225
LA FERIA
Rialto 475
LA GRANGE
Cozy 400
Cole
'ioO
M a j es t ic
eoc
LeRov
585
240
T.A PORTF
Port
T V FOR <
1 j 1 1 l Ulvi3
LAREDO
M exico
400
Rialtn
504
Royal
1009
Tivoli
930
T A TUVA
i . . \ i i > . \
Tex
onn
LEONARD
Texas
250C1
LEVELLAND
Rose
200
700
LEWISVILLE
250
LIBERTY
400
Park
500
LINDALE
New
260
LINDEN
200
LITTLE FIELD
Palace
401
Ritz
400
LIVINGSTON
Fain
400
400
LLANO
406
Ritz
CI
Tentsho
CI
LOCKHART
Square
425C1
LOCKNEY
300C1
LOMETA
200
LONEOAK
Oak
280
LONGVIEW
Arlyne
1000
450
Lincoln
CI
Rembert
795
Rita
800
Ritz
400
Strand
400
LORAINE
Hub
250C1
LORENZO
Queen
200
LOTT
Lott
260
LUBBOCK
Arcadia
300
400
500
784
450
Palace
934
Rex
417C1
Tech
375
Texan
373
LUEDERS
Strand
270C1
LUFKIN
350
Lynn
751
Ritz
400
300
LULING
.400
McALLEN
Azteea 300
Palace 850
Queen 630
McCAMEY
Grand 1000
Ritz 300
McGregor
Ritz 446
Texas 500
McKINNEY
Ritz 800
State 200
Texas 250
Mclean
Avalon 450
Lone Star 334
MABANK
Matex 200
MADISONVILLE
Madison 300
Plaza 300
Rex 250
MALAKOFF
Community 525
Ritz 625
MALONE
Malone CI
MANSFIELD
Fair 200
MARBLE FALLS
Rio 180
MARFA
Alamo
Palace 475
Texas 360
MARLIN
Palace 659
Strand 290
MARSHALL
Harlem 300
Palace 420
Paramount 1235
Strand 510
MART
Martex 300
Queen 300
MASON
Odeon 350
MATADOR
Rosrtie 275
MATHIS
Texas 299
MEDINA
Medina CI
MEGARGLE
Texas 250C1
McGregor
Ritz 446
Texas 500
MELVIN
Kirkwall 200
Leedja 326
MEMPHIS
Palace 450
Ritz 400
Texas 350
MENARD
Mission 500
MERCEDES
Rio CI
State 501
MERIDIAN
Capital 250)
MERKEL
Queen 500
MESQUITE
Colonial 284
MEXIA
American 400
National 430
Palace 360
MIAMI
Nusho CI
MIDLAND
Palace
Rex
Ritz 800
Yucca 1500
MIDLOTHIAN
Key 285
MILES
State 250
MINEOLA
Le Roy 300
Select 450
MINERAL WELLS
Gem 400
Grand 47 j
MIRANDO CITY
Trinity 200
MISSION
Concordia 600
Mission 500
MONAHONS
Palace 300
Texas
Tower 45U
MONT BELLVIEU
Mont 450
MOODY
Palace 300
MORTON
Wallace 350
MOULTON
New .... 250
MOUNT PLEASANT
Martin 460
Texan 300
MOUNT VERNON
Queen 300
MULESHOE
Palace 260
MUNDAY
Roxy 490
NACAGODOCHES
Harlem CI
Rita 275
Stone Fort 360
Texan 602
NAPLES
Tnez 200
NAVASOTA
Dixie 200
Miller's 500
Queen 300
NEDERLAND
Rio 518
NEEDVILLE
Coles 350
NEW BOSTON
Strand 350
NEW BRAUNFELS
Rex 450
Rialto 450
NEW CASTLE
Castle 330
NEW GULF
Texas 400
NEWTON
Newtex
NIXON
Frels 450
NOCONA
Nocona 335
Roxy 200
ODESSA
Lyric 900
Rio 475
State 400
Texas 400
O'DONNELL
Rex 300
OLNEY
Olney 350
Westex 376
OLTON
Olton 260
ORANGE
Gem 400
Starland 570
Strand 750
ORANGE GROVE
Cozy 176
OVERTON
Overton 600
Strand 500
920
OZONA
New 250
Ozona 300
PADUCAH
Palace 600
Zana 300
PALACIOS
Queen 400
PALESTINE
Pal 450
Ritz 750
Texas 1000
PAMPA
Crown 626
Lanora 1048
Rex 772
State 436
PANHANDLE
Panhandle 250
PARIS
Alhambra 250C1
Dixie
Grand 809
Lamar 500
Plaza 700
PASADENA
Pasadena 642
PEARSALL
Rio 260
PECOS
Cactus 400
Grand 500
Palace
PELLY
Alamo 500
New Gulf 485C1
PERRYTON
Ellis 800
PETERSBURG
Petersburg: 200
PHARR
Texas 450
Valencia
PILOT POINT
Queen 250
PINELAND
Peoples 200
Pineland 200C1
PITTSBURG
Crystal 365
State 600
PLAINVIEW
Fair 300
Granada 1400
Ritz 350C1
Texas 650C1
PLANO
Palace 350
PLEASANT GROVE
Grove 900
PLEASANTON
Ples-Tex 340
PONTATOC
State 200
PORT ARTHUR
Dreamland 654
Lincoln 600
Majestic 43(i
Pearce 525
Peoples 1000
Strand 1200
Texan 610
PORT ISABELL
Granada
PORT LAVACA
Rex 223
PORT NECHES
Lyric 480
POST
Garza 540
POTEET
Avon 200
POTH
Movieland 200
PRAIRIE VIEW
Auditorium 800
FREMONT
Iris 200
PRESIDIO
Rio 260
PYOTTE
Palace CI
QUANAH
Palace 300
Ritz 397C1
Texan 400
QUITAQUE
Queen 400
QUITMAN
Gem 600
RALLS
Crystal 500
Palace
RANGER
Arcadia 860
Columbia 286
RAYMONDVILLE
Raymon 400
Rio 400
REFUGIO
Rialto 450
Rig- 430C1
RICHARDSON
Ritz 400
RICHMOND
Cole's 275
RIO GRANDE
Dreamland 400
Ft. Ring-old- (USA) . . .CI
Garmon 600
RIO HONDO
Rio 250
RISING STAR
Liberty 310
ROARING SPRINGS
Texan 150
ROBERT LEE
Alamo 392
ROBSTOWN
Aldine
Palace 760
ROBY
Roby 300
ROCHESTER
Rex 400
ROCKDALE
Dixie 425
ROCKPORT
Rio 300
ROCK SPRINGS
O & S 400
ROCKWALL
Ritz 250
ROGERS
Strand 235
ROMA
Roma
ROPESVILLE
Lariot CI
ROSCOE
Joy 350
Hollywood 200C1
ROSEBUD
Gem 200
ROSENBERG
Cole's 300
State 300
ROTAN
Majestic 400
Ritz
ROUNDROCK
Rock 300
ROWENA
Rowona CI
ROYALTY
Texas 300
ROYCE CITY
Palace 425
RULE
Rule 300
RUNGE
Rialto 310
RUSK
Astor 300C1
Texas 300
SABINAL
Ross 225
SAINT JO
Ritz CI
Texan 376
SAN ANGELO
An gp los 425
Rex 425
Ritz 800
Royal 800
Texas 1700
SAN ANTONIO
Aztec 2465
Broadway 1030
Brook Field (USA)450C1
Empire 1200
Ft. Sam Huston (USA)
460
Harlem 600
Harlendale 920
Hig-hland Park 848
Kelly 500
Majestic 4000
National 800
New
Obrero 400
Plaza 900C1
Plaza 900
Prince 860
Progresso 550
Ritz 580C1
State 1936
Texas 2746
Uptown 1015
Zaragosa 800
SAN AUGUSTINE
Augrus 250
SAN BENITO
Juarez 200
Palace 692
Rivoli 986
SANDERSON
Princess 250
SAN DIEGO
Regis 350
Rio 300
SANGER
Texan 300
SAN JUAN
San Juan 300
SAN MARCOS
Palace 500
Plaza 360
SAN SABA
Palace 430
SANTA ANNA
Queen 325
SCHULENBERG
Cozy 400
SEAGOVILLE
Texas 200
SEAGRAVES
Pix 400
Wallace 400
SEALY
Texas 300
SEGUIN
Austin 350C1
Palace 506
Texas 450
SEMINOLE
Palace 300
SEYMOUR
Ritz 332
Texas 400
SHAMROCK
Liberty 400
Texas 400
SHERMAN
Plaza 472
Ritz 560
Texas 900
SHINER
Palace 300
SIERRA BLANCA
Sierra Blanca ....200
SILSBEE
Palace 300
SILVERTON
Palace 160
SINTON
Rialto 375
Roy's 250
SLATON
Palace 552
State 350
SMITHVILLE
Lauda 400C1
Texas 400
SNYDER
Palace 562
Ritz 560C1
Texas 600
SOMERVILLE
Majestic 468
SONORA
Las Vista 300
SOUR LAKE
Crescent 300
SPEARMAN
Lyric 250
SPUR
Palace 650
Spur
STAMFORD
Grand 500
Palace 300
Ritz 350
STANTON
Texas 300
STEPHENVILLE
Majestic 550'
Palace 450
STERLING CITY
Sterling 250
STOCKDALE
Van 130C1
STRATFORD
Roxy 300
STRAWN
Rex 208
Strawn 250C1
SUDAN
SULPHUR SPRINGS
Broadway 300
Carnation 500
Mission 500
Palace 250
SUNRAY
Sunray 300
SWEETWATER
Nolan 420
Ritz 400
Texas 860
TAFT
Texas 300
TAHOKA
Ada 200
English 250
TALCO
Strand 368
Talco 415
TAYLOR
Colonial 270
Howard 485
TEAGUE
Plaza
Ritz 200C1
Star 475
TEMPLE
Arcadia 936
Bell 300
Gem 600
Little 250
TENAHA
Public 250
TERRELL
Iris 603
Lyric 600
TEXARKANA
Little Princess . . . .460
Palace 400
Paramount 980
Strand 600
TEXAS CITY
Jewel 498
Texas 300
TEXON
Texon 475
THORNDALE
Palace 360
921
THREE RIVERS
Rialto 250
THROCKMORTON
Texan 250
TIMPSON
Palace 250
Texas
TOMBALL
Winona 200
TRINITY
Queen 250
TROUP
Texas 300
TULIA
Grand 450
TURKEY
Gem 298
TYLER
Arcadia 544
Joy 584
Liberty 400
Majestic 400
Palace 300
Queen 372
UVALDE
Ritz 400
Strand 600
VALLEY MILLS
Ritz 250
VAN
Victor 300
VAN ALSTYNE
Aztec 500
VAN HORN
Community 200
VENUS
Barrows 339C1
VERNON
Majestic 350
Pictorium 450
Vernon 864
VICTORIA
Queen 380
Rita 600
Uptown 740
WACO
Crystal 400
Fox 450
Gem
Orpheum 911
Rex 450
Rivoli 491
Strand 522
Waco 1331
WALLIS
Cole's 350
WAXAHACHIE
Empire 300
Lincoln 375C1
Ritz 600
Texas 600
WEATHERFORD
Palace 560
Princess 365
WEIMAR
Palace 350
WEIRGATE
Palace 250
WELLINGTON
Ritz 800
Texas 500
WESLACO
Nacional 400
Ritz 693
WEST
Best 370
WEST COLUMBIA
Capital 300
WHARTON
Queen 452
Rio 450
WHEELER
Rogue 250
WHITESBORO
Princess 250
Royal 200
WHITEWRIGHT
Palace 300
WHITNEY
Texas 250
WICHITA FALLS
Gem 610
Majestic 1186
Ritz 500
Roxy 300C1
State 816
Strand 900
Texan 300
Wichita 1000
WICKETT
Texas
WILLIS
Willis 200
WILLS POINT
Majestic 300
Ritz 400
WINK
Rex 516C1
Riir 516
WINNSBORO
Kiroy 250
State 400
Strand 400
WINTERS
Queen 600
State 632
WOLFE CITY
Booth 300
Criterion 260
WOODSBORO
Arcadia 450
WOODVILLE
Fain 260
WORTHAM
Texan 400
WYLIE
Mecca 400
YOAKUM
Grand 535
Ritz 250
YORKTOWN
L' Arcade 400
Strand 300
YSLETA
Texas 300
ZAPATA
Rex
UTAH
224 Theaters; 71,639 Seats
Closed — 29 Theaters; 6,410 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 195 Theaters; 65,229 Seats
AMERICAN FORK
Cameo 450
BEAR RIVER CITY
Woman (Port.) ..200
BEAVER
Firmape 225
BEAVER CITY
Lyric
BINGHAM CANYON
Gem CI
Princess 450
BLANDING
Ward House 250
BOUNTIFUL
Portable 150
Town 250
Ward House CI
BRIGHAM CITY
Capitol 500
Roxy 496
BURNS
(Port.)
CASTLE DALE
Ward House 250
CASTLE GATE
Castle Gate 300
CEDAR CITY
Austin Hey wood. (Port.)
Orpheum 496
Park 400
Thorley 420
CENTERVILLE
Ward House .... (Port.)
CIRCLEVILLE
Whittaker 200
CLARKSTON
Ward Hall 200
CLEARFIELD
Worman Circuit
(Port.) 400
CLEVELAND
Cleveland
COALVILLE
Loma 25'o
COLUMBIA
Amusement Hall
CONSUMERS
Community 150
COPPERFIELD
Diana 202
CORRINE JUNCTION
Worman (Port.) ...200
CORNISH
Worman (Port.) . . . 100
DELTA
Crest 400
DESERET
Broadway CI
DEVILS SLIDE
Opera House (Port.) 100
DEWEYVILLE
Worman (Port.) ...150
DRAPER
Pearl
Ward 300
DUCHESNE
CCC Camp
Cozy 250
EMERY
Emery Ward 200
ENTERPRISE
Ward 200
EPHRAIM
Towne 320
ESCALANTE
Escalante
EUREKA
Star 400
FAIRVIEW
Columbia Laurel
.200
FARMINGTON
Farminglon .... (Port.)
FERRON
Ferron Ward 200
FIELDING
Worman (Port.) . ..100
FILLMORE
Avalon 250
FOUNTAIN GREEN
Fountain Green ...200
Victory (Port.) ..150C1
GARDEN CITY
Opera House CI
GARFIELD
Ward 200
GARLAND
Garland 300
GOSHEN
Goshen 220CI
G RA NTS VILLE
Opera House 250
GREEN RIVER
Gem 200C1
GUNNISON
Star 360
HEBER CITi
Ideal 300
HELPER
Bonnie 600
Strand 450
HENEFER
Worman (Port.) . . .100
HINCKLEY
Ward 61
HOLDEN
Aurora (Port.) . . . .200
HOLLADAY
Holladay
Olympus 500
HONEYVILLE
Worman (Port.) ...100
HUNTINGTON
Circuit (Port.)
Huntingdon
Ward House 550
HUNTSVILLE
Opera House . . . (Port.)
HURRICANE
Star 150
HYDE PARK
Ward Hall (Port.) . 200C1
HYRUM
Orpheum 150
South Cache 300
JOSEPH
Ward (Port.)
KAMAS
Kamas 300
922
KANAB
Kanab 350
Star 100
KANOSH
Ward (Port.)
KAYSVILLE
Ward House . . . (Port.)
KENILWORTH
Kenilworth 250
KOOSHAREM
Ward Hall CI
LAPOINT
Star CI
LARK
Opera House 150C1
LAYTON
Latona CI
Rex 250
Ward House . . . (Port.)
LEHI
Cozy 300
Royal 400
LEVAN
American Hall . . (Port.)
LEVVISTON
Community 400
LOA
Loa 320
I.OGAN
Capitol 1400
Gem 250
Grand 300
Lyric 750
Roxy 546
LYNNDYL
Deluxe 200
MAGNA
Empress 400
Gem 390
MANTI
Manti 400
MANTUA
Worman Circuit
(Port.) 150
MARYSVILLE
Rex
Whittaker (Port.)
MAYFIELD
Amusement Hall
MEADOW
(Port.)
MIDVALE
Iris 400
MIDWAY
Star CI
MILFORD
Firmage 275
Rio 182
MINERSVILLE
Victory (Port.) . . . .100
MOAB
Ides 300
MOHRLAND
Welfare Ass'n
(Port.) 300
MONROE
Ward 400C1
MONTICELLO
CCC Camp
MORGAN
Little
Opera House 300
Vallis 260
MORONI
Kozy 300
MT. PLEASANT
Star 600
MURRAY
Iris 500
Murray 600
MUTUAL
Mutual CI
MYTON
Circuit
NEPHI
Venice 500
OGDEN
Colonial 370C1
Egyptian 1460
Industrial School . . . 200
Lyceum 500
Ogden 1000
Orpheum 1152
Paramount 1804
20th Ward (Port.). 200
ORANGEVILLE
Rex CI
ORDER VILLE
Valley 300C1
OREM
S-C-E-R-A 200
PANGUITCH
Gem 300
Haywood (Port.)
PARK CITY
Egyptian 400
PAROWAN
Aladdin 300
PAYSON
Star 408
PLAIN CITY
Ward House. ... (Port.)
PLEASANT GROVE
Alhambra 400
PRICE
Carbon 650
Price 700
Raywebb (Port.)
Utah 374
PROVO
Paramount 1240
Provo 400
Strand CI
Scera 200
Uinta 620
RANDOLPH
Cozy
Opera House .... 200C1
Ward 260
RICHFIELD
Bowen C No. 1
Kinema 400
Lyric 400
RICHMOND
Richmond 300
RIVERTON
Burk
Princess (Port.) ..150C1
ROOSEVELT
Utopia 260
SALINA
Victory 286
SALT LAKE CITY
Arcade 600
Broadway 634
Centre 1626
Capitol 1300
Empire 484
Fort Douglas 250
Gem 700
Mario
Paramount 1400C1
Rialto 700
Rivoli 300C1
Roxy 1250
Star 500
State 600
Studio 400
Tower 450
Utah 1823
Veterans
Victory 1185
Wandemere Ward
Waterloo Ward .... 260
SANDY
Burk 350
Opera House (Port.) 250
SANTAQUIN
Roxy
SCIPIO
Amusement Hall
SCOFIELD
American
SMITHFIELD
Amusement Hall . . .150
Main 448
Ritz 326
SOUTH BOUNTIFUL
South Bountiful (Port.)
SPANISH FORK
Angelus 400
SPRING CANYON
Community Club . .200C1
SPRING CITY
Victory (Port.) . . . .126
SPRING VILLE
Rivoli 350
Ritz
STANDARDVILLE
Standardville (Port.)
100
ST. GEORGE
Gaiety 360
Wadsworth 600
SUGARHOUSE
Mario 500
Rio 320C1
South East 700
SUNNYSIDE
Circiut (Port.)
SYRACUSE
Worman Circuit .... 100
TAYLORSVILLE
Opera House
TOOELE
Ritz 450C1
Strand 500
TREMENTON
Liberty 350
Orpheum 300
UNION
Ward Hall 260
VERNAL
Maeser Ward 200
Main 400
Vogue 300
WATTIS
Amusement Hall .... CI
WELLSVILLE
Opera House CI
WILLARD
Worman Circuit (Port.)
250
WINTER QUARTERS
Welfare Assn CI
WOODS CROSS
South Bountiful
= VERMONT —
65 Theaters; 35,422 Seats
Closed — 7 Theaters; 2,696 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 58 Theaters; 32,726 Seats
BARRE
Magnet 860
Opera 800
Paramount 1161
BELLOWS FALLS
Opera House 900
Park 400
BENNINGTON
Gen. Starke 800
Uptown 1000C1
BETHEL
Bethel 242
BRADFORD
Colonial 300
BRANDON
Brandon 250
BRATTLEBORO
Auditorium 900
Latchis 600
Paramount
BRISTOL
Colonial 376
BURLINGTON
Flynn 1446
Ft. Ethan Allen
Majestic 1037
Strong 1450
EAST ARLINGTON
Arlington 196C1
ENOSBURG FALLS
Playhouse 400
FAIRFAX
Fairlee 300C1
FAIRHAVEN
Fairhavan 400
FAIRLEE
Fairlee 300
HARDWICK
Idle Hour 400
ISLAND POND
Roxy 250
JEFFERSONVILLE
Town Hall 200C1
LUDLOW
Royal 300
LYNDON VILLE
Gem 300
923
MANCHESTER DEPOT
Colonial 244
Modern 288
Playhouse 300C1
MIDDLEBUKY
Campus 600
Opera House 350
Town Hall 480
MONTPELIER
Capitol 1033
Strand 800
MORRISVILLE
Bijou 350
Tegu 600
NEWPORT
Burns 500
NORTHF1ELD
Savoy 640
ORLEANS
Auditorium 300
POULTNEY
Star 300
PROCTOR
Hall 500
RANDOLPH
Strand 350
RICHFORD
Park 700
ROCHESTER
Pierce Me'rial Hall. 350
RUTLAND
Grand 726
Paramount 1000
ST. ALBANS
Bellevue 700
Empire 400
Weldon 650
ST. JOHNSBURY
Palace 864
Star 800
SPRINGFIELD
Avon 600
Ideal 600
STOWE
Auditorium 275
8WANTON
Champlain 500
VERGONNES
Vergonnes 368
WATERBURY
Rialto 600
WHITE RIVER JCT.
Lyric 688
WILMINGTON
Memorial 400C1
WINDSOR
New Windsor 800
WINOOSKI
Strand 400
WOODSTOCK
Community 300
Gem 300C1
VIRGINIA—
311 Theaters; 148,036 Seats
Closed — 16 Theaters; 4,837 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 295 Theaters; 143,199 Seats
ABINGDON
Town Hall 300
Zephyr 275
ALEXANDRIA
Capitol 250
Ingromar 400
Mt. Vernon CI
Olympic 300
Reed 950
Richmond 860
ALTAVISTA
Liberty 208C1
Vista
AMELIA
Amelia 400
AMONATE
Amonate 290
APPALACHIA
New Appalachia . . . 600
State
APPOMATTOX
Lee 350
ARLINGTON
A6hton 500
Buckingham
Wilson 500
ARVONA
High School 500
ASHLAND
Ashland 200
BA8SETT
Bassett 275
Stone 450
BEDFORD
Liberty 200
BELLEHAVEN
Idle Hour 260
BELVOIR
Belvoir
BERKLEY
New Rex 400
Ritz 400
BERRY VILLE
Clarco 360
BIG ISLAND
Big Island 200
BIG STONE GAP
Big- Stone 400
BLACKSBURG
Lyric 400 Coeburn
COEBURN
BLACKSTONE
Nottowa 499
BLCEFIELD
Lee 300
BOWLING GREEN
Bowling Green 200
BONEY BLUE
Boney Blue
BOYKINS
Star 20001
COLONIAL BEACH
Mayfair 286
COVINGTON
Collins 400
Strand 600
CRADDOCK
320 Alton 500
CREWE
Boykins 300 Crewe 400
Star 300
BRISTOL
Cameo 560 ,
Columbia 600 Crozet 220
CROZET
BUCHANAN
Star 200
BUENA VISTA
Rock Bridge 450
CAPE CHARLES
CULPEPPER
Fairfax 450
DAHLGREN
Naval Station
DAMASCUS
Radium 500 State 300
DANTE
Dante 300
DANVILLE
CARRYS BROOK
Fluvanna H. S 600
CHARLOTTESVILLE
Jefferson 700 Broadway 750
Lafayette 600
Capitol 800
Paramount ......1300 ,B\lal?°.
University 500 Vu-emia 700
CHASE CITY
DEL RAY
Mecca 450 Palm 290
CHATHAM „.„ DILLWYN
.300 Dlllwi'n 352
Ritz
CHERITON
Stratton . . .
CHINCOTEAGUE
ISLAND
Powell's 400
CHRISTIANSBURG
Palace 235
CLARKS VILLE
EAST FALLS CHURCH
.200C1 ^ 35°
EAST RADFORD
Virginia 350
EDINBURG
Edinbuig 235
ELKTON
State 250 Elkton 300
CLIFTON FORGE EMPORIA
Masonic 500 Weiss
Ridge
CLINCHCO
Clinchco 250
CLINTWOOD
400
EXMORE
Cameo 600
FALLS CHURCH
Mountain 300 State
924
FARMVILLE
.361 Eaco 400
Lee 500
FIE LI) ALE
Dale 200
FLOYD
Floyd 150
FORK UNION
Military Academy. . .300
FORT EUSTIS
Liberty CI
FORT MEYER
Ft. Meyer
FORT MONROE
Ft. Monroe
FRANKLIN
State 400
FREDERICKSBURG
Pitts Colonial 1200
Pitts Leader 220
Victoria
FRIES
YMCA 350
FRONT ROYAL
Murphy 650
Pitts Park 600
GALAX
Colonial 248
GATES CITY
Gates City 500
Scott 375
GLADE SPRINGS
Dixie 200
GLOUCESTER
Edgehill 375
GRETNA
Gretna 225
GROTTOES
Grottoes 300
GRUNDY
Alamo
Lynwood 576
HAMPTON
Langley 850
. 500 Lyric 300
HARRISONBURG
New Virginia 1028
State 650
Strand 350
HAYSI
Haysi 150
HERNDON
Herndon 250
HIGHLAND SPRINGS
Henrico 550
HILLSVILLE
Hillsville 150
HONAKER
Jefferson 250
Virginian
HOPEWELL
Beacon 970
Broadway 300C1
HOT SPRINGS
Homestead 500
Liberty 250
HURLEY
Hurley 180C1
INDEPENDENCE
Independence 220
JONESVILLE
Keithley 600
KENBRIDGE
Free State 342
KEYSVILLE
New 200
KILMARNOCK
Fairfax 400
LANGLEY FIELD
Langley Field
LAWRENCE VILLE
Capitol 550
LEBANON
Russell 400
LEESBURG
Tally-Ho 500
LEXINGTON
Lyric 760
State 694
Military Academy
LOUISA
Louisa 200
LOVINGSTON
Nelson 300
LURAY
Bridge 450
New Page
LYNCHBURG
Academy 1200
Harrison 550
Isis 750
Paramount 1530
Trenton 800
MADISON
Central , 200
MANASSAS
Dixie 250
MARION
Lincoln 800
Rialto
MARSHALL
Marshall 215
MARTINSVILLE
National 487
Rex 125
Rives 500
Roxy 500
MATHEWS
Be-Jo 320
MAXIE
Harman 170
MESSICK
Messick 200
MIDDLEBURG
Hollywood 200
MT. JACKSON
Nelson 300
NARROWS
Narrows 250
NEW MARKET
New 400
NEWPORT NEWS
Dixie 550
James 900
Jefferson 500
Palace 770
Paramount 900
Warwick 800
Wythe 575
NORFOLK
Booker T 1200
Byrd 600
Colley 600
Colonial 1000
Elton 500
Granby 1000
Lennox 500
Loew's State 3200
Manhattan 500
Newport 800
Norva 1500
Olney 700C1
Park 300
Plaza 450
Regal 1000
Roxy 400
Strand 1000
U. S. Naval Training-
Station
Visulite 400
Wells 1300
NORTH TAZEWEW
Valley 400
NORTON
Boiling 500
Norton 300
OCCOQUAN
Lyric 160
OCEAN VIEW
Casino 500C1
Rosele 500
OLNEY
Bijou 280
ONANCOCK
New 250
ORANGE
Madison 400
PARKSLEY
Royal 500
PEARISBURG
Dixie 300
PENNINGTON GAP
Lee 623
PETERSBURG
Barney's 360
Bluebird 600
Century 960
Idle Hour 260
Palace 600
Rex 400
PHOEBUS
Lee 300
POCAHONTAS
Lee 300C1
Palace 225
PORTSMOUTH
Capitol 500
Colony 725
Gates 726
Lyric 300
State 550
Virginia 476
POUND
Pound
PULASKI
Dalton 900
Pulaski 600
PURCELLVILLE
Purcellville
QUANTICO
Marine Barracks
YMCA 700
RADFORD
Radford 500
State 400
RAVEN
Raven 200
REEDVILLE
Reedville 200
RICHLANDS
Guys 380
Star 400
RICHMOND
Bellevue 600
Booker T 900
Brookland 600
Byrd 1384
Capitol 750
Carillon 520
Colonial 1500
East End
Ginter 749C1
Globe 500
Grand 650
Hippodrome 1000
Lee 700
Loew's 2000
National 1500
Park 750
Patrick Henry 600
Robinson 600
Star 200
State 650
Strand CI
Walker 302
West Hampton .... 600
ROANOKE
American 1650
Grandin 1000
Jefferson 1000
Park 550
Rialto 600
Roanoke 1000
Virginia 450
ROCKY MT.
Franklin 300C1
Mount 600
ST. CHARLES
Virginian 400
ST. PAUL
St. Paul 200
SALEM
Salem 600
SALTVILLE
Victory 350
SCHOOLFIELD
Schoolfield YMCA ..400
SCOTTSVILLE
Victory 400
SHENANDOAH
Pastime 280
SMITH FIELD
Smithfield 300
SOUTH BOSTON
Halifax 600
Princess 600
SOUTH HILL
Colonial 400
SOUTH NORFOLK
Grand 300
SO. RICHMOND
Lincoln 325
Ponton 300
Venus 700
STANDARDSVILLE
Standardsville 200
STAUNTON
New Dixie 1100
Strand 600
Visulite 460
STRASBURG
Strand 300
STUART
Stuart 200
SUFFOLK
Broadway 300C1
Cavalier 600
Chadwick 1000
TANGIERS IS.
Grand 300
Wallacedale 200CI
TAPPAHANNOCK
Daw 400
New Essex 400
TAZEWELL
Clinch 375
URBANA
Rappanna 226
VICTORIA
Rialto 300
Victoria 262
VIRGINIA BEACH
Bayne 750
Roland 375
WACHAPREAUGE
Neptune 200
WARRENTON
Fauquier 420
WARSAW
Warsaw 330
WAVERLY
School
WAYNESBORO
Cavalier 900
Wayne 450
WEST POINT
York 300
WILLIAMSBURG
Imperial 500
W & M Auditorium 400
Williamsburg 800
WINCHESTER
Capitol 1000
Hable's Palace ....738
WOODBERRY FOREST
School
WOODSTOCK
Community 700
New 400C1
WYTHEVILLE
Millwald 424
Wythe »400
925
WASHINGTON
342 Theaters; 162,582 Seats
Closed — 31 Theaters; 13,637 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 311 Theaters; 148,945 Seats
ABERDEEN
Bijou 600
D & R 1000
Harbor 400
Roxy
Warner 1060
Weir 1000
ALMIRA
Gem 100
ANACORTES
Empire 900
Island 500C1
ARLINGTON
Olympic 370
AUBURN
Granada 500
BELLEVUE
Bellevue (Port.)
BELLING HAM
American 1175
Avalon 640
Grand 900
Mt. Baker 1740
Peoples 300
BINGEN
New George 275
BLACK DIAMOND
Black Diamond . . 150C1
BLAINE
International 252
AM-BC 310
BLYNE
Blyne (Port.) . . . . 100C1
BOTHELL
Bothell 210
BREMERTON
Grand 250
Rex 350
Rialto 1000
Tower 525
Town 260C1
BREWSTER
Caribou 100
BUCKLEY
Cosmo \ 350
BURLINGTON
Diablo 250
Grand 250C1
CAMAS
Liberty 500
CASHMERE
Vale 600
CASTLE ROCK
Castle Rock 210
CATHLAMET
Elco 200
CENTRALIA
Fox 1085
Liberty 1000
Roxy 500
CHEHALIS
Grand 284C1
Pix
St. Helens 800
CHELAN
Ruby 350
CHENEY
Melodian 350
CHEWELAH
Avalon 300
CLALLAM BAY
Clallam Bay 162C1
CLE ELUM
Vogue 500
COLFAX
Family 400C1
Rose 300
Roxy 375
COLVILLE
Alpine 440
CONCRETE
Concrete 300
CONNELL
Connell (Port.)
COULEE CITY
Coulee (Port.)
Gregg- (Port.) 100
COUPEVILLE
Circuit 150
CUSICK
Cusick 200
DAVENPORT
Family 312
DAYTON
Liberty 340
DEEP RIVER
Deep River 200
DEER PARK
Family 196
DISHMAN
Dishman 515
EATONVILLE
Eatonville (Port.).. 250
EDMUNDS
Princess 260
ELECTRIC CITY
Columbian 400
ELK RIVER
Rex
ELLENSBURG
Audian 400
Liberty 600
Mid-State 650
ELMA
Graham 302
ENDICOTT
Family (Port.) . . . 150
ENUMCLAW
Avalon 450
Liberty CI
EPHRATA
Ephrata (Port.) ...125
EVERETT
Balboa 730
Everett 1200
Granada 1000
Roxy 692
Colby Ave.
FARMINGTON
Farmington CI
FERNDALE
Ferndale 220C1
Grand 220
FLAXVILLE
Flaxville
FORKS
Olympic 200
FT. LEWIS
War Dept 578
FORT WORDEN
Ft. Worden 400
FRIDAY HARBOR
Island 250
GARFIELD
Rose (Port.) 200
GIG HARBOR
Roxy 250
GOLDENDALE
Star 300
GRAND COULEE
Grand Coulee. (Port.) 100
Roosevelt 600
GRANDVIEW
Colonial 350
HARRINGTON
Family 200
HOLDEN
Recreation Hall
HOQUIAM
Hoquiam 600
Seventh St 1200
HUNTER
Hunter (Port.)
ILWACO
Ilwaco 320
INCHELIUM
Inchelium (Port.) ....
IONE
lone 200
ISSAQUAH
Issaquah 300
KALAMA
Monroe 160
KELSO
Embassy 600
Kelso 639
Liberty 580
KENNEWICK
Roxy 600
KENTON
Roxy
KENT
Kent 390
KETTLE FALLS
Kettie Falls (Port.) ....
KIRKLAND
Gateway 400
KLICKITAT
Community (Port.) ....
LA CROSSE
Family (Port.) ...100
LAKE STEVENS
Lake Stevens 270
LANGLEY
Clyde 350
LEAVENWORTH
Alpine 300
LINCOLN
Lincoln (Port.)
LIND
Cozy 189
LONG BEACH
Sunset 200
LONGVIEW
Columbia 1100
Roxy 350
LYNDEN
Liberty 250
MABTON
Mabton 250
MANSFIELD
Grange Hall 100
Playhouse 175
MARCUS
Crescent CI
MARYSVILLE
Marysville 280
MASON CITY
Mason City 432
METALINE FALLS
Playhouse 148
MINERAL
Mineral (Port.) ...200
MONROE
Avalon 235
MONTESANO
Monte 400
MORTON
Liberty (Port.) . . . .200
MT. VERNON
Lincoln 500
Lyric 500
Mission 438
NE AH BAY
Hunters (Port.) ...250
Macah Hall
Neah Bay
NEPPELL
Neppell (Port.) .... 100
NESPELEN
New Deal 300
NE WHELM
Hall 150
NEWPORT
Rainbow 350C1
Rex 250
NORTH BEND
North Bend 248
NORTH BONNEVILLE
Columbia 275
NORTHPORT
Northport (Port.) ..200
OAKDALE
Oakdale (Port.) ...200
926
OAK HARBOR RYDERWOOD Queen Anne Ave. TACOMA
Oak Harbor 212 Sunset 200 Rialto 275 Beverly 400
ODESSA ST. JOHN First & Cherry Blue Mouse 550
Family (Port.) 250 Family 160 Ruteemont 451 c^J^uni'ty |gQ
OKANOGAN SEATTLE ( Greenwood Ave.) Kay Street 500
Avalon 230 American 380 Roosevelt 750 Lakewood .580
OLTMPIA Hillman City Pike St. Lincoln CI
Avalon 630 Arabian 680 Royal 500C1 Music Box 1600
Capitol 900 i...... „ Roxy 425 Paramount 327C1
Liberty 700 Atlas Aurora &l- 40Q Roycroft 500 Park 600
OMAK Mavnnrrfqt"" Nineteenth Ave. N. ^roc1tor( St 400
t?nv .nri juaynard bt. „. Realart 400
E°*k 400 Ba'dad 1800 Star 400 Rex 450
n».,.'Cv'," Market St. Occidental Riait0 1100
ONALASKA Beacon 600 State 500 Riviera 1100
Dream ;--200 Beacon Ave Madison Rose 250C1
nRV„„ ' Blue Mouse" A!e-... 980 Upt°™ 600 Roxy 1200
OROVILLE Onppn Anno Shell 350
Ossoyoos 210 , Fifth Ave. VeneUan son s«"set 400
OTHELLO Broadway 400 Vene lan ; ■ • • ■ ■ • ■ • • 80° TempIe 1250
Othello ™) ... 200 „ Broadway. N. Winter^rde" ^ 616 * TAKOA
Bruen's 45th St. ...475 vvlruer warden 616 Empire 325
PACIFIC BEACH Capitoi ""ssO Third
Pacific (Port.) Wnn(i,„nfI * " „,„ TENINO
„,,.,„„ Third Ave. woodland 616 Liberty ((Port.)
.210
TONASKET
PALOUSE Center '....280 W. 65th St.
ongress ~'5 16th Aye N w SEDRO WOOLLEY Chief 200
Libertv ^ 49R Century 500 Dream 602 TOPPENISH
Liberty .. .... 425 circle 260 SEQUIM Liberty 700
t>» m, Q™ Second Ave. Dresden 250 Boxy 300
^e JM1 JUU Coliseum 2017 SHELTON Wigrwam CI
Seeley P0MER0Y B4R Pike St. Graham 700 TWISP
y Colonial 700 Paramount 336 Twisp 125
E.whaOKT.ANGELES700 EgyptiaFn°UrthAVe- 1000 Silver™ ^ 300 VANCOUVEr"
Lincoln CI ^yptian 1000 Sllver ^alce 300 Castle 1200
Olympian 800 University Way SKYKOMISH Rig-gins
PORT KLAKELEY
VASHON
Embassy 700 Skykomish 150 Mission 462
Linwood 315 Third & Union SNOHOMISH
PORT GAMBLE Fifth Avenue ••••2420 Brown 500 Vaghon 200
Community 300C1 _. Fifth Ave. _ _ SNOQUALMIE
PORT LUDLOW
Port Ludlow 204C1
First Avenue 300 Brook 400 WAITSBURG
Florence 400 Falls 210 Plaza 300
Second Ave. SNYDER WALLA WALLA
Community !...?... 350 Galla 50001 Snyder <port.) Capitol 1050C1
PORT TOWNSEND
Rose 400
Granada 750 SOAP LAKE Liberty 70'0
California Ave. Soap Lake (Port.) . .200 Roxy 450
To"wnsend"!!!!!!!!l00 Grand 400 SOUTH BEND WAPATO
POULSBO _ j 86 tri St. South Ben(J 600 Dickon 300
Vimos 200 Green Parrot 350 Liberty 600
PROSSER " „ „ Fj,rst Ave- Aan BandboxSP°KANE 350 WASHOUGAL
p.:,,™.. Aoa Hollywood 480 oanaDox tsou ih . oko,
Pl,ncoss 438 " .. _ Empress 350 i^oerty • -36"
PULLMAN Roosevelt Way Fox 3800 Roxy 350C1
Audian 429 Lake 7»° Granada 600 WASHTUCNA
Cordova 700 Greenlake St. Liberty 900 Washtucna (Port.) .100
piivaiiitp Liberty 1800 Orpheum 1300
Liberty . . ... 550 First Ave. Post Street 950 W4TERVILLE
Roxy 300 Madison CI Rainbow Nifty 290
PYSHT Madrona 700 gex 402 WENATCHEE
Community (Port.) .100 East Cherry Ritz 450 Liberty 750
QUILCINE Mission 400 state "..'.'..'.]...'.', i000 MiaS,5tion St S
^JSZL Mont^r^.^oo UniqueSPRAGUE-272 «n;-:::::::::?!2°
S""1.:::::::::^ »- <psonRAGUE...2oo CamriTE. SA.™0N247
Roardon "port.)1" " Jackson Ave Sprin?dale (Port.) Liberty "....".7 150
KENTON Music Box 1000 j . , STANWOOD WILSON CREEK
Grand 400C1 Fifth Ave. laeal dc,u Wilson Creek
Renton 400 Music Hall 2850C1 STEVENSON (Port.) 150
Roxy 780 Seventh & Olive Lorin 215 WINLOCK
REPUBLIC Neptune 1000 SULTAN Roxy 240
Republic 200 E. 45th St. Rex CI
Ornhpum T0OO WOODLAND
RIDGEFIELD Orpheum 3000 SUMAS Woodland 200
Ridrefield 178 Times Square Rose 250
Palomar 2000 YAKIMA
RITZVILLE Paramount 3000C1 SUMNER Avenue 400
Rltz 420 Riviera 520 Capitol 2000
9th & Pine T ;1 i rinn
ROSALIA Pix 375 SUNNYDALE Liberty WVnni
Family (Port.) 250 Portoia '....500 Hiland H. S CI J?*}0 .. 330(hl
Majestic 400
ROSLYN California SUNNYSIDE Roxy 814
ao«e 250 Queen Anne 450 Liberty 400 Yakima 680
927
Moore 1200
Mt. Baker 400 _ . SPRIISGDALE . . WILBUR
=WEST VIRGINIA^
327 Theaters; 127,626 Seats
Closed — 43 Theaters; 9,845 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 284 Theaters; 117,781 Seats
ALDERSON
Russell 335
AMEAGLE
Ameagle 226
AMHERSTDALE
Amherst 400
ANAWALT
Union 200
ANSTED
Lyric CI
Ritz 230
ASHLAND
Ashland 200
BANCROFT
Virginian CI
BAKUOURSVILLE
Alpine 250C1
BEARDS FORK
Princess
BECKLEY
Beck ley 900
Ceasar Variety
Ent. Co CI
Lyric 750
Palace 550
BELLE
Belle 235
BELINGTON
Alpine 190
Seneca 200
BEN WOOD
Roxy
BERKLEY SPRINGS
Berkley 270
Ideal 260
BERWIND
Bcrwind 250
BLUEFIELD
Colonial 1200
Granada 1500
Rialto 370
State
BOOMER
Princess 250
BRADSHAW
Bradshaw 300
BRAMWELL
Bramwell 260
Palace . . 250
BRIDGEPORT
Latona 200
Virginia (Port.) . . . 200
BROWNTON
Cosmar
Star 200C1
Warner (Port.)
BUCKANNON
Colonial 600
Grand Opera House. .400
BURNWELL
YMCA 209
CABIN CREEK
Brown 300
CAIRO
Grant
CAMERON
Almo 200
CAROLINA
Alpine (Port.) 200
Carolina 188
CEDAR GROVE
Comet 250
Grove 280
CHARLESTON
Best 319
Capitol 1110
Custer 550
Ferguson 394
Greenbrier 500
Kearse 2200
Lyric 300
Rialto 826
Sunset 220
Virginian 1000
CHARLESTOWN
Pitts Jefferson 400
CHESTER
Alpine 380
CLARKSBURG
Opera House 600
Orpheum 400
Ritz 800
Robinson Grand . . 350C1
CLAY
Clay 210
CLENDENIN
Star 200
COLLIERS
Colliers 215C1
CRUMPLER
dumpier 210
DAVIS
Alpine 400
Davis
Liberty 300C1
DAVY
Palace 300C1
DECOTA
YMCA 100
DEHUE
Dehue 210
DELBARTON
Delbarton 250
DOROTHY
State CI
DUNBAR
Dunbar 250
DURBIN
Durbin 250
EAST RAINELLE
Alpine 500
ECCLES
Eccles 300
EDWIGHT
Edwight (Port.) ...150
ELKINS
Hippodrome 400
Manos 500
ELM GROOVE
Princess 400
ELVERTON
Elverton 500
ENGLISH
English 420
ESKDALE
Eskdale 300
ETHEL
Ethel 200
FAIRMONT
Eastland
Fairmont 1270
Lee
Virginia 863
FAIRVIEW
Fairview 290
FARMINGTON
Farmington 300
FAYETTEVILLE
Fayette
New
Star 186C1
FLEMINGTON
Warner (Port.) . . . .250
FOLLANSBEE
Rexy 400
Royal 280C1
Strand 275
FRANKLIN
Warner 275
GALLOWAY
Warner (Port.)
GASSAWAY
Alpine 300
GAULEY BRIDGE
Gauley 400
GLEN ALUN
Glen Alun
GLEN JEAN
Opera House 500C1
GLEN ROGERS
Glen Rogers 250
GLENVILLE
Lyric 799
Pictureland 294
GRAFTON
Dixie 400
Opera House 575
Strand 400
GRANTOWN
Alpine 200
State 20u
GRANTS VI LLE
Kanawha 308
GUYANDOTTE
Lyric 380C1
Mecca 400
HAMLIN
Palace 194
HARRISVILLE
Electric 200C1
Model 200
HELEN
Helen 280
HARTFORD
Hartford 150 CI.
HIGH COAL
Anchor Coal Co 200
HINTON
Masonic
Ritz 540
HOLDEN
Pioneer 550
HOLIDAYSCOVE
Cove 600
Strand 600
HUNDRED
Alpine 300
HUNTINGTON
Fox 250
Keith-Albee 2660
Margaret t»00
Mills
Orpheum 1000
Palace 1380
Park 500
Rialto 400
Roxy 800
State 800
Vet's Administration . . .
HURRICANE
Putnam 198
IAEGER
Iaeger 270
IDAMAY
Idamay 200C1
INSTITUTE
Institute 200 CI.
ITTMAN
Ittnian CI
JANE LEW
Jane Lew 190C1
Warner (Port.)
JENKINSJONES
Jenkinsjones Cl
Miner's 250
Star 160 Cl.
JENNER
Jenner 200
JOCKIN
Jock in Cl
KENOVA
Strand 300
KEKMIT
Main 250
KEVSER
Keyser 400
Liberty 300
Music Hall 500
KEYSTONE
Community 600
KIMBALL
Kimball 350
KINGSWOOD
Alpine 300
LEWISBUKG
Princess 200
LITTLETON
Alpine (Port.) 200
LOGAN
Logan 400 Cl.
Middleburg 800
New Logan
LOR A DO
Lorado 300
LUMBER TOUT
Port 350
Roxy 250C1
LUNDALE
Lundale 250C1
McCOMAS
McComas 350
McMEHAN
Midway 484
MADISON
Rialto 400
MALLORY
Recreation 140Ci
MAMOUTH
Mamouth 240
MAN
Man 500
928
MANNINGTON
Burt 220
Mannington
MARLINTON
Alpine 250
Rex 400
MARTINSBURG
Apollo 969
Central
Ponton's State 400
Strand 321
MASON TOWN
Virginia 300
MATEWAN
Matewan 387
MATOAKA
Matoaka 400
McCOMAS
McComas 350
MIAMI
Wilson 250
MIDDLEBOURNK
Nadene 200C1
Tyler 300
MILBURN
Milburn
Strand 192 CI.
MILTON
Virginian 250
MONONGAH
Strand 364
MONTGOMERY
Avalon 540
Kayton 650
MOOREFIELD
Grand 35C
Inskeep Hall 300
MORGANTOWN
Metropolitan 1200
Morgan 400
Warner 1300
MOUNDSVILLE
Grand 550
Strand 980
MT. CLAIR
Warner (Port.)
MT. HOPE
Princess 500
Royal 600
MULLENS
Rlalto 3C0
Wyoming 384
NELLIS
Nellis 185
NEWBURG
Crystal 250 CI.
NEW HALL
New Hall
NEW CUMBERLAND
Manos 350
NEW MARTINSVILLE
Lincoln 600
Temple 400
NITRO
Lyric 300
NORTHFORK
Freeman 600
OAKHILL
Kings 250
Mayfair . . 500
Oakhill 600
OCEANA
New CI
OMAR
Omar 400
OSAGE
Evans 300
PADEN CITY
Virginia 175
PARKERSBURG
Broadway 350C1
Burwell 700
Hiehl 400
Palace 350
Parker
Smoot 921
Strand 726
Virginia 700
PARSONS
Victoria 400
PEACH CREEK
Peach Creek 250C1
PENNSBORO
Penn 200
PETERSBURG
Alpine 275
PHILLIPI
Grand 500
Rex 260
PIEDMONT
Majestic 300 CI.
Opera House 350
PINEGKOVE
Grove 200
PINEVILLE
Pine 400
POINT PLEASANT
Alpine 580
POWELLTON
Powellton 300
PRATT
Gallagher 250
PRENTER
Prenter 175
PRINCETON
Mercer 421
Royal 300
QUINWOOD
Quinwood 350
RALEIGH
Virginian
RAVENSWOOD
Alpine 350
RHODELL
Lyric 200C1
RICHWOOD
City Auditorium ...325
New Star 562
RIPLEY
Alpine 300
RIVESVILLE
Alpine 250
State
ROMNEY
Alpine 300
RONCEVERTE
Grand 400
ROWELSBURG
Alpine 250
RUPERT
Rupert 250
ST. ALBANS
Alban
Main 260 CI.
ST. MARYS
Robey 400
SALEM
Alpine 400
SCARBO
Rialto 300
SHEPHERDSTOWN
Opera House 250
SHINNSTON
Princess 200
Rex 470
SISTER VILLE
Paramount 360
SMITHERS
Fountain 250
Smithers 350
SOPHIA
Sophia 275
SO. CHARLESTON
Mound 425
SO. PARKERSBURG
Broadway 480
SPENCER
Robey 600
STAR CITY
Star 300C1
STOTESBURY
Stotesbury 300
SUMMERVILLE
Ward 246
SUTTON
Alpine 230
TERRA ALTA
Alpine 400
THOMAS
Sutton 400
TUNNELTON
Virginia (Port.) ...300
UNION CITY
Palace 400
VAN
Van
VIENNA
Vienna 277 CI.
WAR
War 500
WARD
Ward 300
WARRENSVILLE
Doric CI.
WEBSTER SPRINGS
Mill-Vance 450
Roxy CI
WEIRTON
Manos 600
State 650
WELCH
Pocahontas 1200
Temple of
Odd Fellows 400
WELLSBURG
Alpine 500
Star 600
WENDEL
Warner (Port.)
WESTON
Camden 650
Hollywood 380
WEST UNION
Regent 170
WHARTON
Allcoal 215C1
WHEELING
Capitol 2700
Colonial 750
Court 1200
Liberty 800
Lincoln 450
Marsh 500
Mayfair 780
Pike 800
Pythian
Rex 600
St. Michaels
Assembly Rm. . 500C1
Southern 600
State 980
Victoria 1031
Virginia 1400
WHITE SULPHUR
SPRINGS
Plaza 450C1
WHITESVILLE
Liberty 250
WIDEN
YMCA 300
WILLIAMSON
Cinderella 1000
Lyric 275
Mingo 300
WINDING GULF
Winding Gulf 200
WINONA
Lyric 200
YUKON
New Union 350
-WISCONSIN—
480 Theaters; 274,821 Seats
Closed — 65 Theaters; 27,626 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 415 Theaters; 247,195 Seats
ADAMS ALMA New CI ARCADIA
Adams 250 Alma 300 Palace 1000 Arcadia 230C1
Vn^iip 400
ADELL AMERY APPLETON ° aVhtANI)'
Liberty 120C1 Amery 350 Appleton 750 Bay ...... 650
ALGOMA ANTIGO Elite 432 Majestic" !!!'.!!!!!! 600
Majestic 326 Home 600 Rio 1800 Royal 800
929
ATHENS
Community
AUGUSTA
Joylin 350
BAGLEY
Opera House CI
BAYLEY'S HARBOR
Hall (Port.) 100CI
BALDWIN
Baldwin 240
BARABOO
A. L. Ringing 830
Juliar 407
BARRON
Majestic 475
BAYFIELD
Princess 350
BEAVER DAM
Davison 687C1
Odeon 526
BELOIT
Majestic 986
Rex 600
State 700
BENTON
Blende 250
BERLIN
Rex 600
BLACK RIVER FALLS
Avalon 400
Falls 280
BLAIR
Century 300
BLOOMER
Ideal 300
BLOOMING TON
Bloomingrton . . . (Port.)
BOSCOBEL
Blaine 400
BRILLION
Brillion 410
BRODIIEAD
Sun 300
BURLINGTON
Crystal 340
Plaza 600
CAMBRIDGE
Parle O. H 400C1
CAMERON
Cameron 760
CASSVILLE
Picture Garden ....250
CEDARBURG
Cedarburg 296
Rivoli 400
CHASEBURG
Chaseburg (Port.)
CHETEK
Grand 400
CHILTON
Chilton 500
CHIPPEWA FALLS
Falls 800
Rivoli 750
CLAYTON
Auditorium
CLEAR LAKE
Community 250
CLINTON
Clinton 350
CLINTONVILLE
Grand 430
Times 399
COLBY
Badger 342
COLFAX
Cozy 400
COLUMBUS
Rudalt 245
CORNELL
Gem 300
CRANDON
Crandon 375
Palace 250
CUBA CITY
Cuba 200
CUDAHY
Cudahy 350
Majestic 742
CUMBERLAND
Isle 400
CURTISS
Curtiss (Port.)
DARLINGTON
Town 300
DE FOREST
Hall ci
DELAVAN
New Delavan 650
DENMARK
Denmark 300C1
Lyric 300
DE PERE
Majestic 460
Pearl 370
DODGE VILLE
Dodge 330
DURAND
Grand 400
EAGAR
Eagar (Port.)
EAGLE RIVER
Eagle 250C1
Vilas 500
EAST DE PERE
De Pere 499
EAST TROY
Grand 260
EAU CLAIRE
Badger 1000
O'Klare 498
State 1269
EDGARTON
Rialto 450
ELKHART LAKE
Elm Park CI
ELKHORN
Sprague 500
ELLISON BAY
Hall CI
ELLSWORTH
Ellsworth 300
ELMWOOD
Legion 126
ELROY
Elroy 500
EVANS VILLE
Leota 450
Rex 250
FAIRCHILD
Fairchild 200
Rialto 300C1
FENNIMORE
Fenway 250
FISH CREEK
Town Hall (Port.) .300C1
FOND DU LAC
Fond Du Lac 1660
New Garrick 1100
Retlaw 1125
FORT ATKINSON
Fort 500
Uptown 480
FOUNTAIN CITY
Auditorium 500C1
FOX LAKE
Lake 250
FREDERIC
Frederic 400
GALESVILLE
Marinuka 200
GAYSMILLS
Gaysmills (Port.)
GILLETT
Gem 295
GILLMAN
Scenic
GLEASON
Humming Bird ...200C1
GLENWOOD CITY
Glen 350
GLIDDEN
Rex 250
GOODMAN
Goodman 250
GRANTSBURG
Grand 200
GRATIOT
Opera House CI
GREEN BAY
Auditorium 1500
Bay 2036
Orpheum 1109
Packer 700
Strand 937
GREEN LAKE
Opera House 300
GKEENDALE
Greendale
GREENWOOD
Parkway 260
HAMMOND
Community 276
HANCOCK
Hancock 170
HARTFORD
Hartford 423
State 500
HARTLAND
Victor 240
HAWKINS
Hawkins
HAYWARD
Grand 250
HIGHLAND
Majestic
HILBERT
Opera House .... 250C1
HILLSBORO
New Royal 350
HORICON
Pastime 260
HORTONVILLE
Community CI
HUDSON
Hudson 390
HURLEY
Range 600
INDEPENDENCE
Legion 200
I OLA
Iola 300
IRON RIVER
Rex 260
JANESVILLE
Apollo 328
Beverly 620
Jeffries 1200
Myers O. H 647
JEFFERSON
Allen 342
KAUKAUNA
Rialto 483
Vaudete 300
KENOSHA
Cameo 360C1
Gateway 1000
Kenosha 2500
Lincoln 500
Orpheum 1600
Roosevelt 700
VogTie 600
KEWAUNEE
Kewaunee 450
KIEL
Kiel 350
LaCROSSE
Bijou 800C1
Fifth Ave 600
Hollywood 1000
Riviera 800
Rivoli 1340
Strand 400
Wisconsin 800
LADYSMITH
Unique 450
LAKE GENEVA
Geneva 700
LAKE MILLS
Lake
LANCASTER
Orpheum 219
LAONA
Club House 600
LITTLE CHUTE
Little Chute 200
LODI
Lodi 300
LOYAL
Miller 735
LUCK
Luck 200
LUXEMBERG
Legrion CI
MADISON
Capitol 2200
Eastwood 1000
Madison 1100
Majestic 600
Orpheum 2246
Parkway 1232
Strand 400
University of Wise. 634
MANAWA
Manawa 301
MANCHESTER
Manchester 276C1
MANITOWOC
Capitol 1600
Empire 495
Mikado 800
Strand 400
MARATHON
Marathon (Port.)
MARINETTE
Fox 673
Rialto 673C1
Strand 570C1
MARION
New Fox 300
MARKESAN
Markesan 296
MARSHFIELD
Adler 800
New Adler 806
Relda 600
MAUSTON
Gale 400
MAYVILLE
May 302
MAZOMANIC
Majestic 200C1
MEDFORD
Avon 200
M ELLEN
Orpheum 275
MENASHA
Brin 966
Menasha 598C1
Orpheum 400C1
MENOMINEE
Grand 360
Orpheum 675
MENOMINEE FALLS
Falls 342
Stout Institute 395
MERCER
Movies 200C1
MERRILL
Badger 500
Cosmo 600
MILWAUKEE
Abbey 630
(W. Greenfield Ave.)
Alamo 650
(S. 16th St.)
Alhambra 2500C1
(W. Wisconsin Ave.)
Astor 800
(N. Astor St.)
Atlas 800
(N. 3rd St.)
Avalon 1736
(S. Kinnickinnic) Ave.)
Burleigh 740
(W. Burleigh St.)
Climax 867
(W. Fond du Lac Ave.)
Colonial 1609
(1516 W. Vliet St.)
Columbia 1400C1
930
(1029 W. Walnut St.)
Comet 600
(W. North Ave.)
Davidson
Downer 900
(2589 N. Downer Ave.)
Egyptian 1400
(N. Teutonia Ave.)
Fern 810
(2566 N. 3rd St.)
Franklin 340
(1706 N. Center St.)
Garfield 1900
(N. 3rd St.)
Gayety 980C1
(N. 3rd St.)
Grace 600
(3303 W. National Ave.)
Granada 1000
(W. Mitchell)
Grand 760
(N. Holton)
Hollywood 700
(N.Green Bay Ave.)
Home 660C1
(931 S. Fifth St.)
Jackson 868
(N. Jackson St.)
Juneau 1100
(W. Mitchell)
Kosciusko 716C1
(W. Lincoln Ave.)
Lake 963
(S. Delaware Ave.)
Layton Park 650
(S. Layton Blvd.)
Liberty 760
(2623 W. Vliet)
Lincoln 500C1
( W. Lincoln Ave.)
Little 1250
(W. Wisconsin Ave.)
Lyric 600
(3804 W. Vliet)
Majestic 2000
Midsret 385
(S. 8th St.)
Miller 1200
(N. 3rd St.)
Milwaukee 1000
(2764 N. Teutonia Ave.)
Mirth 700
(S. Kinnic)
Modjeska 2500
(W.Mitchell)
Mozart 610
(1316 S. 16th St.)
Murray 600
(2342 Murray Ave.)
National 1400
(W. National Ave.)
National Soldier's Home
New Aragon 640
(2311 S. Howell St.)
Oakland 60C
(N. Oakland Ave.)
Ogden 500C1
(E. Ogden Ave.)
Oriental 2380
(N. Farwell Ave.)
Pabst 1549
(E. Wells)
Palace 2600
(Wisconsin Ave.)
Park 300
(725 W.Mitchell)
Parkway 960
(W. Lisbon)
Pearl 650
(668 — 14th Ave.)
Peerless 477
(E. Center)
Plaza 1000
(3069 S. 13th St.)
Princess 800
( N. 3rd St.)
Radio 800
(W. Fond du Lae Ave.)
Rainbow 800
(W. Lisbon Ave.)
Regal
(Walnut St.)
Riverside 2200
(116 W. Wisconsin Ave.)
Riviera 1200
(W. Lincoln Ave.)
Roosevelt 750
(W. North)
Roxy 700
(3240 N. Green Bay Ave.)
Savoy 800
(W. Center)
Sherman
Shorewood 1200
(N. Oakland)
State 1206
(W. State St.)
Strand 1216
(W. Wisconsin Ave.)
Times 500
(6906 W. Vliet)
Tivoli 900
(W. North Ave.)
Tower 1680
(N. 27th St.)
Uptown 1800
(Ni 49th St.)
Varsity
Venetian 1400
(W. Center)
Violet 600
(W. Vliet)
Warner 2500
(W. Wisconsin Ave.)
Whitehouse 1400
(N. 3rd St.)
Wisconsin 3600
(W. Wisconsin Ave.)
World 820
(S. 6th & National)
Zenith 1450
(W. Hopkins)
MINERAL PT.
Municipal 360
Point
MINOCQDE
Acqua 450
MONDOVI
Mondovi 300
MONROE
Chalet 551
Goetz 800C1
Goetz Junior 275
MONTELLO
Montello 315
MONTICELLO
Community 650
MONTREAL
Hamilton Club 260
MOSINEE
Mosinee 350
MT. HOREB
Parkway 350
Strand 350
MUKWONAGO
Vista 460
MUSCODA
Muscoda 300C1
NEENAH
Embassy 800
NEILLSVILLE
Adler 450
NEKOOSA
Rialto 350
NEW GLARCS
New Glarus 210
NEW HOLSTEIN
Towne 400
NEW LISBON
Home 186
NEW LONDON
Grand 619
Mermae 299
NEW RICHMOND
Gem 400
NEWALD
Gerl 2000C1
NORTH LAKE
Phelps 300
NORTH MILWAUKEE
Ritz 650
OCONOMOWOC
L» Belle 600
Strand 600
OCONTO
Gem 300C1
Oconto 368
OCONTO FALLS
Grand 360
OMRO
Omro 499
ONTARIO
Ontario (Port.)
OREGON
Oregon O. H 250
OSCEOLA
Garden 200
OSHKOSH
Grand 857
Mode 500
Oshkosh 1405
Star 240
(317 Oregon St.)
Strand 1165
Time 650
OSSEO
Fox 200
OWEN
Owen 350
PALMYRA
Butterfly 500
PARDEEVILLE
Lovell 230
PARK FALLS
Rex 500
PATCH GROVE
Opera House CI
PESHITIGO
Lyric 250
PHELPS
North Lakes 300
PHILLIPS
Norwood 300
PLAINFIELD
Plainfleld 250
PLATTEVILLE
Avalon 600
Gem 350
PLUM CITY
Auditorium 196
PLYMOUTH
Majestic
Plymouth 250
PORTAGE
Home 500
Portage 777
PORT WASHINGTON
Grand 500
Ozaukee 600C1
PRAIRIE DU CHIEN
Metro 600
Regent 300C1
PRAIRIE DU SAC
Bonham 225
PRAIRIE FARM
Pederstien 250C1
PRESCOTT
St. Croix 300
PRINCETON
Princeton 400
RACINE
Capitol 800
Crown 800
Douglas 550
Granada 980
Main Street 1100
New Rex 850
Rex 1200C1
Rialto 1100
State 800
Uptown 1889
Venetian 1600
RED GRANITE
Community 400CI
REEDSBURG
Badger 450
READSTOWN
Willard Hall (Port.) . .CI
REO
Purtell 175C1
RHINELANDER
Majestic 446C1
State 850
RIB LAKE
Gem
RICE LAKE
El Lago 760
Majestic 400
RICHLAND CENTER
Eskin 500
Richland 400
RIO
Purtell 170CI
RIPON
Ripon 550
Campus 400
RIVER FALLS
Auditorium 024
Falls 425
ST. CROIX FALLS
Auditorium 044
SEYMOUR
See-More 300
SHAWANO
Crescent 49a
Shawano 475
SHEBOYGAN
Butterfly 437
Lincoln 315
Majestic 800
Rex 1000
Sheboygan 1400
Strand 300
Van der Vaart 900
SHEBOYGAN FALLS
Falls 350
SHELL LAKE
Auditorium
SHULLSBURG
Opera House 295
SOLDIERS GROVE
Electric 250
SOLON SPRINGS
Paul Brunell . . . (Port.)
Village 500
SOMERSET
J.deal 275C1
SO. MILWAUKEE
Garden 400
Grand 480
SPARTA
Classic 500
Sparta 450
War Dept CI
SPOONER
Palace 300
SPRING GREEN
Spring Green 350
SPRING VALLEY
Auditorium 200
STANLEY
Stanley 300
STEVENS POINT
Fox 600
Lyric 900
STOUGHTON
Badger 670
STRATFORD
Stratford
STRUM
Strum 160
STURGEON BAY
Door 460
SUN PRAIRIE
Prairie 400
931
SUPERIOR
Beacon 600
Capitol 356C1
Palace 1106
Peoples 650
Princess 400
Savoy 650C1
Superior 700
THORP
Rialto 300
TIGERTON
Opera House 260C1
TOMAH
Tomah 400
TOMAHAWK
Lyric 350
TWO RIVERS
Rlvoli 600
UNITY
Unity (Port.)
VIOLA
Willard Hall . . . (Port.)
VIROQUA
Temple 704
Vernon 400
WABENO
Wabeno 600
WASHBURN
Lake 600
WASHINGTON ISLAND
Hall 150C1
WATERFORD
Leg-ion 256C1
WATERLOO
Community CI
Mode
WATERTOWN
Classic 600
Savoy 480C1
WAUKESHA
Avon 708
Park 800
WAUPACA
Palace 450
Waupaca 600
WAUPUN
Classic 350
WAUSAU
Grand 1434
Ritz 450
Waueau 1100
WAUTOMA
Park 387
WAU WAUTOSA
Tosa 600
WAUZEKA
Willard Hall . . . (Port.)
WAYSIDE
Newayside 240C1
WEBSTER
Webb 200
WEST ALLIS
Allis 860
(66th & Greenfield)
Capitol 700
(65th & Greenfield)
Paradise 1239
(West Greenfield)
WEST BEND
Mermac 210
West Bend 900
WESTBY
Westby 100
WEST DE PERE
Nicolet 420
WESTFIELD
Community CI
Opera House 300
WEST SALEM
Salem 276
WEYAUWEGA
Opera House 290
WHITEHALL
Whitehall 260
WHITEWATER
Strand 460
WISCONSIN DELLS
Dells 300C1
WISCONSIN RAPIDS
Palace 540C1
Rapids 400
Wisconsin 786
WITTENBERG
Badger 375
Kerston O. H 350C1
WONEWOC
Majestic CI
WOODVILLE
Village Hall 200
—WYOMING—
62 Theaters; 25,532 Seats
Closed — 10 Theaters; 2,582 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 52 Theaters; 22,950 Seats
AFTON DIXON KEMMERER RAWLINS
Wray 440 Harris Hall 100 Victory 520 Strand 800
BAGGS DOUGLAS LANDER RIVERTON
Novelty (Port.) Mesa 500 Grand 360 Acme 429
BASIN DU BOIS LARAMIE KOCK SPRINGS
Wigwam 350 Danceland Fox"" 700 Grand 500
BIG PINEY ENCAMPMENT LOVELL RlaU° 9°°
Big Piney CI Echo 150 Armada 400 „ SARATOGA
rvavstom Community 300
,.„ —rzn?..*. „ Lolu,™^ m
CASPER _ _ „F0X FARK LYMAN Orpheum 650
American 826 66111 200 Veterans Hospital .150
Rex 800 GILLETTE MIDWEST SUNDANCE
Ria»° 840 American Midwest 448 Commercial 150
Fiesta 200
CHEYENNE MOORECROFT s0. SUPERIOR
Ft. Warren 250 GLfcN KOLK Avon 150 Crystal 300
T ir.nr.ln 1 9nn Wyoma 370
Lincoln 1<!00 NEWCASTLE THERMOPOLIS
Paramount 928 GREEN RIVER CasUe 350 T
Princess 996 Isis 485
Strand CI rRli,v RTTTT PAKC0 TORRINGTON
GREY BULL Parco 300cl Lyric
CHIMNEY PARK Big Horn 600 FIVEBLUFFS Wyoming ...."."^OO
Torch C1 GUERNSEY Pastime 200 UPTON
CODY star 200 PINED ALE uPton H0C1
Cody 300 HANNA Mannwill 150C1 WHEATLAND
Temple 340C1 Hanna 375 Mesa 150 Ramona 400
COWLEY JACKSON POWELL WORLAND
Cowley 150C1 Rainbow 400C1 Teton 400 Kerby 350
932
== ALASKA
22 Theaters; 8,954 Seats
Closed — 4 Theaters; 1,527 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 18 Theaters; 7,427 Seats
ANCHORAGE JUNEAU NOME
Empress 460 Capitol 480 Dream
CORDOVA Coliseum 550 PALMER
DOUGLAS wutwu-™...
Coliseum 250C1 KETCHIKAN PETERSBURG
FAIRBANKS Coliseum 700 Alaska-Variety ...537C1
Empress 450 Revilla 480 Coliseum 700
HAINES
Chirkoot Barracks ..200 KLAWOK SEWARD
Coliseum 700 Bayview 176 Empress 250
SITKA
Coliseum
350
SKAGWAY
250C1
UNALASKA
150
VALDBX
165
WRANGELL
. .375
CANADIAN
THEATERS
1,246 Theaters; 655,255 Seats
Closed — 85 Theaters; 20,344 Seats
Operating Jan. 1, 1940 — 1,161 Theaters; 634,911 Seats
Alberta
Lux
CALGARY CHAMPION
Capitol 1560 Opera 125
Crescent 400 CHAUVIN
Empress 490C1 Chauvin 100C1
Gary 375 CLARESHOLM
Grand 1400 Rex 300
Isis 500 CLIVE
Kinema 335 Community Hall ...150
Palace 1400 CLYDE
ACME BELLEVUE Plaza 420 Opera 100
Strand 858 COLEMAN
ALEX BENTLEY Tivoli 430 Palace 300
Variety 1220 COAL VALLEY
ALLIANCE BERWYN CAMROSE Community 125
Bailey's 450 CONSORT
ATHABASCA BIG VALLEY CANMORE Village 150C1
>ra 175 CORONATION
BANFF BLAIRMORE CARBON star 200C1
176
Cole's
300
BENTLEY
175
Opera
125
BERWYN
100
Berwyn 100C1
BIG VALLEY
160
Lyceum
450
BLAIRMORE
400
Orpheum
400
BONNYVILLE
150
.250
BROOKS
176
300
BURDETTE
150
.100
CADOMIN
160
,200
BARRHEAD BONNYVILLE CARDSTON
DAYSLAND
„„„ Community Hall ...150
Palace 300 mri ritrisjw
CARMANGAY Town ««^«*uk«*. ^
BASSANO BURDETTE CARSTAIRS DEWBERRY
...n 150 Community 100 Masonic Dewberry 150C1
BEAVER LODGE CADOMIN CASTOR DIDSBURY
Pekin 300 Opera 300
933
British Columbia
DONALDO LUSCAR TOFIELD VULCAN
I. 0. O. F 200C1 Luscar 160 Variety 150 Opera 276
DRUMHELLEK McLENNAN TROCHU WAINRIGHT
Napier 640 Elk Hall 160 Opera 176 Elite . 300
DUCHESS MACLEOD TURNER VALLEY WARNER
Duchess 150C1 Empress 350 Opera 275 Warner . 176
EAST COULEE MAGRATH TWO HILLS WATERTON LAKES
Star 275 Empress 300 Two Hills 100 Opera House ....275C1
ECKVILLE MANNVILLE VEGREVILLE WESTLOCK
Opera 160 Purdy 160C1 Vimy 300 Sharp's 160
EDBERG MARWAYNE VERMILION WETAKIWIN
Edbers 150 Community Hall ..125C1 Columbia 400 Audien 475
EDMONTON MAYERTHORPE VIKING WILLINGTON
Avenue 400 Community 100 Opera 110 M. P 150
Capitol 1100 MEDICINE HAT
Dreamland 450 Empress 700C1
Empress 800 Monarch 460
Gem 450 Roxy 340
Princess 400 MILK RIVER
Rialto 1200 Crystal 150C1
Roxy 412 MIRROR
Strand 720 Grand 200
EDSON MORRINVILLE
New Edson 300 Manville 150
EDGARTON MT. PARK ABBOTSFORD NEW WESTMINSTER
Pawsey's Hall 150 Opera 175 Abbotsford 400 Columbia 910
ELNORA MUNDARE ARMSTRONG Edison 850
Opera 150 Sharp's 160 Star 300 Metro 400C1
FAIRVIEW MYRNAM ATHALMER Westminster G17
Gem 250C1 Opera 100C1 Legion 160C1 NORTH VANCOUVER
FALHER NANTON ATLIN Lonsdale 600
Gay Rex 175 Globe 150 Nova 7(J0
FOREMOST NEWCASTLE ASHCROFT
Midland 175 Sylvia 300 Ashcroft 200
FORT McMURRAY _ NORDEGG CHILLIWACK
Fort 140C1 -Empress 325 Strand 669
FORT SASK. OLDS T>i„i,i» ,„„
Sharpe's 275 May fair 200 Bickle ...... . • • • • • 499
FORESTBURG OKOTOKS T, tUMBLKLANll
Crillon 100C1 Opera 150 110 ?.r VvRRnnK '
GLEICHEN PEACE RIVER _. CRANBROOK
Opera 150 Boyd's 250C1 btar ' oresTOn"
GRANDE PRAIRIE Godfr!pCvTURE BUTTE Grand 340
Capitol 450 God£rey 150 DAWSON
GRANUM PINCHER CREEK Family 300C1
Starland 200 Opera 300 Orpheum 300 PRINCE RUPERT
HANNA PONOKA DUNCAN Capitol 708
Capitol 375 Empress 200 Capitol 464 PRINCETON
HARDISTRY PROVOST FSOUIMAI T Capitol 300
OPera 200 Royal 150 ESQUIMALT QUESNEL
HIGH PRAIRIE RAYMOND oadet 'kkr'tvif1 Rex 125
Legion Hall 150 Capitol 350 Qrpheum 375 REVELSTOKE
HIGH RIVER RED DEER fikt'd Province 380
Wales 300 Capitol 150 YMCA 150 ROSSLAND
HILLCREST Crescent 440 ImoA lou Capitol 552
Cole's 220 ROCKYFORD GRAND FORKS SALMON ARM
HUGHENDEN Opera 135 Granada 350 Rex 270
Recreation 300C1 ROCKY MT. HOUSE GOLDBRIDGE SAPPERTON
HUSSAR
NATAL
300
OLIVER
260
PENTICTON
733
PORT ALBERNI
500
POWELL RIVER
484
PRINCE GEORGE
450
Azeii 250 Ace 100C1 Sapperton 400
Community RIMBEY HEDLEY SMITHERS
Opera 300 0pera 150 C°mmTiLi nnP« " B° Capito1 2«°
"trmA ROSEDALE KAMLOOPS STEWART
IKMA Variety 100 Capital 719 stewart 250
Irma 250 RYLEY KELOWNA TRAII
I O 0™FREE 150 RyIey ■ ■ ■ •100 E^re- rWri V 722 «'a"° • 522
IASPFr" ST. PAUL KIMBERLY strand 515
I . iw RHtp 27R Orpheum 200
Chaba WVfVlAM • •30° SEDGEWICK LADNER VANCOUVER
KILLIAM Kiefers 150 D«Ra Hall 400 £lma 064
Empire 175 Klefers STAVELY ' ' ' 150 LADYSMITH Bay 732
LACOMBE iKn Rio 325 Beacon !550
Avalon 350 Stavely .... .... . . 150 Rio pRAIRi;25 Broadway 934
LAMONT „ STETTLER LANGLEY PRAIRIE Cambie 700
Lamont . . ... 175 Stett,er_;^.A„- ' -300 Langley._^„.™ " " 375 Capitol 2153
LEDUC STANDARD MERRITT Colonial 842
Leduc 176 S- & S' Hal1 100 Rex 350 Dominion 866
eauc Lio STRATHMORE MICHELL Dunbar 770
LETHBRIDGE Opera 275 Opera 200 Fraser 769
Capitol 1100 STROME MINTO CITY Grandview 918
Lealta 400 Memorial Hall 250 Minto 200C1 Hollywood '753
Roxy 600 SYLVAN LAKE MISSION Kerrisdale 756
LITTLE CHICAGO Dptown 250 Victory 500 Kingsway 731
Mountain View ....150 TABER NANAIMO Kitsilano 853
LLOYDMINSTER Rex 300 Capitol .719 Lyric 1281
Empress 450 THREE HILLS Opera House 625C Plaza 674
LOMOND Leg-ion 225 Strand 545C1 Marpole 470
Hall CI TILLEY NELSON Music Box 626
LOUGHEED New 200 Capitol 640 Oak 800
Community 150 Palace 175 Civic 800 Olympia 919
934
Orpheum 2871
Paradise 830
Princess 480C1
Resent 679
Rex 931
Rio 600
Roxy 460
Royal 1000
Stanley 1218
Star 489
Strand 1912
Victoria 527
Windsor 652
VERNON
Capitol 532
VICTORIA
Atlas 700
Capitol 1330
Columbia 569
Dominion 856
Oak Bay 526
Plaza 601
WILLIAMS LAKE
Oliver 1 00
WELLS
Sunset 200
WEST SUMMERLAND
Rialto 260
WESTVIEW
Roxy 244
WEST VANCOUVER
Hollyburn 400
WHITE ROCK
White Rock 250C1
Manitoba
ARBORG
Arborg- 125
AUSTIN
Oliver 150
BALDUR
Baldur 150
BEAUSEJOUR
Star 250
BELMONT
Belmont 175
BENITO
Benito 150
BERESFORD LAKE
Beresford Lake ....150
BINSCARTH
Strand 150
BIRTLE
Savoy 250
BISSETT
Rice Lake 250
BOISSEVAIN
Victoria 350
BOWSMAN
Happyland 150
BRANDON
Capitol 700
Oak 300
Strand 560
CARBERRY
Palace 200
CARMAN
Boyne 500
CLEAR LAKE
Park 450CI
CRYSTAL CITY
De Lux 200
DAUPHIN
Dauphin 600
DELORAINE
Jubilee 225
ELK HORN
McLeod 200
EMERSON
De Lux 300
FLIN FLON
Northland 150
GILBERT PLAINS
Plains 125
CHILI
M. P 150
GLADSTONE
Revilo 200
GLENBORO
Roxy 275
GOD'S LAKE
God's Lake 120
GRETNA
De Luxe 172
GRANDVIEW
Orland 150
HAMIOTA
McConnell 200
HARTNEY
Altone 250
HOLLAND
Holland 150
HUDSON BAY
JUNCTION
Canadian Lesion . . . 160
KENTON
Kenton 150
KILLARNEY
Lyceum 150
LAC DU BENNETT
M. P 150
LUNDAR
Lundar 150
McGregor
Tivoli 200
MANITOU
Pembina 150
MELITA
Melita 250
MIAMI
De Lux 100
MINNEDOSA
Lyric 285
MORDEN
Starland 250
MORRIS
Princess 150C1
NEEPAWA
Roxy 400
OAK LAKE
Oak Lake 200
PILOT MOUND
Cozy 200
PINE FALLS
Chateau 280
PIPESTONE
Hall 250
PORTAGE
LA PRAIRIE
Elite 370
Playhouse 600
RESTON
M. P 150
ROBLIN
Lyric 100
RIVERS
Wag-ar 200C1
RIVERTON
M. P 200
ROLAND
M. P 200
ROSSBURN
Rossburn 100
RUSSELL
Bijou 150
ST. CLAUDE
St. Claude 100
SHERRIDON
Roxy 300
SHOAL LAKE
Masonic 175
SOURIS
Avaaon 275
STONEWALL
Notons 250
SELKIRK
Roxy 275
SWAN RIVER
Palace 300
STRAITHCLAIR . .
M. P 250C1
SOMERSET
Central Lorrie 200
TEULON
Teulon 150
THE PAS
Roxy 600
TRANSCONA
Transcona 376
TREHERNE
Leg-ion 200
VIRDEN
Auditorium 600
WINNIPEGOSIS
Rex 200C1
WINNIPEG BEACH
Beachview 250C1
WINNIPEG
Arlington 541
Baddow 330
Beacon 1078
Bijou 769
Capitol 2126
Classic 444
Colonial 492
College 980
Corona 348
Crescent 566
De Luxe 400
Elm 250
Fox 610
Furby 488
Garrick 1155
Gaiety 740
Kings 675
Lyceum 1200
Mac's 381
Metropolitan 1983
Oak 300
Onyx 150
Osborne 805
Palace 823
Park 730
Plaza 800
RKO Winnipeg- ...1800
Regent 661
Rialto 700
Rio 995
Rose 700
Roxy 1000
State 375
Starland 1500
Times 370
Tivoli 803
Tower 490
Ukranian Temple ...300
Uptown 1760
Valour 500
Windsor 600
Wonderland 612
New Brunswick
ANDOVER
Capitol 300
BATHHURST
Opera 300
BLACK'S HARBOUR
Strand 320
BRADFORD
Reg-al
CAMPBELLTON
Capitol 794
CHATHAM
Capitol 410
CHIPMAN
Chipman 350
DALHOUSIE
Capitol 510
EDMUNDSTON
Capitol 485
FAIRVILLE
Gaiety 271
FREDERICTON
Capitol 600
GRAND FALLS
Opera House 450
HARTLAND
Capitol 250
HARVEY
Empire 210
McADAM JUNCTION
Capitol 400
MARYSVILLE
Lyric 258
MINTO
Gaiety 450
MONCTON
Capitol 1200
Empress 650
Imperial 600
NEWCASTLE
Opera House 400
NORTH HEAD
Happy Hour .... 200C1
RICHIBUCTO
Kent 205
SACKVILLE
Imperial 626
ST. GEORGE
Capitol 300
SAINT JOHN
Capitol 1600
Empire 806
Opera 800C1
Mayfair 800
Regent 876
Strand 769
SAINT JOHN WEST
Community 300
ST. STEPHEN
Queen 1000
ST. ANDREWS
Marina 200
SHEDIAC
Capitol 200
SUSSEX
Strand 626
WOODSTOCK
Capitol 470
935
Newfoundland
BELL ISLAND
Gajety 200
BOTWOOD
Empire 200
BUCHANS
Buchans 200
CORNER BROOK
Majestic 500
Palace 500
Regent 150
DEER LAKE
Town Hall 200
Nova Scotia
AMHERST
Capitol 802
ANNAPOLIS
King's 380
ANTIGONISH
Capitol 540
BARRING TON
PASSAGE
Goudey's 500
BERWICK
Bligh's 200
BRIDGETOWN
Strand 250
BRIDGEWATER
Capitol 400
CANSO
Ideal 238
CHESTER
Kenerick 150
CLARKS HARBOUR
Vimy 450
DARTMOUTH
Dundas 750
Mayfair 800
DIGBY
Capitol 300
DOMINION
Royal 300
ENFIELD
Queen 150
FREEPORT
Nu Era 300
GLACE BAY
Russell 950
Savoy 1290
HALIFAX
Capitol 2200
Casino 1164
Community 600
Empire 600
Family 600
Gaiety 600
Garrick 725
Orpheus 879
Oxford 686
INVERNESS
Palace 250
IMPEROYAL
Princess 294
KENTVILLE
Capitol 922
Empire 730
LIVERPOOL
Astor 687
WEYMOUTH
Community 225C1
WHITNEY PIER
Casino 335
Star 575
WINDSOR
Imperial 600
WOLFVILLE
Orpheum 400
YARMOUTH
Capitol 1325
Community
Strand 507
Ontario
GRAND FALLS
ST. JOHN'S
Capitol 1000
Crescent 450
Nickel 800
Little Star 250
Majestic 787
Regal 385
Star 1000
ACTON
LOCKEPORT
Hayden's 450
LUNENBURG
Capitol 660
MIDDLETON
NEW GLASGOW
Academy 650
NEW WATERFORD
Majestic 500
NORTH SYDNEY
PARRSBORO
Community 150
PICTOU
RIVER HERBERT
Palace 260
SHELBURNE
Magnet 360
SHUBENACADIE
Majestic 200
SPRINGHILL
Capitol 450
STELLARTON
Jubilee 600
SYDNEY MINES
Strand 700
SYDNEY
Capitol 1100
Strand 689
Vogue 1075
TIVERTON
Town Hall 175
TRURO
Capitol 700
Strand 659
WESTPORT
Community 250
WESTVILLE
258
ALLISTON
332
ALMONTE
O'Brien's
356
AMHERSTBURG
450
ANSON VILLE
442
ARNPRIOR
627
AURORA
382
AYLMER
300
BARRIE
567
Imperial
466
719
BEARDMORE
380
BELLEVILLE
958
McCarthy
836
i > « - ' • . * iii.i*!
335
BLIND RIVER
472
BOWMANVILLE
Royal
391
BRACEBRIDGE
334
BRADFORD
Holland
357
BRAMPTON
831
BRANTFORD
917
College
549
Esquire
705
BROCK VILLE
943
BURLINGTON
479
CALEDONIA
Andre
244
CAMPBELLFORD
Hollywood
232
CANNINGTON
194
CAPREOL
230
CARDINAL
225
CARLTON PLACE
Star
378
CHESTERVILLE
Community
210
CHAPLEAU
Regent
300
CHATHAM
Granada
501
New Capitol 1285
CHESLEY
Roxy
350
CLINTON
263
COBALT
Classic 560
COBOL RG
Capitol 519
COCHRANE
Empire 416
COLLINGWOOD
Gayety 551
Regent 500
CORNWALL
Capitol 1261
Palace 749
CREIGHTON MINES
Regent 319
DELHI
Capitol 342
Imperial 450
DRESDEN
Majestic 249
DRYDEN
Strand 247
DUNDAS
Majestic 445
DUNNVILLE
Granada 381
ENGLEHART
Palace 150
ESPANOLA
Princess 202
EXETER
Learitt's 350
ESSEX
Reo 456
FERGUS
Grand 471
FOREST
Kineto 300
FORT ERIE NORTH
Bellard 372
FORT FRANCES
Royal 640
FORT WILLIAM
Orpheum 948
Royal 704
FRASERDALE
Canyon 100
GERALDSTOWN
Strand 514
GALT
Capitol 1121
Grand 605
GANANOQUE
Delaney's 610
GEORGETOWN
Gregory 398
GLENCOE
Fox 400
GODERICH
Capitol 418
GORE BAY
Community Hall ...350
GRAVENHURST
Muskoka 480
GRIMSBY
Moore's 382
GUELPH
Capitol 914
Royal 1003
HAGERSVILLE
Regal 404
HAILEYBURY
Strand
936
HAMILTON
Capitol 2233
Community 675
Delta 9C5
Empire 875
Granada 1079
Gregory 481
Kenilworth 071
Kenmore 601
Lyceum 675
Lyric 722
Palace 2233
Playhouse 666
Queen's 974
Regent 614
Savoy 1181
Royal 428
Strand 935
Tivoli 1307
Westdale 586
IIANOVEK
Paramount 347
HAKRISTON
Roxy 336
HARROW
Haro
HAWKESBURY
Ottawan 385
HORNEPAYNE
Lyric 182
I1UNTSVILLE
King George 470
HESPELER
Queen's 503
HEARST
New Royal 100
1NOERSOLL
Maitland 448
KAPAUSKASING
Community Club . .400
KENORA
Bijou
Palace 717
KINCARDINE
Blue Water 456
KINGSVILLE
Roxy 480
KINGSTON
Capitol 1177
Grand 510
Tivoli 510
KIRKLAND LAKE
Capitol 516
La Salle 500
Strand 944
Uptown 693
KITCHENER
Capitol 1085
College 676
Lyric 1391
LARDER LAKE
Capitol 400
LEAMINGTON
Capitol 578
Vogue
LEVACK
Rio 380
LINDSAY
Academy 708
Kent 288
LITTLE CURRENT
Princess 250
LISTOWELL
Capitol . . 396
LONDON
Capitol 1304
Centre 607
El ni wood 620
Grand 1209
Loew's 1965
Palace 874
Patricia 1073
Rex 492
LONG BRANCH
Royal 619
MoKENZIE ISLAND
Island 208
MADOC
Empire 310
MASSEY
Princess 150
MATACHEWAN
Palace 463
MEAFORD
Capitol 316
MIDLAND
Capitol 761
MILTON
Princess 409
MIMICO
Rex 494
MITCHELL
Plaza
MORRISBURG
Cameo 200
MOUNT DENNIS
Mount Dennis 661
MOUNT FOREST
Lauder 408
NAPANEE
Granada 442
NEW HAMBURG
Regent 190
NEW LISKEAKD
Empire 515
NEWMARKET
Strand 394
NEW TORONTO
Capitol 1090
NIAGARA FALLS
Capitol 749
Hollywood 788
NORTH BAY
Capitol 1435
Royal 762
OAKVILLE
Gregory 498
OKANGEVILLE
Uptown 440
ORILLIA
Geneva
Opera House 820
Princess 311
OSHAWA
Marks 701
Regent 1055
OTTAWA
Avalon 874
Capitol 2580
Centre 1044
Elrin 750
Francais 999
Imperial 1911
Little
Mavfair 639
Nolan 621
Regent 1182
Rexy 663
Kialto 524
R idea u 932
Summerset 750
Victoria 580
OWEN SOUND
Classic 748
Savoy 430
PARIS
Capitol 576
PARRY SOUND
Royal 275
PEMBROKE
O'Brien's 750
PENETANG
Esquire 308
PERTH
Perth 655
PETERBORO
Capitol 1106
Center 595
Granada 800
Regent 570
PETROLIA
Iroquois 364
PICTON
Regent 850
PORT ARTHUR
Colonial 949
New Lyceum 715
PORT CABLING
Island Park 200
PORT COLBORNE
Strand 795
PORT CREDIT
Vogue 500
PORT DOVER
Gem 225
PORT ELGIN
Elgin 320
PORT HOPE
Capitol 684
PRESCOTT
Riviera 496
PRESTON
Pairk 490
RAINY RIVER
Gayety 220
RED LAKE
Cabin 160
RENFREW
O'Brien's 712
RIDGETOWN
Palace 228
SARNIA
Capitol 1116
Imperial 1054
SAULT STE. MARIE
Algoma 1042
Orpheum
Princess 470
SHUMACHER
Mascioli's 500
SEAFOKTH
Regent 306
SIMCOE
Capitol 542
Lyric 300
Norfolk 599
SIOUX LOOKOUT
May fair 307
SMITHS FALLS
Capitol 790
SMOOTH ROCK FALLS
United Church Hall. 700
SOUTH PORCUPINE
Mascioli 480
SOUTHAMPTON
Esquire 320
STIRLING
Community Hall ...499
STOUFFV1LLE
Stanley 300
STRATFORD
Classic 612
Majestic 1209
STRATHROY
King 412
STURGEON FALLS
Regent 435
SUDBURY
Capitol 1419
Grand 814
Regent 588
Rio
ST. CATHARINE'S
Capitol 1180
Centre 500
Granada 837
Lincoln
ST. MARY'S
Lyric 387
ST. THOMAS
Capitol 1086
Columbia 510
Granada 1213
SUTTON WEST
Simcoe 300
THESSALON
Empire 381
THOKOLD
Tivoli 320
TILBURY
Plaza 417
TILLSONBURG
Capitol 574
Oxford
Strand 685
TIMMINS
Carter 625
Goldftelds 850
Palace 1262
TORONTO
Allenby 750
( Danforth Ave.)
Academy 391
( 1286 Bloor W.)
Adelphi 460
( 1008 Dovercourt)
Alhambra 1045
(680 Bloor W.)
Apollo 563
(2901 Dundas W.)
Arcadian 370
(Queen St.)
Aster 470
(233 Ossington Ave.)
Avalon 453
(2925 Danforth Ave.)
Avenue 700
Bayview 674
Beach 1532
(1969 Queen E.)
Beaver 1162
(2942 Dundas W.)
Bedford 954
(3301 Yonge St.)
Bellvue 785
(366 College St.)
Belmont 319C1
(College St.)
Belsize 968
(551 Mt. Pleasant Rd.)
Beverly 544
(1488 Yonge St.)
Bloor 782
(529 Bloor St. W.)
Bloordale 694
( ItiOO Bloor St.)
Bluebell 620
13U9 Parliament)
Bonita 544
(1035 Gerrard E.)
Bright on 420
( 127 Roncesvalles )
Broadview 557
i 348 Broadview)
Broadway 486
(Queen & Bay)
Brock 706
i 1585 Dundas W.)
Cameo 743
(989 Page Ave.)
Capitol 1115
(2492 Yonge St.)
Casino 1121
Carlton 1015
I 509 Parliament)
Centre 583
(772 Dundas W.)
Century 1354
(147 Danforth Ave.)
Chateau 363
i :">.-.(> Queen St. W.)
Christie 886
(663 St. Clair W.)
Circle 750
(2507 Yonge St.)
Classic 604
I 1300 Gerrard E.)
College 1505
(960 Collesre St.)
College Playhouse . .453
1344 College St.)
Colony
Community 742
(1202 Woodbine)
Crescent 480
(3265 Dundas W.)
Crown 666
(591 Gerrard E.)
Doric 527
(1098 Bloor W.)
Eastwood 889
(1430 Gerrard E.)
Eclipse 596
(387 Parliament)
Eglinton 1086
( Eglinton Ave.)
Embassy 692
(651 Yonge St.)
937
Prince Edward Island
MONTAGUE
160
O'LEARY
Green Oak
150
SOl'RIS
Yeo's
SUMMERSIDE
Capitol
550
Queb
ec
Esquire 612 Radio City 836
(Bloor St.. W.) (1444 Bathurst St.)
Family 544 Regent 497
(Queen St. E.) (225 Queen St. E.)
Pox 630 Revue 540
(Queen E.) (400 Roncesvalles)
Garden 538 Rex 413
(College St.) ( H30 Queen St. E.)
Gerrard 794 Rialto 714
(1908 Gerrard E.) (408 Queen St. E.) ALBERTON
Granada 518 Rio 468 Town Hall ... If
(415 Danforth Ave.) (373 Yonge St.)
Gra"l ■ • ft" •• ■ • " ■ 665 Royal 346 «*A RLOTTETOWN Green o^T"' _150
(522 0akwood) ( 1481 Dundas W.) „ Plt0' V 514 SOURIS
Guild 438 Royal Alexander ..1640 Pnnce Edward ...1050
( 1275 Gerrard E.) (260 King St. W.) CRAPAUD
Grover 810 Royal George 497 Yeo's
(2720 Danforth) (1217 St. Clair W.)
Hillcrest 440 Runny mede 1600
(285 Christie St.) (2225 Bloor St. W.)
Hollywood 1056 Rovce 589
( 1519 Yonge St.) ( 315 Royce Ave.)
Hudson 458 Searboro 698
(675 Mt. Pleasant Rd.) (960 Kingston Rd.)
Ideal,Af W^wiY480 Shea's Hippodrome 2663
(Main & Gerrard) (440 Rav St )
Imperial 3411 (440 Bay St.)
(263 Yonge St.) St. Clair 1655 «wna . L ^
Iola 600 (1166 St. Clair W.) R AMOS DL PARQUET
(605 Danforth Ave.) Strand 876 326 Be3tty 225CI
Kenwood 593 (287 Spadina Ave.) „ , ARVTDA EAST ANGUS
(962 Bloor St. W.) Teck 625 Palace 400 Royal 200
n° r' ' ' A ' oi \ (700 E. Queen St. E.) ASBESTOS F1RVH,,.
(5(>5 College St.) . Club House ioc r AK>HAM
King's Playhouse ...329 Temple 740 WUD u°use 125 Rialto 300
(Queen St W) (300 Bathhurst St.) AYLMER
Kum-C . . .... . .596 Tivoli 1436 Capitol 250 FORT OOUI.ONGE
(1288 Queen St. W.) ( 15 Richmond E.) BAIE COMEAC Town Hall 100C1
Lansdowne 1066 Uptown 2761 Arcade 350 GASI'E
(683 Lansdowne) (764 Yonge St.) BEAUHARNAIS Ro>'al 250
LaP!^ r, o'. '^ ;79<5 Village 822 Weal 300 rmvnv
LaReta Q"ee '394 '422 Spadina Rd> BELOEIL Palace . . . . 600
(Pape & Gerrard) York 8"7 BeI°eil 150 Cartier 450
La Sallo 492 ( 812 Yonge St.) BERTHIER GRAND CASCAPEDIA
(526 Dundas W.) TRENTON M. P. Hall 200 Municipal ' 200C1
Loew's 2074 Capitol 516 BEDFORD r.Rl\nvFRp"
(189 Yonge St.) Century Bedford 150 National 400
Madison 999 Trent 708 »„„„«™ -National 400
(506 Bloor St. W.) TivFFn ^ BELM0NT PARR HUDSON HEIGHTS
Major 599 victoria 216 0penAlr C1 Masonic Temple .... 150
(1780 St. Clair W.) V a * ' * BOURLAMAQUE HULL
Major Rogers Road. 623 UXBRIDGE Capitol 600 Cartier 987
(435 Rogers Rd.) strand /JO BROWNSBURG Laurier 1200
Manor 448 WALKERTON Capitol 150 HUNTINGTON
Ma/fafr KingSt°n ^ 478 ^"T, L^^0 BUCKINGHAM O'ConZTal.0™* .250
^"(Jane-St:)"-478 Alexander^ °™ 3°°CI JOLIETTE
Metro 700 New Capitol 608 CADILLAC Arena
Oakwood 1393 Palace 300 Capitol 350
, 948 St. Clair W.) WATERLOO CAMPBELL'S BAY JONQUIERE
0dU558 QueenSt. W])752 WELLAND T°W" " ' " " " 150 EmP"e 400
Oriole 597 Capitol 1396 „ CAPE COVE „„„ KUZABAZUA
(Eglinton & Yonge) Community 440 Commun.ty 200C1 Hall 150CI
Orpheum 32£
(604 Queen St. W.)
WESTON CHAMBLY LACHINE
Weston 660 Chambly 136 Empress 500
Oxford" 7. ~. ... ...803 WHITBY CHANDLER Royal Alexandra ...998
( 1510 Danforth) Brock 404 Chandler 300 LACHUTE
Palace 1575 WIARTON CHATEAUGUAY Rex 300
(664 Danforth Ave.) Berford 238 Alamo 250 LA TUQUE
Paradise 643 WILLIAMSBURG CHICOUTIMI Empire 523
(1008 Bloote W.) Piccadilly 382 Capitol 650 LAKE EDWARD
Paramount 432 WINDSOR COATICOOK Gaiete 200
(1069 St. Clair) Capitol 1945 Rivoli 250 LEVIS
Parkdale 1548 Empire 877 COWANSVIIIE Academy 200CI
(1605 Queen W.) Palace 1605 prjncess 300 Cinema 290
Parliament 941 Regent 530 DOLBEAU LONGUEIL
(426 ParHamentSt.) Royal 405 ImDeria, BEAL 315 Lyric 200C1
Photodrome 368 JemPle 664 Impe"a' ' ' J1° Radio 200
(39 Queen St. W.) Tivoh 1205 DONNACONNA fnm<!VlllF
Pickford 459 Va""y 976 Parish Hal1 150 Parisien 168
(382 Queen St. W.) WINGHAM DOUGLASTOWN
Prince of Wales... 1250 Lyceum 300 Parish Hall 320 Royal
(2094 Danforth) WOODSTOCK DRUMMONDVILLE LOW
Pylon Capitol 1043 Capitol 860 Low 100
Queen 460 Princess 413 Drummond 760 LUCERNE
(1674 Queen 9t. E.) Royal 966 Palace 663 Log Chateau 160
938
MAGOG
Capitol 400
Wonderland 378
MALARTIC
Malartic Mines . . . .400
MANIWAKI
Plaza 200
MATANE
Cercle Pardissal . . . 260
National 260
MEGANTIC
Bijou 200
MONTMAGNY
K of C 350
MONT JOLIE
Canadian 408
MONT LAURIER
Laurier 300
MONTREAL
Amherst 1692
Arcade 900
Beaubien 750
Belmont 1111
Broadway 260
Cameo 600
Canada 500
Canadian 600
Capitol 2603
Cartier 1146
Centre Palace 650
Chateau 1400
Cinema de Paris.... 660
Corona 1264
Crystal Palace 929
Century 600
Dominion 880
Electra 1038
Empire 500
Empress 1453
Fairyland 560
Francais 1900
Granada 1600
His Majesty's 1584
Hollywood 600
Imperial 1944
Laval 800
Lido 760
Lord Nelson 607
Loew's 2982
Maisonneuve 800
Majestic 650
Mayfair 1000
Midway 1185
Monkland 1285
Mount Royal 773
National 1518
Orleans 750
Orpheum 1055
Outremont 1477
Palace 2532
Papineau 1450
Passe Temps 400
Perron 500
Plaza 1025
Princess 2200
Regent 971
Rex 600
Rialto 1259
Rivoli 1500
Rosemont 1372
Roxy 789
Seville 1125
Snowden 1000
Star 506
Starland 889
St. Denis 2380
Stella 400
Strand 750
System 924
Westmount 1302
York 1102
MORIN HEIGHTS
Midget 150
MURRAY BAY
Richelieu Hotel ....100
NEW CARLISLE
Salle Stella 300
NORANDA
Noranda 600
NORTH HATLEY
Town Hall 200C1
PERRON MINES
Kino 150
PIERREVILLE
Lapirrier 300
PLAQUE LAVAL
Plaque Laval . . . .200C1
POINT AC PIC
Casino 300C1
PORT ALFRED
Chateau 300
QUEBEC
Cambrai 500
Canadian 600
Capitol 1900
Cartier 810
Cinema de Paris. . . .780
Empire 680
Francais 400C1
Imperial 1000
Princess 800
Rialto 400
Victoria 726
RAWDON
Copping Hall 180
RIMOUSKI
Cartier 600
LeBon 300C1
RICHMOND
Richmond 250
RIVIERE DU LOUP
Princess 625
ROBERVAL
Roberval 150
ROCK ISLAND
Border 400
ROUYN
Allevato 400
Capitol 750
RIGAUD
Vimy 212
ST. AGATHE
Alhambra 300
Roxy 180
ST. ANNE DE
BELLEVUE
Rex 350
ST. EUSTACHE
Hall 200C1
St. Eustache
ST. GEORGES DE
BEAUCE
St. Georges 250
ST. HYACINTHE
Corona 900
Maska 800
ST. JEROME
Rex 900
ST. JOHNS
Capitol 850
Imperial 700
ST. JOSEPH
Municipal 300
ST. JOSEPH d'ALMA
Alma 300
ST. JULIENNE
Opera House
ST. LAMBERT
Astor 450
Victoria 425
ST. LAURENT
Cinema Modern . .847C1
ST. MARGUERITE
Esterel 200
ST. MARIE
Btllt-vue 100
ST. THERESE
Georges 500
SENNETERRE
Bell 200
SHAWINIGAN FALLS
Auditorium 628
Roxy 500
SHELTER BAY
Hall 150
SHERBROOKE
Cinema de Paris ...400
Granada 1565
Premier 800
SOREL
Eden 500
TEMISKAMING
Crescent 200
TERREBONNE
Hotel de Ville
THETFORD MINES
Bey's Cinema 550
THREE RIVERS
Capitol 1224
Cinema de Paris. . . .730
Rialto 526
Imperial 800
VALLEYFIELD
Bellerive 340
Royal 800
VAL D'OR
Palace 350
Princess 350
VALOIS
Country Club . . . .250C1
VERDON
Park 1189
Fifth Avenue 790
Palace 1150
Savoy 1000
VICTORIAVILLE
Victoria 500
WATERLOO
Starland 150
WINDSOR MILLS
Regent 248C1
Saskatchewan
ARBORFIELD
Rocklin 100
ARCOLA
Princess 225
ASSINIBOIA
Olympia 300
AYLSHAM
Northern Light .... 150
BALCARRES
Arcadia 200
BENGOUGH
Bengough 150
BIENFAIT
Legion 200
BIRCH HILLS
Palace 300
BLAINE LAKE
Blaine Lake 160
BROADVIEW
Broadview 300
BRUNO
Bruno 200
BUCHANAN
Buchanan 160
CABRI
Rex 200C1
CANORA
Royal 275
CARLYLE
Carlyle 125
CLIMAX
Community 150C1
CODETTE
Roxy
CONQUEST
Coliseum 250C1
CRAIK
Pallas 250
CUDWORTH
Cudworth 125C1
CUTKNIFE
Municipal 150C1
DAVIDSON
Davidson 175
DINSMORE
Gaiety 100C1
EAST END
Opera 480
ELFROS
Elfros 125
ESTERHAZY
M. P 150
ESTEVAN
Orpheum 600
ESTON
Opera 200
ETONIA
Franks 175C1
FOAM LAKE
Foam Lake 200
FORT QU'APPELLE
M. P 160
FOX VALLEY
Fox Valley 176CI
FOX WARREN
Fox Warren 150
GOLDEN PRAIRIE
Golden Prairie 100
GOLDFIELDS
Roxy 300
GRAVELBURG
Gravelburg 200
GRENFELL
Windsor 225
GULL LAKE
Lyceum 305
HANLEY
Hanley 150
HERBERT
Herbert 200
HUMBOLDT
Lux 350
IMPERIAL
Montgomery 200
INDIAN HEAD
Auditorium 360
ITUNA
Town Hall 125
KAMSACK
Elite 300
KELLIHER
M. P 100
939
KELVINGTON
Gaiety 150
KENNEDY
Kennedy 200
KERROBERT
Orpheum 200
KINCAID
Kineaid 150
KINDERSLEY
Rex 300
KINISTINO
Marlowe's 400
KIPLING
Kipling: 200
KYLE
Kyle 200
LA FLECHE
Globe 250
LANGENBURO
Capitol 150C1
LANIGAN
Lanigan 150
LASHBURN
Lashburn 175
LEADER
Star 125
LEASK
Mark's Hall 300
LIMERICK
Palace 200C1
LIPTON
M. P 275
LLOYDMINSTER
Empress 450
LUCKY LAKE
Mirror 175C1
LUSELAND
Community 200C1
MACKLIN
Community Hall . . 200C1
MAIDSTONE
Maidstone 250
MAPLE CREEK
Grand 300
MARGO
Margro 135
MEADOW LAKE
Strand 150
MELFORT
Grand 600
MELVILLE
Princess 400
MEYRONXE
Opera 125C1
MILESTONE
Municipnl Hall ....150
MOOSE JAW
Capitol 752
Orpheum 760
Royal 600
Savoy 550C1
MOOSOMIN
Lyric 225C1
MORSE
Morse 150
MOSSBANK
Rose 150C1
NAICAM
Naicam 150
NEILBURG
Community 125C1
NIPAWIN
Orpheum 200
NORQUAY
Norquay 160
NORTH BATTLEFORD
Empress 490
OUTLOOK
Lyric 150C1
OXBOW
Palladium 200
PERDUE
Onyx 300
PLEASATDALE
M. P 160
PONTIEX
Opera 175C1
PREECEVILLE
Preeeeville 150
PRELATE
Prelate
PRINCE ALBERT
Orpheum 600
Strand . ... .1)15
RADfSSON
Community 200C1
RADVILLE
Princess 225
RAPID CITY
M. P 150
RAYMORE
M. P 250
REGINA
Broadway 500C1
Capitol 1329
Metropolitan 998
Grand 947
Rex 600
Roxy 476
RIVERHURST
Hollywood 200
ROSE VALLEY
M. P 150
ROSETOWN
Unique 400
ROSSTHERN
Orpheum 250
SASKATOON
Capitol 1600
Daylig-ht 900
Ritz 316
Roxy 900
Tivoli 750
SCEPTRE
Palace 100
SEMANS
Coliseum 200
SHAUNAVON
Plaza 400
SHILLBROOK
Shillbrook 270
SIMPSON
Victoria 125
SPALDING
Spalding- 175
SPEERS
Scott Hall 140
SPIRITWOOD
Hall 125
STAR CITY
Roxy 200C1
STURGIS
M. P 100
SWIFT CURRENT
Eagle 600
Lyric 350
TISDALE
Falcon 400
TUGASKE
M. P 125
UNITY
Star 350
VISCOUNT
Viscount 200
WADENA
G. W. V. A 200
WAPALLA
M. P 170
WASKADA
Brenda 250C1
WATROUS
Roxy 225
WATSON
Watson 200
WELDON
M. P 150
WEYBURN
Hi Art 480
WHITE FOX
White Fox 200
WHITEWOOD
Rex 150
WILKIE
Roxy 300
WILLOWBUNCH
Palace 150
WINNIPEGOSIS
Rex 200
WOLSELEY
Savoy 200
YORKTON
Roxy 800
Princess 226C1
940
NEGRO THEATERS
A list of motion picture theaters catering to Negro patronage,
compiled by the Motion Picture Division of the
U. S. Department of Commerce.
M-
ALABAMA
BESSEMER: Frolic; BIRMINGHAM: Champion,
Famous, Grand; CAMDEN: Lincoln; ENSLEY:
Palace: GADSDEN: Gem; GREENVILLE: Palace;
HOT SPRINGS: Star: HUNTSVILLE : Princess;
MOBILE: Pike, Lincoln: MONTGOMERY: Pekin,
Ritz; OPELIKA: Ga-Ala; TUSKEGEE: Macon;
TUSCALOOSA: Diamond.
ARKANSAS
HELENA: Plaza; LITTLE ROCK: Gem; PINE-
BLUFF: Vester.
CALIFORNIA
LOS ANGELES: Lincoln, Florence Mills, Savoy,
Rosebud, Bill Robinson, Largo; OAKLAND: Lin-
coln.
tral. Plaza; WEST PALM BEACH: Grand;
QUINCY: Roxy; LAKELAND: Roxy; COCOANUT
GROVE: News.
GEORGIA
ATLANTA: Ashby, Lincoln, Royal, Pictorial,
Lenox, Harlem, Strand, 81; COLUMBUS: Dixie.
Liberty: DECATUR: Ritz: GAINESVILLE: Rex;
GRIFFIN: Lincoln; LA GRANGE: Princess; MA-
CON: Douglas, Pic; SAVANNAH: Dunbar, Star;
THOMASVILLE : Ritz.
ILLINOIS
CAIRO: Opera House; CHICAGO: Appollo, Av-
enue, Globe, Grand, Louis, Joy, Irving, Metro-
politan, Michigan, Imperial, N. R. A., Owl, Park.
Public, Regal, States, Indiana, Willard; EAST ST
LOUIS: Deluxe, Broadway.
COLORADO
DENVER: Roxy.
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
WASHINGTON: Alamo. Booker T, Broadway,
Dunbar, Howard, Jewel, Lincoln, Mid-City, Mott,
Raphael, Republic, Rosalia, Strand.
FLORIDA
BARTOW: Harlem; BELLE GLADE: Golden
Nugget; BRADENTON: Lincoln; CLEAR-
WATER: Dixie; CLEWISTON: Lincoln, Harlem:
CROSS CITY: Palace; DAYTONA BEACH: Ritz;
DELAND: Washington: DELRAY BEACH: Del-
ray; FORT LAUDERDALE: Palace: FORT MYER:
Grand: FORT PIERCE: Grand: GAINESVILLE:
Lincoln; JACKSONVILLE: Frolic, Ritz, Strand;
LAKE WALES: Delia Roba; MIAMI: Harlem,
Lyric, Ritz, Modern, Ace: OCALA: West Side;
ORLANDO: Lincoln; PALMETTO: Rex; POM-
PANO: Pompano; PAHOKEE: Prince, Ace, Golden
Nugget; ST. PETERSBURG: Harlem; TALLA-
HASSEE: Capitol. A & M College; TAMPA: Cen-
IN DIANA
GARY: Roosevelt; INDIANAPOLIS: Douglas,
Indiana, Lido, Regal, Walker.
KANSAS
KANSAS CITY: Princess, Regal; TOPEKA :
Ritz.
KENTUCKY
LOUISVILLE: Dixie, Grand, Palace, Lyric.
LOUISIANA
ALEXANDRIA: Ritz; BATON ROUGE: McKin-
ley. Temple; LAFAYETTE: Liberty: LAKE
CHARLES: Palace, Louisianne; MONROE: Ritz:
NEW ROADS: Alamo; NEW ORLEANS: Lincoln,
Jolly, Ritz. Ace, Palace; SCOTTLANDVILLE :
Cook's: SHREVEPORT: Star: TALLULAH: Bai-
ley; THIBODAUX: Harlem.
941
MARYLAND
OHIO
ANNAPOLIS: Booker T, Star; BALTIMORE:
Booker T, Carey, Diane, Dunbar, Fremont, Gold-
field, Harlem, Lafayette, Lenox, Lincoln, Regal,
Regent, Roosevelt .Royal, Star; BARTON: New.
MICHIGAN
DETROIT: Arcade, Castle, Catherine, Dunbar,
Echo, Russell, Farfield, Willis, Grand.
MISSISSIPPI
BELZONI: Harlem: BROOKHAVEN: Rex; CAN-
TON: Harlem; CLARKSDALE: Savoy; ELECTRIC
MILLS: Washington; GREENWOOD: Dixie;
GREENVILLE: Harlem, Lincoln; HATTIESBURG:
Dixie; INDIANOLA: Dixie; JACKSON: Alamo,
Booker T; LAUREL: Lincoln; LELAND: Pix;
McCOMB: Lyric; MERIDIAN: Star; TUNICA:
Savoy; GRENADA: Gem.
MISSOURI
KANSAS CITY: Castle, Gem, Lincoln; ST.
JOSEPH: Louis: ST. LOUIS: Amytis. Douglass,
Strand, Roosevelt, Star, Globe, Criterion, Regal.
New Movie.
NEBRASKA
OMAHA: Ritz.
NEW JERSEY
NEWARK: Court, Essex, Garden, Lyric, Luxor,
National, Station, Montecello; ATLANTIC CITY:
Alan. Earle; TRENTON: New Lincoln.
NEW YORK
BRONX: Bronx. Willis; BROOKLYN: Appollo.
Art, Brevoort, Howard, Kismet, New United,
Peerless, Regent, State. Subway, Summer, Tomp-
kins. Capitol; BUFFALO: Plaza; NEW YORK
CITY: Alhambra, Appollo, Blue Bird. Columbia.
Deluxe, Franklin, Lafayette, Harlem, Opera House.
Park West, Renaissance, Roosevelt, Lincoln, Vic-
toria, Washington, Sunset, Odeon, Regent, Jewel,
Orient. Morningside, Chatham; SOUTH JAMAICA.
L. I.: Plaza.
NORTH CAROLINA
ASHEVILLE: Eagle. Booker T., Princess; BEAU-
FORT: Sea Breeze; CHAPEL HILL: Standard:
CHARLOTTE: Lincoln, Grand; DURHAM: Regal;
ELIZABETH CITY: Gaiety: GREENSBORO: Pal-
ace; KINSTON: State; NEW BERN: Palace;
RALEIGH: Royal: REIDSVILLE: Penn, New
Colored; ROCKY MOUNT: Booker T; WILSON:
Ritz: WINSTON-SALEM: Lincoln, Roosevelt.
CINCINNATI: Beecher. Dixie, Lincoln, Pekin.
Roosevelt; CLEVELAND: Cedar, Erie, Globe. Halt-
north, Grand-Central, Quincy. Temple: COLUMBUS:
Empress. Ogden, Pythian: DAYTON: Classic:
LOCKLAND: Dunbar; SPRINGFIELD: Southern.
OKLAHOMA
ARDMORE: Jewel; BOLEY: Yale; MUSKOGEE:
Grand: OKLAHOMA CITY: Aldridge, Jewel:
TULSA: Dreamland, Dixie, Rex.
PENNSYLVANIA
BLAIR STATION: Park; CHESTER: Rio: PHIL-
ADELPHIA: Dixie, Nixon Grand, Forrest, Royal.
Pearl, Joy. Douglas, Strand. New Garden, Standard.
Rex, Globe; McALESTER: Edwards; PITTS-
BURGH: Park, New Granada, Triangle. Rhumba:
WEWOKA: Pittman.
SOUTH CAROLINA
AIKEN: New Colored: BENNETTSVILLE : Pal-
ace; CHARLESTON: Lincoln; COLUMBIA: Royal.
Capitol; GREENVILLE: Liberty; FLORENCE:
Lincoln: SPARTANBURG: Union; SUMTER:
Lyric.
TENNESSEE
BROWNSVILLE : New; CHATTANOOGA:
Amuse. New Grand; KNOXVILLE: Gem: MEM-
PHIS: Ace, Daisy, Grand, Harlem. Palace. Savoy:
NASHVILLE: Bijou, Ritz, Ace.
TEXAS
AUSTIN: Harlem; BEAUMONT: Gem; CAM-
DEN: Harlem: DALLAS: Century, Harlem, State;
FORT WORTH: Grand, Ritz; GALVESTON: Dixie
No. 3; GREENVILLE: Grand: HOUSTON: Lincoln.
Lyons, Pastime, Park, Roxy, Rainbow: LUFKIN:
Lincoln; NACOGDOCHES: Glenn; PARIS: Alham-
bra, Dixie; PORT ARTHUR: Lincoln, Dreamland:
PRAIRIE VIEW COLLEGE: Auditorium: TAY-
LOR : Dixie Airdrome: TEXARKANA: Palace
TYLER: Palace; WACO: Gem.
VIRGINIA
ACCOMAC: Booker T; ALEXANDRIA: Capitol:
BERKLEY: Lincoln; HAMPTON: Lyric: NEW-
PORT NEWS: Jefferson, Dixie: NORFOLK: Booker
T. Manhattan, Regal; PETERSBURG: Barney's,
Idle Hour, State; PORTSMOUTH: Capitol; RICH-
MOND: Booker T, Globe, Hippodrome, Lincoln,
Robinson, Walker; ROANOKE: Virginian: SUF-
FOLK: Broadway; WILLIAMSBURG: Appollo.
WEST VIRGINIA
CHARLESTON: Ferguson; HUNTINGTON: Fox:
LAREDO: Laredo: WHEELING: Temple.
CIRCUITS
In the United States and Canada
Operating Four or More Theaters
Arranged Alphabetically
Mil I I. THEATER CO.
'ZOSys S. Central Ave., Marshfield, Wise.
President-Gen'l Mgr J. P. Adler
Film Buyer John A. Ludwig
THEATERS (9) :
Wisconsin. MARSHFIELD: Adler. New Adler.
Relda; MILWAUKEE: Roosevelt; NEILLSVILLE:
Adler. Armory; MERRILL: New Badger; WAU-
PACA: Adler's Waupaca, Adler's Palace.
AFFILIATED THEATERS CORP.
Common St., New Orleans, La.
THEATERS (40) :
Louisiana, BOGALUSA: State, Redwood: COV-
INGTON: Majestic; CROWLEY: Arcadia: DON-
ALDSONVILLE: Grand: EUNICE: Liberty:
BlRANKLIN : Opera House: HAMMOND: Colum-
bia: HOUMA: Grand; JEANERETTE : Avalon;
JENNINGS: Strand; LAFAYETTE: Jefferson.
Buck; LAKE CHARLES: Arcade. Paramount.
Ritz, Louisianne: MINDEN: Rex; NEW IBERIA:
Palace; OPELOUSAS: Delta, Rex; PLAQUEMINE:
Wilbert: RAYNE: Opera House: RESERVE:
Maurin's; RUSTON: Rialto: THIBODAUX: Grand.
Baby Grand.
Mississippi, BAY ST. LOUIS: A & G: BROOK-
HAVEN: Arcade: CANTON: Canton: COLUM-
BIA: Marion. Columbia: McCOMB: State, Strand;
PASCAGOULA: Nelson: TYLERTOWN: Avenue;
WAYNESBORO: Princess; LAUREL: Arabian.
Strand, Jean.
AFFILIATED THEATERS, INC.
Capitol Theater Rldg., Sioux City, la.
THEATERS (6) :
Iowa. SIOUX CITY: Granada, Iowa, Hipp,
Loop. Princess, Rialto.
AFFILIATED THEATERS CIRCUIT, INC.
2713 Gcrmantown Ave., Philadelphia, Pa.
President David E. Milgram
Treasurer Raymond Schwartz
Secretary Cecil M. Felt
THEATERS (10) :
New Jersey, ATLANTIC CITY: Alan.
Pennsylvania, PHILADELPHIA: Avenue, How-
ard, Eagle. Star. Rialto, Temple. Walton, Frolic,
Adelphi, Allen Bluebird, Casino, Strand, Lorraine;
WEST CHESTER: Garden.
AL-DUN AMUSEMENT CO.
West Point, Ga.
President
.L. J. Duncan
THEATERS (9) :
Listed in three groups.
Al-Duii Amusement Co.
Alabama, LANETT: Lanett: SHAWMUT: Shaw
mut; LANGDALE: Langdale; FAIRFAX: Fair-
fax; RIVERVIEW: Riverdale.
Georgia, WEST POINT: Riviera.
Ra-ltun Amusement Co.
Georgia, CLAYTON: Rabun.
North Carolina, FRANKLIN : Macon.
Central Amusement Co.
Georgia, BARNESVILLE: Ritz.
ALGER THEATRES
225 Gooding St., La Salle, 111.
President E. E. Alger
Vice-President H. R. Alger
Secretary A. I. Klein
Booker R. N. Hurt
THEATERS (13) :
Listed in three groups.
Alger Theaters
Illinois, CHAMPAIGN: Park; MENDOTA :
State; PRINCETON: Apollo, State; ROCHELLE:
Hub; SPRING VALLEY: Valley; URBANA: Albro.
Princess.
L. and P. Theaters
President E. E. Alger
Vice-President J. J. Rubens
Secretary A. I. Klein
Illinois, LA SALLE: La Salle, Majestic; PERU:
Peru. Star.
Campus Theater Corp.
Illinois, CHAMPAIGN: Coed.
ALLIANCE THEATER CORP.
220 S. State St., Chicago, 111.
General Manager-Film Buyer S. J. Gregory
THEATERS (27) :
Illinois, MARSEILLES: Ritz, Mars; OTTAWA:
Illinois, Orpheum, Roxy.
Indiana, ANDERSON: State; DELPHI: Roxy;
FRANKFORT: Clinton. Ritz. Roxy; KOKOMO:
Indiana, Isis, Sipe, Fox; LOGANSPORT: Roxy,
Paramount, State; MARION: Indiana, Lyric.
Paramount; PERU: Ritz, Roxy, Wallace.
Wisconsin, FOND DU LAC: Fond du Lac,
Garrick, Retlaw; OSHKOSH: Grand.
ALLIED THEATERS OF ILLINOIS, INC.
1325 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago, 111.
THEATERS (15) :
Illinois, CHICAGO: Adelphi, Alex, Armitage,
Avenue, Bell, Bryn Mawr, Century, Gold. Jackson
Park, Lake Shore, Lexington, Madlin, Twentieth
Century, Villa; HIGHLAND PARK: Alcyon.
ALLISON, R.
Rivoli Theater, Cresson, Pa.
THEATERS (9) :
Pennsylvania, ALTOONA: Rivoli; BEAVER-
DALE: Rivoli; COLVER: Rivoli; CRESSON:
Rivoli; EBENSBURG: Rivoli; HASTINGS: Holly-
wood; JOHNSTOWN: Hollywood; PORTAGE:
Rivoli; SOUTH FORK: Rivoli.
ALPINE THEATER CIRCUIT
Kingwood, W. Va.
Manager Charles A. Anderson
Contract Manager-Broker C. B. Kosco
THEATERS (26) :
Listed in eight groups.
Alpine Theater Circuit, Inc.
West Virginia, KINGWOOD: Alpine; MARLIN-
TON: Alpine, Rex; SALEM: Alpine: TERRA
ALTA: Alpine.
Community Theater Co., Inc.
West Virginia, WELLSBURG: Alpine. Star.
943
Alpine Eastern Theaters, Inc.
West Virginia, PETERSBURG: Alpine; RO
MENY: Alpine.
Alpine Allieil Theaters, Inc.
Ohio, SALINEVILLE: Alpine.
Pennsylvania, NEW BRIGHTON: Alpine; WEST-
VIEW: Gerard.
West Virginia, CHESTER: Alpine: EAST
RAINELLE: Alpine: ESKDALE: Eskdale; GAS-
SAWAY: Alpine; HUNDRED: Alpine; RAVENS-
WOOD: Alpine: RIPLEY: Alpine: SOUTH
CHARLESTON: Mound.
Auditorium Theater Co.
West Virginia, RICHWOOD: Auditorium.
Anderson & Urling
West Virginia, BARBOURSVILLE : Alpine:
POINT PLEASANT: Alpine.
Charles Anderson
West Virginia, RIVESVILLE: Alpine.
New Kex Theater Co.
Ohio, STEUBEN VILLE : Rex.
ALTOONA PCBLIX THEATERS, INC.
1101 Eleventh Ave., Altoona, Pa.
President A. N. Notopoulos
General Manager C. A. Notopoulos
THEATERS (15):
Maryland. CUMBERLAND: Strand.
Pennsylvania, ALIQUIPPA: Rialto, Temple:
State. Strand: ALTOONA: Capitol. Mishler. Olvm-
pic, Perm: AMBRIDGE: Penn: BUTLER: Capitol.
Penn; CONNELLSVILLE : Orpheum; HUNTING-
TON: Grand; JOHNSTOWN: Strand.
AMUSEMENT ENTERPRISES. INC.
Princess Theater. Albertvillc, Ala.
Pres.-Gen'l Mgr.-Film Buyer Thomas E. Orr
THEATERS (9) :
Alabama, ALBERTVILLE: Carol. Princess:
ATALLA: Liberty: BOAZ: Rialto: FORT PAYNE:
DeKalb, Strand: GUNTERSVILLE : Palace, Ritz.
Georgia, TALLAPOOSA: Grand.
ANDERSON THEATER CIRCUIT
118 E. Jefferson St., Morris. III.
Owner Fred W. Anderson
Booker and Buyer Roland Viner
THEATERS (9) :
Illinois, COAL CITY: Rialto: DE KALB: Fartrn
Egyptian: MANTENO: Darb: MORRIS: Morris-
N A PER VILLE : Naper; ST. CHARLES: Arcadia;
WILMINGTON: Wilton; WOODSTOCK: Miller.
ANDEKSON THEATER COMPANY
Dillon. S. C.
THEATERS (9) :
Listed in three groups.
H. H. Anderson Theaters
South Carolina, BENNETTSVILLE : Carolina;
DILLON: Dillon.
B. It. & H. H. Anderson Theaters
North Carolina, HAMLET: Hamlet; LUM-
BERTON: Carolina.
South Carolina. McCOLL: Broadway.
It. It. Anderson Theaters
South Carolina, HEMINGWAY: Anderson:
KINGSTREE: Carolina; MARION: Rainbow;
MULLINS: Anderson.
ARKANSAS AMUSEMENT CORP.
( Paramount Partner)
Pulaski Theater, Little Rock. Ark.
President Edward H. Rowley
Secretary H. B. Robb
THEATERS (8) :
Arkansas, LITTLE ROCK: Capitol, Pulaski.
Royal, Arkansas, New, Roxy, Prospect, Lee.
ASSOCIATED AMUSEMENT CO.
10'il E. Franklin Ave, Minneapolis, Minn.
Manager O. C. Woempner
THEATERS (16) :
Minnesota, HUTCHINSON: Rex, State; MIN-
NEAPOLIS: Avalon. Boulevard. Chateau. Frank-
lin, LaSalle, Lyndale, Park: OWATONNA: State,
Tonna, Roxy: ST. PAUL: Randolph. West Twins:
WILLMAR: State, Willmar.
ASSOCIATED THEATERS
3rd Floor, Film Exchange Bldg.,
JJlst & Payne Ave., Cleveland, O.
President John D. Kalnfat
General Manager & V. P Meyer S. Fine
Secretary-Treasurer John M. Urbansky
THEATERS N22) :
Ohio, CLEVELAND: Capitol. Denison Square.
Five Points. Garden. Jewel. Jennings. Knicker-
bocker, Imperial. Homestead. Sh.-iw-Hayden. Union
Square. Rialto, Windameer, Sunbeam, Plaza. Hil-
lard Square. Liberty, Doan, Detroit, Lorain-Fulton.
Memphis.
ASSOCIATED THEATERS
617 Keith Bldg., Cincinnati, 0.
President Frank W. Huss. Jr.
Vice-President Louise H. Huss
Secretary J. Carlin
THEATERS (7):
Ohio, CINCINNATI: Americus. Dixie. Highland.
Imperial, Park, Rex. Royal.
ASSOCIATED THEATERS. INC.
1338 Dime Bank Bldg., Detroit. Mich.
Officers: — Alex Schreiber. Harold Smilay, William
A. London.
THEATERS (9) :
Michigan, DETROIT: Center. Loop. Highland-
Park; FLINT: Nortown. Rialto: TRENTON:
Trenton; WYANDOTTE: Majestic, Rialto, Wyan-
dotte.
ATLANTIC THEATERS. INC.
1204 Schaft Bldg.. Philadelphia. Pa.
President-Treasurer Ben Amsterdam
THEATERS (11):
New Jersey, BEVERLY: Bever-Lee: BORDEN-
TOWN: Fox: BRIOGK TON : Stanley: BURLING-
TON: Fox: MOORESTOWN: Criterion: MT. HOL-
LY: Fox: PENNS GROVE: Broad: RIVERSIDE:
Fox: SWEDESBORO: Embassy; WOODBURY:
Rialto, Wood.
ATLAS THEATER CORP.
2lfi.r) Broadway, Denver, Colo.
President C. U. Yaeger
Vice President Dave Davis
THEATERS (11):
Colorado, BRIGHTON: REX: DENVER: Jewell.
Santa Fe: ENGLEWOOD: Gothic. Pioneer:
GOLDEN: Gem: LAMAR: Isis. Pioneer: MONTE
VISTA: Granada; SALIDA: Isis. Salida.
BACH THEATERS
138% Whitehall St., S. W.. Atlanta. Ga.
President Mrs. L. S. Bach
Assistant to President E. B. Kantor
THEATERS (6) :
Georgia. ATLANTA: Alpha. American. Bank
head. Center, Hilan, Ponce de Leon.
1$ A Ell It BROS.
Baehr Bldg., Bemidji, Minn.
Partners E. J. Baehr, A. W. Baehr
THEATERS (11):
Minnesota. ALEXANDRIA: Andria: BRAIN-
ERD: Brainerd: BEMIDJI: Bemidji: BRECKEN-
RIDGE: Ridge; ELY: Ely: INTERNATIONAL
FALLS: Border. Falls: PARK RAPIDS: Park:
THIEF RIVER FALLS: Avalon, Falls.
North Dakota, WAHPETON: Valley.
BALABAN & KATZ CORP.
(97 per cent controlled by Paramount Pictures.
Inc.!
175 N. State St., Chicago, 111.
President Barney Balaban
Vice-President Y. Frank Freeman
Vice-President Waller Immerman
Secretary-Treasurer John Balaban
Ass't Secretary-Treasurer Elmer C. Upton
Film Buyer A. J. Kaufman
THEATERS (45) :
Illinois, CHICAGO: Belmont, Belpark. Berwyn
Biltmore. Central Park. Chicago. Congress. Covent.
Crystal, Gateway, Harding, LaGrange, Alba.
Manor, Maryland, Pantheon, Paradise, United
Artists, Norshore, Senate, Roosevelt, Tower, Up
town. Riviera, Century, Granada. Marbro. State.
Northtown, Southtown, Regal, Terminal, Garrick.
944
Apollo, Lakeside, Tivoli, Will Rogers, Cine. Iris,
Luna: DOWNERS GROVE: Tivoli: EVANSTON:
Coronet, Valencia, Varsity; LA GRANGE: Park.
BALABAN. HARRY, THEATERS
1!)0 N. State St., Chicago, III.
President Harry Bnlahan
Vice-President Elmer Bnlahan
Treasurer D. F. Quinn
THEATERS (II):
Illinois, CHICAGO: Commercial, E. A. R.. Es-
quire, Joy. Dale. Windsor: DES PLAINES: Des
Plaines. Echo: PARK RIDGE: Pickwick, Ridge.
Michigan, DETROIT: Adams.
BAROVIC, MIKE, THEATERS
900 Pacific Ave., Tacoma, Wash.
Owner-General Manager Mike Barovic
THEATERS (5) :
Washington. PUYALLtTP: Liberty. Roxy;
SUMNER: Riviera; TACOMA: Beverly, Riviera.
BASIL BROS. THEATERS
1(>00 Genesee St., Buffalo, N. Y.
General Manager Nicholas J. Basil
THEATERS (19):
Listed in two groups.
Basil Bros. Theaters
New lurk, HLFFALO: Genesee. Strand, Varsity.
Jefferson, Vctoria, Broadway, Liberty, Roxy;
NIAGARA FALLS' Rainbo, State. LaSalle.
Dipson-Basil Theaters
New York. BUFFALO : Bailey. 20th Century;
LACKAWANNA: Franklin. Hollywood, Park,
Ridge; TON A WANDA: Riviera, Star.
BELLE THEATERS. INC.
1050 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
President Benjamin Sherman
Vice-President Charles Steiner
Treasurer Max A. Cohen
THEATERS (9) :
New York, NEW YORK: Clinton. New Delan-
cy, Palestine, Bijou, Star, Harlem-Grand, Jewel,
Regun. Palace.
BENEFIELD. B. J.
Strand Theater. Morris. Minn.
THEATERS (8):
Minnesota. BEARDSLEY: Star: CLINTON: Clin-
ton Opera House: ELBAU LAKE: Crystal: GLEN-
WOOD : Opera House: GRACEVILLE : Grand;
HANCOCK: Hancock: MORRIS: Orpheum. Strand.
BENNETT THEATER CIRCUIT
Bennett Theater, Auburn, Neb.
Owners O. R. Bennett
THEATRES (4):
Nebraska, AUBURN: Bennett: BROWNS-
VILLE: Opera House; NEMAHA: Opera House;
TALMADGE: Lyric.
BENTON, WILLIAM, CIRCUIT
IKS Broadway, Saratoga, N. Y.
President-General Manager William Benton
THEATERS (8) :
New York, BALLSTON: Capitol: GRANVILLE:
Ritz; MECHANICSVILLE: State: PLATTSBURG:
Champlain. Strand: SARATOGA: Community,
Congress; WHITEHALL: Capitol.
BERGER AMUSEMENT CO.
507 Pence Bhlg., Minneapolis, Minn.
President Bennie Berger
THEATERS (12):
Minnesota, BEMID.II: Elko. Chief: BRAIN-
ERD: Paramount, Palace; FERGUS FALLS
Lyric: HASTINGS: Riviera State; JAMESTOWN
State: MINNEAPOLIS: Paradise; ST. PAUL
World: SAUK CENTRE: Oxford; ST. PETER
Ludcke. State.
BERINSTEIN. WILLIAM, THEATERS
319 Realty BIdg., Elinira, N. Y.
General Managers. . . .H. L. & B. M. Berinstein
THEATERS (5) :
New York, ALBANY: Colonial; ITHACA: Cres-
oent, State, Strand. Temple.
BERNHEIMER, LOUIS. THEATERS
18th & Newton St.. N. E., Washington, D. C.
THEATERS (4) :
District of Columbia, WASHINGTON: Newton.
Jesse. Sylvan.
Virginia, DEL RAY: Palm.
BI.IOU AMUSEMENT CO.
423 Fourth Ave. N., Nashville, Teiin.
President Milton Starr.
Gen'l. Mgr.-Film Buyer Evans Sprott
THEATERS (37):
Arkansas. LITTLE ROCK: Gem.
Florida, PENSACOLA: Ritz.
Georgia. AUGUSTA: Lenox; MACON: Doug-
lass: SAVANNAH: Dunbar.
Kentucky. LOUISVILLE: Dixie.
Louisiana, ALEXANDRIA: Ritz; BATON
ROUGE: Grand. McKinley, Temple: MONROE:
Ritz: NEW ORLEANS: Ace, Palace, Ritz;
SHREVEPORT: Ritz, Star.
North Carolina, ASHEVILLE: Eagle: CHAR-
LOTTE: Lincoln, Savoy; DURHAM: Regal. Won-
derland RALEIGH: Royal: WILMINGTON: Ritz;
WINSTON SALEM: Lincoln.
Oklahoma, OKLAHOMA CITY: Aldridge: TUL-
SA: Rex.
South Carolina, CHARLESTON: Lincoln; CO-
LUMBIA: Capitol: GREENVILLE: Liberty:
SPARTANBURG: Union.
Tennessee. KNOX VTLLE : Gem: NASHVILLE:
Ace. Bijou. Gem. Lincoln, Ritz.
Texas, FORT WORTH: Ritz; HOUSTON: Lin
coin.
BLACK HILLS AMUSEMENT CO.
799 Main St.. Deailwooil, S. D.
President Leo Bertolero
General Manager John Bertolero
Film Buyer Charles Klein
THEATERS (10) :
Nehraska. CHADRON : Pace: GORDON: Pace.
South Dakota, BELLE FOURCHE: Belle:
DEADWOOD: Deadwood. Isis: HOT SPRINGS:
Hot Springs: LEAD: Homestake: RAPID CITY:
Elks. Rex; STURGIS: Majestic.
BLAND BROS.
1018 S. Wabash Ave.. Chicago, 111.
THEATERS (7) :
Illinois, CHICAGO: Calo, Oak. Olympia, Radio,
Rogers. Rosco, Temple.
BLATT BROS. CIRCUIT
Grand Theater. Patton, Pa.
THEATERS (17) :
Pennsylvania, AUSTIN: Community: BERLIN:
Blue Ridge: CORRY: Rex: EAST BRADY: Slate;
GIRARD: Denman : GREENSVILLE: Main. Mer-
cer Square: MERCER: Liberty: NEW BETHLE-
HEM : Arcadia: PATTON: Grand; PORT ALLE-
GHENY: Grand: RAMEY: Pastime: ROARING
SPRINGS: Roaring Springs: SOMERSET: Gov-
ernor, Par-K; YOUNGSVILLE : State; YOUNG-
WOOD: Pearl.
BLUMENFELD THEATER CIRCUIT
25 Taylor St., San Francisco, Calif.
General Manager Joe Blumenfeld
THEATERS (17) :
California, BERKELEY: Berkeley. Oaks: EL
CERRITO: Cerrito: MILL VALLEY: Sequoia;
NORTH SACRAMENTO: Del Paso; SAN AN
SELMO: Tamnlpnis: SAN RAFAEL: El Camino.
Rafael: OAKLAND: Esquire. Franklin, Roxie;
SACRAMENTO: Esquire. Sierra. Tower; SAN
FRANCISCO: Vogue; STOCKTON: Sierra; SAU-
SALITO: Gate.
BOLTE CIRCUIT
4212 White Plains Ave., Bronx, N. Y.
Representative John C. Bolte
THEATERS (5) :
New York, NEW YORK (Bronx) : B-B (closed).
Burke, Laconia. Wakefield; YONKERS: Kimball.
BOYD. A. R.. ENTERPRISES, INC.
1001 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa.
President A. R. Boyd
945
Vice-President Frank W. Buhler
Secretary-Treasurer Louis N. Goldsmith
THEATERS (8) :
Pennsylvania, ALLENTOWN: Bovd. Strand
BETHLEHEM: Boyd. Globe: LANCASTER:
Colonial: EASTON: Boyd: CHESTER: Boyd:
YORK: York.
KKANDS, PAUL
Brighton Theater, Brighton, III.
THEATERS («) :
Portable :
Illinois. IiETHALTO: Bethalto: BRIGHTON:
Brighton; grafton : Gem: kampsville:
Kampsville; palmyra: star: Raymond: Com
munity.
BRANDT THEATERS
15/55 Broadway, New York. N. V.
President Harry Brandt
THEATERS (80) :
Connecticut. STAMFORD- Plaza.
New Jersey, JERSEY CITY: Bergen: NEWARK:
Broad, Congress. Essex, Rialto: PATERSON: Gar-
den. State: TENAFLY: New Berger.
Itialto. PATERSON: Garden State.
New York. NEW YORK — Manhattan: Alrlen.
Apollo, Audubon. Bedford. Beverly, Central. Cen-
tury. Clifton. Colony, Continental. Decatur. El
tinge. Eafrle. Gaiety. Globe, Greenwich. Liberty.
Monroe, New Yorker. Normandie. Park. Park-
Lane. Rex. Ritz. Republic, Schuyler. Selwyn. Ter-
race. Times Square, Town. Tudor. Waldorf
Windsor: NEW YORK — Brooklyn: Carlton. Colony.
Duffleld, Electra, Empire. Flatbueh, Garden. Globe,
Halsey. Jewel. Lakeland. Midway. Rivoli. Rogers.
Sanders, Sheldon, Shubert, Star, Sutter,
Towne, Werba's, Willoughby. Wvckoff: LONG
ISLAND — BAYSIDE: Bayside ; FAR ROCKA WAY :
Fa ire: FOREST HILLS: In wood: JACKSON
HEIGHTS: Colony, Earle; JAMAICA: Carlton
MIDDLE VILLAGE: Arinn: REGO PARK: Drake:
NEW YORK STATE — DOBBS FERRY: Embassy
MOt'NT VERNON: Embassy: NEW ROCHELLE:
Alden: POUGHKEEPSIE: Liberty, Playhousi
WHITE PLAINS: Colony; Y'ONKERS: Central.
BK.UJNS & THOMAS CORP.
Iron Mountain, Mich.
General Manager M. D. Thomap
THEATERS (B) :
Michigan, BREITUNG: Capital: HANCOCK:
Kerredge. Orpheum: IRONWOOD: Ironwood.
Morgan. Rex.
BRECHEK, LEO, THEATERS
K. 58th St., New York, N. Y.
President Leo Breirher
THEATERS (10):
New York. NEW YORK: Harlem Opera Hou«e
Lafayette. Little Carnegie. Odeon. Plaza. Renais-
sance. (18th St. Playhouse. Pclham Picture House
Lincoln, Apollo (125th St.).
BROTMAN, M. B. & A.
Paradise Theater, Moline, III.
THEATERS (5) :
Illinois. FULTON: Royal: MOLINE: Paradise.
Roxy: ROCK ISLAND: Rialto. Ritz.
BROWARSKY. HARRY anil IKE
Hippodrome Theater. Pittsburgh, Pa.
THEATERS (4):
Pennsylvania, BELLEVUE: Bellevue. New Lin
den: PITTSBURGH: Beaver. Hippodrome.
BROWN ENTERPRISES
2070 Penobscot Bldg., Detroit, Mich.
President Samuel Bhjwd
Vice-President Dora Brown
General Manager E. J. Bonnville
THEATERS (6) :
Michigan. DETROIT: Ambassador. Astor. Bel-
mont. Dexter, Fenkell. Woodward-Grand.
BUFFALO THEATERS. INC.
«4G Main St., Buffalo, N. Y.
General Manager Vincent R. McFaul
THEATERS (13):
New York, BUFFALO: Shea's Buffalo. Shea's
Elmwood. Shea's Great Lakes. Shea's Hippodrome.
Shea's Kensington. Shea's Niagara. Shea's North
Park. Shea's Roosevelt, Shea's Seneca, Shea's Court
Street: KENMORE: Shea's Kenmore; LACKA-
WANNA: Shea's Lackawanna; NIAGARA FALLS:
Shea's Bellevue.
BUMSTEAD, CHARLES
2725 W. 25th St., Denver, Colo.
THEATERS (4) :
Portable:
Colorado. CENTRAL CITY: Novelty: HAYDEN:
Crystal: MOUNT HARRIS: Liberty.
Wyoming. DIXON: Harris Hall.
BUTTERFIELD THEATERS
(Affiliated with Paramount-Publix and Radio-
Keith-Orpheum)
1942 National Bank Bldg., Detroit, Mich.
President and Treasurer E. C. Beatty
Vice-President E. C. Shields
Secretary L. E. Gordon
THEATERS (105) :
Theaters are listed in two groups:
W. 8. Butterfleld Theaters, Inc.
Michigan. ALLEGAN: Regent: ANN ARBOR
Majestic. Michigan, Orpheum, Whitney, Wuerth
BATTLE CREEK: Bijou, Post. Regent. Strand:
BAY CITY: Bay. Center. Regent, Westown :
FLINT: Capitol. Garden. Palace. Regent; GRAND
HAVEN: Grand. Robinhood; GRAND RAPIDS:
Center, Eastown. Four Star, Keith's, Kent, Ma-
jestic. Our. Regent, Royal. Wealthy; GREEN-
VILLE: Silver: HILLSDALE: Alhambra. Dawn:
HOLLAND: Colonial, Holland. Strand; IONIA:
Ionia, Orpheum: JACKSON: Capitol. Majestic.
Michigan. Regent, Rex; KALAMAZOO: Capitol,
Fuller, Michigan, State, Uptown; LANSING: Cap-
itol, Gladmer. Lansing, Strand; EAST LANSING:
State; MONROE: Dixie. Family. Monroe: MUSKE-
GON: Michigan. Regent. State: NILES: Ready.
Riviera: NORTH LANSING: Northtown: OWOSSO:
Capitol. Center, Strand; PONTIAC: Eagle. Oak-
land. Orpheum. Rialto. State. Strand: PORT
HURON: Desmond. Family. Majestic: SAGINAW
Center. Franklin. Mecca-Palace. Strand, Temple,
Wolverine: SOUTH HAVEN: Center, Model: YPSI
LANTI: Martha Washington. Wuerth.
Butterfield Michigan Theaters Co.
Michigan, ADRIAN: Croswell. Family: AL-
PENA: Lyric. Maltz; BENTON HARBOR: Lake.
Liberty; BIG RAPIDS: Big Rapids; CADILLAC:
Center, Lyric; LUDINGTON: Lyric. Kozy; MAN
ISTEE: Lyric. Ransdell. Vogue: ST. JOSEPH:
Caldwell: STURGIS: Roxy. Strand; THREE RIV-
ERS: Rialto, Riviera; TRAVERSE CITY: Lyric.
Tra-Bay.
C. & F. THEATER CO.
CO Union St., Providence, R. I.
President Frank C. Walker
General Manager-Film Buyer. ... Edward M. Fay
THEATERS (5) :
New York, ROCHESTER: Comerford's Capitol.
Rhode Island, PROVIDENCE: Carlton. Fay's
Majestic.
Pennsylvania, WEST PHILADELPHIA: Fay's
C. & M. AMUSEMENT CO.
First National Bank Bldg., Marietta, O.
President Edward E. Finch
Vice-President E. H. Steward
Secretary-Treasurer C. T. Finch
Gen'l. Mgr. -Film Buyer Frank J. Hassett
THEATERS (4):
Ohio, CAMBRIDGE: Colonial, Strand: MAUI
ETTA: Hippodrome, Putnam.
OABART THEATERS CORP.
1581 W. Washington Blvd., Los Angeles, Calif.
President M. B. Arthur
Secretary H. C. Arthur. Sr.
THEATERS (15) :
California, ANAHEIM: Anaheim. Fox: FUL-
LERTON : Fox; LONG BEACH: Cabart, Dale, Ritz,
Rivoli, State; LOS ANGELES: Balboa. Man-
chester. Mayfair, Paramount; SANTA ANA:
946
Broadway. West Coast: SAN BERNARDINO:
Studio.
CANTOR BROS.
3155 E. Tenth St., Indianapolis, Ind.
President Joe Cantor
Vice-President Morris Cantor
Secretary-Treasurer Leonard Cantor
THEATERS (4) :
Indiana, INDIANAPOLIS: Arlington, Garrick.
Parker. Sheridan.
CAREY & ALEXANDER
Avon Theater, Lebanon, Ind,
THEATERS (7) :
Indiana, ATTICA: Messner, Devon: LEBAN-
ON: Avon. Lido: MONTICELLO: Lyric. Lakes:
ROCKVILLE: Ritz.
CAROLINA AMUSEMENT CO., INC.
Elizabeth City, N. C.
THEATERS (fi) :
Listed in two groups.
Carolina Amusement Co., Inc.
President W. T. Culpepper
V-P & General Manager J. H. Webster
North Carolina, ELIZABETH CITY: Alkrama,
Carolina, Gaiety; HERTFORD: State.
Carolina-Virginia Amusement Corp.
President H. A. Creef
V-P & General Manager J. H. Webster
Secretary-Treasurer W. T. Culpepper
North Carolina, MANTEO: Pioneer.
Virginia, CRADOCK: Afton.
CASS THEATER CIRCUIT
Sumner, la.
Owner J. F. Cass
General Manager J. E. Cass
THEATERS (13) :
Iowa, ARLINGTON: Arlington: COGGON: Cog-
gon: LAMONT: Lamont: LIME SPRINGS: Lime
Springs: MARBLE ROCK: Marble Rock: NASH-
UA: Nashua: OXFORD JUNCTION: Oxford:
REN WICK: Renwick; STACEYVILLE: Stacey-
ville: STRAWBERRY POINT: Orpheum; SUM-
NER: Opera House: WAUCOMA: Waucoma.
CASSIDY, W. A.
Frolic Theater, Midland, Mich.
Manager K. W. Lybolt
THEATERS «5) :
Michigan, ALMA: Alma, Strand; MIDLAND:
Frolic, Mecca: SAGINAW: DeLuxe. Michigan.
CENTRAL STATES THEATER CORP.
300 Iowa Itldg., Des Moines, la.
President A. H. Blank
Vice-President Y. F. Freeman
Treasurer J. w. Denman
Secretary Raymond Blank
Assistant Secretary Myron Blank
THEATERS (47):
Listed in two groups.
Central States Theater Corp.
Iowa, BOONE: Boone, Princess. Rialto: CHARI
ton: Ritz, State: CENTERVILLE: Majestic. Ritz-
ALGONA: Call, Iowa; EAGLE GROVE: Princess:
ESTHERVILLE: Grand: BURLINGTON: Capitol.
Palace, Zephyr: CLINTON: Capitol. Clinton, Rialto,
Strand: CHARLES CITY: Charles: FORT
DODGE: Iowa. Rialto, Strand: MASON CITY:
Cecil, Palace. Strand; IOWA CITY: Englert. Var-
sity: OELWEIN: Grand. Ritz: GRINNELL:
Iowa, Strand; CLARION: Clarion: FOREST
CITY: Forest.
General Theaters Corp.
President H. M. Warren
Vice-President Don G. West
Nebraska. ALBION: Rex; COLUMBUS: Colum-
bus, Pawnee. Swan; FREMONT: Empress. Fre-
mont: HOLDREGE: Magic. Sun; KEARNEY:
World; NORFOLK: Grand, Granada, Rialto;
YORK: Sun, York.
CENTURY CIRCUIT, INC.
30 Rockefeller riaza, New York. N. Y.
President H. Clay Miner
Vice-President A. A. Hovell
THEATERS (34) :
New York, BROOKLYN: Albemarle. Avalon
College, Elm. Farragut. Kingsway, Marine, May
fair, Midwood. Nostrand, Parkside. Patio, Quentin
Rialto. Triangle. Vogue: LONG ISLAND — BALD
WIN: Baldwin; BELLEROSE: Bellerose: FLORAL
PARK: Floral: FRANKLIN SQUARE: Franklin
FREEPORT: Freeport. Grove, Plaza; HUNTING
TON: Huntington, Huntington Station: LYN
BROOK: Lynbrook; LONG ISLAND CITY: Bliss
43rd St.. Sunnyside: QUEENS VILLAGE: Queens
Community; ROCKVILLE CENTER: Fantasy
Strand; VALLEY STREAM: Valley Stream.
CHAKERES THEATERS, INC.
State Theater Bldg., Springfield, O.
President Phil Chakeres
THEATERS (12) :
Ohio. CIRCLEVILLE: Grand: GREENVILLE
State; HILLSBORO : Bells, Colony: LOGAN: Logan
SPRINGFIELD: Hippodrome, Princess; WELL
STON: Louvee, Virginia; WILMINGTON: Murphy
XENIA: Orpheum, Xenia.
CHEROKEE AMUSEMENTS, INC.
La Follette, Tenn.
THEATERS (8) :
North Carolina, BURNSVILLE: Yancy; MAR-
SHALL: Capital; SPRUCE PINE: Capital.
Tennessee, LA FOLLETTE: Capital. Cherokee;
ONEIDA: Capital; MADISONVTLLE : Hollywood;
MOUNTAIN CITY: Strand.
( HERTCOFF, HARRY, CIRCUIT
Strand Theater, Lancaster, Pa.
THEATERS (4) :
Pennsylvania, ELIZABETHTOWN : Moose; LAN-
CASTER: Strand: LEMOYNE: Lemoyne; LITITZ:
Lititz.
CINEMA CIRCUIT CORP.
214 W. 42nd St., New York, N. Y.
President Max A. Cohen
Treasurer-Secretary Mark I. Finkelstein
THEATERS (8) :
New Jersey, LYNDHURST: Ritz, Lyndhurst.
New York, NEW Y'ORK — Manhattan: Harris.
New Amsterdam. West End; NEW YORK — Bronx:
Devon, Prospect, NEW YORK — Brooklyn: Astor.
CIRCLE THEATERS, LTD.
(>013 S. Broadway, Los Angeles, Calif.
Pres.-Gen'l Manager S. Lazarus
THEATERS (5) :
California, LOS ANGELES: Century, Princess:
MONROVIA: Lyric; SOUTH PASADENA: Rialto.
Ritz.
CITIES THEATERS CORP.
1510 Mitten Bldg., Broad & Locust Sts.
Philadelphia, Pa.
President H. R. Lott
Secretary M. Townsend
Treasurer R. J. McLaughlin
THEATERS (6) :
Maryland, BALTIMORE: Royal.
Pennsylvania, BETHLEHEM: College; EASTON:
Strand, Transit: PHILADELPHIA: Lincoln, Roxy
CLEARFIELD AMUSEMENT CO., INC.
305 Locust St., Clearfield, Pa.
President H. J. Thompson
General Manager Miss M. E. Shivelj
THEATERS (6) :
Listed in two groups:
Mid-State Theaters:
Pennsylvania, BELLEFONTE: Plaza. State,
COALPORT. Dixie; CURWENSVILLE : Rex.
Clearfield Amusement Co.:
Pennsylvania, CLEARFIELD: Lyric. Ritz.
COCALIS ENTERPRISES
276 W. 43rd St., New York, N. Y.
Representative Soteros D. Cocalis
THEATERS (30) :
New Jersey, ELIZABETH: Elmora, Gaiety.
Royal. Strand; RAHWAY: Rahway, Empire:
NEWARK: Park; ROSELLE: Roslyn: ROSELLE
PARK: Park; KEANSBURG: Casino, Fowler.
947
New York, BEACON: Beacon, Roosevelt: NEW
YORK — Manhattan: Alpine: NEW YORK — Bronx:
Allerton. Beach, Castle Hill. Crest, Dale. Interboro,
Marble Hill. Pilgrim, Pelham, Rosedale, Square,
Ward, Yorke: NEW YORK — Brooklyn: Apollo-
MINEOLA: Mineola, Williston.
COCIIOVETY. L.
ail S. Michigan St.. South Bend, Ind.
THEATERS (1):
Indiana, MISHAWAKA: North Side Tivoli
Temple: SOUTH BEND: Strand.
COHEN, BEN AND LOU
3154 Second Blvd., Detroit, Mich.
President Ben Cohen
V-P and Treasurer Lou Cohen
THEATERS (6) :
Michigan, DETROIT: Capitol, Hollywood. May-
fair, Norwood. Rio, Roxy.
COLE THEATERS
Rosenberg, Tex.
President-General Manager Mart Cole
THEATERS (9) :
Texas, EAGLE LAKE: Cole: HALLETSVILLE :
Cole: NEEDVILLE: Cole: RICHMOND: Cole-
ROSENBERG: Cole. State: WALLIS: Cole-
YOAKUM: Grand, Ritz.
COLLINS THEATERS, INC.
De Soto, Mo.
President-General Manager W. A. Collins
Secretary -Treasurer A. F. Collins
Manager L. V. Collins
THEATERS (4) :
Missouri, CANTON: Gem; DE SOTO: DeSoto
Jefferson. THAYER: Royal.
COMERFORD PUBLIX THEATERS CORP.
State Theater Bldg., Scranton, Pa.
President Frank C. Walker
Vice-President Y. Frank Freeman
Secretary Austin Keough
THEATERS (78) :
(Note: Comerford interests, in addition to
theater properties listed below, are interested in
the following circuits: Kallet Theaters, Berin-
stein Circuit. Fays Circuit.)
Listed in three groups.
Comerford Publix Theaters Corp.
Pennsylvania, BLOOMSBURG: Capitol: CAR-
LISLE: Comerford. Strand: DANVILLE: Capitol-
DICKSON CITY: Rex: DUNMORE: Orient: DUR-
YEA: Pastime: FOREST CITY: Freedman: FORTY
FORT: Institute: HAWLEY: Ritz: HAZLETON:
Capitol. Feeley. Grand: HONESDALE: Lvric-
JERSEY SHORE: Victoria; KINGSTON: King-
ston; LUZERNE: Luzerne: MAUCH CHUNK:
Capitol: NORTHUMBERLAND: Savoy; OLD
FORGE: Holland; OLYPHANT: Granada- PAR-
SONS: Parsons: PITTSTON : American, Roman:
PLYMOUTH: Shawnee; POTTSVILLE: Capitol.
Hippodrome, Hollywood: SAYRE: Sayre; SCRAN-
TON: Bell. Capitol. Comerford. Globe. Manhat-
tan. Rialto. Riviera. Roosevelt. State. Strand.
West Side: SHENANDOAH: Strand; SUNBURY:
Rialto. Strand; TO WANDA: Keystone: WILKES-
BARRE : Capitol. Comerford. Hart. Irving, Or-
pheum. Penn, Sterling, Strand; WILLIAMSPORT :
Capitol. Keystone.
Comerford Theaters, Inc.
Pennsylvania, AVOCA: Palace: CARBONDALE:
Irving, Majestic; EDWARDSVILLE : Grand:
EYNON: Eynon; SCRANTON: RCA: SELINS-
GROVE: Stanley.
New York. OSWEGO: Tioga; WAVERLY: Cap-
itol: ROCHESTER: Capitol. Century, Palace, Re-
gent. Temple.
Binghampton Theater Co.
New York, BINGHAMTON: Strand, Capitol.
Riviera, Symphony. Star. Binghamton. Suburban.
Regus: ENDICOTT: Strand; UNION: Elvin;
JOHNSON CITY: Enjoy.
COMMONWEALTH AMUSEMENT CORP.
213 W. 18th St., Kansas City, Mo.
President C. A. Schultr
Vice-President O. K. Mason
Secretary-Treasurer L. Parrett
THEATERS (44) :
Arkansas, HARRISON: Lyric. Plaza; SEARCY ;
Plaza. Rialto.
Iowa, CRESTON- Strand. Uptown.
Kansas, ELLSWORTH: Golden Bell. Kansan
GARDEN CITY- Ritz, State: GOODLAND: Sher-
man: GREAT BEND: Kansan. Plaza. Strand-
HERINGTON: Dreamland. Kansan: HOTSINGTON ;
Royal: KINSLEY: Palace: LAWRENCE: Granada.
Jayhawk, Varsity, Patee; NORTON: Auditorium.
Cozy.
Missouri, CARKOLLTOWN: Uptown; CLIN-
TON: Lee: COLUMBIA: Boone. Uptown: HAR-
RISONVILLE: Perkins: KANSAS CITY: Ashland.
Benton. Madrid: MONETT: Gillioz. Strand:
NEOSHO: Fotosho, Orpheum: ROCK PORT: Para-
mount: TRENTON- Plaza. Royal: WARRENS-
BURG: Mainstreet, Star; WASHINGTON: Calvin.
Garden.
COMMUNITY CIRCUIT THEATERS
Great Lakes Life Bldg., Cleveland, O.
Presidtnt-General Manager Max Lefkowich
THEATERS (18):
Ohio. CLEVELAND: Cedar-Lee. Carter. Circle.
Commodore. Detroit. Embassy, Euclid. Hilliard
Square. Lyric. Stork. Liberty. Doan. Standard,
University. West Park, Tivoli. Riverside, New Mall.
CONERY THEATERS
Kaveua, N. Y.
Owner & General Manager Mitchell Conery
District Manager Donald H. Reed
THEATERS (6) :
New York, HENSONVILLE: Hensonville: MID-
DLEBURG: Valley; RAVENA: Ravena: RICH-
FIELD SPRINGS: Capitol: SCHOHARIE: Scho-
harie: WORCESTER: Worcester.
CONFEDERATION AMUSEMENTS, LTD.
1440 S. Alexander St., Montreal.
President F. A. Tabah
Managing Director N. N. Lawand
Secretary -Treasurer E. N. Tabah
THEATERS (7) :
Canada. MONTREAL. QUE. : Cartier. Chateau.
Dominion. Empress. Maisonneuve. Outremont.
Savoy.
CONSOLIDATED AMUSEMENT ENTERPRISES.
INC.
lfttiu Broadway, New York, N. Y.
President Max Richter
Vice-President Laurence S. Bolognino
Secretary Giuseppe Previtali
Treasurer Abel Fanchi
THEATERS (21):
New York, NEW YORK: Squire. Arena. Ava-
'.on. Fleetwood. Forum. Jerome. Kingsbridge. Lux-
or. Mosholu, Ml. Eden. Ogden. Oxford. Times.
Tivoli. Tuxedo, Willis, Park, Surrey, Earl. Ascot.
Kent.
CONSOLIDATED THEATERS, INC.
100 Passaic Ave., Garfield, N. J.
Treasurer Samuel Rosen
Vice-President H. Blumenthal
Secretary Joseph Lefkowitz
THEATERS (6) :
New Jersey, BUTLER: Butler: CLIFTON: Clif-
ton. Strand: GARFIELD: Ritz: POMPTON
LAKES: Colonial: WESTFIELD: Rialto.
CONSOLIDATED THEATERS, LTD.
301 Dominion Square Bldg.,
1010 St. Catherine St., W., Montreal, Quebec.
President-General Manager J. Arthur Hirscb
Vice-President J. L. Geller
Secretary J. J. Rosenthal
Treasurer Alex Adilman
THEATERS (8) :
Quebec, MONTREAL. Capitol, His Majesty's,
Imperial. Palace, Princess: SHERBROOKE: Prem-
ier; JONQUIERE: L'Aiglon, Empire.
CONSOLIDATION COAL CO.. INC.
Watson Bldg., Fairmont, W. Va.
General Purchasing Agent F. C. Davie
948
THEATERS (10) :
Listed in two groups:
Consolidation Coal Co.:
Kentucky, BURDINE: Burdine (closed): JEN-
KINS: Jenkins: McROBERTS: McRobcrts: VAN
LEAR: Van Lear: DUNHAM: Dunham (closed).
West Virginia, CAROLINA: Carolina: IDA MAY:
Ida May.
Dull Mercantile Co.:
Pennsylvania, ACOSTA: Acosta (closed) : GRAY:
Gray (closed); JENNER: Jenner (closed).
COOPER. J. H., ENTERPRISES. INC.
1441 Welton St., Denver, Colo.
President J. H. Cooper
V-P and Treasurer L. J. Finske
Secretary J. Alfred Ritter
THEATERS (ft) :
Listed in two groups.
J. H. Cooper Enterprises
Colorado, GREELEY: Sterling, Park: GRAND
JUNCTION: Avalon. Mission: PUEBLO: Main,
Uptown.
Interstate Theaters, Inc.
(J. H. Cooper and J. E. Tompkins)
Colorado, COLORADO SPRINGS: Trail. Tomp-
kins, Ute.
CO-OPERATIVE THEATERS OF MICHIGAN,
INC.
1001 Fox Bldg., Detroit, Mich.
President Fred DeLodder
Vice-President B. J. Cohn
Treasurer B. L. Kilbride
Secretary J. c. Ritter
General Manager Carl Buermele
Assistant Manager S. H. Barrett
THEATERS (97) :
This corporation is a hooking circuit.
Michigan, BUCHANAN: Hollywood; DETROIT:
Alhambra, Arcade. Beverly. Capitol, Castle. Century.
Grande, Crystal, Graystone. Great Lakes. Holly-
wood, Iris. Kramer, Lancaster. Mayfair, Nortown,
Norwood. Rio. Roxy, Russell. Senate. Strand, War-
field. Boulevard, Cameo, Campau, Casino, Colony,
Conant, Del The, DeLuxe, Eastend. Farnum, Fla-
mingo. Fredro, Harmony, Hazel Park. Home, Lake-
wood, Lasky, Martha Washington, Maxine. Park.
Plaza, Punch & Judy. Redford, Rialto, Rivoli,
Royal Oak (Royal Oak), Washington (Royal
Oak, Whittier, Your, Alden, Avenue, Gayety,
Beechwood, Catherine, Center, Circle, Ferndale.
Fine Arts, Highland Park, Loop, Midway, Rex,
Stratford, Avalon. Calvin (Dearborn), Eastown,
Fenkell, Harper, Linwood-LaSalle. Mack Uptown.
Oriole. Picadilly, Roosevelt, Tower. Tuxedo.
Westown; FLINT: Michigan, Nortown, Rialto,
Richard: GRAND RAPIDS: Savoy: JACKSON:
Family: LAPEER; Lyric: MUSKEGON: Ritz;
OXFORD: Oxford: PETOSKEY: Hollywood: ST.
CLAIR: St. Clair: TRENTON: Trenton: WYAN-
DOTTE: Rialto, Wyandotte, Majestic; LINCOLN
PARK: Park.
CRAVER, S. W., THEATERS
P. O. Box 1206, Charlotte, N. C.
THEATERS (12) :
North Carolina, DURHAM: Criterion; GREENS-
BORO: Criterion.
South Carolina, COLUMBIA: State; GREEN-
VILLE: Paris.
Virginia, DANVILLE: Virginia: LYNCHBURG;
Academy: LEBANON: Russell: NORFOLK: Cava-
lier, Colonial. Wells; ROANOKE: Jefferson;
WYTHEVILLE: Wythe.
CRESCENT AMUSEMENT CO.
147 Fifth Ave., N„ Nashville, Tenn.
President Tony Sudekum
THEATERS (37) :
Listed in five groups.
Crescent Amusement Co.
Film Buyer Tony Sudekum
Alabama, ALABAMA CITY: Ritz. DECATUR:
Capitol. Princess: GADSDEN: Capitol. Princess.
Kentucky, BOWLING GREEN: Capitol. Dia-
mond: HOPKINSVILLE: Alhambra, Princess;
MADISONVILLE: Capitol.
Tennessee, CLARKSVILLE: Capitol; CLEVE-
LAND: Bohemia, Princess; COLUMBIA: Prin
cess; DYERSBURG: Frances; HARRIMAN
Princess: LEBANON: Princess; M ARYVILLE
Capitol. Park; MORRISTOWN: Princess: MUR
FREESBORO: Princess; PARIS: Capitol
SPRINGFIELD: Princess: UNION CITY: Capitol
BROWNSVILLE. Capitol.
Cumberland Amusement Co.
Film Buyer Cowan Oldham
Tennessee. FAYETTEVTLLE : Capitol: FRANK-
LIN: Franklin: McMINNVILLE: Dixie; PU-
LASKI: Best: TALLAHOMA: Strand; WIN-
CHESTER: Rivoli.
Muscle Shoals Theaters
Film Buyer Louis Rosenbaum
Alabama. ATHENS: Ritz: FLORENCE: Prin-
cess: SHEFFIELD: Ritz; TUSCUMBIA: Strand.
Lyric Amusement Co.
Alabama, HUNTSVILLE: Grand, Lyric.
Auditorium Co.
Film Buyer j. c. Tune
Tennessee, SHELBYVILLE: Princess.
CUMBERLAND AMUSEMENT CO., INC.
Park Theater Bldg., McMinnville, Tenn.
Presidenl Tony Sudekum
General Manager-Secy. Treasurer. .Cowan Oldham
Vice-President Ernest SmaUman, Jr.
THEATERS (11) :
Tennessee. DAYTON. Dayton: CROSSVILLE
Mecca: FAYETTEVTLLE: Capitol- FRANKT.TN
Franklin; McMINNVILLE: Dixie, Park; PULASKI
Sam Davis: SOUTH PITTSBURG: Princess
SPARTA: Oldham; TULLAHOMA: Strand: WIN-
CHESTER: Rivoli.
I) ALKE'S VALLEY THEATERS
Main St., Woodstock, Va.
Owner William Dalke
THEATERS (5) :
Virginia, EDINBURG: Edinburg; NEW MAR-
KET: New Market: STRASBURG: Strand: WOOD
STOCK: Community, New.
DAVIS-URLING-MURPHY CIRCUIT
Perpetual Savings Bldg., Wellsville, O.
THEATERS (7):
Virginia, APPALACHIA : Appalachian: BIQ
STONE GAP: Big Stone: CLINTWOOD: Mountain-
COEBURN: Coeburn; GATE CITY: Gate City:
NORTON: Norton.
West Virginia, RICHMOND: Auditorium.
DELFT THEATERS, INC.
136 VV. Washington St., Marquette, Mich.
President Morgan W. Jopling
General Manager-Film Buyer. .. .Hugh S. Gallup
Secretary Lawrence J. Jacobs
THEATERS (6) :
Michigan. ESCANABA: Delft. Michigan-
IRON RTVER: Delft: MARQUETTE: Delft. Nor-
dic; MUNSING: Delft.
DELISI. JOSEPH and
NANTY-GLO AMUSEMENT CO.
THEATERS (4) :
Listed in two groups
Delisi Amusement Co.
Saltsburg, Pa.
Partners. .Joseph P. Delisi and Joseph C. DeMaria
Pennsylvania, AVONMORE: Delmore; SALTS
BURG: Liberty.
Nanty-Glo Amusement Co.
Nanty-Glo, Pa.
President Joseph L. Delisi
Pennsylvania, NANTY-GLO: Capitol. Family.
DeLODDER. FRED
8935 Mack Ave.. Detroit. Mich.
THEATERS (7) :
Michigan, DETROIT: Aloma, Delthe, East End.
Flamingo. Maxine. Plaza, Your.
DEMBOW. HARRY L.
Media Theater, Media, Pa.
Film Buyer Harry L. Dembow
THEATERS (4) :
Pennsylvania. COLUMBIA: Alto, Opera House
State; MARCUS HOOK: Globe.
949
DE MORD.M NT & DRENNEN
Itlackfoot, Iilalio
THEATERS (8) :
Idaho, BLACKFOOT: New Mission. Nuart:
IDAHO FALLS: Gayety, Rio; REXBURG: Elk.
Romance; ST. ANTHONY: Rex, Roxy.
DIETRICH AND FELOSTEIN
1911 S. Vermont Ave., Los Angeles, Calif.
President Manny Feldstein
Secretary Paul Dietrich
THEATERS (6) :
California, MONROVIA: Monrovia: OXNARD:
Boulevard. Oxnard. Strand: SAN BERNARDINO:
Azteca; SAN FERNANDINO: San Fernandino.
MILLER, C. G.
1100 Clarkson St.. Denver, Colo.
THEATERS (6) :
Portable:
Colorado, OURAY: Uray; SILVERTON: Lode:
TELLURIDE: Nugret: URAVAN: Uravan; RICO:
Rico.
1'ermanent House:
Colorado, CRIPPLE CREEK: Vida.
DIPSON CIRCUIT
22 .Jackson St., Batavia, N. Y.
President Nikitas D. Dipson
General Manager John R. Oshorno
Acting Vice-President William J. D. Dipson
THEATERS (25) :
New York, BUFFALO: 20th Century, Bailey;
TONAWANDA: Star: NORTH TONAWANDA :
Riviera: LACKAWANNA; Franklin. Ridge. Hol-
lywood, Park; ELMIRA : Caponial. Capitol.
Ohio, EAST LIVERPOOL: American. State.
Pennsylvania, BRADFORD: Bradford: BRACK-
ENRIDGE: Avenue; FORD CITY: Ford. Ritz:
KITTANNING: Lyceum, State: NEW CASTLE:
Cathedral.
West Virginia. WHEELING: Capitol. Court.
Liberty. Victoria, Virginia Pike.
DOMINION THEATERS, INC.
603 E. Jefl'crson St., Charlottesville, Va.
President Hunter Perry
Comptroller Jack Katz
Secretary Ed Harris
THEATERS (13) :
Virginia. CAPE CHARLES: Radium: CHAR
LOTTESVILLE: Jefferson, Lafayette, Paramount,
University; EXMORE: Cameo: HAMPTON: Lang-
ley; LYNCHBURG: Isis, Paramount, Trenton;
NEWPORT NEWS: James. Paramount: PHOE-
BUS: Lee.
DURKEE, F. H„ ENTERPRISES
Arcade Theater Bldg., Harford and Hamilton
Aves., Baltimore, Md.
President Frank H. Durkee
Vice-President Walter D. Paey
General Manager Charles E. Nolte
District Managers Fred C. Schmuff
C. Elmer Nolte, Jr.
Booking Manager C. W. Henderson
Office Manager Gilbert W. Reddish
THEATERS (23) :
Maryland. ANNAPOLIS: Circle, Republic:
BALTIMORE: Arcade, Avon, Ambassador, Bel-
nord. Boulevard, Casino. Edgewood, Forest. Ful-
ton, Grand, Gwynn. Linwood. McHenry, North-
way. Garden. Patterson, Red Wing, Senator, State,
Waverly; HAVRE DE GRACE: State.
DUKWOOD BROS. CIRCUIT
Liberty Theater Itldg., Kansas City, Mo.
General Manager Ed Dubinsky Durwood
THEATERS (12):
Kansas, LEAVENWORTH: Hollywood, Lyceum.
Orpheum.
Missouri, JEFFERSON CITY: Capitol. Gem.
Jefferson, State; KANSAS CITY: Liberty: ST.
JOSEPH: Crystal, Electric, Missouri. Orpheum
EASTLAND THEATERS, INC.
307 s. Brondway, Los Angeles. Calif.
President Harry M. Popkin
Treasurer Pete Lasher
Vice-President-Secretary Jack Berman
THEATERS (10) :
California, LOS ANGELES: Brooklyn. Crystal.
Jewell, Joy. Keystone, Largo, Linda. Meralta.
National, Wabash.
ECKERSLEY CIRCUIT
Nez Perce, Idaho
THEATERS (4) :
Idaho, KAMIAH: Kamiah; KOOSKIA : Kooskia;
NEZ PERCE: Wigwam: WINCHESTER: Win-
chester.
EGYPTIAN THEATERS, INC.
18 W. Poplar St., Harrisburg, 111.
President John T. Gaskins
General Manager S. M. Farrar
Film Buyer O. L. Turner
Booker S. M. Farrar
THEATERS (16):
Illinois, ALBION: Hollywood. Majestic; CARMI
Carmi. Strand: CARRIER MILLS: Grand; COUL-
TERVILLE: Roxy: ELDORADO: Grand. Orpheum;
FAIRFIELD: Fairfield, Strand: GALATIA: Grand:
HARRISBURG: Grand, Orpheum; ROSICLARE:
Capitol; SPARTA: Grand; VIENNA: Grand.
ELLIOTT-WARD ENTERPRISES
689 McClelland Bldg.. Lexington, Ky.
THEATERS (8) :
Indiana, AURORA: Grand, Palace.
Kentucky, GEORGETOWN: Glenn; MT. STER
LING: Tabb. Trimble; SOMERSET: Kentucky.
Virginia, VERSAILLES: Lyric.
ENDICOTT CIRCUIT
13th Ave. & 70th St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Representatives Louis Nelson, Irving Renner
THEATERS (10) :
New York, FAR ROCKAWAY: Boardwalk, Edge-
mere, New. Rivoli; NEW YORK — Brooklyn: Coli-
seum, Endicott, Hollywood. Howard, Metro. Sun.
EPSTEIN'S THEATERS CORP.
1032 S. 24th St., Omaha, Neb.
President-Treasurer Sam Epstein
Vicfc-Presidenl-Secretary Louis Epstein
THEATERS (G) :
Nebraska, OMAHA: Benson, Circle. Corby.
Lothrop, Roseland. Tivoli.
ERVIN THEATERS
Kremmling, Colo.
Owner-Manager R. D. Ervin
THEATERS (7) :
Colorado, BRECKENRIDGE : Mines; FRASER :
Spruce: GRANBY: Granby; GRAND LAKE: Lake;
HEENEY: Green Mountain: KREMMLING: Ra-
mona: WALDEN: Star.
ESSANESS THEATERS CORP.
540 N. Michigan Ave.. Chicago, III.
President Edwin Silverman
Vice-President Emil Stern
Secretary-Treasurer Sidney M. Spiegel. Jr.
THEATERS (29) :
Illinois, CHICAGO: American. Argmore. Avon.
Biograph. Broadway-Strand. Buckingham. Byrd,
Crawford, Crown. Davis, Devon, Embassy, Irv-
ing, Joy. Julian. Liberty. Mode. Michigan, North
Center, Sheridan, Vic, Vogue. West End. -,400",
Woods: CICERO: Town: OAK PARK: Lamar.
Lake, Southern.
ESTATES OPERATING CO., INC.
269 Fifth Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Representatives Harry Pear. Bernard Pear
THEATERS (4) :
New York, NEW YORK — Brooklyn: Avon.
Eden, Garfield, Sixteenth Street.
EVERGREEN STATE AMUSEMENT CORP.
671 Skinner Bldg., Seattle, Wash.
President Frank L. Newman
Vice-President Al Finkelstein
Secretary Al Rosenberg
Treasurer A. M. Ahlskog
Film Buyer W. T. Powers
950
THEATERS (40) :
Oregon. EUGENE: McDonald, Rex: PORT-
LAND: Blue Mouse, Hollywood, Liberty. Mayfair,
Music Box, Oriental, Paramount, Playhouse,
Rivoli.
Washington, ABERDEEN: D. & R., Weir: BEL-
LINGHAM: American. Avalon, Mount Baker:
BREMERTON: Rex. Rialto: EVERETT: Balboa.
Evsrett. Granada: HOQUIAM : Seventh Street;
OLYMPIA: Liberty; SEATTLE: Blue Mouse.
Coliseum, Egyptian. Fifth Avenue, Music Box,
Music Hall. Neptune. Orpheum, Paramount;
SPOKANE: Fox, Orpheum, State, Liberty: VAN-
COUVER: Castle, Kiggins; WENATCHEE: Lib-
erty, Rialto.
F. & M. ST. LOUIS THEATERS
537 N. Grand Ave., St. Louis. Mo.
General Manager Harry C. Arthur, Jr.
THEATERS (30) :
Illinois, GRANITE CITY: Rialto, Washington.
Missouri, ST. LOUIS: Ambassador, Fox, Guild
Cinema. Missouri, St. Louis, Aubert. Capitol, Con-
gress, Florissant, Florissant Cinema Garden, Gra-
nada, Gravois, Kingsland, Lafayette, Lindell, Maf-
fltt. Manchester, Maplewood, Mikado, Pageant.
Richmond, Westend, Shady Oak, Shenandoah,
Shaw, Hi Pointe, Tivoli, Union.
FABIAN THEATERS
1501 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
President S. H. Fabian
Secretary-Treasurer Samuel Rosen
THEATERS (37) :
New York, ALBANY: Palace, Hall. Grand.
Leland: CATSKILL: Community: COHOES: Re-
gent. Rialto, Majestic; MIDDLETOWN: Para-
mount (pool), State, Stratton (pool); NEW
YORK — Brooklyn: Fox, Paramount, Strand
(pool): PORT JERVIS: Ritz, Royal, Strand;
SCHENECTADY: Proctor, Plaza, State. Strand.
Erie, Van Curler, Center; TROY: American (pool).
Lincoln, Troy. Proctor. Griswold (pool). STATEN
ISLAND. N. Y. : GREAT KILLS: Strand; NEW
DORP: New Dorp; PORT RICHMOND: Ritz; ST.
GEORGE: St. George: STAPLETON: Libertv.
Paramount: TOTTENVILLE: Stadium; WEST
BRIGHTON: Capitol.
FAMOUS PLAYERS CANADIAN CORP., LTD.
1200 Royal Bank Bldg., Toronto, Ontario
President N. L. Nathanson
Vice-President J. J. Fitzgibbons
Secretary-Treasurer T. J. Bragg
Comptroller-Asst. Treasurer R. W. Bolstad
Assistant Secretary N. G. Barrow
THEATERS (159) :
Canada, BELLEVILLE: Belle; BRANDON,
MAN.: Capitol, Strand; BRANTFORD: Brant.
Capitol; BROCKVILLE: Capitol. New: CAL-
GARY, ALTA.: Capitol. Palace: CHATHAM:
Capitol, Princess; CHILLIWACK, B. C: Strand;
COBOURG: Capitol: CORNWALL: Capitol. Pal-
ace: DARTMOUTH: Dundas. Royal: EDMONTON.
ALTA.: Capitol, Dreamland, Empress, Princess.
Strand; FORT WILLIAM: Corona. Orpheum.
Royal: GALT: Grand. Capitol; GUELPH: Cap-
itol, Royal, Regent: HALIFAX, N. S.: Capitol.
Casino, Garriek; HAMILTON: Palace, Savoy.
Capitol, Strand, Tivoli; HULL. QUE. : Cartier-
KAMLOOPS. B. C: Capitol. Rex. Strand: KE-
LOWNA. B. C: Empress; KINGSTON: Capitol.
Grand, Tivoli: LETHBRIDGE, ALTA.: Roxy, Ma-
jestic, Capitol; LONDON: Capitol, Grand. Palace;
MONCTON, N. B.: Capitol. Empress; MONTRE-
AL: Capitol, Palace: MOOSE JAW, SASK.: Cap-
itol, Savoy; NANAIMO, B. C: Bijou. Capitol.
Opera House: NELSON, B. C: Capitol, Starland-
NEW WESTMINSTER, B. C: Columbia: NI-
AGARA FALLS: Capitol; NORANDA, QUE.:
Noranda: NORTH BAY: Capitol. Royal; NORTH
BATTLEFORD. SASK.: Empress; OSHAWA: Re-
gent; OTTAWA: Imperial, Capitol, Avalon, Re-
gent; OWEN SOUND: Classic. Opera House. Sa-
voy: PENTTCTON, B. C: Empress, Capitol;
PETERBORO: Capitol, Grand: PORT ARTHUR:
Colonial, Lyceum: PORT HOPE: Capitol: PRINCE
RUPERT, B. C: Capitol; QUEBEC: Capitol; RE-
GINA: Capitol, Broadway, Grand, Metropolitan;
ROSSLAND, B. C: Capitol; SARNIA: Capitol, Cres-
cent, Imperial; SASKATOON: Capitol. Daylight
SAULT STE. MARIE: Orpheum, Algoma; SHAUN
AVON. SASK.: Plaza; ST. CATHARINES: Cap
itol. Palace; SAINT JOHN. N. B.: Capitol; SYD
NEY. N. S.: Capitol; SUDBURY: Capitol; ST
THOMAS: Capitol: THREE RIVERS. QUE.: Cap
itol. Rialto; TORONTO: Alhambra, Beach. Bed
ford, Belsize, College, Bloor, Capitol, Eglinton
Family, Hippodrome, Imperial, Oakwood. Palace
Parkdale, Runnymede, St. Clair, Tivoli, Up
town, Victoria; TRAIL, B. C: Liberty: TRENTON
Trent: VANCOUVER: Alma, Broadway. Capitol
Dominion. Grandview. Kerrisdale, Kitsilano, Or
pheum, Regent, Strand. Victoria. Windsor; VER
NON: Empress: VICTORIA: Atlas, Capitol. Do
minion, Royal, Victoria; WELLAND: Capitol,
Grand: WEYBURN: Hi-Art: WINDSOR: Capitol
Empire, Regent, Tivoli: WINNIPEG: Capitol, Met
ropolitan: WOODSTOCK: Capitol, Royal.
FIRST NATIONAL THEATERS, INC.
314 E. Yakima Ave., Yakima, Wash.
Managing Director Frederick Mercy
Booker Frederick Mercy, Jr
City Manager Arch Bartholet
THEATERS (6) :
Washington, YAKIMA: Capitol, Liberty. Ma-
jestic, Roxy, Yakima.
FISHMAN THEATERS, INC.
134 Meadow St., New Haven, Conn.
President A. Fishman
General Manager-Film Buyer J. B. Fishman
THEATERS (7) :
Connecticut, FAIRFIELD: Community; NEW
HAVEN: Apollo, Dixwell, Howard, Lawrence.
Lyric, Winchester.
FITE BROS. THEATER CO.
CIS Kansas Ave., Kansas City, Kans.
President w. D. Fit€
Vice-President .£,. F Fitf
THEATERS (G) :
Kansas, CONCORDIA: Concordia, Strand: EL
DORADO: Eris; KANSAS CITY: Kansas: SALINA :
Royal.
Missouri, JOPLIN: De Ray.
FIVE BORO THEATER CIRCUIT, INC.
S7G W. 43rd St., New York, N. Y.
President Samuel Strausberg
Vice-President Stanley Kolbert
Ass't. Vice-President Max A. Goldbaum
Secretary -Treasurer Abraham Leff
THEATERS (7) :
New York, NEW YORK: Freeman, Lido, Fen-
way, De Luxe, Granada, Zenith, Tower.
FLANIGON & STEELE
SSG W. Superior Ave., Cleveland, O.
President Edward C. Flanigon
Film Buyer B. C. Steele
THEATERS (4) :
Ohio. CLEVELAND: Terminal; KENT: Kent'
RAVENNA: Ravenna, Ohio.
FOURTH AVENUE AMUSEMENT CO.
35C Francis Bldg., Louisville, Ky.
President Fred J. Doll*
Secretary -Treasurer D. H. Long
THEATERS (33) :
Listed in three groups:
Theater Enterprises
Kentucky, LOUISVILLE: Baxter, East Broad
way. Ideal, Oak, Park, Towers.
Fourth Avenue Amusement Co.
Indiana, LAFAYETTE: Lafayette, Luna, Mars:
TERRE HAUTE: American, Grand, Hippodrome.
Indiana, Liberty.
Kentucky, LOUISVILLE: Brown, Rex, Rialto,
Strand, Uptown.
Greater Indianapolis Amusement Co., Inc.
Indiana, INDIANAPOLIS: Apollo, Circle. In-
diana.
FOX GREATER THEATERS, INC.
Paramount Theater Bldg., Denver, Colo.
District Manager Harry E. Huffman
951
THEATERS (12) :
Colorado, DENVEK : Denver. Paramount. Alad-
din. Broadway. Rialto. Tabor. Blue Bird. Mayan.
Ogden. Hiawatha. Webber, Isis.
FOX IXTERMOINTAIN THEATERS, IXC.
1631 Glenarm St., Denver. Colo.
President Frank H. Rieketson. Jr.
Secretary Albert J. Gould
Treasurer I. Weiner
THEATERS (87) :
Colorado, BOULDER: Boulder. Isis. State:
DELTA: Strand. Egyptian: DENVER: Aladdin.
Bluebird. Broadway. Denver. Hiawatha. Isis. May-
an. Ogden. Paramount. Rialto. Tabor. Webber:
DURANGO: Kiva, Rialto; FORT COLLINS: Amer-
ica. Lyric: LA JUNTA: Rourke, Kit Carson:
LEADVILLE: Liberty Bell. Elks: LONGMONT:
Longniont. Isis. Fox: MONTROSE: Fox. Em-
press. Ute: STERLING: America. Fox. Rialto:
TRINIDAD: Isis, Rialto, West: WALSENBURG:
Rialto. Valencia.
Idaho. CALDWELL: American Rnxv. StPdium:
POCATELLO: Orpheum. Chief. Capitol; IDAHO
FALLS: Paramount; NAMPA: Adelaide, Majestic.
Ritz.
Montana, HELENA: Rio. Marlowe, Antlers.
Orpheum; MISSOULA: Wilma, Rialto, Liberty
BILLINGS: Babcock.
Nebraska, ALLIANCE: Alliance. Rialto: Mc-
COOK: Fox. Temple: NORTH PLATTE: Fox.
Paramount. State: SIDNEY: Fox.
New Mexico, LAS CRUCES: Del Rio. Mesilla
Park, Rio Grande; LAS VEGAS: Coronado, Serf.
titan, oGD ON : Egypliau, Ogden.
Wyoming:, CHEYENNE: Strand. Paramount.
Princess. Li 'Coin: KEMMERER: Victory: LARA-
MIE: Crown, Fox: RAWLINS: Strand, Opera
House: ROCK SPRINGS: Rialto. Grand: SHERI-
DAN: Lotus. Orpheum.
FOX MIDWEST AMUSEMENT CORr.
370G' Broadway, Kansas City, Mo.
President E. C. Rhoden
Vice-President-Treasurer Charles E. Shafer
THEATERS (IOK) :
Illinois, BENTON: Capitol: CENTRALIA : Grand.
Illinois; BELLEVILLE: Lincoln. Illinois: DU-
QUOIN: Grand. Majestic: JACKSONVILLE: Illi-
nois. Majestic; MARION: Orpheum. MT. VER-
NON: Plaza. Granada. Royal: SPRINGFIELD:
Lincoln: W. FRANKFORT: State. Strand.
I»»», FORT MADISON: Orpheum, Strand:
MUSCATINE: Palace. Uptown: COUNCIL
BLUFFS: Strand.
Kansas, ARKANSAS CITY: Burford: ATCHI-
SON: Orpheum. Royal: CHANUTE: Peoples; CLAY
CENTER: Rex: COFFEY VILLE: Midland. Tackett:
CONCORDIA: Grand; DODGE CITY: Crown. Dodge,
Cozy; ELDORADO: Eldorado; EMPORIA: Gra-
nada. Strand: FORT SCOTT: Empress. Liberty;
HAYS: Strand: HUTCHISON: Midland, Fox.
Strand; KANSAS CITY: Granada: LIBERAL: Tuck-
er: LYONS: Lyons: MARYSVILLE: Liberty;
NEWTON: Star. Regent: OTTAWA: Plaza. Web-
ster: PITTSBURG: Colonial. Midland: SALINA:
Strand. Jayhawk. Watson: TOPEKA: Gem, Grand.
Jayhawk. Orpheum: WICHITA: Miller. Palace.
Orpheum. Wichita, Uptown; WINFIELD: Resent.
Zimm: IOLA: Iola. Uptown.
Missouri. BON VILLE: Lyric: BROOKFIELD:
DeGraw; CAPE GIRARDEAU: Broadway. Or-
pheum; CARTHAGE: Crane: EXCELSIOR
SPRINGS: Beyer: JOPLIN: Fox, Hippodrome.
Paramount: KANSAS CITY: Tower, Esquire. Glad-
stone. Isis, Lincoln. Linwood. Madrid. Plaza. Rock-
hill. Uptown. Vista, Warwick. Waldo. Brookside;
KIRKSVILLE: Kennedy: LEXINGTON : Main-
street: MARSHALL: Auditorium: MOBERLY:
Grand. Fourth Street: NEVADA: Arbo. Star:
SEDALIA: Liberty. Sedalia: SPRINGFIELD: Gil-
loiz. Plaza. Electric.
Nebraska, BEATRICE: Riroli.
FOX WEST COAST THEATERS
1837 S. Vermont Ave., Los Angeles, Calif.
President Charles P. Skouras
Vice-President Charles A. Buckley
Treasurer George Topper
Secretary Albert W. Leeds
THEATERS (211):
Listed by districts; closed houses are
listed last.
Los Angeles First Run District
District Manager Thornton Sargent
California, BEVERLY HILLS: Wilshire- HOL-
LYWOOD: Chinese. Filmaile: LOS ANGELES:
Four Star. Loews State. United Artists. Carthay
Circle.
District No. 1
District Manager Cullen Espy
California. BEVERLY HILLS: Beverly: HOL-
LYWOOD: Apollo. Carmel. Egyptian. Iris. Para-
mount: LOS ANGELES: Belmont. Boulevard.
Carlton. Embassy. Fairfax, Figueroa. La Brea.
Laichmont. Leimert. Melrose. Mesa. Pari«ian.
Ravena. Ritz. Stadium, Uptown, Western, West-
lake: SHERMAN: Marquis; WESTWOOD: Bruin.
Village.
District No. 2
District Manager B. V. Sturdivant
California, GLENDALE: Alexander. Queen. Cal-
ifornia. Capitol. Gateway. Glendale: LOS AN-
GELES: Arroyo Highland. Starland: MONROVIA:
Lyric: NORTH HOLLYWOOD: El Portal. PASA-
DENA: Strand. Tower, United Artists: SHER-
MAN OAKS: La Reina: SOUTH PASADENA: Ri-
alto. Ritz: STUDIO CITY: Studio City; VAN
NUYS: Rivoli. Van Nuys.
District No. 3
District Manager George R'iw<er
California. CALEXICO: Capitol: EL CENTRO:
United Artists. Valley; COMPTON: Compton.
Tower; LONG BEACH: Belmont. Egyptian. Im-
perial. Long Beach. Palace. United Artists, West
Coast: SAN DIEGO: Aztec. Balboa. California.
Egyptian, Fairmount. Fox. Mission, North Park.
Orpheum Plaza: SAN PEDRO: Cabrillo. Strand.
SANTA BARBARA: Arlington: SANTA PAULA:
Glen City; WILMINGTON: Avalon. Granada.
District No. 4
District Manager Dick Dickson
California, BELL: Alcazar. Alpha: HERMOSA
BEACH: Hermosa: HUNTINGTON PARK: Cali-
fornia. Lyric: LOS ANGELES: Florence. Gentry.
Golden Gate. Royale. United Artists: INGLE-
WOOD: Granada. Inglewood. United Artists: MAY-
WOOD: Maywood: OCEAN PARK: Dome. Rose-
mary: REDONDO BEACH: Redondo: SANTA
MONICA: Criterion: VENICE: California.
District No. 5
District Manager Cullen Espy
California. ONTARIO: California. Granada: PO-
MONA: California. Fox, Sunkist: REDLANDS:
Redlands: RIVERSIDE: De Anza. Golden State.
Riverside: SAN BERNARDINO: California. Fox.
West Coast.
Special District
District Manager Homer Gill
California, BAKERSFIELD: California. Fox.
Nile, Kern, Rex: TAFT: Hippodrome.
Orange County District
District Manager Milton Arthur
California. ANAHEIM: Anaheim. Fox: FUL-
LERTON: Fullerton: SANTA ANA: Broadway.
West Coast.
Direct Supervision
California. HOLLYWOOD: Hollywood: SAN
LUIS OBISPO: Elmo. Obispo.
Arizona District
District Manager Louis B. Christ
Arizona, GLOBE: Alden: PHOENIX: Fox.
TUCSON: Fox. Lyric.
Metropolitan District
Manager A. M. Bowles
California, SAN FRANCISCO: Fox. Loew's
Warfield. Paramount. St. Francis.
Peninsula District
District Manager Harry Seipel
California, BURLINGAME: Broadway. Penin-
sula. PALO ALTO: Varsity. Stanford: RED-
WOOD CITY: Sequoia. Redwood: SALINAS: Fox.
El Rey: SAN FRANCISCO: California. El Cap:-
tan. New Rialto: SAN MATEO: Bay wood, San
Mateo: WATSON VILLE : Fox. State.
East Bay District
District Manager Richard Spier
California, BERKELEY: California. United Art-
ists. U. C: OAKLAND: Fox. Grand Lake. Orphe-
952
um, Paramount. Senator, State; RICHMOND:
Fox. State: VALLEJO: Hanlon. Senator, Strand.
Valley District
District Manager N. O. Turner
California. FRESNO: Kinema, State. Wilson:
SACRAMENTO: Alhambra. Capitol. Hippodrome.
Senator: SAN JOSE: California. Mission. Padre;
STOCKTON: California, Ritz, State, Rialto.
Montana District
District Manager Dick Dickinson
Montana, BILLINGS: Fox; BUTTE: American,
Fox, Rialto; GREAT FALLS: Liberty, Ritz, Town;
LEWISTOWN: Judith, Broadway.
Closed Theaters
Arizona. GLOBE: Globe.
California, BERKELEY: Campus: BURLING-
AME: Garden: EL CENTRO: Imperial: FRESNO:
White; HANFORD: Fox; LOS ANGELES: Rivoli;
NORTH HOLLYWOOD: Valley; OAKLAND: Clare-
mont; PASADENA: Pasadena; REDLANDS: State:
REDWOOD CITY: Old Sequoia: SALINAS: Strand
(Crystal); SAN MATEO: Regent; SANTA ANA:
Spurgeon; SANTA PAULA: Lyric: VALLEJO:
Marval, Valmar; VISALIA: Fox, Hyde; WATSON-
VILLE: Pajaro, Rainbow.
Montana, GREAT FALLS: Grand.
FOX WISCONSIN CIRCUIT
536 W. Wisconsin Ave., Milwaukee, Wise.
Chairman of the Board Spyros Skouras
President and General Manager. .H. J. Fitzgerald
Film Buyer William T. Powers
Treasurer G. N. Blatchford
THEATERS (58) :
Listed in 21 groups
Fox Calumet Corp.
Michigan, CALUMET: Calumet; LAURIUM :
Peoples.
Fox City Theaters Corp.
Wisconsin, MILWAUKEE: Kosciusko. Lincoln.
Riviera, State. Venetian.
Fox Downtown Theater Corp.
Wisconsin, MILWAUKEE: Strand.
Fox East Side Theatres Corp.
Wisconsin, MILWAUKEE: Astor, Jackson, Oak-
land, Ogden.
Fox Janesvillc Corp.
Wisconsin, JANESVILLE: Beverly, Myers.
Fox Manitowoc Corp.
Wisconsin. MANITOWOC: Strand.
Fox Northside Theater Corp.
Wisconsin, MILWAUKEE: Ritz.
Fox Palace Corp.
Wisconsin. MILWAUKEE : Palace.
Fox Port Washington Corp.
Wisconsin, PORT WASHINGTON: Grand.
Fox Racine Corp.
Wisconsin, RACINE: Uptown.
Fox Soutliside Theaters Corp,
Wisconsin, MILWAUKEE: Grace, Layton Pail;
Fox Varsity Corp.
Wisconsin, MILWAUKEE: Varsity.
Fox Winnebago Corp.
Wisconsin, FOND DU LAC: Fond du Lac,
Garrick. Retlaw.
Fox Wisconsin Corp.
Wisconsin, MILWAUKEE: Wisconsin.
Green Bay Operating Co.
Wisconsin, GREEN BAY: Orpheum.
Milwaukee Theaters, Inc.
Wisconsin, MILWAUKEE: Downer. Shorewood;
MENASHA: Brin. Menasha; NEENAH: Embassy.
Valley Theaters Corp.
Wisconsin, WAUSAU: Grand, Wausau.
Fox Wisconsin Theatres, Inc.
Michigan, IRON MOUNTAIN: Braumart. Colon-
ial: MENOMINEE: Lloyd.
Wisconsin, BEAVER DAM: Odeon. Davison
MADISON: Madison. Orpheum, Parkway, Strand
MARINETTE: Fox, Rialto. Strand: MILWAU
Kee: Miller, Sherman, Zenith: OSHKOSH: Grand
STEVENS POINT: Fox, Lyric; WEST ALLIS
Allis, Paradise.
Fox Cudahy Corp.
Wisconsin. CUDAHY: Cudahy, Majestic.
Fox Plaza Theater Corp.
Wisconsin, MILWAUKEE: Plaza.
Fox Wisconsin Amusement Corp.
Agent for all companies listed above.
Fox Northside Theater Corp.
Wisconsin, MILWAUKEE: Ritz.
Fox Varsity Corp.
Wisconsin, MILWAUKEE: Varsity.
Fox World Theater Corp.
Wisconsin, MILWAUKEE: World.
FRELS' THEATERS
113 VV. Constitution St., Victoria, Tex.
General Manager-Film Buyer Rubin Frel;
THEATERS (10):
Texas. BAY CITY. State: EL CAMPO: Nor
mana: GOLIAD: Goliad: KARNES CITY: Karnes
NIXON: Nixon; SAN DIEGO: Regis. Rio; VIC
TORIA: Uptown; WHARTON: Rio; YORKTOWN
L'Arcade.
FRIEDER & GROSSMAN
35 Warren St., Hudson, N. Y.
Film Buyers Frieder & Grossman
THEATERS (7):
New York, CAMBRIDGE: Strand: HOOSICK
FALLS: New; HUDSON: Playhouse, Park, Rialto:
PORT HENRY: Dery; TICONDEROGA: Play-
house.
FRISINA AMUSEMENT CO.
Capitol Theater, Taylorsville, III.
President D. Frisina
THEATERS (20) :
Illinois. CARLINVILLE: Marvel: CHARLES
TON: Lincoln: GILLESPIE: Colonial; LITCH
FIELD: Capitol; MATSON: "K". Matson
SPRINGFIELD: Roxy, Tivoli; TAYLOR VILLE
Capitol, Ritz; EFFINGHAM: Effingham: HILLS
BORO: Grand. Orpheum: KINCAID: Kincaid
LAWRENCEVILLE: Avalon : MORRISON VILLE
State: ONLEY: Onley; SHELBYVILLE: Play-
house.
Iowa, KEOKUK: Grand, Iowa.
FRY, S. G., THEATERS
P. O. Box 787, Tyler, Tex.
Owner & General Manager S. G. Fry
Secretary-Treasurer Mrs. S. G. Fry
THEATERS (5) :
Texas. RROWNSBORO: Rex' GRAND SALINE:
Grand; TYLER: Joy. Palace; VAN: Victor.
G. C. S. CIRCUIT
•10(!0 Milwaukee Ave., Chicago, III.
President Mort D. Goldberg
General Manager J. J. Weiss
THEATERS (8) :
Illinois, CHICAGO: Admiral, Fox. Jeff, New
Drake, Portage, Revue.
Wisconsin, NEENAH: Embassy.
GAERTNER, GEORGE and I.OU
Ritz Theater, Baltimore, Md.
THEATERS (5) :
Maryland, BALTIMORE: Earle. Palace. Ritz.
Vilma; DUNDALK: Strand.
GAMMELL-ENSMINGER THEATERS
Buffalo, N. Y.
THEATERS (5) :
New York, BUFFALO: Little Seneca. New
Ariel, United. Colonial, Columbia.
GASCONADE THEATER CORP.
210 W. 8th St.. Rolla. Mo.
Managers Caesar Burutt. Forrest L. Snvder
THEATERS (I):
Missouri, LEBANON: Lyric; ROLLA: Rollamo:
ST. JAMES: Lyric; SULLIVAN: Meramec.
GILES, GEORGE A., CO.
<>8!» Massachusetts Ave.. Cambridge, Mass.
Treasurer John S. Giles
THEATERS (0) :
.Massachusetts, BOSTON: Uptown; FRAMING
HAM: St. George, Gorman; GARDNER: Orphe-
um, Uptown; NORWOOD: Guild. Norwood.
New Hampshire, LACONIA: Gardens, Colonial.
GOLDBERG, AARON, THEATERS
35 Taylor St., San Francisco, Calif.
Owner Aaron Goldberg
953
THEATERS (5) :
California, SAN FRANCISCO: New Circle.
Egyptian, Peerless, Regal, Silver-Palace.
GOLDBERG, R. D„ THEATER CORr.
State Theater lildg., Omaha, Neb.
President-Treasurer R. D. Goldberg
Vice-president-Secretary ....Mrs. R. D. Goldberg
THEATERS (7) :
Nebraska, OMAHA: Arbor, Avenue. Dundee.
Military, State, Town, Winn.
GOLDEN STATE THEATER & REALTY CORP.
25 Ta>lor St., San Francisco, Calif.
President E. H. Emmick
Gen'l Mgr. Film Buyer R. A. McNeil
THEATERS (32) :
California, BERKELEY: Forum. Rivoli; HAY-
WARD: Hayward. State; OAKLAND: Broadway,
Capitol, Central, Dimond. Fairfax, Gateway, Gra-
nada, Piedmont, New Fruitvale. Palace, Park-
way, Uptown: SAN FRANCISCO: Amazon. Daly
City, El Rey, Granada, Haight. Irving, Palace.
Noe, Parkside, Midtown, Uptown, Verdi: SAN
BRUNO: El Camino; SAN LEANDRO: Palace:
SAN JOSE: State: SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO:
State.
GOLDMAN, WILLIAM. THEATERS, INC.
1518 Walnut St., Philadelphia. Pa.
President William Goldman
Secretary E. Lyle Trenchard
THEATERS (9) :
Pennsylvania, HANOVER: Park: PHILADEL-
PHIA: Band Box, Fifty-Sixth Street, News:
POTTSTOWN: Hippodrome. Strand, Victor
(closed); UPPER DARBY: Terminal; YORK: Hi-
Way.
GOLLOS BROTHERS
Los Angeles, Calif.
THEATERS (4):
California, BEVERLY HILLS: New; LOS
ANGELES: Midway, Ray, Woodlawn.
GOODMAN & HARRISON
2879 W. 22nd St., Chicago, 111.
THEATERS (4) :
Illinois. CHICAGO: Douglas. Ulington. Marshall
Square, West.
GRAPHIC THEATERS CIRCUIT
164 Stuart St., Boston, Mass.
President Samuel Kurson
General Manager Newell B. Kurson
THEATERS (20) :
Maine, BELFAST: Colonial, BUCKPORT: Ala-
mo: CAMDEN: Comique: DEXTER: Park
DOVER: New Star; ELLSWORTH: Dirigo, Grand:
MILLINOCKET: Opera House; MILO: Chic;
NORTHEAST HARBOR: Pastime; MADAWASKA:
Roxy; BRIDGETON : Mayfair.
Massachusetts, DAN VERS: Orpheum.
New Hampshire, FRANKLIN : Regal. Pastime.
Capitol.
Vermont, BRANDON: Brandon; MIDDLE-
BURY. Campus, NEWPORT: New Burns.
GREEN COUNTY AMUSEMENT CO., INC.
Wedgeway Bldg., Schenectady, N. Y.
Gen'l Manager-Film Buyer W. W. Farley
THEATERS (9) :
New York, ALBANY: Capitol: CATSKILL:
Community; SCHENECTADY: Albany. Barcli,
Hudson. State, Strand. Van Curler; SCOTIA
Ritz.
GREEN, IRVING, CIRCUIT
650 Mt. Auburn St., Watertown, Mass.
THEATERS (4) :
Massachusetts, EVERETT: Park: MEDFORD:
Fellsway; MELROSE: Melrose; WATERTOWN:
Coolidge.
GRIFFITH AMUSEMENT COMPANY
11% N. Lee Ave., Oklahoma City, Okla.
THEATERS (228) :
Listed in 12 groups:
Griffith Amusement Co.
President L. C. Griffith
Vice-President Foster McSwain
Secretary H. J. Griffith
Assistant Secretary R. E. Griffith
Assistant Secretary B. J. McKenna
Treasurer H. M. Lowenstein
Assistant Treasurer A. R. Powell
Oklahoma, ADA: McSwain. Kiva. Ritz: BAK-
TLESVELLE : Odeon. Lyric. Rex: BLACKWELL
Rivoli, Midwest. Palace: CHANDLER: H. & S.
Odeon: DUNCAN: Palace. Folly: ELK CITY
Elk: ENID: Aztec, Cherokee, Arcadia, Mecca
GUTHRIE: Melba. State, Guthrie: HENRYET
TA: Blaine, Morgan: HOBART: Kiowa; HUGO
Erie, Ritz; NORMAN: Sooner. Varsity. Univer
sity. Campus; OKLAHOMA CITY: Rialto; OK
MULGEE: Orpheum. Yale. Inea. Rex: SEMINOLE
Rex. State. Rialto: SHAWNEE: Bison. Criterion
Avon. State; STILLWATER: Aggie, Mecca
Campus.
Texas, BORGER: Rig, Rex, State: KERMIT
Kermit. Texas; PAMPAS: LaNora. Rex, State
WELLINGTON: Ritz. Texan: WINK: Rig, Rex.
Consolidated Theaters, Inc.
President L. C. Griffith
Vice-President B. J. McKenna
Secretary -Treasurer H. J. Griffith
Assistant Secretary -Treasurer H. R. Falls
Assistant Secretary R. E. Griffith
Oklahoma, ALTUS: Plaza, Delta. Ritz:
CHICKASHA: Washita. Rialto. Midwest. Ismo.
Ritz: CLAREMORE: Yale, Palace: CLINTON:
Del Rio. Rialto: CUSHING: Dunkin. Paramount.
American: DRUMRIGHT: Tower, Midwest, Rex:
EL RENO: Criterion, El Caro. Royal, Empress:
FREDERICK: Ramona, Ritz, Grand: HOLDEN-
VILLE: Grand. Dixie. Liberty: HOMINY: Ritz:
MANGUM: Temple. Greer, Rialto: OKLAHOMA
CITY: Reno: PONCA CITY: Poncon. Murray. Roxy.
Ritz: SAPULPA: Yale. State, Empress: SAYRE:
Ute, Rio; VINITA: Lyric. Aztec; WEWOKA: Key.
Paramount. State.
Texas, CLEBURNE: Yale. Palace: GOLDSMITH:
Ector; LUBBOCK: Palace. Lindsey. Broadway.
Lyric, Cactus. Texan: MIDLAND: Yucca, Ritz.
Rex; SUNRAY: Sunray.
Jack Pickens Theaters, Inc.
Texas, CUERO: Rialto, Trot: NEW BRAUN-
FELS: Rialto, Rex: REFUGIO: Rialto. Rig:
UVALDE: Strand, Ritz.
Lowenstein Theaters
Oklahoma, ARDMORE: Tivoli. Ritz. Para-
mount. Star. Fox, Temple.
Walmur Amusement Co.
Oklahoma. BRISTOW: Princess. Walmur.
W. J. Moore Theater
Oklahoma. FAIRFAX: Tall Chief.
Wade-Tex Theaters
Texas, GAINESVILLE: State. Plaza, Ritz.
Texan.
Coleman Interests
Oklahoma, MIAMI: Coleman, GIory-B.
R. E. Griffith Theaters, Inc.
President R. E. Griffith
Vice-President F. L. Stocker
Secretary and Treasurer R. I. Payne
Assistant Treasurer B. J. McKenna
New Mexico, ALAMOGORDO: White Sands.
Alamento: CARLSBAD: Cactus. Cavern: CLOVIS:
Lyceum, Mesa, Plains. Clovis; CONCHAS DAM: Con-
chas: DEMING: Luna: EUNICE: Lea: GALLUP:
Chief, Navajo: HOBBS: Reel, Rig. Scout; JAL:
Rex; LOVINGTON : Mesa: ROSWELL: Yucca,
Pecos.
Texas, OLNEY: Westex. Olney. Princess; POST:
Garza.
Westex Theaters, Inc.
President R. E. Griffith
Vice-President F. L. Stocker
Secretary-Treasurer R. I. Payne
Asst. Treasurer B. J. McKenna
New Mexico, PORTALES: Yam. Kiva.
Texas, BALLINGER: Texas. Palace: BELTON:
Beltonian, Beltex; BRADY: Brady. Palace: BURK-
BURNETT: Palace. Tex: CLARKSVILLE: Avalon.
State, Colonial; DENVER CITY: Rhea: GEORGE-
954
TOWN: Palace, Ritz; GONZALES: Crystal; HERE-
FORD: Star: LAMPASAS: LeRoy, Rio: LOCK-
HART: Baker; LULING: Princess: MERKEL:
Queen: ODESSA: Lyric. Texas: PLAINVIEW:
Granada, Fair, Texas: SAN SABA: Palace: SPUR:
Palace, Spur; STAMFORD: Grand, Ritz; WIN-
TERS: State, Queen.
Long-Griffith Theaters (Part of VVestex)
Texas, ALVIN: Alvin: BAY CITY: Franklin.
Colonial; EL CAMPO: Floyd's, Liberty; TEXAS
CITY: Jewel, Texas; VICTORIA: Rita, Queen;
WHARTON: Queen.
Griffith-Arizona Theaters
Arizona, AJO: Oasis: BENSON: Benson: BO-
WIE: Bowie; COOLIDGE: San Carlos, Coolidge;
DUNCAN: Duncan: ELOY: Eloy: FLORENCE:
Isis;; HAYDEN: Rex: McNARY: Rivoli; PIMA:
Pima: RAY: Iris; SAFFORD: Safford, Ramona;
SPRINGERVILLE : El Rio: SONORA: Juarez;
ST. JOHNS: Ritz; SUPERIOR: New Uptown;
WILLCOX: Willcox.
GRIFFITH-DICKSON THEATERS, INC.
3525 Broadway, Kansas City, Mo.
President H. J. Griffith
Vice-President Glen W. Dickinson
Secretary-Treasurer Glen W. Dickinson. Jr.
Asst. Secretary-Treasurer Harold Harris
THEATERS (31) :
Listed in two groups:
Griffith-Dickson Theaters, Inc.
Kansas. BELOIT: Dickinson; HIAWATHA:
Chief; INDEPENDENCE: Booth, Beldorf, Main-
street; JUNCTION CITY: Junction, Coxy: MAN-
HATTAN: Carlton, Wareham. Dickinson: OLA-
THE: Dickinson; OSAWATOMIE: Osawa, Kansas;
PAOLA: Dickinson; PARSONS: Kansan, Uptown;
OSAGE CITY: Osage.
Missouri, CHILLICOTHE: Grand. Ritz; FAY-
ETTE: Fayette: MACON: Macon: MARCELINE:
Uptown. Chief; PLEASANT HILL: Peoples: SLA-
TER: Kiva.
Williams-Griffith Circuit
Kansas, FREDONIA: Klock, Whiteway.
Nebraska, AUBURN: Booth, Auburn; NE-
BRASKA CITY: Booth, Paramount.
GROSS CIRCUIT
Owner and Manager W. D. Gross
THEATERS (8) :
Alaska, DOUGLAS: Coliseum; HAINES: Coliseum;
JUNEAU: Coliseum; KETCHIKAN: Coliseum;
PETERSBURG: Coliseum; SITKA: Coliseum:
SKAGWAY: Broadway: WRANGEL: Coliseum.
GUSDANOVIC, PAUL
002 Film Exchange Bldg., Cleveland. O.
President Paul Gusdanovic
THEATERS (4) :
Ohio. CLEVELAND: Avalon, Corlett, LaSalle.
Regent.
H. & H. THEATER CO.
Abilene, Tex.
President-General Manager H. T. Hodge
THEATERS (16) :
Texas. ANSON: Lyric, Palace; BALLINGER:
Palace, Texas; BROUTE: Texas: MERKEL: Cozy.
Queen; MIDLAND: Grand, Ritz, Rex; ODESSA:
Lyric, Texas; STAMFORD: Grand, Ritz; WIN-
TERS: Queen, State.
HALL INDUSTRIES THEATERS
Beeville, Tex.
Owner & Film Buyer H. W. Hall
THEATERS (22) :
Texas, ALICE: Rialto. Rex: ARANSAS PASS:
Rialto. Rex; BEEVILLE: Rialto. Rex. Rio:
CUERO: Rialto, Rex; GEORGE WEST: Rialto:
KENEDY: Rialto, Rex; KEERVILLE: Arcadia,
Rex, Rialto; KINGSVILLE: Rialto, Rex; NEW
BRAUNFELS: Rialto, Rex; SINTON: Rialto, Rex;
THREE RIVERS: Rialto.
HAMKICK-EVERGREEN THEATERS
070 Skinner Bldg., Seattle, Wash.
Genl. Mgr. Seattle Division John Hamrick
Genl. Mgr., Portland Division .. Albert Finkelstein
407 American Bank Bldg., Portland, Ore.
THEATERS (16):
Listed in two groups:
John Hainrick Theaters
Washington, TACOMA: Blue Mouse, Music Box,
Roxy, Temple.
Hamrick-Eveigreen Theaters
Oregon, PORTLAND: Blue Mouse. Hollywood.
Liberty, Music Box, Oriental, Rivoli, Paramount,
Playhouse.
Washington, SEATTLE: Blue Mouse. Coliseum,
Fifth Avenue, Music Box, Music Hall. Orpheum.
Paramount.
HANCOCK CIRCUIT
Council, Idaho
Gen'l Managers Leo and Joseph Hancock
THEATERS (4) :
Idaho, CAMBRIDGE: Cambridge; COUNCIL:
Peoples; MIDVALE: Midvale; NEW MEADOWS:
LaFays.
HANLINE, ANDREW L.
Illinois Theater Bldg., Macomb, 111.
THEATERS (8) :
Illinois, AUGUSTA: Cozy; CANTON: Garden;
MACOMB: Illinois, Lamoine; MONMOUTH: Bijou.
Rivoli; MT. STERLING: Brown; WARSAW:
Royal.
HARRIS AMUSEMENT CO.
William Penn Hotel, Pittsburgh, Pa.
President Frank J. Harris
V. P. -General Manager John H. Harris
Secretary George S. Harrison
Treasurer James G. BaJmer
THEATERS (20) :
Michigan, DETROIT. Family.
Ohio, SALEM: Grand, State; WARREN: Harris-
Warren.
Pennsylvania, DuBOIS: Harris: EAST LIBERTY
(Pittsburgh) : Harris-Family, Harris-Liberty;
HUNTINGTON: Clifton; JEANNETTE: Harris-
Manos, Harris- Jeannette : PITTSBURGH: Harris-
Alvin, Harris-Beechview. Harris-Denis, Harris-
Perry, Harris-Palace, Harris-William Penn, Harris-
Senator; REYNOLDSVILLE : Harris-Adelphia ; ST.
MARYS: Harris, Family.
HARRIS THEATRICAL ENTERPRISES
3410 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
General Manager-Film Buyer .... Harry A. Harris
THEATERS (7) :
New York, NEW YORK: Delmar, Dorset, Cen
tral, Columbia, Sunset, Washington, New 14tfc
Street.
HARRIS-VOELLER THEATERS, INC.
Burley Theater, Barley, Idaho
President-General Manager I. H. Harris
Vice-President C. C. Voeller
THEATERS (12):
Idaho, BUHL: Cozy. Ramona: BURLEY: Bur
ley, Orpheum; JEROME: Voris; MONTPELIER :
Rich, Roxy; RUPERT: Egyptian, Wilson.
Oregon, NYSSA, Nyssa.
Wyoming, EVANSTON : Orpheus. Strand.
HARVEY AMUSEMENT CO.
291 Golden Gate Ave., San Francisco, Calif.
President J. A. Harvey, Sr.
V-P and General Manager H. V. Harvey
Secretary-Treasurer R. W. Harvey
THEATERS (14):
California, ANGELS CAMP: Angels; AR-
BUCKLE: Arbuckle: EXETER: Exeter, Kaweah:
McCLOUD: McCloud: MENLO PARK: Menlo; OR-
LAND: Orland: PALO ALTO: Mayfield; PLUMAS:
Portola; SONORA: Star: SANTA CLARA: Santa
Clara; SUISUN: Suisun ; WALNUT GROVE: Grove;
WESTWOOD: Westwood.
HAVEN CIRCUIT
Imperial Theater, Forest City, Ark.
Pres. -Gen'l Manager L. F. Haven
THEATERS (4) :
Arkansas, BRINKLEY: Imperial: FOREST
CITY: Imperial, Rosemary: MARIANNA: Im-
perial: WYNNE: Imperial.
955
HEARD, J. M., CIRCUIT
West Monroe, La.
THEATERS (4):
Louisiana, HA YNESVILLE : Melba: SULPHUR:
Strand; WEST MONROE: Rialto, Strand.
HECHT, HARRY K., CIRCUIT
Rialto Theater, Passaic, N. J.
General Manager Maurice J. Miller
THEATERS (4) :
New Jersey, PASSAIC: Palace. Rialto: PAT-
ERSON: Plaza. Capitol.
IIEISEL, G. J.
THEATERS (4) :
Ohio. NEW BOSTON: Lyric. New. Popular:
SCOTOVILLE: Stanley.
HERMAN, DR. C. E.
New Carnegie Theater, Carnegie, Pa.
THEATERS (4) :
Pennsylvania, CARNEGIE: Dixie. Grand. Lib-
erty, New Carnegie.
HEY WOOD AMUSEMENT CO.
Box It., New Richmond, Wise.
Gen'l Mgr.-Film Buyer J. G. Hey wood
Secretary-Treasurer Carrie Kahler Hey wood
THEATERS (5) :
Wisconsin. CORNELL: Gem: HUDSON: Hudson:
NEW RICHMOND: Gem; STANLEY: Stanley;
OSCEOLA: Spanish Garden.
HII. DINGER ENTERPRISES
142 E. State St., Trenton, N. J.
Film Buyer Sidney E. Samuelson
THEATERS (6) :
New Jersey, TRENTON: Bijou, Greenwood.
Princess. Rialto, Stacy, Strand.
HIES II AMUSEMENT CO.
Marshall St. & Erie Ave., Philadelphia. Pa.
President Martin Hirsh
Secretary-Treasurer Harry Hirsh
Vice-President David Levin
THEATERS (5) :
Pennsylvania, PHILADELPHIA: Century, For-
rest, Pike, Ruby. Spruce.
HOME THEATERS CIRCUIT CORP.
Lincoln Theater. Robinson, HI.
Pres. -Gen'l. Mgr. -Film Buyer J. C. Hewitt
THEATERS (4) :
Illinois. NEWTON: New Star: OBLONG: Home
ROBINSON: Lincoln, Strand.
HOUSE, CHARLES, ENTERPRISES, INC.
105 W. State St., Rockford, III.
General Manager-Film Buyer Charles House
THEATERS (5):
Illinois, CANTON: Garden: ROCKFORD: Cap-
itol, State: MONMOUTH: Bijou. Rivoli.
HUDSON THEATERS CO.
Tivoli Theater Bids-
Main Street, Richmond, Ind.
President Robert L. Hudson
THEATERS (6) :
Indiana. KENDALLVILLE : Strand. Princess:
RICHMOND: Hudson, Indiana, Ritz, Tivoli.
Ill ISH THEATER ENTERPRISES
I 126 Harvard Ave., Salt Lake City, Utah
Owner E. C. Huish
THEATERS (13):
Nevada. ELKO: Elvada. Hunter.
Utah. EUREKA: Star: HELPER: Strand: KA-
NAB: Kanab: MT. PLEASANT: Star: PAYSON:
Star: PRICE: Carbon. Price. Utah: RICHFIELD:
Kinema. Lyric: SPANISH FORK: New Angelus.
HUNTS THEATERS, INC.
Hunt's Shore Bldg.
3511 Atlantic Ave., Wildwood, N. J.
President W. C. Hunt
Treasurer W. R. Stine
Secretary w. D. Hunt
THEATERS (19) :
New Jersey, CAPE MAY: Hunt's Palace. City
Pier. Liberty; CAPE MAY COURT HOUSE:
Grand: NEWARK: Walnut: TRENTON: Orphe-
um. Centre Street. Gaiety: WEST COLLINGS-
WOOD: Crescent. WILDWOOD: Auditorium.
Blaker, Casino. Plaza Dance Pier. New Shore.
Nixon, Regent, Strand, Ocean Pier.
Pennsylvania, PHILADELPHIA: Rockland.
IDEAL AMUSEMENT CO.
524 Central Ave, Johnstown, Pa.
President V. F. Scott
Secretary Cuba Walker
THEATERS (17) :
Pennsylvania, ALTOONA: Lyric. Vernon:
BARNESBORO: Vernon: BOSWELL: Morrison.
Vernon: CAIRNBROOK: Vernon: CLEARFIELD:
Roxy: CONEMAUGH: Penn: CONNELLSVILLE :
Soisson: JOHNSTOWN: Ideal. Laurel. Rivoli. Roxy:
HOLSOPPLE: Vernon: JUNIATA: Juniata; MEY-
ERSDALE: State; SYKESVILLE: Ideal.
IMPERIAL THEATERS CO.
Imperial Theater, Forrest City, Ark.
President-General Manager L. F. Haven
THEATERS (6) :
Arkansas, BR1NKLEY: Imperial: FORREST
CITY: Forest City, Imperial, Rosemary: MARI-
ANNA: Imperial; WYNNE: Imperial.
IMPERIAL THEATERS, INC.
Strand Theater Bldg., Hackettstown, N. J.
Representative William B. Stein
THEATERS (4) :
New Jersey, FLEMINGTON: Palace; FRENCH-
TOWN: Gem: HACKETTSTOWN: Strand; LAM-
BERTVILLE: Strand.
INDEPENDENT THEATERS, INC.
Cameo Theater, 527 Market St., Chattanooga,
Tenn.
Presktent A. Solomon
General Manager-Film Buyer A. H. Borisky
THEATERS (8) :
Listed in two groups:
Independent Theaters, Inc.
Tennessee, CHATTANOOGA: American. Park.
Cameo. Ritz, Rivoli, Riviera.
Grand Amusement Co.
Pres.-Genl. Mgr.-Film Buyer Mose Lebovitz
Tennessee, CHATTANOOGA: Amusu, Grand
(for colored patronage).
INDIANA COUNTY THEATERS CO., INC.
Tribune-Review Bldg.. Greensburg, Pa.
President Michael Manos
Treasurer William Lipsie
THEATERS (8) :
Pennsylvania, BLAIRSVILLE: Manos: HOMER
CITY. Empire: LATROBE: Manos. Grand. Olym-
pic; VANDERGRIFT: Casino, Arcadia, Manos.
INDIANA-ILLINOIS THEATERS, INC.
910 S. Michigan Ave., Chicago, 111.
President Alexander Manta
Vice-President D. J. Chrissis
Secretary-Treasurer Jack Rose
THEATERS (28) :
Illinois, CHICAGO: Gaiety, Englewood. Lex.
Linden. Montclaire, Owl, Palace: OAKWYN: Elm.
Indiana. EAST CHICAGO: Forsythe. Vogue:
ELKHART: Bucklin. Orpheum. Roxy, Elco: GO-
SHEN : Circle. Jefferson. Lincoln : INDI * HA HAR-
BOR: Indiana. Vic: LA PORTE: Fox. Roxy:
MICHIGAN CITY: Lake. Lido. Ritz. Tivoli. Up-
town; WHITING: Capitol, Hoosier.
INLAND THEATERS CO.
230 S. Second St., Yakima. Wash.
Partners: Frederick Mercy. Frederick Mercy, Jr..
Paul F. Mercy. Edgar B. Mercy
THEATERS (10):
Washington. ELLENSBURG: Liberty: HEX-
NEWICK: Liberty: PASCO: Liberty; SUNNY* -
SIDE: Liberty: TOPPENISH: Liberty, Wigwam:
WALLA WALLA: Liberty, Roxy, Capitol, Keylor-
Grand.
956
INTERBORO CIRCUIT, INC.
10 Court St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
President Samuel Strausberg
Vice-President Solomon M. Strausberg
Film Buyer Jack Hattem
THEATERS (42) :
New Jersey, NEWARK: Congress, Essex.
New York, NEW ROCHELLE: Trent; NEW
YORK — Brooklyn: Coliseum, Park, Ritz, Berkshire,
Fortway, Harbor, Hollywood, Endicott, Sumner.
Kismet, State, Canarsie, Sun, Metro, Williamsburg,
Howard, Sunset. Vanity, Peerless (Myrtle Ave.) ;
NEW YORK — Bronx: Dover, DeLuxe, Fenway,
Freeman, Lido, Tower, Zenith: NEW YORK —
Manhattan: Granada; LONG ISLAND — FOREST
HILLS: Trylon: HOLLIS: Island; LAURELTON:
Laurelton; LITTLE NECK: Little Neck; MER-
RICK: Gables; WOODSIDE: Hobart: COLLEGE
POINT: College: ST. ALBANS: Linden, Cambria,
St. Albans, Trylon.
INTERMOliNTAIN THEATERS, INC.
52 W. 2nd St., South, Salt Lake City, Utah.
President Y. F. Freeman
Vice President-General Manager Harry David
Treasurer Frederick J. Ewald
THEATERS (28) :
Listed in three groups:
Intermountain Theaters, Inc.
Idaho, PRESTON: Grand, Isis: TWIN FALLS:
Idaho, Orpheum.
Utah, BRIGHAM: Roxy; LOGAN: Grand. Roxy,
Capitol, Lyric; PROVO: Paramount. Provo. Strand,
Uinta; SALT LAKE CITY: Capitol, Paramount.
Studio, Victory. Utah, Center, Mario.
I'aramor Theater Co.
General Manager Harry David
Utah, OGDEN: Orpheum, Paramount, Colonial,
Lyceum .
Menmar Theater Co.
General Manager Harry David
Idaho, BOISE : Ada. Pinney, Granada, Lyric.
INTERSTATE CIRCUIT, INC. and
TEXAS CONSOLIDATED THEATERS, INC.
Majestic Theater Bldg., Dallas, Tex.
President Karl Hoblitzelle
General Manager R. J. O'Donnell
THEATERS (134):
New Mexico, ALBUQUERQUE: Kimo, Sunshine,
Mission, Chief. Rio, Mesa, Lobo.
Texas, ABILENE: Paramount, Palace, Majestic,
Queen; AMARILLO: Paramount, Capitol, Rialto,
State: ARLINGTON: Aggie, Texas: AUSTIN: Par-
amount, State, Queen, Capitol. Varsity, Texan,
Austin: BRECKENRIDGE : Palace, National;
BROWNSVILLE: Capitol, Queen: BROWNWOOD:
Lyric. Gem, Queen; CORSICANA: Palace, Ideal,
Grand; DALLAS: Majestic. Palace, Melba, Tower,
Rialto. Capitol, Village, Varsity, Melrose, White,
Del-Sec, Forest, Mirror, Fair, Knox, Lawn, Lake-
wood; DENISON: Rialto. Star: DENTON: Palace.
Texas, Dreamland: EASTLAND: Connellee. Lyric;
EL PASO: Plaza, Ellanay, Wigwam. Palace.
Texas-Grand; FORT WORTH: Worth, Hollywood,
Palace, Majestic, Parkway, Tivoli, Varsity; GAL-
VESTON: Martini, State. Queen, Tremont, Key;
HARLINGEN : Arcadia, Rialto. Strand: HOUSTON:
Majestic, Metropolitan, Kirby, North Main, Tower,
Eastwood. Delman, Bluebonnet, Yale, Alabama:
MERCEDES: State, Rio; MEXIA: National, Palace;
McALLEN: Palace, Queen. Azteca; PARIS: Plaza.
Lamar, Grand. Dixie; RANGER: Arcadia, Colum-
bia; SAN ANTONIO: Majestic, Aztec, Texas, Em-
pire, State, Palace, Uptown, Highland, Harlandale.
Broadway; SAN BENITO: Rivoli, Palace; SAN
MARCOS: Palace. Plaza: TEMPLE: Arcadia. Gem,
Bell, Little; TYLER: Arcadia, Liberty, Queen,
Majestic: VERNON: Vernon, Pictorium; WACO:
Waco, Orpheum, Rivoli, Strand: WICHITA FALLS:
Majestic, Strand, State, Gem; WESLACO: Ritz.
INTERSTATE ENTERPRISES
Rose Theater Bldg., Thomasville, Ga.
President-Manager Nat M. Williams
THEATERS (8) :
Florida, QUINCY: Shaw.
Georgia, MEIGS: Palm; QUITMAN: Ilex;
THOMASVILLE: Grand, Mode, Ritz, Rose; PEL-
HAM: Pine.
INTERSTATE THEATER CORP.
260 Tremont St., Boston, Mass.
President Edward Ansin
Treasurer E. Harold Stoneman
THEATERS (40) :
Connecticut, DANIELSON: Orpheum. Majestic;
PUTNAM: Bradley, Victory; ROCKVILLE: Pal-
ace.
Massachusetts, BROCKTON: Colonial; CHATH-
AM: Chatham; DENNIS: Cape Cinema: FALL
RIVER: Durfee. Empire: GREAT BARRINGTON:
Mahaiwe; HARWICHPORT: Modern: HYANNIS:
Hyannis. Center; MILFORD: Opera House, State;
OSTERVILLE: Community: PLYMOUTH: Old Col-
ony, Park. Plymouth; REVERE: Boulevard, Re-
vere: SOUTHBRIDGE: Blanchard, Phelps, Strand;
STOUGHTON: State.
New Hampshire. BRISTOL: Bristol: LANCAST-
ER: Rialto: LINCOLN: Charkarohen: NORTH
WOODSTOCK: Corliss: PLYMOUTH: Music Hall,
Plymouth: ROCHESTER: Colonial. Scenic.
Vermont, BELLOWS FALLS: Opera House.
Park; ST. JOHNSBURY: Star: VERGENNES:
Vergennes: WHITE RIVER JUNCTION: Lyric,
Opera House.
INTERSTATE THEATERS, INC.
503 Sinclair Bldg., Steubenville, 0.
President A. G. Constant
District Manager George A. Delis
THEATERS (11) :
Ohio, BELLAIRE: Capitol, Temple; CANTON:
Palace: EAST LIVERPOOL: American, State:
MANSFIELD: Park: NILES: McKinlev; NORTH
CANTON: Park: PORTSMOUTH: Garden; TIL-
TONSVILLE: Palace; YORKVILLE: Ohio.
ISLAND THEATER CIRCUIT
087 Eighth Ave., New York, N. Y.
THEATERS (16):
New Jersey, NEWARK: Art. Strand.
New York, BROOKLYN: Dewey: ASTORIA
Ditmars: CORONA: Palace; EAST ISLIP: East
Islip; ELM HURST : Newtown: FARMINGDALE:
Strand; HAMPTON BAYS: Bays: HEMPSTEAD:
State: JACKSON HEIGHTS: Polk Ave.: LONG
ISLAND CITY: Idle Hour, Vernon; LYNBROOK:
Arcade; MATTITUCK: Mattituck; ROSLYN: Ros-
lyn.
ISLE THEATRICAL CORP.
1560 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
General Manager-Film Buyer Harry Shiffmar
THEATERS (8) :
New York, STATEN ISLAND: St. George, Ritz
Liberty, Capitol, Strand, Stadium, New Dorp
Paramount.
JAYEM MANAGEMENT CORP.
584 Bergenline Ave., West New York, N. S.
President-Treasurer Albert Marguliei
V-P and Secretary Irwin Margulies
Secretary Laura Cohen
THEATERS (5) :
New Jersey, CLIFFSIDE: Savoy; WEST NEW
YORK: Rialto. Rivoli, Mayfair.
New York, NEW YORK — Brooklyn: Regent.
JEFFERSON AMUSEMENT CO., INC. and
EAST TEXAS THEATERS, INC.
Jefferson Theater Bid:;.. Beaumont, Tex.
THEATERS (64) :
Listed in two groups:
Jefferson Amusement Co., Inc.
President J. C. Clemmons
Texas, ANAHUAC: Rig; BEAUMONT: Gem,
Jefferson. Liberty, Peoples, Tivoli, Lamar. Rio;
GREENVILLE: Rita. Texan: MONT BELVIEU:
Mont; NEDERLAND-PORT NECHES: Rio, Lyric:
ORANGE: Gem, Strand: PORT ARTHUR: Ma-
jestic. Pearce, Peoples. Strand. Texan: SEGUIN:
Palace. Texas: SILSBEE: Palace.
East Texas Theaters, Inc.
President Sol E. Gordon
Texas, ARP: Rex: BAYTOWN: Arcadia: BRY-
AN: New Dixie, Palace. Queen: CONROE: Creigh-
ton, Liberty: GLADE WATER: Gregg, Palace,
Cozy; GOOSE CREEK: DeLuxe, Texan: GREGG-
TON: Ritz; HENDERSON: Palace, Strand, Vic-
957
tory; JACKSONVILLE: Palace, Rialto; JASPER:
Lone Star: KILGORE: Crim. Ritz, Strand, Texan;
LA PORTE: Port: LIVINGSTON: Fair: LONG-
VIEW: Rembert. Rita. Strand: LUFKIN: Pines,
Ritz; MARSHALL: Palace, Paramount. Strand;
NACOGDOCHES: Stone Fort. Texan; OVERTON:
Gem, Strand: RUSK: Texas: TALCO: Strand.
Talco; PELLY: Alamo.
.JENSEN AND VON HERBERG
1520 First Ave., Seattle, Wash.
President C. 9. Jensen
Secretary -Treasurer J. von Herbert
V-P & General Manager Leroy V. Johnson
THEATERS (4) :
Washington, SEATTLE: Liberty. Bag-dad, Vene-
tian, Roxy.
JOHNSON, H. H., THEATERS
Ohio Theater, Madison, Ind.
THEATERS (4) :
Listed in two groups:
Madison Theater Co.
Indiana, MADISON: Madison, Ohio.
Rensselaer Theater Corp.
Indiana, RENSSELAER: Palace, Ritz.
JOHNSON, HAROLD
Jerome, Idaho.
THEATERS (5) :
Idaho, EDEN: Eden; HAGERMAN: Park:
RICHFIELD: Town Hall: HAZELTON: L. D. S.
Hall; MURTAGH: High School Gym.
JOHNSON'S PORTABLE CIRCUIT
338 22nd Ave., N., Seattle, Wash.
General Manager B. C. Johnson
THEATERS (12) :
Washington, ALMIRA: Gem: BOTHELL: Both-
ell: BOVILL: Bovill; BREMERTON: Grand:
GRAND COULEE: Grand Coulee: McCLEARY:
McCleary; MARYSVILLE: Marysville: PE ELL:
Pe Ell- POTLATCH: Potlatch; SKYOMISH: Skyo-
mish; STANWOOD: Bovill: TENINO: Tenino.
JOELSON, JULIUS
303 Broadway. Somerville, Mass.
THEATERS (7) :
Massachusetts, ARLINGTON: Capital; FAL-
MOUTH: Elizabeth: SOMERVILLE: Ball Square.
Capital, Central: TAUNTON: Park. Strand.
JONES, G. C, SR.
3501 Cornell Place, Cincinnati, 0.
Owner G. C. Jones. Sr.
THEATERS (4) :
Kentucky, FRANKLIN: Liberty.
Ohio, CINCINNATI: Queen Ann. Victor, Wash-
ington.
JONES, LINICK & SCHAEFER
25 W. Madison St., Chicago, III.
Partners Aaron J. Jones, John J. Jones,
Aaron Jones, Jr.
THEATERS (5) :
Illinois, CHICAGO: Dearborn, Homewood, La-
Salle, McVickers, Oriental.
JOY'S THEATERS, INC.
629 Common St., New Orleans, La.
President Joy N. Houck
Secretary -Treasurer E. C. Houck
Vice President C. N. Houck
THEATERS (28) :
Listed in five groups:
Jov's Theaters, Inc.
Louisiana, ARCADIA: Joy; NAPOLEONVILLE :
Jov: NEW ORLEANS: Joy. Joy's Strand; RAY-
VILLE: Joy; WELSH: Joy.
Mississippi, MOSS POINT: Joy.
Rex Amusements, Inc.
President Willis Houck
Vice-President Joy N. Houck
Secretary -Treasurer Cecil Howard
Louisiana, CHURCH POINT: Joy; CLINTON:
Joy: COTTONPORT: Joy: GROSSE TETE: Joy;
GUEYDAN: Joy: KAPLAN: Joy; MANIOU: Joy;
MAUSURA: Joy: MELVILLE: Joy; NEW OR-
LEANS: Joy's Rio: RINGGOLD: Joy; STMMES-
PORT: Joy; VINTON: Joy.
Mississippi, ROLLING FORK: Joy; BELZONI:
Joy.
Arkansas, TEXARKANA: Joy.
Ritz Theaters, Inc.
President Joy N. Houck
Vice-Presidents Mrs. L. C. Montgomery.
Willis M. Houck
Secretary-Treasurer L. C. Montgomery
Louisiana, KINDER: Joy; RAYNE: Joy; ST.
MARTINVILLE: Joy.
Fun Theaters, Inc.
President Joy N. Houck
Vice-President Louis J. Maurin
Secretary-Treasurer L. C. Montgomery
Louisiana, GRAMERCY: Joy.
LaRose Theaters, Inc.
President Dr. Irwin J. Boulet
Vice-President L. C. Montgomery
Secretary-Treasurer Joy N. Houck
Louisiana, LaROSE: Joy.
KAIMANN THEATERS, INC.
4026 W. Florissant Ave., St. Louis, Mo.
THEATERS (9) :
Missouri, ST. LOUIS: Baden, Bremen, Bridge.
Circle. Janet, O'Fallon, Salisbury. Lee. Lowell.
KALLET THEATERS
Oneida, N. Y.
Pres.-Gen'l Mgr. -Film Buyer M. J. Kallet
THEATERS (23) :
New York, CANAJOHARIE: Strand; CANA-
STOTA: Avon: DEPOSIT, Empire. Stage
FLEISCHMANNS: Whipple; FULTON: Avon
State: GENESEO: Palace. Riviera; LONG LAKE
Strand; MARGARETVILLE : Galli Curci; ONEIDA
Kallet. Madison. Regent: PULASKI: Temple
ROME: Capitol. Family, Strand; SYRACUSE: Re
gent; TICONDEROGA: State; UTICA: Oneida
Orpheum, Uptown.
KAPLAN CIRCUIT
2108 Payne Ave., Cleveland. O.
President Meyer Kaplan
THEATERS (5) :
Ohio, CLEVELAND: Arion. Crown. Savoy.
Superior, Waldorf.
KARSCH CIRCUIT
806 W. Columbia St., Farmington, Mo.
President George H. Karsch
Secretary-Treasurer Mrs. George H. Karsch
THEATERS (7) :
Listed in two groups:
Lead Belt Amusement Co.
Missouri. BONNE TERRE: Odeon; ELVINS:
Regal; FLAT RIVER: Roseland: IRONTON:
State.
Farmington Entertainment Co.
Missouri. DESLOGE: Grand: FARMINGTON:
Ritz; LEADWOOD: Roxy.
KAYHERN THEATERS
2521 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
Representatives. .Benjamin Knobel. B. Zimetbaum
THEATERS (11):
New York, MOUNT VERNON: Embassy; NEW
YORK — Bronx: Bedford. Dale. Decatur: NEW
YORK — Manhattan: Eagle. Greenwich. Monroe.
Park Lane, Schuyler: POUGHKEEPSIE : Liberty.
Playhouse.
KEOGH, JOHN F., THEATERS
Vista Theater, San Diego, Calif.
THEATERS (4) :
California. CHULA VISTA: Seville: EL CAJON:
El Cajon; OCEAN BEACH: Strand; SAN DIEGO:
Vista.
KLUTH & LAVIN
Cut Bank, Mont.
THEATERS (4) :
Montana. CONRAD: Orpheum: CUT BANK:
Orpheum: KEVIN: Kevin: SHELBY: Orpheum.
KNOBEL, BENJAMIN, CIRCUIT
226 W. 47th St., New York, N. Y.
Representative Benjamin Knobel
THEATERS (8) :
New York. MOUNT VERNON: Embassy: NEW
YORK — Bronx: Decatur. Bedford: NEW YORK —
958
Brooklyn: Irving: NEW YORK — Manhattan:
Greenwich, Schuyler; POUGHKEEPSIE : Liberty,
Playhouse.
KONCZAKOWSKI, M. M .. THEATERS
526 Walden Ave., Buffalo. N. Y.
President M. M. Konczakowski
THEATERS (5)
New York, BUFFALO: Central Park, Grand.
Marlowe, Regent, Senate.
KRIM THEATRICAL ENTERPRISES
407 Fox Theater Bldg., Detroit, Mich.
President Sol Krim
Treasurer Mac Krim
THEATERS (7) :
Michigan, DETROIT: Buchanan, Granada, Har-
mony, Kramer, Lasky, Park, Sun.
LACROSSE THEATERS CO.
Rivoli Bldg., La Crosse, Wise.
President M. Rosenstein
General Manager F. L. Koppellmeyer
Film Buyer William D. Burford
THEATERS (5) :
Wisconsin, LA CROSSE: Bijou, Riviera, Rivoli,
Strand, Wisconsin.
LAM AMUSEMENT CO., INC.
Broad St., Rome, Ga.
President O. C. Lam
Secretary Joe Weber Lam
THEATERS (19) :
Note: Houses at Fort Payne. Ala., Tallapoosa.
Ga. and LaFayette. Ga. are affiliates.
Alabama, FORT PAYNE: DeKalb, Strand:
PIEDMONT: Fox.
Georgia. CEDARTOWN: Cedar, Princess: HO-
GANSVILLE: Royal; LA GRANGE: La Grange,
Troup, Family, Ritz; LAFAYETTE: Palace: NEW-
NAN: Alamo. Gem: ROCKMART: Joy, Rockmart:
ROME: DeSoto, Rivoli, Gordon; TALLAPOOSA:
Grand.
LANE THEATER CIRCUIT
170 Nassau St., New York, N. Y.
THEATERS (4) :
New York, NEW YORK: Gem, Lane, Loyal,
Tribune.
LASKER, JACOB, & SONS
310 S. Michigan Ave., Chicago, HI.
President Jacob Lasker
Film Buyer Ben Lasker
THEATERS (6) :
Illinois, BERWYN: New Ritz, Roxy; CHICA-
GO: Music Box, Ridge, Bertha; CICERO: Villas.
LATCHIS, PETER D.
95 Main St., Kecne, N. H.
Treasurer Peter D. Latchis
THEATERS (14):
Massachusetts, GREENFIELD: Lawler; LEO-
MINSTER: Plymouth, Rialto.
New Hampshire, CLAREMONT: Latchis:
KEENE: Colonial, Latchis; MILFORD: Latchis.
Strand.
Vermont, BRATTLEBORO: Auditorium, Latch-
is; WINDSOR: Strand. Windsor; WOODSTOCK:
Community, Woodstock.
LEE, M. G.
Cuthbert, Ga.
THEATERS (5) :
Alabama, EUFAULA: Lee. Rex.
Georgia, CUTHBERT: Lee: DAWSON: Lee:
SHELLMAN: Lee.
LEE THEATERS
Sprague, Wash.
Owner & Manager
Assistant
R. E. Lee
.Mrs. R. E. Lee
THEATERS (8) :
Portable.
Washington, CUSICK: Cusick; INCHELIUM :
tnchelium: KETTLE FALLS: Falls: MARCUS:
Marcus; SPRAGUE: Rex; WASHTUCNA: Wash-
tucna; WILSON CREEK: Wilson Creek.
LEIBERMAN, FRED E., CIRCUIT
Tremont Theater, Boston, Mass.
THEATERS (38) :
Connecticut, HARTFORD: Cameo, Province.
Maine, PORTLAND: Keith.
Massachusetts, BOSTON: Bijou, Keith's Lyric.
Newsreel, Repertory, Normandie, Old South, Ma-
jestic, Columbia; BROCKTON: Strand: FITCH-
BURG: Lyric; HOLYOKE: Holyoke; LOWELL: Vic-
tory, Rialto. Opera House, Paramount, Crown, Cap-
itol ;MEDFORD: Square; SPRINGFIELD: Franklyn,
Majestic: WEST SPRINGFIELD: Strand; WEST-
BORO: Strand: WILLIAMSETT: Willow.
New Hampshire, NASHUA : Colonial.
Rhode Island, PROVIDENCE: Modern.
UBSON, I. & A. and MAURICE WHITE
1230 Keith Bldg., Cincinnati, O.
THEATERS (15) :
Kentucky, ASHLAND: Paramount; LOUIS-
VILLE: Mary Anderson; NEWPORT: Hipp, Strand.
Ohio, AKRON: Forum; BRYAN: Temple; CIN-
CINNATI: Hollywood, Forest, Nordland, Gifts,
Madison; DAYTON: Dale. Strand; GREENFIELD:
Lyric, Rand.
Note: I. Libson is interested in the operation of
all of the above houses except the Hipp and Strand
in Newport, Ky.; A. Libson and Maurice White are
interested in the operation of all of the theaters.
LICHTMAN THEATERS
1215 Vou St., N. W., Washington, D. C.
President A. E. Lichtman
General Manager-Film Buyer E. J. Haley
Supervisor R. G. Byars
THEATERS (22) :
District of Columbia, WASHINGTON: Booker-
T, Broadway, Howard, Lincoln, Mott, Raphael,
Republic, Rosalia.
North Carolina. ROCKY MOUNT: Booker-T.
Virginia, LYNCHBURG: Harrison: NEWPORT
NEWS: Jefferson; NORFOLK: Booker-T. Carver.
Manhattan, Regal: PORTSMOUTH: Capitol: RICH-
MOND: Booker-T. Globe, Hippodrome, Robinson,
Walker; ROANOKE: Virginia.
LILLY, A. W., CIRCUIT
Greenville, Tex.
General Manager-Film Buyer A. W. Lilly
THEATER (7):
Texas, COMMERCE: Palace, Lyric; SULPHUR
SPRINGS: Broadway, Carnation, Mission;
GREENVILLE: Colonial, Rialto.
LOEW'S E. M.. THEATERS, INC.
21G Tremont St., Boston, Mass.
President-Treasurer Elias M. Loew
THEATERS (43) :
Connecticut. HARTFORD: Loew's.
Florida, MIAMI: Drive In.
Maine, PORTLAND: Casco. Portland; SAN-
FORD: Capitol, State; SPRINGVALE: Colonial.
Maryland, GLENBURNIE: Gov. Ritchie (open
air) .
Massachusetts, ARLINGTON: Regent: BOS-
TON: Gaiety, Lancaster, National: BEVERLY:
Larcom, Ware: DORCHESTER: Dorchester; FITCH-
BURG: Majestic, Lyric, Universal; LYNN: Capitol,
Open Air: NEW BEDFORD: Strand; ROXBURY:
Ideal: SOMERVILLE: Davis Square; SPRING-
FIELD: Court Square: WATERTOWN: Watertown
Square; WORCESTER: Olympia, Family, Plym-
outh, Regent. Royal; PEABODY: Strand: WIN-
CHESTER: Winchester; FRAMINGHAM: Hollis;
NORTH ADAMS: Mohawk: WEBSTER: State,
Liberty.
Rhode Island, NEWPORT: Colonial: OLNEY-
VILLE: Olympia, Royal; PAWTUCKET: Capitol:
PROVIDENCE: Capitol. Loew's Drive-in.
Virginia, ALEXANDRIA: Mt. Vernon Open Air.
LOEW'S, INC.
1540 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
President Nicholas M. Schenck
Gen'l Theater Rep Charles C. Moskowitz
Vice-Pres. -Treasurer David Bernstein
Ass't Gen'l Theater Rep Marvin Schenck
Booking Mgr., Vaudeville Booking Agency,
Sidney Piermont
Chief Exploitation and Advertising. .Oscar A. Doob
959
Sec'y and Chief Counsel Leopold Friedman
Director WHN Radio Station. .. .Louis K. Sidney
THEATERS (114) :
Note: Loew's, Inc. operates several theaters in
association with United Artists Theater Circuit,
which theaters are designated in the list of
United Artists holding's. In addition. Loew's. Inc.
operates the Poli-New England Circuit, listed under
Poli New England.
District of Columbia, WASHINGTON: Colum-
bia. Capitol. Palace.
Georgia, ATLANTA: Grand.
Delaware, WILMINGTON: Loew's.
Indiana. EVAN3VILLE: Victory, Majestic: IN-
DIANAPOLIS: Loew's.
Kentucky, LOUISVILLE: Loew's.
Louisiana, NEW ORLEANS: State.
Maryland, BALTIMORE: Century, Parkway.
Valencia.
Massachusetts. BOSTON: Orpheum, State.
Missouri, KANSAS CITY: Midland: ST. LOUIS:
Loew's.
New Jersey, JERSEY CITY: Loew's: NEWARK:
State: NORTH BERGEN: Embassy.
New York, NEW YORK — Manhattan: Apollo.
Avenue B, Canal. Commodore. Criterion. Delancey.
Dyckman. SOth Street. 83rd Street. 42nd Street. Hol-
lywood, Inwood, Lexington. Lincoln. Mayfair,
Olympia. 175th Street, llb'th Street. Orpheum (E.
Stith St.). Rio. 72nd Street. Sheridan. State. Vic-
toria. Zieg-feld: NEW YORK — Brooklyn: Alpine,
Bay Ridge. Bedford. Boro Park. Brevoort. Broad-
way, Century, Coney Island. 46th Street. Gates.
Kameo. Kings. Melba. Metropolitan. Oriental. Pal-
ace. Pitkin. Premier. Warwick: NEW YORK —
Bronx: Boston Road. Boulevard. Burland, Burn-
side. Elsmere. Fairmont. Grand. National. 167th
Sireet, Paradise. Post Road. Spooner. Victory.
New York. Long Island. ASTORIA: Astoria.
Triboro; CORONA: Plaza: FLUSHING: Prospect:
JAMAICA : Hillside. Valencia: WOODHAVEN:
Willard: WOODSIDE: Woodside.
New York. MOUNT VERNON: Mount Vernon:
NEW ROCHELLE: Loew's: ROCHESTER: Roch-
ester: SYRACUSE: State: WHITE PLAINS: State:
VONKERS: Yonkers.
Ohio, AKRON: Loew's: CANTON: Loew's:
COLUMBUS: Broad. Ohio: CLEVELAND: Ohio.
Granada. Park. State. Stillman: DAYTON: Loew's
TOLEDO: Valentine.
Pennsylvania. PITTSBURGH: Penn: HARRIS
IITJUG: Loew's: READING: Loew's.
Rhode Island. PROVIDENCE: State.
Tennessee, MEMPHIS: State: NASHVILLE
Wiidome.
Texas, HOUSTON: State.
Virginia, NORFOLK: State. Richmond. Loew's.
Camilla. LONDON: Loew's: TORONTO: Loew's.
LONG. J. G.
Itaj City. Texas
THKATKKs (30):
Listed in two groups:
J. G. Long
Texas, ANGLETON: Angleton: BISHOP: Texas:
DOLING: Boling: BASTROP: Strand: CLEVE-
LAND: Texas: COLUMBUS: Ritz: DAYTON: Rio:
EDNA : Edlex: HEBRONVILLE: Casino. Texas:
MA1HSONVILLE: Madison: NAVASOTA: Millers.
Queen: PASADENA: Pasadena: POINT LAVACA:
Long: PALACIOS: Queen: ROCKPORT: Rio:
SM ITHYILLE : Texas: TAFT: Roberta: TEAGUE:
Star: WEST COLUMBIA: Capitol: YORKTOWN:
Strand.
Long-Griffith
Texas. ALVIN: Alrin: BAY CITY: Texas.
Franklin: EL CAMPO: Floyds: TEXAS CITY:
Jewel, Texas: VICTORLA: Queen, Rita: WHAR-
TON: Queen.
LONG, LOUIS F., CIRCUIT
SalTord Theater. SafTord. Ariz.
THEATERS (5) :
Arizona. BOWIE: Bowie: DOUGLAS: Royal:
1'IM A: Pima: SAFFORD: Safiord: WILCOX:
Mystic.
LOWE. F. L.. CIRCUIT
Sterling, Kansas
THEATERS (5) :
Kansas, HOISINGTON : Star: HAYS: Star-
LUCAS: Lowe. LYONS: Star: STERLING: Lowe's.
LUCAS AND JENKINS, INC.
060 Peachtree St., Atlanta, Ga.
President Arthur Lucas
Secretary-Treasurer William K. Jenkins
THEATERS (50) :
Listed in four groups:
Theaters affiliated with Publix:
Georgia. ATHENS: Georgia. Palace. Strand:
ATLANTA: Capitol, Fox. Paramount: AUGUS-
TA: Dreamland. Imperial. Miller. Modjeska. Rialto:
BARNESVILLE: Ritz: BRUNSWICK: Bijou. Ritz:
BUFORD: Allen: COLUMBUS: Grand. Rialto.
Royal. Springer: GAINESVILLE: Royal. State:
MACON: Capitol. Grand. Rialto. Ritz: MOULTRIE:
Grand. Moultrie: ST. SLMONS ISLAND: Casino:
SAVANNAH : Arcadia. Bijou. Folly. Lucas, Odeon.
Victory: WAYCROSS: Lyric. Ritz.
Independently operated :
Georgia, ATLANTA: Palace. Tenth Street, West
End. Cascade: DECATUR: De Kalb.
Munger & Storey:
Rhodes Theater Bldg., Atlanta, Ga.
Georgia, ATLANTA: Rhodes, Techwood. Lanier.
Empire.
Fred Coleman:
Fairfax Theater Bldg.. East Point, Ga.
Georgia. ATLANTA: Sylvan: COLLEGE PARK:
Park: EAST POINT: Fairfax: HOPEVILLE: Ful-
ton.
LUCAS THEATER CIRCUIT
•i'iO S. State St., Chicago, 111.
General Manager B. A. Lucas
THEATERS (15) :
Illinois. COAL CITY: Rialto: DE KALB: Egyp-
tian. Fargo: FREEPORT: Patio: MANTINO: Darb:
MORRIS: Morris: NAPERVILLE: Naper: ST.
CHARLES: Arcadia: SANDWICH: Stage: STERL-
ING: State. Sterling: WOODSTOCK: Miller: WIL-
MINGTON: Wilton.
LUCKIE. D. F.
Goliad. Texas
THEATERS (6) :
Texas. BASTROP: Strand: GOLIAD: Goliad.
KARNES CITY: Earns: LOTT: Gem: NIXON:
Nixon: WEIMAR: Palace.
LUST, SIDNEY B.. THEATERS DIRECTION OF
620 Earle Bldg., Washington. D. C.
General Manager Miss A. McConnell
Film Buyer Sidney B. Lust
THEATERS (11):
District of Columbia, WASHINGTON: Hippo
drome. Leader.
Marvland, BETHESDA: Bethesda: HYATTS
VILLE: Arcade. Hyattsville: MOUNT RAINER:
Cameo: ROCKVILLE: Milo: UPPER MARLBORO:
Marlboro.
Virginia, ALEXANDRIA: Igomar. Reed. Rich-
mond.
LUTZ. E. E.
5911 Oram St.. Dallas, Texas
THEATERS (8):
Texas, ARP: Liberty: BORGER: American:
CROSS PLAINS: Liberty: GLADEWATER: Lib-
arty: HENDERSON: Liberty: LONGVIEW: Lib-
erty: MEXIA: American: RISING STAR: Liberty.
LYRIC .AMUSEMENT CO.
84 W. Pennington St.. Tucson, Ariz.
President Nick Diamos
Vice-President Daved Diamos
THEATERS (7) :
Arizona: BISBEE: Lyric: DOUGLAS: Grand.
Lyric: LOWELL: Lowell: NOGALES: Nogales:
PHOENIX: Phoenix: TUCSON: Plaza.
MacDONALD THEATERS. INC.
1800 W. 5th Ave., Columbus. O.
President C. A. MacDonald
THEATERS (6) :
Ohio, ADA: Ada: COLUMBUS: Arlington, Cleve.
Southland, Thurmania. Westmont.
960
MacKENNAN, A. J.
115 Hooker Ave., Pouglikeepsie, N. Y.
THEATERS (4) :
New York, MILLBROOK: Strand: MILLER-
TON: Paramount: PAWLING: Albemae;
PHOENICIA: Keen's.
McCarthy bros.
55 Fifth St., Fargo, N. I).
Pres.-Gen'l Mgr.-Film Buyer.... W. T. McCarthy
THEATERS (23) :
Minnesota. BADGER: Roxy: BATTLE LAKE:
Roxv; FERGUS FALLS: Orpheum: HANCOCK:
Roxy; HAWLEY: Roxy: SHELLY: Shelly.
North Dakota, ANTLER: Roxy; CAVALIER:
Roxy: HATTON: State: GARRISON: Roxy:
KULM: Roxy: McCLUSKY: Roxy: MAYVILLE:
Roxy: NECHE: Roxy: NORTHWOOD: Roxy;
ST. THOMAS: Opera House, Roxy: STEELE:
Roxy: STREETER: Roxy; TUTTLE: Roxy:
TURTLE LAKE: Roxy: TOWNER: Roxy:
WISHEK: Roxy.
McCOLLUM'S, A. B„ THEATERS
805 E. Lincoln St., Hoopeston, HI.
Film Buyer A. B. McCollum
THEATERS (11):
Illinois, CLINTON: Clintonia, Kaye, Star;
DWIGHT: Blackstone; FAIRBURY: Central:
HOOPESTON: Lorraine. Princess: PAXTON: Pax-
tonian: URBANA: Colonial: WATSEKA: Little.
Watseka.
M. & P. THEATERS
(Affiliated with Paramount)
60 Scollay Square, Boston, Mass.
Executive Managers. . . .M. J. Mullin. S. Pinanski
THEATERS (90) :
Connecticut, HARTFORD: Allyn: NEW HAV-
EN: Paramount: NEW LONDON: Capitol. Crown:
NORWALK: Norwalk; SOUTH NORWALK: Em-
press.
Maine, BANGOR: Bijou, Graphic, Opera House,
Park; BATH: Uptown, Opera House: BIDDE-
FORD: Central, City Opera House: FORT FAIR-
FIELD: Paramount, Park; HOULTON: Temple:
ORONO: Strand; ROCKLAND: Empire. Park,
Strand: WATERVILLE: Haines; WESTBROOK:
Star: PORTLAND: Maine. State.
Massachusetts. ALLSTON: Allston, Capitol:
BOSTON: Fenway, Metropolitan, Modern, Para-
mount, Scollay Square, Washington Street Olym-
pia; BRIGHTON: Egyptian; BROCKTON: Brock-
ton, Rialto: CAMBRIDGE: Central Square:
CHELSEA: Broadway, Olympia: DORCHESTER:
Codman Square, Fields Corner, Liberty, Morton,
Strand, Franklin Park: EAST MILTON: State:
GLOUCESTER: Nctrth Shore, Union Hill;
HAVERHILL: Colonial. Paramount; HULL: Bay-
side: HYDE PARK: Fairmont, Hyde Park: JA-
MAICA PLAIN: Egleston. Jamaica; LOWELL:
Merrimac Square, Strand; LYNN: Olympia, Para-
mount: MARLBORO: Princess, Marlboro: MAT-
TAPAN: Oriental; NATICK: Colonial: NEEDHAM :
Paramount; NEW BEDFORD: Capitol, Olvmpia:
NEWTON: Paramount: NORTH CAMBRIDGE:
Harvard: NORTH ATTLEBORO: Community:
NORFOLK DOWNS: Regent; ROSLINDALE : Belle-
vue, Rialto; ROXBURY: Criterion, Dudley, Rivo-
li, Shamut, Warren: SOMERVILLE: Strand:
WALTHAM: Central, Embassy, Waltham; WOL-
LASTON: Wollaston: WORCESTER: Capitol.
New Hampshire, DOVER: Lyric, Strand.
Rhode Island, NEWPORT: Strand; PAWTUCK-
ET: Strand; WOONSOCKET: Stadium.
Vermont, BARRE: Paramount, Magnet; RUT-
LAND: Grand, Strand, Paramount.
MAINE & NEW HAMPSHIRE THEATERS CO.
260 Tremont St., Boston, Mass.
President George W. Lane. Jr.
General Manager J. J. Ford
Film Buyer W. A. Sullivan
THEATERS (33) :
Maine, AUBURN: Auburn: AUGUSTA: Capitol.
Colonial: BRUNSWICK: Cumberland, Pastime;
GARDINER: Opera House, Strand, Coliseum; HAL-
LOWELL: Acme, Rialto; LEWISTON: Empire,
Music Hall. Priseilla. Strand: LIVERMORE
FALLS: Dreamland; NORWAY: Rex; RUMFORD:
Acadia, Strand; SOUTH PARIS: Strand; WILTON:
Wilton.
Massachusetts, FITCHBURG: Fitchburg, Shea's.
New Hampshire, BERLIN: Albert, Princess.
Strand: CONCORD: Capitol, Star; PORTSMOUTH:
Colonial, Olympia.
Vermont, BURLINGTON: Fl.vnn, Majestic;
MONTPELIER: Capitol.
MALCO THEATERS, INC.
138 S. Main St., Memphis, Tenn.
Pres.-Gen'l Manager M. A. Lightman
Secretary-Treasurer M. S. McCord
THEATERS (66) :
Arkansas, BENTONVILLE: Plaza: CAMDEN:
Rialto, Ritz, Strand; CLARKSVILLE: Strand: CON-
WAY: Conway, Grand: FAYETTEVILLE : Ozark.
Palace, Royal: FORT SMITH: Joie, New, Mystic,
Hoyt's Temple; HELENA: Paramount, Pastime:
HOPE: Saenger, Rialto; HOT SPRINGS: Para-
mount, Central, Spa, Roxy; JONESBORO: Strand,
Liberty, Palace; MORRILTON: Rialto: NEW-
PORT: Strand: NORTH LITTLE ROCK: Rialto
Princess: PINE BLUFF: Saenger, Strand; RUS
SELLVILLE: Ritz, New: SMACKOVER: Joy.
SPRINGDALE: Concord; STUTTGART: Majestic
Riceland; VAN BUREN: Bob Burns, Rio.
Kentucky, FULTON: Fulton, Strand; HENDER-
SON: Kentucky, Princess, Graver; OWENSBORO:
Malco, Bleich, Strand.
Mississippi, COLUMBUS: Princess, Varsity,
Dixie; TUPELO: Lyric, Strand; WEST POINT:
Ritz; WINONA: Winona.
Tennessee. JACKSON: Paramount. State, Hau
ber; MEMPHIS: Princess, Lamar, Linden Circle
Memphian, Rialto, Capitol, Malco, Strand, Joy.
MALLERS BROS.
1014 Calhoun St., Fort Wayne, Ind.
Pres.-Gen'l Mgr.-Film Buyer Peter Mailers
THEATERS (12) :
Indiana, BLUFFTON: Gaiety, Grand: FORT
WAYNE: Family. Jefferson. Riley; PORTLAND:
Hines, Princess; TIPTON: Ritz; WARSAW: Cen-
tennial.
Ohio, DEFIANCE: Elita, Strand, Valentine.
MANN AND WALSH THEATERS
988 Market St., San Francisco, Calif.
President George M. Mann
Vice-President Morgan A. Walsh
Secretary L. S. Hamm
Treasurer M. C. Sousa
THEATERS (27) :
Listed in eight groups
Redwood Theaters, Inc.
California, EUREKA: Eureka, State, Rialto.
Liberty.
Trinity Theaters, Inc.
California, ARCATA: Areata; FORTUNA: For-
tuna; UKIAH: State.
Noyo Theaters, Inc.
California, DINUBA: State; FORT BRAGG:
State.
Associated Theatrical Enterprises, Inc.
California, GRIDLEY: Butte; WOODLAND:
Porter, State: YUBA CITY: Yuba.
Modesto State Theater, Inc.
California, MODESTO: State, Strand. Princess.
Lyric.
National Theaters Syndicate of California
California, M ARYSVILLE : Liberty, State.
Vacaville Theater Co., Inc.
California, FAIRFIELD: Solano: MOUNT
SHASTA: Shastona; VACAVILLE: Vacaville.
Klamath Theaters, Inc.
(In association with H. W. Poole interests)
Oregon, KLAMATH FALLS: Pelican, Pine Tree,
Rainbow, Vox, Rex.
MANNY, K. C.
Washington Theater, Los Angeles, Calif.
THEATERS (4) :
California, HUNTINGTON PARK: Huntington;
1NGLEW00D: Seville; LOS ANGELES: American.
Washington.
961
MANNING & WINK
Crescent Theater, Dalton, Ga.
Film Buyers ....H. V. Manning. J. C. H Wink
THEATERS (8) :
Georgia, CALHOUN: Gem: CARTERSVILLE
Grand: DALTON: Crescent. Shadowland: MARI-
ETTA: Strand, New Strand.
Tennessee, ATHENS: Strand: ETOWAH: Gem.
MANOS AMUSEMENT CO.
Manos Theater, Toronto, O.
President George A. Manos
THEATERS (7):
Ohio, COLUMBIANA: Globe: LEETONIA
American: LISBON: Manos, Rex- MINERVA
Roxy; TORONTO: Manos, Rex.
MANSFIELD, W.
Tama, Iowa
THEATERS (4) :
Iowa, BELLE PLAINE : King. Rivoli; TAMA-
luka, Mills Opera House.
MARCH BROS. THEATERS, INC.
82 E. Main St., Vermillion, S. D.
President-General Manager Philip L. March
Booker & Advt. Director George L. March
THEATERS <8) :
Listed in two groups
March Bros. Theaters, Inc.
Iowa, ALTON: New Palace; LE MARS: Elite.
Royal.
South Dakota, VERMILLION: Coyote. March.
Marschoene Theaters, Inc.
General Manager Philip L. March
Iowa, HA WARDEN: Tivoli.
Nebraska, WAYNE: Crystal, Gay.
MARGET THEATER CIRCUIT
53 State St., Boston, Mass.
THEATERS (7) :
Massachusetts, BOSTON: Lancaster; CHELSEA
Strand; EAST BOSTON: Day Square: HYDE
PARK: Hyde Park; SOMERVILLE : Broadway.
Orpheum.
Rhode Island, CENTRAL FALLS: Belleone.
MARLOW'S THEATERS
Annex Bldg., Herrin, 111.
President-Gen'l Mgr.-Booker John Mario w
THEATERS (4) :
Illinois, HERRIN: Annex, New Marlow's; MUR-
PHYSBORO: Hippodrome, Liberty..
MARTIN THEATERS
1308 Broadway, Columbus, Ga.
Owner R. E. Martin
General Manager A. E. Adams
Chief Accountant W. McP. Johnson
District Manager Hugh G. Martin
Booker Charlie Karr
THEATERS (58) :
Listed in two groups:
Martin Theaters
Alabama, ANDALUSIA: Fox, Paramount; AT-
MORE: Ritz: BREWTON: Ritz; DOTHAN: Ala-
bama, Alcazar, Houston; EVERGREEN: Pix;
FLORALA: Strand; GREENVILLE: Ritz; LA FA-
YETTE: La Fayette; OPELIKA: Martin: ROAN-
OKE: Ritz: PHOENIX CITY: Palace; TALLA-
DEGA: Ritz. Paramount; SYLACAUGA: Ritz.
Sylacauga.
Florida, DE FUNIACK SPRINGS: Strand:
LAKE CITY: De Sota, Grand; LIVE OAK: Ali-
mar, Suwannee; MARIANNA: Ritz; PANAMA
CITY: Panama, Ritz; PORT ST. JOE: Port.
Georgia, AMERICUS: Rylander; BAINBRIDGE:
Ritz; BIBB CITY: Pastime; BREMEN: Bremen;
CARROLLTON: Carroll: COLUMBUS: Liberty,
Rialto, Royal: DOUGLAS: Rivoli: DUBLIN: Ritz,
Rose; FITZGERALD: Grand: MANCHESTER:
President, Y.M.C.A.; MILLEDGEVILLE : Campus;
MONTEZUMA: Grand; THOMSON: Knox, Price:
TIFTON: Ritz, Tift; VALDOSTA: Palace, Ritz.
Martin-Thompson Theaters, Inc.
Hawkinsville, Ga.
President & General Manager. .. .J. H. Thompson
Secretary -Treasurer R. E. Martin
Accountant Leon Williams
THEATERS (9) :
Georgiu, BAXLEY: Princess: CANTON: Haven
COCHRAN: Roxy; EASTMAN: Princess- FORT
J^LEY: Peach: HAWKINSVILLE: Princess;
JESUP: Strand: McRAE: Princess: PERRY: Prin-
cess.
MARTINA CIRCUIT
18A Main St., Albion, N. Y.
General Manager Charles V. Martina
Bu>'er Joseph S. Moritesano
THEATERS (11):
New York. ALBION: Rialto; ARCADE. Arcade
ATTICA: Astor; CLYDE: Playhouse; CUBA: Cuba
DANSVILLE: Star: MT. MORRIS: Family. Gen
essee; NAPLES: Naples: NUNDA: Nunda- WIL
LIAMSON: Williamson.
MECO THEATERS CORP.
1(100 Broadway, New York, N. V.
President m. E. Comerford
Vice-President Frank C. Walker
Secretary-Treasurer J. j. O'Leary
THEATERS (11):
New York, BINGHAMTON: Binghamton, Cap-
itol, Regus, Riviera, Star, Strand, Symphony
JOHNSON CITY: Endwell. Enjoy; ENDICOTT:
Elvin, Strand.
MERRITT, FRANK
Birmingham, Ala.
THEATERS (5) :
Alabama, BIRMINGHAM: Capitol, Empire. Ga-
lax, Royal; CULLMAN: Lyric.
MERTZ, F. M„ AMUSEMENT CO.
Virginia Theater, Virginia, 111.
THEATERS (4):
Illinois, ASHLAND: Ashland: CHANDLER
VILLE: Mertz; NEW BERLIN: Mertz (closed)
VIRGINIA: Virginia.
METZGEK, LOU, THEATERS
1014 S. Vermont Ave., Los Angeles, Calif.
President L. B. Metzger
THEATERS (6)
California. LAMANDA PARK: Uptown: SAN
DIEGO: Adams, Broadway, Cabrillo. Spreckels:
LA MESA: La Mesa.
MICHAELS THEATERS
Palace Theater, Buffalo, N. Y.
THEATERS (4) :
New York, BUFFALO: Allendale. Mercury. Pal-
ace, Plaza.
MIDDLESEX AMUSEMENT CO.
21 Pleasant St., Maiden, Mass.
President E. Oliver Ramsdel]
General Manager George A. Ramsdell
THEATERS (7):
Listed in two groups.
Medford Operating Co.
Massachusetts, MEDFORD: Medford.
Middlesex Amusement Co.
Massachusetts, MALDEN: Auditorium. Granada.
Maplewood. Mystic, Orpheum. Strand.
MIDDLESEX THEATERS, INC.
303 Broadway, Somerville, Mass.
Gen'l Manager and Film Buyer. .. .Julius Joelson
THEATERS (7):
Massachusetts, ARLINGTON: Capitol; FAL
MOUTH: Elizabeth; SOMERVILLE: Ball Square.
Capitol, Central: TAUNTON: Park. Strand.
MIDWEST THEATERS, INC.
2615 Woodward Ave., Detroit, Mich.
President -Treasurer Raymond Schreiber
Vice-President - Secretary Sidney W. Foreman
THEATERS (5) :
Michigan, DETROIT: Colonial, Blackstone-No.
2. Garden, Majestic, Forrest.
MIDWESTERN BOOKING AGENCY
1187 N. High St., Columbus, O.
General Manager Ethel Miles
962
THEATERS (11):
Ohio. COLUMBUS: Alhambra, Champion, Drexel.
Garden, Grandview, Hudson, Northern. Pythian.
Victor: MECCA: Salem.
MINER AMUSEMENT CO., INC.
El Lago Theater. Rice Lake. Wise.
General Manager Film Buyer George Miner
THEATERS (12):
Wisconsin. ASHLAND: Bay: CAMERON: Cam-
eron- CHETEK: Grand: CHIPPEWA FALLS:
Loop. Rivoli: CUMBERLAND: Isle: LADYSMITH:
Dniaue: PHILLIPS: Norwood: RICE LAKE: El
Lago. Majestic-: RIVER FALLS: Falls.
MINNESOTA AMUSEMENT CO.
(Affiliated with Paramount Pictures, Inc.)
17 N. Sixth St., Minneapolis, Minn.
Executives John J. Friedl, L. J. Ludwig
THEATERS (91) :
Listed by Districts.
Twin City District
Minnesota. MINNEAPOLIS: Century. Gopher.
Lyric. State, Unique: ST. PAUL: Paramount.
Riviera, Tower. Strand.
Suburban Group
Minnesota. MINNEAPOLIS: American. Arion.
Aster, Granada, Loring, Nokomis. Rialto, Uptown:
ST. PAUL: Capitol, Park, St. Clair, Uptown.
Northern District
Minnesota, DULUTH: Garrick, Lyceum, Lyric.
Orpheum, Strand: HIBBING: State. Garden,
Homer: MOORHEAD: Moorhead: VIRGINIA:
Maco. Granada, Rex, State.
North Dakota, FARGO: Fargo. Grand, State:
GRAND FORKS: Dakota, Paramount; JAMES-
TOWN: Star, Opera House: MINOT: State, Strand,
Orpheum.
Wisconsin. SUPERIOR: Palace, Peoples. Savoy.
Southern Minnesota District
Minnesota. AUSTIN: Austin. Paramount, State:
FAIRMONT: Nicholas. Strand: MANKATO: State.
Grand, Time: ROCHESTER: Chateau. Empress,
Lawler. Time; NORTH MANKATO: Urban: ST.
CLOUD: Eastman, Grand, Paramount, Roxy:
WINONA: Avon. Broadway. State. Winona.
Wisconsin, EAU CLAIRE: State, Oklare, Badger.
South Dakota District
South Dakota. ABERDEEN: Capitol. Lyric
Orpheum: HURON: Bijou. Huron, State: MADI-
SON: Lyric. State: MITCHELL: Lyric. Para-
mount, Time: SIOUX FALLS: State. Egyptian.
Orpheum. Dakota, Time: WATERTOWN: State.
Lyric, Colonial, Metropolitan.
MONARCH THEATERS, INC.
1270 Sixth Ave., New York, N. Y.
President Harry Katz
Vice-President David J. Chatkin
Treasurer E. J. Gennett
Assistant Treasurer LeRoy J. Furman
THEATERS (7):
Indiana, INDIANAPOLIS: Apollo, Circle, In-
diana.
Ohio, AKRON: Palace; STEUBENVILLE : Par-
amount; YOUNGSTOWN: Palace.
Pennsylvania, NEW CASTLE: Penn.
MORSE. CHARLES
393 Boylston St., Boston, Mass.
General Manager-Film Buyer Charles Morse
THEATERS (16):
Connecticut. NEW LONDON: Empire: NOR-
WICH: Strand.
Massachusetts, ADAMS: Adams, Park: EVER-
ETT: Rialto: HAVERHILL: Strand; LAWRENCE:
Strand: LYNN: Auditorium; PITTSFIELD:
Kameo: QUINCY: State; ROXBURY: Roxbury.
New Hampshire, NASHUA: Colonial, Park:
PORTSMOUTH : Arcadia.
New York, POUGHKEEPSIE : Rialto: UTICA :
Colonial.
MOSES, CHARLES H., CIRCUIT
1270 Sixth Ave., New York, N. Y.
Representatives. . .Charles H. Moses, Lewis Moses
THEATERS (4) :
New York, NEW YORK (Brooklyn) : St. George
Playhouse: NEW YORK (Staten Island). NEW
DORP: Lane: PORT RICHMOND: Palace: TOMP-
KINSVILLE: Victory.
MULLEN, F. O.
Dade City, Fla.
THEATERS (8) :
Florida, AVON PARK: Park; CLEARWATER:
Dixie; DADE CITY: Crescent: FORT MEADE:
Fox; HAINES CITY: Florida: PUNTA GORDA :
New; SEBRING: Circle: WAUCHULA: Royal.
NASSER BROS. THEATERS
25 Taylor St., San Francisco, Calif.
THEATERS (8) :
California. ALAMEDA: Alameda. Strand; SAN
FRANCISCO: Alhambra, American. Castro. New
Fillmore, New Mission, Royal.
NATIONAL THEATER CORP.
Roanoke, Va.
President and General Manager E. D. Heins
Vice-President-Treasurer Henry Scholz
THEATERS (4) :
Virginia, ROANOKE: American, Park, Rialto.
Roanoke.
NEIGHBORHOOD THEATER, INC.
1013-A E. Main St., Richmond, Va.
President Morton G. Thalhimer
V-P & General Manager. ... Sam Bendheim. Jr.
Vice-President Charles A. Somma
Secretary & Treasurer Harold E. Wood
THEATERS (23) :
Virginia. ARLINGTON: Ashton, Buckingham.
Wilson: EAST FALLS CHURCH: Lee: FALLS
CHURCH: State: PETERSBURG: Bluebird, Cen-
tury. Palace, Rex; PULASKI: Dalton, Pulaski:
RICHMOND: Bellevue, Byrd, Brookland, Capitol.
Sinter, Grand. Ponton. State. Venus, Westhanip-
ton: SOUTH BOSTON: Halifax. Princess.
NETCO THEATERS CORP.
35 Market St., Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
President-General Manager. ... George C. Walsh
THEATERS (14):
New York, GLENS FALLS: Paramount: MID
DLETOWN: Paramount, State: NEWBURGH:
Broadway, Cameo, Park. Ritz; PEEKSKILL: Col-
onial. Paramount, Peekskill; POUGHKEEPSIE:
Bardavon. Juliet, State. Stratford.
NETH, J. REAL, THEATERS CO.
39 W. Broad St., Columbus, O.
President-General Manager J. Real Neth
THEATERS (6) :
Ohio, COLUMBUS: Cameo. Clinton. Eastern.
Lincoln, Markham, State.
NEW ERA AMUSEMENT CORP.
8008 Rockaway Beach Blvd., Rockaway Beach.
L. I.
Representative Samuel Kantor
THEATERS (5) :
New York, ARVERNE, L. I.: Arverne, Board
walk; EDGEMERE, L. I.: Edgemere: ROCKAWAY
BEACH, L. I.: New. Rivoli.
NEWBURY CIRCUIT
902 F. St., Belmar, N. J.
Secretary-Treasurer Lee W. Newbury
Gen'l Manager-Film Buyer George W. Emmot
THEATERS (9) :
New Jersey, ASBURY PARK: Ocean, Spring-
lake, Ritz; BAY HEAD: Lourine; BELMAR:
Rivoli: BRADLEY BEACH: Palace; LAVALETTE :
Lavalette; MANASQUAN: Arcade: POINT PLEAS-
ANT; Arnold: SEASIDE PARK: Colonial.
NEWSREEL THEATERS, INC., THE
1560 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
President W. French Githens
Vice-President Harold E. Wondsel
Treasurer Francis Carter Wood, Jr.
General Manager Major A. G. Rudd
THEATERS (4) :
New Jersey, NEWARK: Newsreel.
New York, NEW YORK: Embassy (Broadway
at 4tith St.). Newsreel (Rockefeller Plaza), News-
reel (Broadway at TMnd St.).
963
NOMIKOS, VAN. THEATERS
6228 S. Halsted St., Chicago, 111.
President Van A. Nomikos
Secretary George Christoe
Treasurer George Nikolopulos
THEATERS (13):
Illinois. AUSTIN: Ambassador: CHICAGO: Ace.
Emmett, Empress. Halsted. Logan. Milo, Parkway,
Rex, City. Lincoln, Stadium: MAYWOOD: Yale.
NORTHIO THEATERS CORP.
Paramount Theater, Hamilton, O.
THEATERS (13):
Listed in two groups:
Northio Theaters Corp.
Kentucky, DANVILLE: Kentucky. State.
Ohio, HAMILTON: Palace. Paramount. Rialto:
MARION: Palace. Marion: MIDDLETOWN: Gor-
don. Paramount. Sorg, Strand.
Publix Wheeling Theaters Corp.
West Virginia, WHEELING: Rex.
NORTON, WALTER
Windsor Hotel, Hannibal, Mo.
THEATERS (6) :
Illinois, MASCOUTAH: Norton: MEREDOSIA:
Princess. _
Missouri. CENTER : Community: HUNTS VILLE :
Roxy; NEW LONDON: Gem; WINFIELD: Gem.
NOTES, MARCUS. THEATERS
Strand Bldg., 401 9th St., N. W.,
Washington, D. C.
Proprietor Marcus Note?
General Manager Isaac Notes
Auditor D- R- SilHnc
THEATERS (4) :
District of Columbia, WASHINGTON: Criteri-
on. Empress. Roosevelt, Strand.
NOTOPOULOS & GRIBBLE
State Theater, Bellwood, Pa.
THEATERS (4) :
Pennsylvania. BELLWOOD: State: GREEN
CASTLE": State: OSCEOLA MILLS: State: SHIP-
PENBURG: State.
O. K. THEATERS, INC.
211 S. Pearl St., Dallas, Tex.
President Oskar Korn
THEATERS (17) :
Texas, ALPINE: Granada: BRACKETTVILLE :
Palace: CANADIAN: Palace: CRANE: Palace:
ELDORADO: Rex: FORT STOCKTON: Grand:
MARFA: Palace. Texas: MONAHANS: Palace.
Texas- McCAMEY: Grand: PECOS: Grand. Palace;
QUANAH: Palace. Texan: ROYALTY: Texas;
SANDERSON: Princess.
OCHS', LEE A., THEATER CIRCUIT
2109 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
THEATERS (7) :
Note: Lee A. Oehs' Theaters are now being
operated by the following companies under work
ing arrangements:
Radio-Keith-Orpheum
New York, NEW YORK: Midtown, Uptown,
Yorktown.
Consolidated Amusement Enterprises
New York, NEW YORK: Kingsbridge, Mosholu.
Ogden. Tuxedo.
OLSON THEATER ENTERPRISES
314 Traction Bldg., Indianapolis, Ind.
President Charles M. Olson
Treasurer Jean Marks
Secretary R°y Balr
General Manager Carl Niesse
THEATERS (7):
Indiana. INDIANAPOLIS: Lyric, Oriental. Ritz.
Uptown. Strand. Apollo. St. Clair.
PANORAS CIRCUIT
Strand Theater, Willimantlc, Coiin.
THEATERS (4) :
Connecticut, NEW MILFORD: Star: STAF-
FORD SPRINGS: Palace; WATERBURY: Gar-
den: WXLLLMANTIC: Strand.
PARAMOUNT PICTURES INC.
Theaters operated by subsidiaries.
1.501 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
THEATERS:
Theaters are listed by subsidiary groupi.
Kansas City Operating Co.
Missouri, KANSAS CITY: Newman.
George Walsh
New York: ARLINGTON: Juliet: GLEN FALLS:
Paramount: MIDDLETOWN: Paramount; NEW-
BURGH: Broadway, Cameo. Park. Ritz; PEEK-
SKILL: Colonial. Paramount. Peekskill; POUGH-
KEEPSIE: Bardavon, State, Stratford.
Par-Land Theaters, Inc.
New York (Staten Island), GREAT KILLS:
Strand: NEW DORP: New Dorp: PORT RICH
MOND: Ritz: ST. GEORGE: St. George: STAPLE
TON: Liberty. Paramount: TOTTEN VILLE:
Stadium: WEST BRIGHTON: Capitol.
Mort Shea
Ohio, FREMONT: Fremont, Paramount. Strand:
NEW PHILADELPHIA: Bijou, Union.
Vincent McFaul
New York, BUFFALO: Buffalo. Court Street.
Elmwood. Great Lakes, Hippodrome. North Park.
Roosevelt. Seneca. Kensington: NIAGARA FALLS :
Bellevue: KENMORE: Kenmore.
Fulton Enterprises. Inc.
New York, FULTON: Avon. State.
Hercules Theater Corp.
New York, NEW YORK: Paramount.
Si Fabian
New York, NEW YORK — Brooklyn: Paramount
M. E. Coinerford and Frank Walker
New York, ROCHESTER: Capitol. Century.
Regent: OWEGO: Tioga: WAVERLY: Amuzu.
Capitol.
Pennsylvania, BLOOMSBURG: Capitol, Colum-
bia' CARLISLE: Comerford. Orpheum, Strand;
DANVILLE: Capitol: DICKSON CITY: Rex; DUN-
MORE: Garden, Orient: DURYEA: Pastime; FOR-
EST CITY : Freedman : FORTY FORT : Auditorium
HAWLEY: Ritz: HAZLETON: Capitol. Feeley
Grand: HONESDALE: Lyric: JERSEY SHORE
Victoria: KINGSTON: Kingston: LUZERNE: Lu
zerne: MAUCH CHUNK: Capitol: MINERS FALLS
Crystal: NORTHUMBERLAND: Savoy; OLD
FORGE: Holland: OLYPHANT: Granada; PAR
SONS: Parsons: PITTSTON: America. Roman
PLYMOUTH: Shawnee: POTTSVILLE: Capitol
Hippodrome, Hollywood: SAYRE: Sayre: SHEN
ANDOAH: Strand: SUNBURY: Rialto. Strand
TO WANDA: Keystone; WILLIAMSPORT: Capitol
Keystone: SCRANTON: Bell, Capitol. Comesford
Globe. Manhattan. New Rialto. Riviera, Roose
velt. State. Strand. Temple. West Side: WILKES
BARRE: Capitol. Comerford. Hart. Hazel. Irving.
Orpheum. Penn, Sterling. Strand. Temple.
A. N. Notopoulos
Pennsylvania, AMBRIDGE: Penn: BUTLER:
Capitol, Penn; ALIQUIPPA: Rialto, State. Strand.
Temple.
Quaker Theaters Corp.
Pennsylvania, PHILADELPHIA : Frankf ord.
Nixon, Roosevelt. Tower.
A. A. & P. Adams
New Jersey, NEWARK: Adams. Paramount:
PATERSON: U. S.
Carl Bamford
North Carolina, ASHEVILLE: Imperial. Para-
mount. Plaza, State; CANTON: Colonial. Strand:
WEST ASHEVILLE: Isis, Palace.
Tennessee, BRISTOL: Paramount, State.
Wilby-Kincey
Alabama, ANNISTON: Cameo. Noble, Ritz: AU-
BURN: Tiger; BESSEMER: Grand, State: DEMOP-
OLIS: Lido. Marengo: JASPER: Jasper. New:
MONTGOMERY: Empire. Grand. Paramount.
Strand. Tivoli: SELMA: Wilby. Walton. TUSCA-
LOOSA: Bama, Druid. Diamond. Ritz: TROY:
Princess. Enzor; BIRMINGHAM: Alabama, Pan-
tages, Ritz, Strand. Temple. Jefferson; TUSKEGEE:
Macon.
North Carolina. CHARLOTTE: Carolina. Dil-
worth. New State, Imperial, Broadway.
South Carolina, ABBEVILLE: Opera House
ANDERSON: Criterion. Strand; COLUMBIA
Five Points, Palmetto. Ritz, Strand; DARLING
TON: Liberty; FLORENCE: Carolina, Colonial;
964
fiREENWOOD: Carolina. Ritz, Slate: SPARTAN
UURU: Carolina, Criterion, State, Strand: SUM-
TER: Rex, Sumter; GREENVILLE: Carolina,
Rivoli. Center.
Tennessee. CHATTANOOGA: Bijou, Tivoli.
Rialto. State: KNOXVILLE: Park, Tennessee.
Riviera. Strand, Booth, Bijou, Lyric; KINGS-
PORT: Gem. Rialto, State, Strand: JOHNSON
CITY: Liberty, Majestic, State, Tennessee.
M. A. Lightman
Arkansas, RUSSELVILLE : New, Ritz: VAN
BUREN: Bob Burns. Rio: FORT SMITH: Joie.
Mystic. New, Temple: CAMDEN: Rialto, Ritz,
Strand: CLARKSVILLE: Strand: HOT SPRINGS:
Central, Paramount, Spa. Princess: JONESBORO:
Liberty. Palace. Strand: MORRILTON: Rialto:
NEWPORT: Capitol. Strand: SMACKOVER: Joy;
STUTTGART: Majestic. Strand: CONWAY: Con-
way, Grand: FAYETTE VILLE : Ozark, Palace,
Royal: SPRINGDALE: Concord.
Kentucky, FULTON: Fulton, Strand: HENDER-
SON: Kentucky. Kraver. Princess; OWENSBORO :
Bleich, Malco, Strand.
Tennessee, JACKSON: Hauber. Paramount.
State; MEMPHIS: Malco. Strand.
Hunter Perry
Virginia, CHARLOTTESVILLE: Jefferson, La-
fayette, Paramount, University; HAMPTON:
Langley: EXMORE: Cameo; PHOEBUS: Lee:
CAPE CHARLES: Radium: LYNCHBURG: Isis,
Paramount, Trenton; NEWPORT NEWS: Para-
mount, James.
George Zeppos
West Virginia, WHEELING: Rex.
Lucas and Jenkins
Georgia, BRUNSWICK: Bijou. Ritz; BARNES
VILLE: Ritz; ELBERTON: Strand: ATHENS:
Palace, Strand. Georgia, Morton: MOULTRIE:
Grand, Moultrie: ST. SIMONS ISLAND: Casino:
GAINESVILLE: Royal, State: WAYCROSS: Lyric,
Ritz; MACON: Capitol, Grand. Rialto. Ritz;
COLUMBUS: Grand, Rialto. Royal, Springer:
AUGUSTA: Imperial, Dreamland, Modjeska.
Rialto; SAVANNAH: Arcadia, Bijou, Folly, Lucas,
Odeon, Victory: ATLANTA: Fox. Capitol, Para-
mount; BUFORD: Allen: LEXINGTON: Lex.
Harry David
Idaho, BOISE: Ada, Granada, Pinney, Lyric:
TWIN FALLS: Idaho, Orpheum; PRESTON: Isis,
Grand.
Utah, BRIGHAM CITY: Roxy; LOGAN: Capitol,
Lyric, Roxy, Grand: OGDEN: Orpheum. Para
mount. Colonial. Lyceum, Weber; SALT LAKE
CITY: Capitol, Centre, Mario, Paramount, Victory,
Studio, Utah; PROVO: Paramount, Provo, Strand.
Uinta.
E. J. Sparks
Florida, JACKSONVILLE: Arcade. Capitol. Em-
press, Florida, Imperial, Palace, Temple, Roxy:
DAYTONA BEACH: Auditorium, Florida, Crystal.
Lyric, Empire; LAKELAND: Lake, Palace, Polk.
Strand; LAKE WORTH: Oakley; WEST PALM
BEACH: Arcade, Florida. Palace. Park, Rialto:
ST. PETERSBURG: Cameo, Capitol, Florida. Har-
lem, La Plaza. Ninth Street, Pheil, Roxy: TAMPA:
Florida, Garden, Park, Seminole, Victory, Tampa:
SULPHUR SPRINGS: Roxy; PALM BEACH:
Beaux Arts, Garden, Paramount: ARCADIA: Star:
ORLANDO: Beacham, Grand, Rialto, Lincoln,
Roxy, Strand; CLEARWATER: Capitol, Ritz:
DELAND: Dreka, Athens: SARASOTA: Florida,
Garden, Ritz: BELLAIR: Bellevue: FORT MYERS:
Arcade, Ritz; WINTER PARK: Baby Grand: ST.
AUGUSTINE: Jefferson. Matanzas: BRADENTON:
Palace. Wallace: PALMETTO: New, Palmetto:
PLANT CITY: Capitol: GAINESVILLE: Florida,
Lyric: OCALA: Dixie. Ritz. Roxy. Temple; I'AL-
ATKA: Howell, Lincoln: SANFORD: Ritz, Prin-
cess; FORT LAUDERDALE: Florida. Queen, Sun-
set: BARTOW: Ritz. Bartow: HOLLYWOOD:
Arcade. Ritz. Florida: DELRAY: Delrav. Roxy;
NEW SMYRNA: Palace. Victoria; DANIA: Dania:
EUSTIS: State: UMATILLA: Umatilla: MT.
DORA: Princess.
S. A. Lynch
Florida, CORAL GABLES: Coral Gables; HIA.
LEAH: Hialeah: MIAMI: Flagler, Olympia, Para-
mount, Regent, Rex, Roxy, Tivoli; MIAMI BEACH:
Colony. Community, Cinema, Shoridan.
Ed Rowley
Arkansas, LITTLE ROCK: Arkansas, Capitol.
Pulaski, Royal, Lee, New, Prospect, Roxy.
Joe Cooper and Warner Bros.
Oklahoma, OKLAHOMA CITY: Empress. Folly.
Liberty, Midwest, Warner. Circle, Criterion. Ritz.
Victoria, Plaza. Tower.
Joe Cooper
Colorado, COLORADO SPRINGS: Trail, Ute.
Tompkins: GRAND JUNCTION: Mission, Avalon:
GREELEY: Sterling, Park; PUEBLO: Main. Up-
town.
Nebraska, LINCOLN: Liberty, Nebraska, Stuart
Hoblitzelle & O'Donnell
Texas, ARLINGTON: Aggie. Texan; DALLAS.
Capitol, Majestic, Melba. Daisec, Forest, Melrose.
Rialto, Village. White, Palace, Fair. Knox Street.
Lawn. Tower. Varsity. Lakewood, Mirror; FORT
WORTH: Hollywood, Majestic, Parkway, Palace.
Worth, Tivoli, Varsity; HOUSTON: Delman. Yale,
Kirby, Majestic, Bluebonnet, Eastwood. North
Main. Tower, Metropolitan, Alabama: SAN AN
TONIO: Aztec, Broadway, Empire, Uptown, Har
laudato, Highland, Palace, Majestic. State. Texas:
AUSTIN: Austin. Queen. State. Paramount. Texas
Varsity: GALVESTON: State. Key. Martini. Queen
Tremont: ABILENE: Majestic. Palace, Paramount.
Queen: AMARILLO: Paramount, Rialto, Capitol.
State: BRECKENRIDGE : National. Plaza, Palace:
BROWNWOOD: Gem, Lyric. Queen: CORSICANA:
Grand. Ideal, Palace: DENISON: Rialto, Star;
DENTON: Dreamland. Palace. Texas; EASTLAND:
Lyric, Connellce; EL PASO: Ellanay, Palace. Plaza,
Texas-Grand. Wigwam: McALLEN: Palace. Queen.
Azteca; MEXIA: National, Palace; PARIS: Grand,
LaMar, Dixie. Plaza: RANGER: Arcadia, Colum-
bia; TEMPLE: Arcadia, Bell, Gem, Little: TYLER:
Arcadia, Liberty. Majestic, Queen; VERNON:
Pictorium, Vernon: WACO: Orpheum, Rivoli,
Strand. Waco: WESLACO: Ritz; MERCEDES: Rio.
State; WICHITA FALLS: Gem. Majestic, Palace.
State, Strand. Wichita: HARLINGEN: Arcadia.
Rialto, Strand: SAN BENITO: Palace, Rivoli:
BROWNSVILLE: Capitol. Queen; SAN MARCOS:
Palace, Plaza. Main.
New Mexico. ALBUQUERQUE: Mission, Chief.
Kimo. Mesa. Rio. Sunshine. Lobo.
3. C. Clenimons and Sol Gordon
Texas, ANAHUAC: Rig; NEDERLAND: Rio:
LaPORTE: Port: TALCO: Talco: GREGGTON:
Ritz; MONT BELVIEU: Mont; PORT NECHES:
Lyric: OVERTON: Gem. Strand; HALLETTS-
VILLE: Cole; NEEDVILLE: Cole: RICHMOND:
Cole; ROSENBERG: Cole. State: WALLIS: Cole;
EAGLE LAKE: Cole: YOAKUM: Grand. Ritz;
BEAUMONT: Gem, Jefferson, Liberty, Peoples.
Tivoli, Rio Lamar: ORANGE: Gem, Strand. Amer-
ican; PORT ARTHUR: Majestic, Texan. Pearce.
Peoples. Strand; BAYTOWN: Arcadia: CONROE:
Crighton. Liberty: GLADEWATER: Gregg, Palace.
Cozy; GOOSE CREEK: DeLuxe, Texan: HENDER
SON: Victory, Palace, Strand: JACKSONVILLE:
Rialto, Dorbandt. Palace: KILGORE: Crim, Ritz,
Strand, Texan: LONGVIEW: Rita, Rembert.
Strand, Arlyne: LUFKIN: Lynn. Ritz, Pines:
MARSHALL: Palace, Paramount, Strand; NACOG-
DOCHES: Texan. Stonefort. Rita: PELLY: Alamo:
RUSK: Astor. Texas: GREENVILLE: Rita, Texan:
SILSBEE: Palace.
Will Horwitz
Texas, HOUSTON: Ritz, Palace, Texan, Iris.
Tracy Barhani
Ohio, HAMILTON: Palace. Paramount. Rialto:
MARION: Palace. Marion; MIDDLETOWN: Para
mount. Strand. Gordon. Sorg.
Kentucky, DANVILLE: State. Kentucky.
A. H. Blank
Iowa, CLEAR LAKE: Lake, Park; ESTHER
VILLE: Grand; CLARION: Clarion; FOREST
CITY: Forest; FORT DODGE: Rialto, Strand,
Iowa: BOONE: Rialto. Boone, Princess; CHARI-
TON: Ritz, State; CHARLES CITY: Charles;
BURLINGTON: Palace. Iowa, Capitol, Zephyr:
MASON CITY: Cecil, Palace. Strand: ALGONA :
New Call. Iowa, Call: EAGLE GROVE: Princess;
CENTERVILLE: Ritz, Majestic: GRINNELL:
Iowa, Strand; OELWEIN: Grand, Ritz; IOWA
CITY: Englert, Varsity: CLINTON: Clinton, Cap-
itol, Rialto, Strand; CEDAR RAPIDS: Paramount,
State; DAVENPORT: Capitol, Esquire, Garden;
965
GTTl'MWA Capitol. Ollumwa. Rialto, Strand.
SIOUX CITY : Circle, Granada. Hipp. Loop. Rialto.
Iowa, Capitol, Princess; WATERLOO: Paramount.
Strand: DES MOINES: Des Moilnes. Garden, Hi-
land, Ingersoll. Paramount, Strand. Roosevelt.
Uptown; NEWTON: Capitol. Rialto.
Illinois, MOLINE: LeCIaire; ROCK ISLAND:
Fort Armstrong, Spencer.
Nebraska, HASTINGS: Strand. Rivoli: OMAHA:
Paramount, Orpheum. Omaha; GRAND ISLAND:
Capitol, Empress. Grand. Majestic: FAIRBURY:
Bonham, Majestic.
Mulling & 1'inanski
Connecticut, NEW HAVEN: Paramount.
Massachusetts, ALLSTON: Allston. Capitol;
BOSTON: Fenway, Majestic, Paramount. Scollay
Square. Metropolitan: BROCKTON: Brockton.
Kialto. CAMBRIDGE: Central Square: CHELSEA:
Broadway, Olympia; DORCHESTER: Fields Cor-
ner. Strand. Codman Square: GLOUCESTER:
North Shore, Union Hill; LOWELL: Merrimac
Square. Strand, LYNN: Olympia. Paramount:
NEEDHAM: Paramount, NEW BEDFORD: Capi
tol, Olympia: NORTH CAMBRIDGE: Harvard:
SOMERVILLE: Ball Square. Capitol, Central.
Strand; NEWTON: Paramount: WEST NEWTON:
Newton; HAVERHILL: Colonial, Paramount. Ar-
lington. Capitol, Falmouth, Elizabeth, Taunton.
Park.
Connecticut, HARTFORD: Allyn: NEW LON
DON: Capitol. Crown; NORWALK: Norwalk;
SOUTH NORWALK: Empress.
Maine, BATH: Opera House, Uptown: BANGOR:
Bijou, Opera House. Park; BIDDEFORD: Central.
City: FORT FAIRFIELD: Paramount, Park.
Hacker. Hall; HOULTON: Temple: ORONO:
Strand; PORTLAND: State. Maine: ROCKLAND:
Empire. Park Strand: WESTBROOK: Star; WA-
TERVILLE: Haines.
Massachusetts, NATICK: Colonial; ROXBURY :
Criterion, Shawmut. Rivoli, Dudley, Egleston.
Warren; BOSTON: Modern. Beacon. Washing-ton
Street: WORCESTER: Capitol: NORTH ATTLE-
BORO: Community; MARLBORO: Marlboro. Prin-
cess; BRIGHTON: Egyptian; DORCHESTER:
Liberty. Franklin Park, Morton Street; MATTA-
PAN: Oriental: JAMAICA PLAIN: Jamaica; NOR-
FOLK DOWNS: Regent; ROSLINDALE: Bellevue.
Rialto; WOLLASTON: Wollaston: WALTHAM :
Waltham, Central. Embassy. Waldorf: EAST MIL-
TON: State; HYDE PARK: Fairmont. Hyde Park.
New Hampshire, DOVER: Lyric, Strand.
Rhode Island, NEWPORT: Strand: PAW
TUCKET: Strand: WOONSOCKET: Stadium.
Vermont, BARRE: Magnet, Paramount: RUT-
LAND: Grand, Paramount. Strand.
John Ford
Maine, AUBURN: Auburn: BRUNSWICK:
Cumberland. Pastime: LEWISTON: Empire. Mu-
sic Hall. Priscilla, Strand: GARDNER: Coliseum.
Opera House. Strand: AUGUSTA: Capitol. Colon-
ial; HALLOWELL: Acme. Rialto: LIVERMORE
FALLS: Dreamland: NORWAY: Rex; SOUTH
PARIS: Strand: WILTON: Wilton, Bijou; RUM-
FORD: Acadia, Strand.
Massachusetts, FITCHBURG: Fitchburg, Shea's.
New Hampshire, PORTSMOUTH: Colonial.
Olympia: BERLIN: Albert. Princess, Strand: CON-
CORD: Capitol, Star.
Vermont, MONTPELIER: Capitol; BURLING-
TON: Flynn, Majestic.
N. Goldstein
Massachusetts, CHICOPEE: Rivoli: GREEN-
FIELD: Garden; HOLYOKE: Strand. Victory:
NORTHAMPTON: Calvin, Plaza: PITTSFIELD:
Capitol, Colonial. Palace, Strand: SPRINGFIELD:
Arcade. Broadway, Paramount; WESTFIELD:
Strand; NORTH ADAMS: Bijou, Paramount, Rich-
mond.
Vermont, BRATTLEBORO: Paramount.
E. V. Richards
Alabama, MOBILE: Saenger. Crown. Empire.
Arkansas, HELENA: Paramount. Pastime:
HOPE: Saenger, Rialto; PINE BLUFF: Saenger.
Strand.
Florida, PENSACOLA: Isis. Saenger, Rex.
Louisiana, BATON ROUGE: Louisiana, Para-
mount, Varsity: NEW ORLEANS: Loew's State,
Globe, Tudor. St. Charles, Saenger: ALEXAN-
IjKIA: Paramount. Kt-x. Saenger: MONROE: Cap
itol. Paramount: SHREVEPORT: Saenger. Ma-
jestic, Capitol. Strand. Rex. Century. Old Venu*.
Venus, West End.
Mississippi, JACKSON: Century. Buck. Majestic.
Paramount: CLARKSDALE: Paramount. Delta;
HATTIESBURG: Lomo. Buck, Rose. Saenger;
GREENWOOD: Lyric. Paramount: BILOXI: Buck,
Saenger: GULFPORT: Anderson. Paramount
MERIDIAN: Strand. Temple. Alberta: NAT
CHEZ: Baker. Grand. Ritz, Vicksburg. Al-
amo. Strand. Saenger: GREENVILLE: Delta
Grand. Paramount; COLUMBUS: Dixie. Princess.
Varsity; TUPELO: Lyric. Strand: WEST POINT
Ritz, Star. WINONA: Winona.
Texas, TEXARKANA: Strand. Paramount.
H. F. Kincey
North Carolina. ASHEBORO: Carolina: BUR
LINGTON: Alamance. Carolina. Paramount
CHAPEL HILL: Carolina. Pick; CONCORD: Para
mount, Cabarrus: DURHAM: Carolina. Center.
Rialto: FAYETTEVILLE: Broadway. Carolina.
State: GOLDSBORO: Carolina. Paramount:
GREENSBORO: Carolina, Imperial. National:
GREENVILLE: Pitt. State: HENDERSON VILLE
Carolina. State; HICKORY: Paramount. Park.
HIGH POINT: Broadhurst. Carolina. Paramount.
Rialto. Center: RALEIGH: Ambassador, Capitol.
Palace, State; ROCKY MOUNT: Carolina, Center:
SALISBURY: Capitol. State, Victory; WILSON:
Carolina, Rialto, Ritz, Wilson: WINSTON-SALEM:
Carolina, State, Colonial. Forsyth: LENOIR: Im
perial. State: MT. AIRY: Center: LEXINGTON
Carolina. Granada: WILMINGTON: Bijou. Car
olina. Royal; MONROE: Center; LEXINGTON
Lyric. Temple, Lumberton. Carolina. Pastime.
Virginia, DANVILLE: Capitol, Dan. Rialto.
West Virginia, BLUEFIELD : Granada. State
Harry Nace
Arizona, PHOENIX: Orpheum, Ramona. Rialto.
Strand, Studio; TUCSON: Rialto. State.
John Friedl and L. J. Ludwig
Minnesota, AUSTIN: Paramount. State. Austin
DULUTH: Garrick, Lyceum. Lyric. Orpheum.
Strand; MANKATO: Grand. State. Time: MOOR
HEAD: Moorhead; ROCHESTER: Chateau. Em-
press, Lawler. Time; FAIRMONT: Nicholas.
Strand: HIBBING: Garden. Homer. Victory. State:
ST. PAUL: Capitol, Paramount. Park. Riviera.
St. Clair, Tower. Uptown: VIRGINIA: Rex.
State. Maco: WINONA: State. Winona, Avon.
Broadway; MINNEAPOLIS: Arion. Astor, Cen-
tury, Granada. Gopher, Loring. Lyric. Nokomis.
Rialto, State. .Uptown, American: ST. CLOUD:
Grand, Miner, Paramount. Eastman.
North Dakota, GRAND FORKS: Dakota. Para
mount : JAMESTOWN: Opera House. Star :
MINOT: Orpheum. State. Strand; FARGO: Fargo
State, Grand.
South Dakota. ABERDEEN: Capitol. Lyric.
Orpheum; HURON: Bijou. State. Huron; SIOUX
FALLS: Egyptian. Orpheum. State. Dakota.
Time: MITCHELL: Lyric, Paramount. Time:
WATERTOWN: Colonial. Lyric. Metropolitan.
State: MADISON: Lyric. State.
Wisconsin, EAU CLAIRE: State. Badger. Oklare:
SUPERIOR: Palace. Peoples. Savoy. Princess:
LA CROSSE: Fifth Ave.. Hollywood.
John Balaban
Illinois, ALTON: Grand. Princess: AURORA
Fox. Paramount, Tivoli; BLOOMINGTON: Castle.
Illini, Irvin, Majestic: BLUE ISLAND: Grand.
Lyric; DANVILLE: Fisher, Lincoln. Palace:
DOWNERS GROVE: Tivoli: DECATUR: Empress.
Lincoln Square, EDWARDSVILLE : Wildey: EL-
GIN: Crocker, Grove. Rialto: GALESBURG
Orpheum, West, Colonial; HARVEY: Harvey.
JOLIET: Orpheum. Princess. Rialto: KANKAKEE:
Luna. Majestic. Paramount: KEWANEE: Kee.
Peerless. LaSALLE: LaSalle. Majestic ;PEKIN : Em-
pire, Pekin, Rialto: PERU: Peru, Star; OAK
PARK: Lamar, Lake: SPRINGFIELD: Orpheum:
STREATOR: Majestic. Plumb; WAUKEGAN
Academy, Genesee. Majestic. Rialto: WOOD
RIVER: Wood River; PEORIA: Apollo. Madison.
Majestic, Orpheum, Palace. Rialto; EAST ST.
LOUIS: Majestic. Orpheum; QUINCY: Belasco.
Empire, Orpheum, Washington: ROCKFORD: Cor-
onado, Midway. Palace, Times: BERWYN: Ber-
wyn; EVANSTON: Valencia. Varsity. Coronet:
966
LaGRANGE: Park, LaGrange: CHICAGO: Alba,
Belpark. Central Park, Chicago. Gateway, Gar-
rick, Granada, Marbro. Maryland. Norshore. Nor-
town, Pantheon, Paradise, Riviera, Roosevelt,
Southtown, Terminal, Tivoli, Uptown, Varsity,
Senate, Tower. United Artists, Will Rogers, Cen-
tury, Convent, Harding, Regal, State, Belmont.
Biltmore, Congress, Crystal, Lakeside, State Lake,
Cine. Center. MeViekers. Luna. Manor, Iris. Apollo.
Tiffin: CHICAGO HEIGHTS: Lincoln, Dixie, Rex.
Indiana, SOUTH BEND: Colfax. Palace. State;
MARION: Paramount, Indiana, Lyric; HAMMOND:
Paramount: GARY: Grand, State.
Ohio, TOLEDO: Paramount, Princess.
George W. Trendle
Michigan. DETROIT : Annex, Birmingham,
Fisher. Michigan, Ramona, Riviera, Palms, State.
United Artists. Norwest, Regent, Rosedale, Varsity.
Alger, Cinderella, Vogue.
W. S. Butterfield Theaters, Inc. and
Bntterfleld Michigan Theaters Co.
Michigan, ALLEGAN: Regent: ANN ARBOR:
Majestic, Michigan, Orpheum, Whitney, Wuerth:
BATTLE CREEK: Bijou, Post, Regent. Strand:
BAY CITY: Center, Bay. Regent. State: FLINT:
Capitol, Garden, Palace, Regent: HILLSDALE:
Alhambra, Dawn: IONIA: Ionia, Orpheum: JACK-
SON: Capitol, Majestic. Michigan, Regent, Rex:
KALAMAZOO: Michigan. Capitol, Fuller. State,
Uptown; LUDINGTON: Lyric, Kozy: LANSING:
Capitol. Gladmer. Lansing. Strand: EAST LAN-
SING: State: NILES: Riviera. Ready: OWOSSO:
Capitol, Center, Strand; PONTIAC: Eagle, Oak-
land, Orpheum, Rialto, State. Strand: PORT
HURON: Desmond. Family. Majestic: SAGINAW:
Franklin. Mecca, Center. Strand, Temple. Wol-
verine: YPSILANTI: Martha Washington, Wuerth;
GRAND HAVEN: Grand, Crescent. Robinhood:
MUSKEGON: Michigan, Regent, State: GRAND
RAPIDS: Empress. Kent, Majestic, Regent.
East own. Royal, Our. Center. Four Star. Wealthy:
MONROE: Dixie, Family. Monroe: HOLLAND:
Colonial. Holland. Strand: SOUTH HAVEN: Cen-
tre. Model: ALPENA: Lyric, Maltz; BENTON
HARBOR: Lake. Liberty: BIG RAPIDS: Colonial:
CADILLAC: Lyric: MANISTEE: Lyric. Ramsdell:
ST. JOSEPH: Caldwell: THREE RIVERS: Riviera.
Rialto: TRAVERSE CITY: Lyric. Trabay: ADRI-
AN: Croswell. Family: STURGIS: Roxy. Strand:
NORTH LANSING: Nortown.
PARAMOUNT-RICHARDS THEATERS, INC.
608 Canal St., New Orleans, La.
President-General Manager . .E. V. Richards, Jr.
Ass't. General Manager N. L. Carter
Vice-President Y. Frank Freeman
Treasurer W. B. Cokell
Secretary N. L. Carter
THEATERS (63) :
Alabama, MOBILE: Crown. Empire, Saenger.
Arkansas, HELENA: Paramount. Pastime:
HOPE: Rialto. Saenger: PINE BLUFF: Alamo.
Saenger.
Florida, PENSACOLA: Isis. Saenger. Rex.
Louisiana, ALEXANDRIA: Paramount, Rex.
Saenger: BATON ROUGE: Louisiana, Paramount.
Varsity: MONROE: Capitol, Paramount: NEW OR
LEANS: Globe. Saenger. Tudor, Shreveport.
Capitol, Majestic, Saenger, Strand, Rex, Centenary.
Venus, West End.
Mississippi, BILOXI: Buck, Saenger: CLARKS
DALE: Delta, Paramount: COLUMBUS: Dixie.
Princess: GREENVILLE: Delta, Paramount:
GREENWOOD: Lyric. Paramount: GULFPORT:
Anderson, Paramount: HATTIESBURG: Buck,
Lomo, Saenger; JACKSON: Buck. Century. Ma-
jestic, Paramount: MERIDIAN: Alberta, Strand.
Temple; NATCHEZ: Grand. Ritz, TUPELO: Lyric.
Strand: VICKSBURG: Alamo. Strand. Saenger:
WEST POINT: Ritz.
Texas, TEXARKANA: Paramount. Strand.
PARAMOUNT- WILBY-KINCEY
THEATER CIRCUIT
154 Walton St.. Atlanta, Ga.
THEATERS (143):
Listed in two groups.
H. F. Kincey
First National Bank Bldg., Charlotte, N. C.
North Caralina, ASHEBORO: Carolina: BUR-
LINGTON : Alamance. Carolina, Paramount:
CHAPEL HILL: Carolina, Pick: CHARLOTTE
Broadway, Carolina, Dil worth. Imperial. State;
CONCORD: Cabarrus. Paramount: DURHAM:
Carolina, Center, Rialto; FAYETTEVILLE : Broad-
way, Carolina, State: GASTONIA: Lyric, Temple;
GOLDSBORO: Carolina, Paramount, Wayne:
GREENSBORO: Carolina, Imperial, National:
GREENVILLE: Pitt, State: HENDERSONVILLE :
Carolina, State: HICKORY: Paramount, Park;
HIGH POINT: Broadhurst, Carolina, Center, Para-
mount, Rialto: LENOIR: Imperial. State: LEX-
INGTON: Carolina, Granada: MONROE: Center:
MOUNT AIRY: Center; RALEIGH: Ambassador.
Capital. Palace, State: ROCKY MOUNT: Carolina.
Center, Lyric: SALISBURY: Capitol. State. Vic-
tory; WILSON: Carolina. Rialto. Ritz. Wilson:
WILMINGTON: Bijou, Carolina, Center, Royal:
WINSTON-SALEM: Carolina, Colonial, Forsyth,
State.
South Carolina, ABBEVILLE: Opera House:
ANDERSON: Criterion, Strand, Lyric, State:
COLUMBIA: Five Points. Palmetto, Ritz, Strand;
DARLINGTON: Liberty; FLORENCE: Carolina.
Colonial: GREENVILLE: Carolina. Center, Rivoli:
GREENWOOD: Carolina. State, Ritz; SPARTAN-
BURG: Carolina, Criterion, State. Strand: SUM-
TER: Rex, Sumter.
Virginia, DANVILLE: Capitol. Dan. Rialto.
West Virginia, BLUEFIELD: Granada, State.
R. B. Wilby
154 Walton St., Northwest, Atlanta, Ga.
Alabama, ANNISTON: Noble, Cameo. Ritz:
AUBURN: Tiger; BESSEMER: Grand. State:
BIRMINGHAM: Alabama, Pantages. Ritz, Strand.
Temple: DEMOPOLIS: Marengo. Lido; JASPER:
Jasper, New: MONTGOMERY: Empire, Para-
mount, Strand, Tivoli: SELMA: Wilby. Walton:
TROY: Enzor: TUSCALOOSA: Bama, Diamond.
Druid, Ritz; TUSKEGEE: Macon.
Tennessee. CHATTANOOGA: Bijou. Rialto.
State, Tivoli: ELIZ ABETHTOWN : Bonnie Kate.
Ritz; JOHNSON CITY: Liberty. Majestic, State.
Tennessee: KINGSPORT: Gem, Rialto, State.
Strand: KNOXVILLE: Bijou, Booth. Lyric. Park
Riviera, Strand, Tennessee.
PARKER, I 3., THEATERS
Broadway Theater, Portland, Ore.
President J. J. Parker
General Manager Ted R. Gamble
THEATERS (6):
Oregon, ASTORIA: Liberty, Riviera: PENDLE-
TON: United Artists: PORTLAND: Broadway.
Mayfair, United Artists.
PAR LAND THEATERS, INC.
1501 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
THEATERS (8) :
New York, STATEN ISLAND — GREAT KILLS:
Strand: NEW DORP: New Dorp; PORT RICH-
MOND: Ritz: ST. GEORGE: St. George: STAPLE-
TON: Liberty. Paramount: TOTTENVILLE: Sta-
dium; WEST NEW BRIGHTON: Capitol.
PARTMAR THEATER CORP.
1584 W. Washington Blvd.. Los Angeles, Calif.
President Marco Wolff
Secretary J. Partington
THEATERS (7) :
California, LOS ANGELES: Balboa. Manchester,
Paramount: LONG BEACH: Cabart. Rivoli. State:
SAN BERNARDINO: Studio.
PARTNERSHIP THEATERS, INC.
Tower Petroleum Bldg., Dallas, Tpv.
THEATERS (5) :
Kansas, HIAWATHA: Chief.
Nebraska, AUBURN: Auburn. Booth; NEBRAS
KA CITY: Booth. Paramount.
PASTIME AMUSEMENT CO.
93 Society St.. Charleston, S. C.
General Manager-Film Buyer Albert Sottile
THEATERS (5) :
South Carolina, CHARLESTON: Garden, Gloria.
Majestic. Riviera. Victory.
967
TERRAS. JOHN
360 Broad St., Elyria, O.
President -Manager John Pekras
THEATERS (4):
Ohio, ELYRIA: Capitol. Lincoln, Elalto, Rivoll.
PIONEER THEATER CORP.
4839 Minnetonka Blvd., St. Lewis Park, Minn.
President Harold D. Field
Vice-President Leonard S. Field
Vice-President Frank D. Rubel
Secretary-Treasurer Daniel E. Field
THE \TERS (IB):
Iowa. ATLANTIC: Iowa. Grand: CARROLL:
Earle. State; CLARINDA: Clarinda. Rialto: JEF-
FERSON: Iowa. Howard: SPENCER: Spencer.
Fraser: SPIRIT LAKE: Royal: PERRY: Perry.
Foxy: WEBSTER CITY: Isis, Webster; ROCK
RAPIDS: Rapids.
PIRTLE CIRCUIT
Orpheum Theater, Jerseyville, III.
Pres.-Gen'l. Mgr. -Film Buyer S. E. Pirtle
THEATERS (8) :
Illinois. ABINGDON: Bijou: BEARDSTOWN :
Gem, Princess; BDSHNELL: Rialto; CARROLL-
TON: Bijou; JERSEYVILLE: Orpheum; Mc-
LEANSBORO: Capitol.
Missouri, MACON: Valencia.
PITTS THEATERS, INC.
909 Caroline St.. Fredericksburg, Va.
Presiden'. Benjamin T. Pitts
Secretary-Treasurer L. G. Payne
Office Manager Freda Pollard
Asst. Office MgT Mrs. Frances Floyd
THEATERS (24) :
Virginia, BERRYVILLE: Pitts Ciareo: CUL-
PEPPER: Pitts. Pitts Fairfax: EMPIRIA: Pitts.
Pitts Weiss: FREDERISKSBURG: Pitts Colonial.
Pitts Leader, Pitts Victoria: FRONT ROYAL: Pitts
Murphy. Pitts Park: LEESBURG: Pitts Tall-ho.
Opera House; MANASSAS: Pitts: ORANGE:
Pitts Madison: RICHMOND: East End, Patrick
Henry; SUFFOLK: Pitts Cavalier, Pitts Chad-
wick: WARRENTON: Pitts Facquier; WEST
POINT: Pitts York.
West Virginia, CHARLESTOWN: Pitts Jeffer-
son, Pitts Opera House.
PIZOR, LEWEN
2011 Philadelphia Savings Fund Bldg.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
General Manager-Film Buyer Lewen Pizoi
THEATERS (16) :
Pennsylvania, MINERSVILLE: Lyric. Opera
House: NAZARETH: Broad Street. Royal: PHIL-
ADELPHIA: Ace, Apollo, Cedar, Chelten. Tiogo;
PHOENIXVILLE : Colonial, Rialto: PINE GROVE:
Hippodrome: POTTSVILLE: Hollywood: ROVERS-
FORD: Penn.
PLYLER CIRCUIT
Craigmont, Idaho.
THEATERS (4) :
Idaho, CRAIGMONT: Craigmont: PIERCE:
Ark; RIGGINS: Riggins; WEIPPE: Grand.
POLI NEW ENGLAND THEATERS, INC.
23 Church St., New Haven, Conn.
Operated by Loew's. Inc.
Division Manager Harry F. Shaw
THEATERS (15):
Connecticut. BRIDGEPORT: Loew's Poli. Loew-
Poli Majestic, Loew-Poli Globe. Loew-Poli Lyric:
NEW HAVEN: Loew's Poli. Loew-Poli College.
Loew-Poli Bijou. WATERBURY: Loew's Poli:
MERIDEN: Lo^w-Poli Palace: HARTFORD:
Loew's Poli. Loew-Poli Palace.
Massachnsetts, SPRINGFIELD: Loew's Poll:
WORCESTER: Loew's Poli. Loew-Poli Elm Street.
Loew-Poli Plaza.
POPKIN St RINGER BROS.
Million Dollar Theater
307 S. Broadway, Los Angeles, Calif.
THEATERS (10) :
California, LOS ANGELES: Art. Burbank.
Crystal, Gayety, Hippodrome, Jewel. Lark. Lyce-
um, Million Dollar, Optic, Regent.
POUZZNER, MORRIS. CIRCUIT
100 Arlington St.. Boston, Mass.
THEATERS (6):
Connecticut, MIDDLETOWN: Capitol. Mlddl*-
sex. Paramount.
Massachusetts, READING: Reading.
Rhode Island, WESTERLY: Lyric, United.
PREFERRED THEATERS CORP.
1915 Fourth Ave., Los Angeles, Calif.
President Russell Rogers
Vice-President George B. Sheldon
Secretary-Treasurer C. W. Crandall
THEATERS (5) :
California, BAKERSFIELD: Nile: LONG
BEACH: Palace: SAN DIEGO: Aztec, Mission.
Plaza.
PREMIER OPERATING CORP., LTD.
21 Dundas Square, Toronto, Out.
President-Film Buyer Herbert Allen
General Manager Jule Allen
THEATERS (35) :
Michigan, LINCOLN PARK: Park.
Canada, BOURLAMAQUE. QUE.: Capitol: CO-
BALT: Classic: GERALDTON: Strand: HAMIL-
TON: Westdale: KITCHENER: Capitol. Lyric:
KIRK LAND LAKE: Capitol. Strand. Uptown:
LARDER LAKE: Capitol: LEAMINGTON: Capi-
tol: MONTREAL: Amherst. Francais. Monkland.
Snowdon. Westmount: MOUNT DENNIS: Mount
Dennis: NEW TORONTO: Capitol: NEW MARKET:
Strand; PARRY SOUND: Royal: PERTH: Perth:
PORT COLBORNE: Strand: PRESTON: Park:
SIMCOE: Lyric: SMITH FALLS: Capitol: STRAT-
FORD: Classic, Majestic: TTLLSONBURG: Strand:
TORONTO: Casino. Hollywood. Major-Rogers
Road. Major St. Clair; WALLACEBURG: Capitol:
WATERLOO: Waterloo; WINDSOR: Temple.
PREMIER THEATERS
216 Main St., Evansville, Ind.
President Isadore J. Fine
Vice-President-Advt. Mgr Jesse D. Fine
General Manager-Film Buver Oscar Fine
THEATERS (8) :
Indiana. EVANSVILLE: Alhambra. American.
Carlton. Columbia. Franklin. Grand. Washington.
Woodlawn.
PRINCIPAL THEATERS CORP. OF AMERICA
9336 W. Washington Blvd., Culver City, Calif.
President Sol Lesser
General Manager-Film Buyer M. RoSenbers
THEATERS (27):
Arizona, YUMA: Lyric. Yuma.
California. ALHAMBRA: Alhambra. El Rey.
Garfield: BANNING. Banning: BRAWLEY: Braw-
ley. Circle: CULVER CITY: Meralta: LOS AN
GELES : Palace. Newsreel, Tower. Orpheum, Ri-
alto; OAKLAND: Senator: PORTERVILLE: Mo-
lino. Monache. Crystal; SANTA MARIA: Gaiety.
Santa Maria: TRACEY: Grand: VENTURA: Amer-
ican, Ventura.
Indiana, ANDERSON: Granada. Riviera. Star-
land.
Washington, SPOKANE: Liberty.
PRUDENTIAL AND PLAYHOUSE OPERATING
CO.
1501 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
President Joseph M. Seider
Film Buyers. . . .Joseph M. Seider. Irwin Wheeler
Assistant Film Buyer Harry Britwar
THEATERS (36) :
Connecticut, NEW CANAAN: Playhouse:
RIDGEFIELD: Playhouse.
New Jersey, CALDWELL: Park: PRINCETON:
Garden, Playhouse: SOMMERVILLE: Cort.
New York, MAMARONECK: Playhouse: RYE :
Playhouse: WHITE PLAINS: Strand; LONG IS
LAND — AMITYVLLLE: Amityville: BABYLON:
Babylon; BAYSHORE: Bayshore. Regent: BEL-
LAIRE: Bellaire; CENTER MORICHES: Center
Moriches: EAST HAMPTON: Edwards: GREEN-
PORT: Greenport: HICKSVTLLE: Hicksville:
968
HOLMS: Hollis: KINGS PARK: Kings Park:
NORTHPORT: Northport; OZONE PARK: Farrell.
State; PATCHOGUE: Granada, Patchogue, Rialto;
RICHMOND HILL: Casino, New Garden: RIVER-
HEAD: Riverhead. Suffolk; SAG HARBOR: Sag
Harbor; SATVILLE: Sayville: SMITHTOWN:
Smithtown: SOUTH OZONE PARK: Park:
SOUTHAMPTON: Southampton; SPRINGFIELD
GARDENS: Garden: WEST HAMPTON: West-
hampton.
I'UBLIX KAMFOKD THEATERS, INC.
Asheville, N. C.
THEATERS (5) :
North Carolina, ASHEVILLE: Isis, Palace, Im-
perial, Paramount, Plaza.
I'LBLOX GREAT STATE THEATERS, INC.
(Affiliated with Paramount Pictures, Inc. ami
Balaban & Katz Corp.)
1 75 N. State St., Chicago, 111.
President Barney Balaban
V-P-General Manager Jules J. Rubens
Secretary John Balaban
THEATERS (57) :
Illinois, ALTON: Grand. Princess: AURORA:
Fox. Paramount, Tivoli; BLOOMINGTON: Castle,
Illini. Irvin. Majestic, BLUE ISLAND: Grand,
Lyric: CHICAGO HEIGHTS: Lincoln-DLxie, Rex;
DANVILLE: Fisher. Lincoln, Palace: DECATUR:
Empress, Lincoln; EAST ST. LOUIS: Majestic,
Orpheum; EDWARDSVILLE : Wildey; ELGIN:
Crocker, Grove, Rialto; FREEPORT: Patio;
GALESBURG: Orpheum, West; HARVEY: Har-
vey: JOLIET: Orpheum, Princess, Rialto: KANK-
AKEE: Luna, Majestic, Paramount: KEWANEE:
Kee, Peerless; NORMAL: Normal; PEORIA:
Apollo, Madison, Majestic, Orpheum, Palace.
Rialto; PEKIN: Empire, Pekin, Rialto; QUINCY:
Belaseo, Empire, Orpheum, Washington; SPRING-
FIELD: Orpheum; STREATOR: Majestic, Plumb;
WAUKEGAN: Academy, Genesee, Majestic, Ri-
alto; WOOD RIVER: Wood River.
I'UBLIX-RICHARDS-NACE, INC.
208 Orpheum Theater Bldg., Phoenix, Ariz.
General Manager Harry L. Nace
THEATERS (27) :
Listed in nine groups.
Publix-Richards-Nace, Inc.:
Arizona, PHOENIX: Orpheum. Rialto. Strand.
Studio, Ramona; TUCSON: Rialto, State.
Harry L. Nace Theaters, Inc.:
Arizona, ASHFORK: Ashfork; HOLBROOK:
Roxy; MESA: Nile, Ritz; SELIGMAN: Seligman;
WILLIAMS: Sultana; WINSLOW: Rialto, Chief.
Affiliated with:
Northern Arizona Theaters, Inc.:
Arizona, FLAGSTAFF: Flagstaff, Orpheum.
Prescott Theaters, Inc.:
Arizona, PRESCOTT: Elks, Studio.
Community Theaters, Inc.:
Arizona, BUCKEYE: Roxy; GLENDALE: El
Ray, Glendale.
Verde Valley Theaters, Inc.:
Arizona, CLARKDALE: Grand; COTTONWOOD:
Rialto.
Tolleson Theater, Inc.:
Arizona, TOLLESON: Tolsun.
Lang's Theater Co.:
Arizona, KINGMAN: State.
Harkins Amusement Co.:
Arizona, TEMPLE: State.
QL'IMBY THEATERS
Palace Theater Bldg., Fort Wayne, lml.
Vice-President Harry G. Hogan
THEATERS (5) :
Indiana, FORT WAYNE: Emboyd, Jefferson.
Palace, Paramount, Riley.
RKO THEATERS
1270 Sixth Ave., New York. N. 1.
THEATERS (95) :
California, LOS ANGELES: RKO-Hillstreet;
SAN FRANCISCO: Golden Gate.
Colorado, DENVER: Orpheum.
District, of Columbia. WASHINGTON: Keith's.
Illinois, CHAMPAIGN: Orpheum, Virginia-
CHICAGO: Palace.
Iowa, DES MOINES: Orpheum.
Massachusetts, BOSTON: RKO Keith's Boston,
Keith's Memorial; LOWELL: Keith's.
Michigan, DETROIT: Uptown.
Minnesota. MINNEAPOLIS: Seventh Street:
ST. PAUL: Orpheum.
Missouri, KANSAS CITY: Orpheum.
New Jersey, NEW BRUNSWICK: Albany. Ki
voli. State; NEWARK: Proctor's: TRENTON:
Broad, Capitol, Lincoln, Palace. State, Trent;
UNION CITY: Capitol, State (closed).
New York, BROOKLYN, N. Y. C: Albee. Bush-
wick. Dyker, Greenpoint. Kenmore. Madison. Or
pheum. Prospect. Republic. Shore Road. Tilyou
FAR ROCKAWAY: Columbia. Strand; FLUSH
ING: Keith's: JAMAICA: Alden: MOUNT VER
NON: Parkway, Proctor's: NEW ROCHELLE:
Proctors: NEW YORK: Alhambra, Chester. Coli-
seum, Colonial, Empire, Fordham. Franklin.
Hamilton, Jefferson, Midtown. Palace, Regent,
Roosevelt, Royal, Uptown, Yorktown, 23rd Street,
58th Street, 81st Street, 86th Street, 125th Street:
RICHMOND HILL: Keith's; ROCHESTER: Pal-
ace, Temple; ROCKAWAY PARK: Park; SYRA-
CUSE: Eckel, Keith's, Paramount, Strand: WHITE
PLAINS: Keith's; YONKERS: Parkhill, Proctor's,
Strand.
Ohio, CINCINNATI: Albee, Capitol, Family,
Lyric, Orpheum, Palace, Paramount, Shubert:
CLEVELAND: Allen, Palace, 105th Street; CO-
LUMBUS: Grand, Palace; DAYTON: Colonial,
Keith's, State.
Rhode Island, PROViDENCE: Albee.
RAEBURN, RAY and ERMA
Newell, S. D.
THEATERS (7) :
Portable:
North Dakota, LINTON: Linton.
South Dakota. BISON: Auditorium: BUFFALO:
Legion; LEMMON: Grand; NEWELL: Arcade
TIMBER LAKE: Orpheum; WALL: Wall.
RANDFORCE AMUSEMENT CORP.
1515 Bedford Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. C.
President Samuel Rinzler
Treasurer Louis Frisch
THEATERS (11):
New York. BROOKLYN: Alba. Alhambra, Am-
bassador, Benson. Beverly. Biltmore. Capitol,
Carlton, Carroll, Claridge, Clinton, Congress, Cross-
bay, Colonial, Commodore, Culver, Duffield. Em-
bassy, Empress, Glenwood, Highway, Kinema.
Leader, Lefferts, Marcy, Marboro, Meserole, Oasis,
Parthenon, Maspeth, Rainbow, Rivera, Ridgewood,
Roosevelt, Savoy, Senate, Stadium, Stone. Su-
preme, Tivoli, Utica, Waldorf, Walker, Wilson.
RAPALUS THEATERS
Majestic Theater, Easthampton, Mass.
General Manager-Film Buyer. . .Joseph S. Rapalu?
THEATERS (5) :
Massachusetts, BONDS VILE: Opera House-
EASTHAMPTON: Majestic; HOLYOKE: Bijou-
LUDLOW- Burr MONSON: Capitol.
RAPF & RUDEN
678 Eighth Ave.. New York, N. Y.
President Arthur M. Rapf
Secretary-Treasurer Michael Rudeu
THEATERS (7) :
New Jersey, BLOOMFIELD: Broadmoor. Royal;
CALDWELL: Park; SOMERVILLE : Cort; UP-
PER MONTCLAIR: Bellevue.
New York, NEW YORK — Brooklyn: Travmore;
NEW YORK — Manhattan: Gramercy Park.
READE, WALTER, ENTERPRISES
701 Seventh Ave., New York, N. Y.
President Walter Reade
THEATERS (32) :
New Jersey, ASBURY PARK: Mayfair, Para-
mount, Lyric, Savoy, St. James; FREEHOLD:
Strand; LONG BRANCH: Paramount. Strand-
PERTH AMBOY: Crescent, Ditmas, Majestic,
Strand; PLAINFIELD: Paramount, Strand. Ox-
ford: RED BANK: Carlton, Strand; ENGLE-
WOOD: Englewood (leased to Skouras) ; TOMS
RIVER: Community; MORRISTOWN: Community,
Park, Jersey.
969
New York, SARATOGA SPRINGS: Commun-
ity; HUDSON: Community. Star. Warren; KINGS-
TON: Broadway. Kingston: NEW YORK: Mayfair
(leased to Loew's), Plaza (leased to Leo Breeher).
Savoy; M1NEOLA, L. I.: Mineola (leased to
Julius Gulkis).
KEINHEIMER, L., FILM SERVICE
910 S. Michigan Ave.. Chicago, III.
THEATERS (12) :
Illinois, CHICAGO: Parkway, Roseland, Rose-
land-State, Thalia. Tiffian. Alamo. Famous. Ridge:
ELMHURST: York: LOMBARD: DuPage.
Indiana, HAMMOND: Calumet, Rio.
RHONHEIMER, SAMUEL, CIRCUIT
7413 Third Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Representative Samuel Rhonheimer
THEATERS (5) :
New Jersey, TENAFLY: Bergen.
New York, NEW YORK (Brooklyn) : Electra:
JACKSON HEIGHTS. L. I.: Fair; MIDDLE VIL-
LAGE, L. I.: Arion; REGO PARK. L. I.: Drake.
RIVOLI THEATERS
Cloverine Terrace, Tyrone, Pa.
THEATERS (6) :
Listed in three gToups:
Rivoli Theaters Co., Inc.
President John D. Meyer
Vice-President R. Allison
Treasurer George C. Wilson, Jr.
Secretary J. C. McConahy
Pennsylvania, PORTAGE: Rivoli: SOUTH FORK:
Rivoli.
Cambria Theaters Co., Inc.
President R. Allison
Vice-President L. I. Wilson
Treasurer George C. Wilson, Jr.
Secretary J. C. McConahy
Pennsylvania, CRESSON: Rivoli: EBENSBURG:
Rivoli.
Tyrone Theaters (leased to Warners)
Joint Owners. . .L. I. Wilson, George C. Wilson, Jr.
Pennsylvania, TYRONE: El Patrio. Wilson.
ROBB & ROWLEY UNITED, INC.
314 S. Harwood St., Dallas, Tex.
President H. B. Robb
Vice-President Lou Anger
Secretary E. H. Rowley
Treasurer G. S. Reinhardt
THEATERS (109) :
Arkansas, ARKADELPHIA: Co-ed. Royal: BAUX-
ITE: Bauxite; BENTON: Imp; LITTLE ROCK:
Arkansas, Capitol, Lee, New, Pulaski, Pros-
pect, Roxy, Royal: MAGNOLIA: Macco, Odeon:
MALVERN: Liberty, Ritz.
California, PASADENA: Pasadena, Park. State.
Tower. Washington.
Oklahoma, DURANT: Metro, Plaza, Ritz; Mc-
ALESTER: Mecca. Okla. Ritz: MUSKOGEE:
Broadway, Grand, Ritz, Roxy, Yale.
Texas, BIG SPRINGS: Lyric, Queen. Ritz:
BRENHAM: Rex. Simon: CAMERON: Cameron.
Milam; CISCO: Ideal, Palace; CORORADO: Gem.
Palace, Ritz; COMMERCE: Lyric, Palace: CORPUS
CHRISTI: Agnes, Amusu, Grande. Melba, Palace.
Ritz, Tower: CROCKETT: Auditorium, Texas:
DALLAS: Astor, Bison, Rosewin, Midway, Texa9:
DEL RIO: Princess, Strand; HILLSBORO: Texas.
Ritz; HUNTSVILLE: Avon. Dorothy; LAREDO:
Rialto, Royal, Tivoli. Azteca, Mexico; McKIN-
NEY: Ritz. State, Texas; MINERAL WELLS:
Gem. Grand; MT. PLEASANT: Martin. Texas;
PALESTINE: Pal. Ritz, Texas: ROBSTOWN:
Aldine, Palace: ROTAN: Majestic, Ritz; SAN
ANGELO: Angelus, Rex, Ritz, Royal. Texas.
Lyric; SHERMAN: Ritz, Texas, Plaza: SUL-
PHUR SPRINGS: Broadway, Carnation, Mission:
SWEETWATER: Nolan, Palace, Ritz, Texas; TAY-
LOR: Colonial. Howard; TERRELL: Iris. Lyric:
WAXAHACHIE: Empire, Ritz, Texas.
ROBINS AMUSEMENT CO.
Robins Theater Bldg., Market St., Warren, O.
President Daniel Robins
Vice-President Edgar Wilkofl
Secretary Joseph Robins
THEATERS (4) :
Ohio. NILES: Butler. Warner: WARREN:
Ohio. Robins.
RODGERS, I. W.. THEATER CIRCUIT
Gem Theater Bldg., Cairo, 111.
President I. W. Rodgers
Viee-President-General Manager C. W. Rodgers
Seeretarj -Treas.-Film Buyer Grace Rodgers
THEATERS (17) :
Arkansas, BLYTHEVILLE : Gem. Ritz. Roxy.
Illinois, ANNA. Rodgers. Yale: CAIRO: Gem.
Rodgers, Opera House: CARBONDALE: Liberty,
Rogers.
Missouri, CARUTHER SVILLE : Bijou. Rodgers:
CHARLESTON: American: POPLAR BLUFF: Cri-
terion, Jewel: SIKESTON: Malone. Rex.
ROME THEATRICAL ENTERPRISES
Met Theater Bldg., North & Pennsylvania Aves.,
Baltimore, Md.
President-General Manager J. Louis Rome
THEATERS (13) :
Maryland, BALTIMORE: Apollo. Astor. Broad-
way, Cameo, Capitol, Diane, Harlem, Leader.
Lenox, Met, Preston, Regent, Rialto.
ROSENBLATT-WELT THEATERS
1501 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
President I. Welt
Vice-President B. Rosenblatt
Secretary-Treasurer L. Rosenblatt
General Manager B. Brooks
THEATERS (9) :
New Jersey, BAYONNE: Lyceum. Plaza:
HIGHTSTOWN: Hights; JERSEY CITY: Orient.
Orpheum.
New York, STATEN ISLAND — PORT RICH-
MOND: Empire; NEW BRIGHTON: Star: STA-
PLETON: Rex; NEW YORK — Brooklyn: Boro
Hall.
ROTH AMUSEMENT ENTERPRISES, INC.
(19 Park Place, Morristown, N. i.
President I. A. Roth
Gen'l. Mgr.-Film Buyer Walter M. Hoffman
THEATERS (5) :
New Jersey. MADISON: Madison: MORRIS-
TOWN: Jersey. Park; SUMMIT: Strand. Lyric.
ROTHSTEIN, NAT
377 Burrows Ave., Winnipeg, Man., Canada
THEATERS (8) :
Manitoba, SELKIRK: Roxy.
Ontario, BEARDMORE: Roxy.
Saskatoon, ASSINIBOIA: Olympia: GOLD-
FIELDS: Roxy; SASKATOON: Roxy; WTLKIE:
Roxy; YORKTON: Princess, Roxy.
ROXY THEATER CIRCUIT
306 E. Main St., Lock Haven, Pa.
Manager and Owner Oscar Stiefel
THEATERS (7) :
Pennsylvania. DOWINGTON: Roosevelt: EPH
RATA Main Street, Roxy: LEWISBURG: Roxy;
LOCK HAVEN: Martin, Roxy; MEYERSDALE:
Roxy.
RUGOIF AND BECKER
1270 Sixth Ave., New York, N. Y.
Partners. .. .Edwird N. Rugoff. Herman Becker
THEATERS (13):
New York, FAR ROCKAWAY: Gem; KEW
GARDENS. L. I.: Austin: LONG BEACH, L. I.:
Laurel, Lido; NEW YORK — Brooklyn: Avenue D.
Avenue U. Granada. Rugby, Surf, Tuxedo, Oceana.
Sheepshead; NEW YORK — Manhattan: Eighth
Street Playhouse.
SABLOSKY. A. & L., ENTERPRISES
Norris Theater Bldg., Norristown, Pa.
THEATERS (5) :
Listed in two groups:
Norris Amusement Co.
President A. Sablosky
Secretary -Treasurer Lewis Sablosky
970
Pennsylvania, NORRISTOWN: Garrick. Grand.
New Tower, Norris.
Grand Amusement Co.
President Lewis Sablosky
Secretary -Treasurer A. Sablosky
Pennsylvania, BRISTOL,: Grand.
ST. CLOUD CIRCUIT
Washington, N. J.
Representative C. E. Smith
THEATERS (10) :
Listed in three groups.
Comerford, St. Cloud Amusement Corp.
New Jersey, BELVIDERE: Belvidere: BLAIRS-
TOWN: Roy's; SUSSEX: Sussex; WASHINGTON:
St. Cloud. Washington.
St. Cloud Theater Corp.
New Jersey, BERN ARDSVTLLE : Liberty; CLIN-
TON: Clinton Point; FRENCHTOWN: Barn: NEW-
TON: Court Square.
Comerford, Victoria Amusement Co.
Pennsylvania, MOUNT POCONO: Casino.
SAN FRANCISCO THEATERS, INC.
25 Taylor St., San Francisco, Calif.
President S. H. Levin
Vice-President M. Naify
Film Buyer C. Verne Taylor
THEATERS (5) :
California, SAN FRANCISCO: Alexandria, Coli-
seum, Harding, Lincoln, Metropolitan.
SCHINE CIRCUIT, INC.
10 N. Main Ct., Gloversville, N. Y.
President J. Myer Schine
Secretary-Treasurer Louis W. Schine
THEATERS (128) :
Listed in five divisions:
Albany Division
New York, AMSTERDAM: Regent, Rialto.
Strand; BALLSTON SPA: Capitol: CARTHAGE:
Strand: GLENS FALLS: Empire, Rialto: GLOV-
ERSVILLE: Glove, Hippodrome: GRANVILLE:
Ritz: HAMILTON: State: HERKIMER: Liberty:
HUDSON FALLS: Strand: ILION: Opera House
(closed), Capitol. Temple (closed): LITTLE
FALLS: Hippodrome. Rialto: MALONE: Malone;
MASSENA: Massena: MECHANICVILLE : State:
NORWICH: Colonial; OGDENSBURG: Strand.
Pontiac; ONEONTA: Oneonta, Palace, Strand
(closed): SARANAC LAKE: Pontiac: TUPPER
LAKE: State: WATERTOWN: Avon, Olympic.
Palace; WHITEHALL: Capitol.
Buffalo Division
New York, AUBURN: Auburn, Jefferson, Palace;
BATH: Babcock; BUFFALO: Granada, Riverside:
CANANDAIGUA: Playhouse: CORNING: Fox.
Palace, State (closed) : CORTLAND: State, Tem-
ple: EAST ROCHESTER: Rialto; FAIRPORT:
Temple; GENEVA: Geneva. Regent; LOCKPORT:
Hi-Art, Palace. Rialto: NEWARK: Capitol: OS-
WEGO: Capitol, Strand: PENN YAN : Elm wood:
PERRY: Auditorium: ROCHESTER: Cameo, Dixie,
Grand, Lake, Liberty, Madison, Monroe, Riviera.
State, West End: SALAMANCA: Andrews: SEN-
ECA FALLS: Strand: SYRACUSE: Eckel, Keith,
Palace. Paramount, Strand.
Ohio Division
Ohio, ASHLAND: Opera House, Palace, Ohio
(closed): ATHENS: Athena, Court (closed),
Ohio: BELLEFONTAINE: Opera House (closed).
Strand (closed), Holland: BUCYRUS: Bucyrus.
Southern: DELAWARE: Star, Strand: FOSTORIA:
Civic, Roxy, State; KENT: Kent, Opera House
(closed): MEDINA: Medina, Princess (closed):
MT. VERNON: Vernon, Vine: NORWALK: Forum,
Moose: PIQUA Miami. Piqua: RAVENNA: Raven-
na: SHELBY: Castamba: TIFFIN: Grand. Ritz,
Tiffin: VA"N WERT: Strand, Van Wert; WOOS-
TER: Wayne, Wooster, Opera House (closed).
Kentucky Division
Kentucky, CORBIN: Hipodrome. Kentucky:
LEXINGTON: Ben Ali, Kentucky, State. Strand:
MAYSVILLE: Hollywood. Russell, Washington:
MIDDLESBORO: Brownie, Manriug: RICHMOND:
Madison, State: PARIS: Bourbon; PIKEVILLE:
Liberty.
Maryland Division
Maryland, LAUREL: Waller: MLLFORD New
Plaza.
SO HOENSTADT, H„ & SONS
1014 S. Michigan Ave., Chicago, 111.
President H. Schoenstadt
THEATERS (16) :
Illinois, CHICAGO: Archer. Atlantic, Boulevard.
Brighton, Crown, Halfield, Harper, Kenwood, Pal-
ace. Peoples, Piccadilly, Midwest, Crane, Hyde
Park, Shakespeare, Regent.
SCHULTE'S THEATRES
17325 Parkside St., Detroit, Mich.
Owner William J. Schulte
THEATERS (18) :
Michigan. ALGONAC: Algonac: BAD AXE:
Bad Axe; BLISSFIELD: Bliss: BRIGHTON: Wash-
ington: COLD WATER: Tibbits; DETROIT: Bag-
ley, Carlton, Clay: FERNDALE: Radio City: FRE-
MONT: Fremont: HAZEL PARK: Oakdale:
HOWELL: Howell: HUDSON: Hudson: MARINE
CITY: Mariner: RICHMOND: Majestic: ROMEO:
Juliet; TECOMSEH: Strand; VAN DYKE: Motor
City.
SCHWARTZ, GEORGE M., CIRCUIT
Capitol Theater, Dover, Del.
THEATERS (6) :
Delaware, DOVER: Capitol, Temple: SMYRNA:
Como, Strand, Everett, Middletown.
SCOVILLE, ESSICK & REIF
210S Payne Ave., Cleveland, O.
President J. E. Scoville
Vice-President P. E. Essick
Secretary h. Reif
THEATERS (11):
Ohio, AKRON: Highland; BEREA: Berea:
CLEVELAND: Ezella, Madison: EUCLID: Shore:
GALION: Ohio, State; MEDINA: Medina: PAR-
MA: Parma; ROCKY RIVER: Beach Cliff: WTL-
LOUGHBY: Willoby.
SEA SHORE AMUSEMENT CORP.
8088 Rockaway Beach Blvd., Rockaway Beach,
N. Y.
Representative Samuel Kanton
THEATERS (4) :
New York, LONG ISLAND — ARVERNE: Ar-
verne. Boardwalk: EDGEMERE: Edgemere: ROCK-
AWAY BEACH: New Rivoli.
SEMELROTH THEATER CIRCUIT
aiO St. Nicholas Ave., Dayton, O.
President Philip Semelroth
Gen'l. Mgr.-Film Buyer. .. .Mrs. Philip Semelroth
THEATERS (6) :
Ohio. DAYTON: Federation. Park. Peoples.
Sigma. Wayne; FRANKLIN: Ohio.
SERVAAS, JOHN, CIRCUIT
102 N. Illinois St., Indianapolis, Ind.
THEATERS (7) :
Indiana, INDIANAPOLIS: State: KOKOMO:
Wood; LAFAYETTE: New Main: MARTINS-
VILLE: Indiana, State: NOBLESVILLE: Logan:
ROCHESTER. Rex.
SETTOS THEATERS
Ohio Theater, Indianapolis, Ind.
Owner George Settos
THEATERS (14) :
Indiana, BEECH GROVE: Grove; BOONVTLLE :
Hipp, Ritz; INDIANAPOLIS: Lincoln, Ohio; LIN-
TON: Grand, Moose Opera House: NEW AL-
BANY: Elks; PLYMOUTH: Rialto: TELL CITY:
Ohio. Rialto.
Kentucky, LOUISVILLE: Ohio; ST. MATHEWS:
Vogue; SHELBYVILLE: Shelby. Strand.
SHABBY THEATERS
10G Main St., Keene, N. H.
General Manager Fred Sharbv
THEATERS (9) :
Maine, LISBON FALLS: Rex.
Massachusetts, FITCHBURG: Lyric.
New Hampshire, CLAREMONT: Magnet, Tre-
mont: HILLSBORO: Capitol: GROVETON: Al-
ley: KEENE. Scenic.
Vermont, ISLAND POND: Roxy: RICHFORD:
Park.
971
SHEA THEATER CORF.
SHEA CHAIN, INC.
1540 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
President M. A. Shea
V.-P. & General Manager E. C. Grainger
THEATERS (45) :
Massachusetts, AMHERST: Amherst; WEST-
FIELD: Park.
New Hampshire, MANCHESTER: Crown. Pal
ace. State, Strand, Vitaphone; NASHUA: Tre-
mont. State.
New York, JAMESTOWN: Roosevelt, Shea's.
Ohio, AKRON: Colonial; ASHTABULA: Bula
Palace, Casto, State; BELLEVUE: Ohio, State
CAMBRIDGE: Cort, State; CLYDE: Clyde: CON
NEAUT: State. La Grande; DOVER: Bexley. State
FREMONT: Paramount, Fremont; GENEVA
Shea's: LANCASTER: Lyric; NEWARK: Mid
land, Auditorium, Grand: NEW PHILADELPHIA
Union, Bijou: MARIETTA: Ohio, Strand
YOUNGSTOWN: Paramount, Park; ZANES
VILLE: Weller.
Pennsylvania, BRADFORD: Shea's Grand. Ly-
ceum: ERIE: Shea's: McKEES ROCKS: Orpheum:
PITTSBURGH: Fulton.
Rhode Island, NEWPORT: Shea's Paramount.
SHULMAN-SCHWARTZ CIRCUIT
1779 E. 55th St., Cleveland, O.
President A . G. Schwartz
Treasurer J. H. Shulman
THEATERS (5) :
Ohio, CLEVELAND: Lexington; F AIRPORT
HARBOR: Lyric; PAINESVILLE: Lake, Park.
Utopia.
SILVER CREST THEATERS
Orpheum Theater Bldg., Yuma, Ariz.
Owner E. B. Sturdivant
THEATERS (4) :
Arizona, SOMERTON: Somerton; YUMA:
Lyric. Orpheum.
California, CALIP ATRIA: Poppy.
SIMANSKY AND MILLER
Standard Oil Bldg., Chicago, 111.
Film Buyer Simon Simansky
THEATERS (5) :
Illinois, CHICAGO: Plaisance, Savoy: FOREST
PARK: Forest, Lil; MAYWOOD: Lido.
SIMONS AMUSEMENT CO.
Wilvna Bldg., Missoula, Mont.
President Edna Wilma Simons
General Manager E. K. Taylor
THEATERS (38) :
Idaho, BURKE: Burke; COEUR D'ALENE:
Dream. Huff, Liberty: KELLOGG: Liberty, Rena;
MULLAN: Liberty: WALLACE: Grand, Liberty.
Montana, BOZEMAN: Ellen, Joyce, Rialto;
CHINOOK : Orpheum ; GARDINER : Park : HAVRE :
Havre, Lyric, Orpheum; GLENDIVE: Rose, Up-
town: PLAINS: Liberty: POLSON: Lake; LIV-
INGSTON: Park, Strand: RONAN: Gaiety;
ROUNDUP: American. Park; ST. IGNATIUS:
Park.
SINGER, MORT. H., THEATERS CORP.
716 State Lake Bldg., Chicago, 111.
President Mort H. Singer
THEATERS (21) :
Iowa, CEDAR RAPIDS: Iowa: DAVENPORT:
Orpheum; DUBUQUE: Orpheum: MARSHALL-
TOWN: Capitol, Family, Strand; SIOUX CITY:
Orpheum; WATERLOO: Orpheum.
Louisiana, NEW ORLEANS: Liberty, Orpheum.
Minnesota, GOPHER: Gopher; MINNEAPOLIS:
Aster, Century, Lyric, Orpheum, State.
Nebraska, OMAHA: Brandeis.
With Associated Theaters:
Iowa, DUBUQUE: Avon. Grand, Strand;
SPENSLEYS: Orpheum.
SKIRBALL BROS.
808 Keith Bldg., Cleveland, O.
General Manager William N. Skirball
THEATERS (10):
(Mansfield houses operated jointly with War-
ner Bros.)
Ohio, MANSFIELD: Madison. Majeetie. Ohio:
MASSILLON: Grand. Massillon; TOLEDO: Gra
nada. Palace, Rivoli, Savoy.
Pennsylvania, PITTSBURGH: Barry.
SKOURAS THEATERS CORP.
1501 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
THEATERS (66) :
New Jersey, BERGENFIELD : Palace: BOUND
BROOK: Brook; DUMONT: Dumont (closed):
ELIZABETH: Liberty: ENGLEWOOD: Englewood.
Plaza; HACKENSACK: Hackensack: JERSEY
CITY: Apollo, Capitol. Fulton, Majestic (closed).
Monticello, Rialto. State, Strand. Tivoli; NEW-
ARK: Terminal (closed); TEANECK: Teaneck:
WESTWOOD: Pascack, Westwood.
New York, BRONXVILLE: Bronxville: HAVER
STRAW: Broadway; NEW YORK — Manhattan:
Academy, Beacon, Carlton, Nemo, Riverside, Rivi-
era. 77th Street. Stoddard. Symphony: NEW
YORK — Bronx: Blenheim. Crotona, Park-Plaza.
Valentine; NYACK: Broadway (closed). Rockland:
OSSINING: Cameo (closed), Victoria: PORT-
CHESTER: Capitol, Embassy: SCARSDALE:
Scarsdale: SUFFERN: Lafayette: LONG ISLAND
— ASTORIA: Broadway, Crescent, Grand, Stein-
way; BAYSIDE: Victory: CORONA: Corona.
Granada: FLUSHING: Roosevelt: FOREST
HILLS: Forest Hills: GLEN COVE: Glen and
Cove; GREAT NECK: Playhouse: HEMPSTEAD:
Hempstead, Rivoli: JACKSON HEIGHTS: Boule-
vard, Jackson: JAMAICA: Jamaica, Merrick:
KEW GARDENS: Kew Gardens (closed): LYN-
BROOK: Lynbrook; PORT WASHINGTON:
Beacon; MANHASSET: Manhasset: VALLEY
STREAM: Valley Stream; WOODSIDE: Sunnysids.
SLENKER, F. O., CIRCUIT
1406 35th St., Rock Island, HI.
Owner and Operator F. O. Slenker
THEATERS (5) :
Illinois, ERIE: Erie NEW BOSTON: New Bos-
ton: STRONGHURST: Opera House: ORION:
Opera House; VIOLA: Opera House.
SMALLEY'S THEATERS, INC.
Main St., Cooperstown, N. Y.
President William C. Smalley
Secretary-Treasurer H. N. Smith
Booker H. L. Johnson
THEATERS (16):
New York, CAMDEN: Smalley's: COOPERS
TOWN: Smalley's; DELHI: Smalley's: DOLGE
VILLE: Smalley's; FLEISCHMANNS : Smalley's
FORT PLAIN: Rialto. Smalley's: JOHNSTOWN
Smalley's: NORWICH: Smalley's: OXFORD
Smalley's: ST. JOHNSVILLE: Smalley's: SHAR
ON: Smalley's: SIDNEY: Smalley's: STAMFORD
Smalley's: WALTON: Smalley's, Strand.
SMITH & BEIDLER
519 Main St., Toledo, O.
President James A. Beidler
Secretary-Treasurer Martin G. Smith
THEATERS (5) :
Ohio, TOLEDO: East Auditorium, Eastwood.
Park, Royal, Westwood.
SMITH CHAIN THEATERS
722 Chimes Bldg., Syracuse, N. Y.
President George E. Smith
Secretary H. C. Copeland
THEATERS (6) :
New York, PHOENIX: Strand: SYRACUSE:
Avon, Happy Hour. Harvard, Mayfair. Novelty.
SMITH, PHILIP, THEATRICAL ENTERPRISES
703 Metropolitan Bldg., Boston, Mass.
THEATERS (9) :
Massachusetts, CHATHAM: Chatham; DEN-
NIS: Cape Cinema; HYANNIS: Center. Hyannis:
IPSWICH. Strand: OSTERVILLE: Community:
SOUTH BOSTON: Broadway. Strand.
Michigan, DETROIT: Drive-In.
Ohio, CLEVELAND: Drive-In.
Rhode Island, EAST GREENWICH: Greenwich.
SNAPER CIRCUIT
234 W. 44th St., New York, N. Y.
President David Snaper
972
THEATERS (7) :
New Jersey, BOONTON: Lyceum. State: KEY-
PORT: Palace. Strand: NEW BRUNSWICK:
Strand: SOUTH AMBOY : Empire: SOUTH RIV-
ER: Capitol.
SNIDER. RALPH E.
260 Tremont St., Boston, Mass.
Treasurer-Gen'l MgT Ralph E. Snider
THEATERS (14) :
Listed in two gToups.
Ralph E. Snider:
Maine, PORTLAND: Empire. Strand.
Massachusetts. DEDHAM: Community: PALM-
ER: Palmer, Strand; WARE: Bijou, Casino:
WINTHROP: Wintlirop. State.
Associated Theaters:
Rhode Island, CRANSTON: Palace. Park:
PROVIDENCE: Bijou, Empire, Playhouse.
SOUTHERN AMUSEMENT CO., INC.
Miller Bldg., Lake Charles, La.
President George Baillio
Vice-President Clyde M. Williams
Secretary-Treasurer Edward Martin
Chairman W. P. Weber
THEATERS (26):
Louisiana, BUNKIE: Bailey: COUSHATTA :
Hollywood: CROWLEY: Acadia: DE RIDDER: Up-
town: JENNINGS: Strand: LAKE CHARLES:
Arcade. Dixie, Paramount. Ritz; LAFAY-
ETTE: Azalea. Liberty. Jefferson, Royal: LEES-
VILLE : Vernon; MARKSVILLE: Bailey: MANS-
FIELD: De Soto; MANY: Crystal: NATCHI-
TOCHES: Cane: OPELOUSAS: Delta, Rex:
5PRINGHILL: Webster: TALLULAH: Bailey,
Cameo: WINNFIELD: Winn; VILLE PLATTE:
Bailey: ZWOLLE: Rio.
SOUTHWESTERN THEATERS, INC.
623 W. Grand St., Oklahoma City, Okla.
President P. R. Isley
Treasurer-Film Buyer W. P. Moran
THEATERS (16) :
Missouri, SPRINGFIELD: Granada. Mozark.
Oklahoma, CHICKASHA: Midwest, Ritz;
PICHER: Plaza. Roxy; TULSA: Plaza, Tower.
Mainstreet, Circle. Palace, Lyric, Cameo. Delman:
OKLAHOMA CITY: Isis: PAWHUSKA: State.
SPARKS CIRCUIT
Florida Theater Bldg., Jacksonville, Fla.
President E. J. Sparks
General Manager Operations B. B. Garner
Secretary -Treasurer M. C. Talley
Gen'l. Mgr. Contract Dept Frank Rogers
THEATERS (77):
Florida, ARCADIA: Star; BRADENTON: Pal
ace: CLEARWATER: Capitol, Ritz, Belleview;
COCOA: State: DAYTONA BEACH: Empire, Crys-
tal, Lyric, Florida: DELAND: Dreka, Athens;
EUSTTS: State; EAU GALLIE: Van Croix: FORT
LAUDERDALE: Florida, Queen, Sunset; FORT
MYERS: Arcade, Ritz; FORT PIERCE: Sunrise;
GAINESVILLE: Baird, Florida, Lyric: JACKSON-
VILLE: Empress, Imperial, Roxy, Palace, Ar-
cade, Temple, Capitol, Florida; JACKSONVILLE
BEACH: Beach: LAKE WORTH: Oakley; OCALA :
Dixie. Temple. Ritz; MELBOURNE: Van Croix:
MT. DORA: Princess: NEW SMYRNA: Palace. Vic-
toria; ORLANDO: Beacham. Grand, Rialto, Roxy,
Lincoln: PALM BEACH: Paramount, Beaux Arte:
PALATKA: Howell, Grand; PALMETTO: Palm-
etto: PLANT CITY: Capitol: ST. AUGUSTINE:
Jefferson, Montanzas; ST. PETERSBURG: Roxy,
Pheil, Cameo, LaPlaza, Florida, Capitol, Harlem.
Ninth St.; SANFORD: Ritz, Princess; SARASOTA:
Florida, Garden, Ritz ; SULPHUR SPRINGS : Roxy ;
TALLAHASEE: Ritz, State; TAMPA: Seminole.
Park, Garden, Victory, Florida, Tampa; VERO
BEACH: Florida: WEST PALM BEACH: Arcade.
Stanley, Florida, Rialto; WINTER HAVEN: Grand,
Ritz: WINTER PARK: Baby Grand.
Sl'ENCER, F. G., CO., LTD.
95 Charlotte St., Saint John, N. B„ CANADA
President F. G. Spencer
Gen'l. Mgr. -Film Buyer A. A. Fielding
Secretary -Treasurer J. G. Armstrong
THEATERS (15) :
New Brunswick, DALHOUSIE: Capitol: CAMP-
BELLTON: Capitol: SAINT JOHN: Strand;
WOODSTOCK: Capitol.
Nova Scotia, AMHERST: Capitol; KENT-
VILLE: Capitol; LIVERPOOL: Astor; LUNEN-
BURG: Capitol: TRURO: Strand, Capitol; MID-
DLETOWN: Capitol: WOLFVILLE: Orpheus.
Prince Edward Island, CHARLOTTETOWN :
Capitol, Prince Edward.
SPROULE THEATER CIRCUIT
310 Main St., Hutchinson, Kansas.
Owners. ... Carl, Lee, George and Robert Sproule
THEATERS (9) :
Kansas, CLAY CENTER: Star; FORT SCOTT:
Yale; HUTCHINSON: Iris, State; McPHERSON:
Mac: MARYSVILLE: Rialto; NEWTON: Rex: OT-
TAWA: Cozy; WINFIELD: Ritz.
STAMATUS AMUSEMENT CO.
1531 Fulton St., Brooklyn, N. Y. C.
President C. D. Stamatus
Secretary-Treasurer George D. Stamatus
THEATERS (6) :
New York, NEW YORK — Brooklyn: Clas»ic,
Cumberland, Lyric, Minerva, Momart, Plaza,
Venus.
STANDARD THEATERS CO.
1032 N. 6th St., Milwaukee, Wise.
General Manager L. F. Gran
THEATERS (14) :
Wisconsin, DELAVAN : Delavan: GREEN BAY:
Bay, Strand, Packer; KENOSHA: Butterfly, Cameo.
Gateway, Kenosha, Vogue; LAKE GENEVA:
Geneva; MILWAUKEE: Regal, Times; OSHKOSH:
Oshkosh, Strand.
■STANDARD THEATERS CORP.
118 W. Main St., Oklahoma City, Okla.
President J. H. Cooper
General Manager W. B. Shuttes
Assistant Treasurer A. L. Smith
THEATERS (10):
Listed :n two groups:
Affiliated with Paramount, Criterion Theater Corp.
and Regal Theaters, Inc.
Oklahoma, OKLAHOMA CITY: Circle. Criterion,
Plaza, Ritz, Victoria, Tower.
Affiliated with Warner Bros. Theaters
Oklahoma, OKLAHOMA CITY: Folly (closed).
Liberty, Midwest, Warner.
STERLING THEATERS, INC.
200 Palomar Bldg., Seattle, Wash.
President John Danz
Secretary William Danz
General Manager William Forman
THEATERS (22) :
Oregon, PORTLAND: Orpheum; THE DALLES:
Columbia, Granada.
Washington, SEATTLE : Capitol, Colonial. Flor-
ence, Grand, Roosevelt, Star, State, Wintergarden,
Palomar, Arabian, Woodland, Queen Anne, Gra-
nada, Portola, Beacon, Mission, Madrona, Roy-
croft, Uptown.
STERN THEATER INTERESTS
910 S. Michigan Ave., Chicago, III.
THEATERS (9) :
Listed in three groups:
Joseph Stern Theater Interests
910 S. Michigan Ave., Chicago, 111.
Illinois, CHICAGO: Chelten, Colony, Highway.
Marquette.
Charles & Henry Stern Theater Interests
161 E. Chicago Ave., Chicago, 111.
Illinois, CHICAGO: Austin, Cinema, Karlov,
Park.
Jack Stern Theater Interests
321 E. 69th St., Chicago, 111.
Illinois, CHICAGO: Park Manor.
STEVENSON THEATERS, INC.
Stevenson Bldg., Henderson, N. C.
President J. D. Cooper
Vice-President S. S. Stevenson, Jr.
Secretary-Treasurer S. S. Stevenson
973
THEATERS (9) :
North Carolina, CLINTON: Gem, State: HEN-
DERSON: State, Stevenson, Vance; SANFORD:
Sanlee, Temple.
South Carolina, ROCK HILL: Carolina. Steven-
eon.
STIEFEL, HARRY and OSCAR, CIRCUIT
Roxv Theater, Lock Haven, Pa.
THEATERS (5) :
Pennsvlvania, DOWNINGTON: Roosevelt; EPH-
RATA: Roxy: LEWISBDRG: Boxy: LOCK
HAVEN: Martin. Roxy.
STRAND AMUSEMENT CO.
1250 Main St.. Bridgeport, Conn.
President Charles Levin
Gen'l. MgT.-Film Buyer Morris Jacobson
THEATERS (6) :
Connecticut, BRIDGEPORT: American. Hippo-
drome. Rialto, Strand, Strand-Palace. Park City.
STRAND ENTERPRISES. INC.
194 E. Calhoun St., Memphis, Tenn.
President-Treasurer G. W. Haynes
Secretary -Vice-President R E. Baulch
THEATERS (14) :
Arkansas, EARLE: Strand: LE PANTO: Rial-
to: MARKED TREE: Star; PARKIN: Ritz.
Kentucky, CLINTON: Strand.
Mississippi, DURANT: Strand; ITTA BENA:
Strand: KOSCIUSKO: A-Mus-U, Strand: LEX-
INGTON: Strand: LOUISVILLE: Strand: MOOR-
HEAD: Strand: PHILADELPHIA: Strand; RIP-
LEY: Dixie.
STRAND THEATER CO.
Moorlyn Theater, Ocean City, N. i.
General Manager-Film Buyer.. D. Roscoe Faunce
THEATERS (4) :
New Jersey, OCEAN CITY : Moorlyn. Strand.
Village, Surf.
STRAND THEATERS
1149 Old South Bldg., Boston, Mass.
President-General Manager. .Joseph M. Levenson
Treasurer Max L. Levenson
THEATERS (12) :
Massachusetts, BOSTON: South Station:
BROOKLINE: Coolidge Corner: EDGARTOWN:
Playhouse: GREENDALE: Greendale: GLOU-
CESTER- Strand; LEOMINSTER: Metropolitan:
OAK BLUFFS: Island, Strand: QUINCY: Strand.
Quincy, Alhambra; VINEYARD HAVEN: Capa-
wock.
STREBE, EARLE C.
Plaza Theater. Palm Springs, Calif.
THEATERS (8) :
California, BALBOA: Balboa: JACUMBA: Ja-
cumba: LAKE ARROWHEAD: Arrowhead: NEW-
PORT: Newoort: PALM SPRINGS: El Paseo. Palm
Springs, Plaza: SAN BERNARDINO: Temple.
SIN THEATER CO.
Plainwell, Mich.
General Manager-Film Buyer Harold Kortes
THEATERS (5) :
Michigan. GRAND LEDGE: Sun: OTSEGO.
Otsego: PLAINWELL: Sun: ROCKFORD: Star:
VICKSBURG: Sun.
SI SSMAN, H„ CIRCUIT
Manville Road, Pleasantville, N. Y.
THEATERS (4) :
New York, BREWSTER: Cameo. Ritz: MOUNT
KISCO: Kisco; PLEASANTVILLE: Rome.
SWITOW, M. A SONS
Bol S. 1th St.. Louisville, Ky.
President M- Switow
V-P and Treasurer S. J. Switow
Secretary H. R. Switow
THEATERS (16) :
Indiana. ANDERSON: Riviera: JEFFERSON-
VILLE: Dream, Lerose: NEW ALBANY: Grand.
Indiana. Kerrigan: ORLEANS: Orleans: SALEM:
Indiana; SEYMOUR: Little. Majestic: SHELBY-
VILLE • Ritz: WASHINGTON: Liberty. Indiana.
Kentucky, LEXINGTON: Ada-Meade; LuM~
VILLE: Cozy, Hi-Land. Kentucky.
SYNDICATE THEATERS, INC.
Artcraft Theater, Franklin, Ind.
President Catherine Rembusch
Secretary -Treasurer Trueman T. Rembusch
THEATERS (7) :
Indiana, COLUMBUS: Crump. Mode. Rio: EL-
WOOD: Elwood. Vogue; FRANKLIN: Artcraft.
Franklin.
T. & D. JK. ENTERPRISES, INC.
25 Taylor St., San Francisco, Calif.
President-General Manager M. Naify
Asst. Genera) Manager C. V. Taylor
THEATERS (39) :
(Note: T. & D.. Jr. Enterprises also holds a
50% interest in San Francisco Theaters, listed
under San Franciwo Theaters.)
California, AUBURN: State; AVANEL: Avanel:
CHICO: Empire. National. Senator; COALINGA:
California: DUNSMUIR: California: GRASS VAL-
LEY: Montez. Strand: HANFORD: Fox. Ritz:
LODI: Lodi. State: MADERA: Madera. Strand:
MARTINEZ: Avalon. State: NEVADA CITY:
Broadway; OROVILLE: State: PASO ROBLES:
T & D, Jr.: PETULAMA: California: RED BLUFF:
State: REDDING: Cascade. Redding: SACRA-
MENTO: California. Roxie: SANTA ROSA: Cali-
fornia: SUSAN VILLE: Sierra: TULARE: State,
Tulare: TURLOCK: Fox: VIS ALIA: Fox. Hyde:
LINDSAY: Lindsay; CROCKETT: American. Col-
umbia.
Nevada, RENO: Granada. Majestic. Wigwam.
TALKINTON CIRCUIT
Harrington, Wash.
Owner W. L. Talkington
THEATERS (10) :
Idaho, SPIRIT LAKE: Family.
\Va»hington, DAVENPORT: Family: END1
COTT: Family: CRESTON: Family; HARRING-
TON: Family: LA CROSSE: Family: ODESSA:
Family: REARDON: Family: ROSALIA: Family:
ST. JOHN: Family.
TAI.LEY ENTERPRISE*
Pleasant on, Texas
THEATERS (5) :
Texas. DEVINE: Majestic: MATHIS : Texas
ORANGE GROVE: Cozy: PEARSALL: Bio;
PLEASANTON: Plestex.
TAMA THEATER CO.
Tama, Iowa.
THEATERS (5) :
Iowa, BELLA PLAINE: King. Rivoli; IDA
GROVE: King; TAMA: Mills: TRAER : Traer.
TANNER THEATER CIRCUIT
falace Theater, Pana, III.
Manager Harry Tanner
THEATERS (5) :
Illinois, NOKOMIS: Palace: PANA: Roseland.
Palace; VANDALIA: Esquire. Liberty.
THEATRICAL MANAGERS. INC.
1144 Consolidated Bldg., Indianapolis, Ind.
President Charles J. Wolf
Vice-President Vern U. Young
General Manager Marc J. Wolf
Buyer and Booker Albert Blocher
THEATERS (25) :
Indiana. BEDFORD: Indiana. Lawrence.
BLOOMINGTON: Harris-Grand. Princess: CROWN
POINT: Palace; GARY: Gary. Palace, Tivoli:
HAGERSTOWN: Circle: MONON: Howard: MUN-
CIE Hoosier. Rivoli. Strand. Uptown. Wysor
Grand: NEW CASTLE: Castle. Princess, Royal.
Starrette: NORTH MANCHESTER: Ritz, Mar-
shall: SULLIVAN: Lyric. Sherman; WIN-
CHESTER: Cozy. Lyric.
TRANS-LUX MOVIES COKP.
1870 Sixth Ave.. New York, N. Y.
Chairman of the Board Percy N. Furber
President L. E. Thompson
Vice-President Percival E. Furber
974
Secretary A. C. Giles
Treasurer A. D. Erickson
THEATERS (7):
District of Columbia. WASHINGTON : Trans-
Lux.
Massachusetts, BOSTON: Trans-Lux.
New York, NEW YORK— Manhattan : Trans-
Lux (Broadway), Trans-Lux (Madison Ave. at
00th St.), Trans-Lux (Madison Ave. at 85th
St.), Trans-Lux (Lexington Ave. at 52nd St.).
Pennsylvania, PHILADELPHIA : Trans-Lux.
TRI-STATE THEATERS, INC.
Cratcrian Theater, Medford, Ore.
President George A. Hunt
Secretary-Treasurer Walter H. Leverette
Vice-President A. W. Adamson
THEATERS (20) :
California, WEED: Weed: YREKA: Broadway.
Miner.
Oregon, ALBANY: Granada, Venetian: ASH-
LAND: Varsity: CORVALLIS: Majestic. Oregon
State, Whiteside: GRANTS PASS: Rivoli, Rogrue:
MEDFORD: Cratcrian. Holly. Rialto, Roxy;
NEWBERG: Francis: ROSEBURG: Indian. Rnso..
Washington, KELSO: Kelso: VANCOUVER:
Mission.
TRUNK, JOSEPH W.
P. O. Box 1072. Youngstown, O.
THEATERS (4) :
Ohio, YOUNGSTOWN: Cameo. Mahoning-, State.
Uptown.
UNITED AMUSEMENT CORP., LTD.
5887 Monkland Ave., Montreal, Que.
President Ernest A. Cousins
V-P and Comptroller D. A. Murray
Managing Director George GnnetaUos
Secretary-Treasurer W. H. Mannard
Aass't. Sec'y .-Treasurer W. Deveault
THEATERS (27) :
Canada, QUEBEC — LACHINE: Empress. Royal
Alexandra: MONTREAL: Belmont. Corona, Mount
Royal, Papineau. Plaza. Regent, Snowdon. Fran-
cais. Seville, Rialto, Rivoli. Rosemount, Strand,
Amherst. Monkland. Westmount. Granada. York;
SAINT HYACINTHE: Maska: SAINT LAMBERT:
Astor. Victoria: SHERBROOKE: Granada. Premier.
His Majesty's; VERDUN: Savoy.
UNITED ARTISTS THEATER CIRCUIT
729 Seventh Ave.. New York. N. Y.
THEATERS (28) :
Note: United Artists also has a real estate in
terest in Metropolitan Playhouses which are now
heing operated by various theater operators.
Majority of United Artists theaters are operated
in conjunction with other theater circuit organi-
zations. Names of these associates appear in
connection with houses so operated.
California. BERKELEY: United Artists (Wesco) ;
EL CENTRO: United Artists (Wesco): GLEN-
DALE: California (Wesco), Capitol (Wesco):
INGLEWOOD: United Artists (Wesco): LOS AN-
GELES: United Artists, Whittier Blvd., United
Artists (Wesco), Four Star, Egyptian, Grauman's
Chinese (Wesco): LONG BEACH: United Artists
(Wesco): PASADENA: United Artists (Wesco):
SACRAMENTO: Alhambra (Wesco): SAN FRAN-
CISCO: United Artists.
Illinois, CHICAGO: United Artists (Balaban &
Katz). .
Kentucky, LOUISVILLE: Loew's (Loew's).
United Artists (Loew's).
Maryland, BALTIMORE : Loew's Century
(Loew's), Parkway (Loew's), United Artists.
Valencia (Loew's).
Michigan, DETROIT: United Artists (United
Detroit) .
New York, NEW YORK: Rivoli.
Ohio, COLUMBUS: Loew's-United Artists Broad
(Loew's), Loew's-United Artists Ohio (Loew's).
Oregon, PORTLAND: United Artists (United
Artists-Parker) .
Pennsylvania, PITTSBURGH: Loew's-United
Artists Penn (Loew's).
UNITED DETROIT THEATERS CORP.
(Affiliated with Paramount Theaters)
lGth Floor, Stroh BIdg.. Detroit, Mich.
THEATERS (16):
Michigan. BIRMINGHAM: Birmingham: DE
TROIT: Michigan, United Artists, Palms-State.
Fisher, Broadway. Capitol, Cinderella, Riviera.
Alger. Annex, Norwest. Ramona. Regent, Rose-
dale, Varsity, Vogue.
UNITED THEATERS, INC.
629 Common St., New Orleans, La.
President-General Manager M. H. Jacobs
V-P and Treasurer V. C. Howard
Secretary Edward Ludman
Ass't. Secretary -Treasurer H.' K. Oliphint
THEATERS (18) I
Louisiana, NEW ORLEANS: Arcade, Carrollton.
Clabon. Dreamland. Eseorial, Fine Arts. Folly, Gra-
nada, Isis. Mecca, Metry, Napoleon, National,
Piety, Poplar, Prytania, Rivoli, Tivoli.
VARBALOW CIRCUIT
4605 W'estfleld Ave., Pennsauken, N. J.
Officers Samuel and Joseph Varbalow
THEATERS (13) :
New Jersey, AUDUBON: Highland, New Cen-
tury: CAMDEN: Rio, Savar, Victoria, Walt Whit-
man: GLASSBORO: Glassboro: GLOUCESTER:
King, Leader: HADDONFIELD: Little: OAKLYN:
Ritz; PALMYRA: Broadway: PITMAN: Broad-
way.
VENTNOR REALTY & LEASING CO.
180 S. New York Ave., Atlantic City, N. J.
President George F. Wielland
Treasurer-General Manager . . .P. Mortimer Lewis
Secretary Milton Kamsler
THEATERS (7):
New Jersey. ATLANTIC CITY: Apollo, Capitol.
Embassy, Margate, Strand, Ventnor.
Pennsylvania, GLENSIDE: Keswick.
VICTORIA AMUSEMENT ENTERPRISES. INC.
4C w. Independence St., Shamokin. Pa.
President John J. Barni
Treasurer G. A. Casari
General Manager L. J. Chamberlain
THEATERS (I):
Pennsylvania, MAHANOY CITY: Victoria; MT.
CARMEL: Victoria: SHAMOKIN: Victoria; TA-
MAQUA: Victoria.
VIRGINIA AMUSEMENT CO., INC.
133 Main St., Hazard, Ky.
President General Manager L. O. Davis
Secretary-Treasurer Tony Cassinelli
THEATERS (6) :
Kentucky, GARRETT: Kentucky: HAZARD:
Family, Virginia: NEON: Bentley.
Affiliated With:
West Virginia, MULLENS: Rialto. Wyoming.
VONDERSCHMITT AMUSEMENT ENTERPRISES
Indiana Theater, Bloomlngton, Ind.
President H. P. Vonderschmitt
General Manager Art Clark
THEATERS (9) :
Indiana, BLOOMINGTON: Granada. Voncastle;
GREENCASTLE: Strand. Vanity: CRAWFORDS-
VILLE: Von Ritz: BEDFORD: Diana: NOBLES-
VILLE: Vondee: SEYMOUR: Liberty, Washing-
ton.
WARNER BROS. CIRCUIT MANAGEMENT
CORP.
321 W. 44th St., New York, N. Y.
President Joseph Bernhard
THEATERS (461):
California, BEVERLY HILLS: Beverly Hills;
FRESNO: Fresno: HOLLYWOOD: Hollywood:
HUNTINGTON PARK: Huntington Park: LOS
ANGELES: Downtown, Forum. Wiltern; SAN
BERNARDINO: Ritz: SAN PEDRO: San Pedro:
SANTA BARBARA: California. Granada, Mission.
Connecticut, ANSONIA: Capitol. Tremont :
BRIDGEPORT: Warner; BRISTOL: Bristol. Cam-
eo; DANBURY: Capitol. Empress. Palace: DER-
975
BY: Commodore Hull: HARTFORD: Colonial.
Lenox, Lyric. Regal. Rialto. Strand: MANCHES-
TER: Circle. State: NEW BRITAIN: Capitol
(closed). Embassy. Strand: NEW HAVEN: Rogrer
Sherman: NEW LONDON: Garde: NORWICH:
Broadway. Palace: SOUTH NORWALK: Palace.
Rialto: TORRINGTON: Alhambra (closed). Pal-
ace. Warner: WATER BURY : State. Strand: WEST
HARTFORD: Central: WTLLIMANTIC: Capitol.
Gem (closed).
Delaware. WILMINGTON: Aldine. Arcadia
'closed). Garrick (closed). Grand Opera House.
Queen. Savoy. Warner.
District of Columbia, WASHINGTON. Ambas-
sador, Apollo. Avalon. Avenue-Grand. Beverly.
Calvert, Central. Colony. Earle. Home. Kennedy.
Metropolitan. Penn. Savoy. Sheridan. Takoma.
Tivoli. Uptown. York.
Illinois. CHICAGO: Avalon. Beverly. Capitol.
Chatham (closed). Cosmopolitan. Frolic. Grove
Hamilton. Highland. Jeffrey. Metropolitan. Oak-
land-Square, Ogden, Rhodes, Shore, Stratford.
Symphony.
Indiana. HAMMOND- Orpheum. Parthenon.
Maryland. BALTIMORE : Stanley: FREDER
ICR: Frederick. Opera House. Tivoli: HAGERS-
TOWN: Academy. Colonial. Maryland: SILVER
SPRINGS: Seca. Silver.
Massachusetts. AMESBURY: Strand: CLIN-
TON : Globe (closed). Strand: EVERETT: Capi-
tol: LAWRENCE: Broadway. Modern. Palace.
Warner: LYNN. Waldorf. Warner: NEWBURT-
PORT: Premier. Strand: SPRINGFIELD: Capitol:
WAVERLY: Strand: WOBURN: Strand: WOR-
CESTER: Warner.
New Jersey. ATLANTIC CITY: Colonial. Earle
(closed). Stanley. Virginia. Warner (closed):
BAYONNE: DeWitt. Strand: BELLEVILLE: Cap-
itol: CAMDEN: Garden (closed). Grand. Lyric.
Princess. Stanley: CLEMENTON: Clementon: COL-
LINGSWOOD: Collingswood: CRANFORD: Cran-
ford: DOVER: Baker. Playhouse: EAST ORANGE:
Hollywood: ELIZABETH: Resrent. Ritz: HACKEN-
SACK: Eureka. Oritani: HOBOKEN: Fabian. United
States: IRVINGTON: Castle. Sanford: JERSEY
CITY: Central. National (closed). Ritz. Stanley:
KEARNY: Hudson. Lincoln: MILLBURN: Mill
burn: MILLYTLLE: Levoy. Peoples: MONTCLAIR
Claridge. Montclair (closed). Wellmont: NEWARK :
Berg-en (closed), Branford. Capitol. Central, Globe.
Hawthorne. Regent. Ritz. Roosevelt. Savoy. Stan-
ley. Tivoli: ORANGE: Embassy: PASSAIC: Capitol.
Montauk. Playhouse: PATERSON: Fabian. Gar-
den. Resrent. Rivoli: PLEASANTVTLLE : Carlton.
Rialto (closed): RIDGEWOOD: Warner: SOUTH
ORANGE: Cameo: UNION: Union: UNION CITY:
Lincoln, Roosevelt: YINELAND: Globe. Grand:
WESTMONT: Westmont (closed).
New York. ALBANY: Albany. Madison. Ritz.
Strand: BATAVIA: Lafayette. New Family:
BROOKLYN: Strand: DUNKIRK: Capitol: EL
MIR A: Keaney. Regent. Strand: HORNELL: Ma-
jestic, Shattuck (closed). Steuben. Strand: JAMES
TOWN: Palace. Winter Garden: MEDINA: Diana.
Park (closed): NEW YORK: Hollywood (closed).
Strand: OLEAN: Havens. State: TROY: Ameri-
can. Lincoln. Troy: UTICA: Avon. Stanley. Utica:
WELLESVELLE: Babcock. Temple.
Ohio. AKRON: Strand: CANTON: Ohio. CHIL
LICOTHE: Sherman: CLEVELAND: Hippodrome.
Lake. Uptown. Variety. Colony: COSHOCTON:
Pastime. Sixth Street: FINDLAY: Harris: LIMA :
Faurot. Opera House (closed). Ohio. Sigma. State:
LORAIN: Palace: MANSFIELD: Madison. Ma-
jestic. Ohio: MASSILON: Lincoln: PORTSMOUTH:
Columbia. Laroy, Lyric: SANDUSKY: Ohio, Plaza:
SIDNEY: Capitol, Ohio: SPRINGFIELD: Fair-
banks. Majestic. Ohio. Resent, State: STEUBEN
VTLLF. : Capitol: YOUNGSTOWN: Warner.
Oregon, SALEM: Capitol. Elsinore.
Pennsylvania, AMBLER: Ambler. Opera House
'closed): AMBRIDGE: Ambridge. Prince: ARD-
MORE: Ardmore: BROOKLTNE: Brookllne. Boule-
vard: BROOKVTLLE: Columbia: BUTLER: But-
ler. Majestic: CHESTER: Stanley. State. Washing-
ton: COLLINGSDALE : Villa (closed): DARBY:
Parker: DONOR A: Harris. Liberty: DORMONT:
Hollywood. South Hills: DREXEL HILLS : Waver-
ly: EAST LIBERTY: Cameraphone. Enright: EL-
KINS PARK: Yorktown: ERIE: Columbia. Strand.
Warner: ETNA: Harris: GERMANTOWN: Colonial.
Germantown. Orpheum: GETTYSBURG: Majestic.
Strand: GREENSBURG: Grand. Manos. Strand:
HANOVER: State. Strand: JOHNSTOWN: Cam-
bria, Majestic. State: LANCASTER: Capitol.
Grand. Hamilton: McKEESPORT: Harris (closed).
Memorial. Victor: NEW KENSINGTON: Liberty.
Ritz: PALMYRA: Seltzer: PHILADELPHIA: Al-
dine, Alhambra. Allegheny. Astor (closed). Audi-
torium, Avon. Benn. Boyd. Broadway. Bromley.
Cadet (closed), Capitol. Center. Circle. Colney.
Columbia. Commodore. Cross. Keys. Earl (28th
St.). Earle, Elite (closed). Fairmount. Family.
Felton. Forum. Fox. Franklin (closed). Grange.
Harrowgate, Hippodrome (closed). Imperial (2nd
St.). Imperial (60th St.), Jefferson (closed).
Karlton. Keiths. Kent. Keystone. Lane. Leader.
Liberty. Lindley. Lindy. Logan. Mastbaum
(closed). Midway. Model. New Palace. Ogontz.
Orient. Oxford. Palace. Park. Plaza. Princess. Rexy
(closed). Richmond. Ritz (closed). Savoia. Savoy.
Sedgwick. Stanley. Stanton. State. Strand. 333
Market St.. Uptown. Victoria. Wishart. World
(closed). Wynne: PITTSBURGH: Arsenal. Bel-
mar. Kenyon. Manor. Model. Plaza. Regent. Ritz.
Schenley. Sheridan Square. Squirrel Hill. Stanley.
Strand. Warner: PROSPECT PARK: Manor:
PUNXSUTAWNEY : Jefferson: READING: Arca-
dia (closed), Astor. Queen (closed). Strand:
RED LION: Community (closed). Lion: R IDG-
WAY: Strand: SHARON: Columbia. Liberty:
STATE COLLEGE: Catham. Nittany. State: TA-
CONY: Liberty. Northeastern: TARENTUM : Har
ris. Palace. Peoples: TITUSVTLLE : Orpheum.
Penn: TYRONE: El Patio. Wilson: UPPER DAR-
BY: 69th Street: WARREN: Columbia. Library:
WASHINGTON: State. Washington: WAYNES-
BORO: Arcade. Strand: WESTCHESTER: Rialto.
Warner: WTLKTNSBURG: Regal. Rowland: WIL-
LOW GROVE: Grove: YORK: Capitol. Rialto.
Ritz. Strand.
Tennessee. MEMPHIS: Warner.
Virginia. CLIFTON FORGE: Masonic. Ridge:
HARRISONBURG: Virginia: LEXINGTON: Lyric.
State: STAUNTON: Dixie. Strand: WINCHEST-
ER: Capitol.
Washington. ABERDEEN: Aberdeen. Bijou:
HOQUTAM : Hoquiam.
West Virginia. CHARLESTON: Rialto. Virgin-
ian: CLARKSBURG: Ritz: FAIRMONT: Fair-
mont. Virginia: MARTTNSBURG: Apollo. Cen-
tral. Strand: MORGANTOWN: Warner: PARKERS-
BURG: Smoot, Strand.
Wisconsin. APPLETON: Appleton: MILWAU-
KEE: Egyptian. Granada. Juneau. Lake. Warner:
RACINE: State. Venetian. Rialto: SHEBOYGAN:
Majestic. Rex. Sheboygan.
WARNER-SAXE THEATERS
103'J N. Sixth St.. Milwaukee. Wise.
General Manager A. D. Kvool
THEATERS (16) :
Listed in four groups;
National Theater Co.
Wisconsin, MILWAUKEE : National.
976
Milwaukee Theater Co.
Wisconsin. MILWAUKEE: Milwaukee.
Warner-Saxe Theaters
Wisconsin, MILWAUKEE: Egyptian. Garfield.
Granada, Juneau. Lake, Mirth. Modjeska, Prin-
cess, Uptown.
Saxe Amusement Management, Inc.
Wisconsin, JANESVILLE: Jeffris, Apollo: KEN-
OSHA: Orpheum: MADISON: Capitol: OSHKOSH:
Oshkosh.
WASHINGTON THK.VTEK CIRCUIT
211 Film Bids., Cleveland, 0.
President M. B. Horwitz
THEATERS (7) :
Ohio, CLEVELAND: Astor. Globe, Haltnorth.
Heights. Plaza: CUYAHOGA FALLS: Alhambra.
Falls.
WATERS THEATER CO.. INC.
726 S. 29th St., Birmingham, Ala.
THEATERS (12):
Alabama. BIRMINGHAM: Avondale. North
Birmingham. Woodlawn. Five Points. Central
Park, Pratt City, East Lake, Norwood: FAIR-
FIELD: Fairfield: LEEDS: Leeds: TARRANT
CITY: Imperial: WYLAM : Wylam.
WAX CIRCUIT
J 524 South St., Philadelphia, Pa.
President Abraham Wax
Vice-President Mo Wax
Secy.-Treas.-Gen'l. Mgr Morris Wax
THEATERS «5) :
Pennsylvania, PHILADELPHIA: Joy, Lincoln,
Pearl, Royal, Standard, Stratford.
WEHRENBERG, FRED, CIRCUIT
2735 Cherokee St., St. Louis, Mo.
General Manager-Film Buyer. .Fred Wehrenbeig
THEATERS (10):
Missouri, ST. LOUIS: Apollo, Cinderella, Lemax.
Melba, Michigan, Normandy, Savoy, Southway.
Studio, Virginia.
WEINBERG'S VIRGINIA THEATERS
Bedford, Va.
President Isaac Weinberg
Secretary-Treasurer Dan Weinberg
THEATERS (5) :
Virginia, BEDFORD: Bridge, Liberty; BUENA
VISTA: New, Rockbridge: LYNCHBURG: Har-
rison.
WEIR-COVE THEATRICAL ENTERPRISES
State Theater, Weirton, W. Va.
THEATERS (4) :
West Virginia, HOLLIDAYS COVE: Cove,
Strand: WEIRTON: Manas, State.
WELWORTH THEATER CO.
Pantages Theater Bldg., Minneapolis, Minn.
Supervisor Edmond R. Ruben
THEATERS (13):
Minnesota. MINNEAPOLIS: Pantages: MON-
TEVIDEO: Hollywood, Monte: NEW ULM : New
Ulm: RED WING: Metro: SOUTH ST. PAUL:
Hollywood.
North Dakota. DEVILS LAKE: Hollywood.
Lake. Grand (closed): LANGDON: Roxy.
South Dakota, SIOUX FALLS: Hollywood.
Wisconsin, LA CROSSE: Fifth Avenue. Holly
wood.
WEST WARWICK THEATER CO., INC.
1003 Main St.. West Warwick, R. I.
President William M. Deitch
Treasurer Sarah Thornton
Secretary Margaret Thornton
Assistant Treasurer Hector A. Gilman
THEATERS (4) :
Rhode Island, ARCTIC: Gem, Majestic. Palace:
RIVERPOINT: Thornton.
WESTERN MASSACHUSETTS THEATERS, INC.
Broadway Theater Bldg.. Springfield, Mass.
President Nathan E. Goldstein
Vice-President Samuel Goldstein
Treasurer William J. AlthaU'-
THEATERS (17):
Massachusetts. CHICOPEE: Rivoli: GREEN
FIELD: Garden: HOLYOKE: Strand. Victory.
NORTH ADAMS: Paramount, Richmond: NORTH-
AMPTON: Calvin, Plaza: PITTSFIELD: Capitol.
Colonial, Palace. Strand: SPRINGFIELD: Arcade.
Broadway, Paramount; WESTFIELD: Strand.
Vermont, BRATTLEBORO: Paramount.
WESTERN THEATERS
Steamboat Springs, Colo.
Owner Jno. A. Grevfl
THEATERS (8) :
Listed in two groups:
Portable Theaters
Colorado, EAGLE: Eagle. HAYDEN: Auditori-
um; MINTURN: Minturn: MT. MORRIS: Liberty:
RED CLIFF: Red Cliff.
Colorado, CRAIG: West: OAK CREEK: Rio,
STEAMBOAT SPRINGS: Chief.
Wyoming, BAGGS: Fiesta.
WESTERN THEATERS, LTD.
300 Film Exchange Bldg., Winnipeg, Man.
Supervisor of Theaters Don F. Gauld
President J. Miles
THEATERS (33):
Canada, WINNIPEG. MAN. : Arlington, Bad-
dow, College, Crescent, Fox, Furby, Gaiety.
Lyceum. Osborne, Mac's. Orpheum, Palace. Plaza,
Regent. Rose. Roxy, Starland, Times, Tivoli,
Tower, Uptown, Wonderland; PORTAGE la
PRAIRIE, Man.: Playhouse.
WESTLAND THEATERS, INC.
Peak Theater Bldg., Colorado Springs, Colo.
President Louis L. Dent
THEATERS (11):
Colorado, COLORADO SPRINGS: Chief, Peak:
DENVER: New Victory. Victory; GRAND JUNC-
TION: Kiva, Mesa: GREELY: Chief, Kiva:
PUEBLO: Chief, Colorado. Pueblo.
WHITE, i. F., JR., CIRCUIT
Asheboro, N. C.
Officers J. F. White. Jr., F. H. Beddingfleld.
T. A. Little
977
THEATERS (14):
Listed in two groups:
J. F. White, Jr.. Circuit
North Carolina, ASHEBORO: Capitol. Sunset:
DURHAM : Uptown: GREENSBORO: State:
CHARLOTTE: Visulite: RALEIGH: Wake.
Little & Bedilingfield
North Carolina, DURHAM: Criterion; GAS-
TONIA: Loray; GREENSBORO: Criterion.
South Carolina, GREENVILLE: Paris; WHIT-
MIRE: Strand.
Virginia. DANVILLE: Virginia: NORFOLK:
Colonial, Wells.
WHITSON-LEWIS THEATERS
1914 S. Vermont Ave., Los Angeles, Calif.
THEATERS (5) :
Listed in two groups:
WINCHESTER AMUSEMENT CO., INC.
739 Liberty St., Springfield, Mass.
President Louis Cohn
Treasurer Harry Cohen
THEATERS (5) :
Massachusetts, SPRINGFIELD: Garden. Jeffer
son. Liberty, Phillips. Strand.
WISPER-WETSMAN THEATERS
GIO Fox Theater BIdg., Detroit, Mich.
President Lew Wisper
Vice-President Frank Wetsman
Booker Daniel J. Lewif
THEATERS (13) :
Michigan, DEARBORN: Calvin: DETROIT
Avalon, Eastown, Fenkell. Harper. Linwood-La-
Salle, Mack-Uptown. Oriole. Piccadilly. Roosevelt.
Tower. Tuxedo, Westown.
Whitson-Lewis Theaters
California, HOLLYWOOD: Hunley. Los Feliz;
LOS ANGELES: Vista.
Ramona-Hollyway Corp.
California, LOS ANGELES: Holly way. Ramona.
WHITTEN, R. L.
Modern Theater, Addison, Me.
Maine, ADDISON: Modern: COLUMBIA
FALLS : Town Hall: MILLBRIDGE: Opera House:
PROSPECT HARBOR: Redmans: WEST PEM
BROOKE: Modern.
WILDER THEATERS
Newport Theater, Norfolk, Va.
President William S. Wilder
THEATERS (6) :
Virginia, NEWPORT NEWS: Warwick: PORTS
MOUTH: Gates, Virginia: NORFOLK: Colley.
Newport: ROANOKE: Grandin.
WILLISTON, D. M.
Walker Theater, Indianapolis, Ind.
THEATERS (6) :
Indiana, INDIANAPOLIS: Lido, Park, Walker.
Kentucky, LOUISVILLE: Grand. Palace. Lyric.
WILMER AND VINCENT CORP.
17T6 Broadway, New York. N. V.
President Sidney Wilmer
Vice-President Walter Vincent
Secretary-Treasurer Joseph D. Eagan
THEATERS (32) :
Pennsylvania. ALLENTOWN: Colonial, Rialto.
State: ALTOONA: State: EASTON: Embassy.
Orpheum, State; HARRISBURG: Colonial, Rio.
State. Victoria: READING: Embassy. State:
JOHNSTOWN: Embassy: MT. PENN: Majestic:
WEST READING: Penn.
Virginia, NORFOLK: Granby. Norva: RICH
MOND: Colonial. Lee, National. Park.
WILSON, L. B.
Covington, Ky.
THEATERS (4) :
Kentucky, COVINGTON: Broadway. Liberty.
Strand. Wilson.
WOMETCO THEATERS
306 N. Miami Ave., Miami, Fla.
Co-owners Mitchell Wolf son. Sidney Meyer
THEATERS (20) :
Florida, COCOANUT GROVE: Ace. Grove: MI-
AMI: Biltmore, Capitol. Harlem. Lyric, Miami.
Ritz. Rosetta. Strand. Tower. May fair. State:
MIAMI BEACH: Plaza. Lincoln: WEST PALM
BEACH: Dixie, Grand.
Bahamas, NASSAU: Montagu. Nassau. Savoy
WORM AN THEATER CIRCUIT
1069 23rd St., Ogden, Utah
Manager William Worman
THEATERS (13):
Portable Theaters:
Utah, BEAR RIVER CITY: Worman: CLEAR-
FIELD: Worman: CENTERVILLE: Worman;
DEVIL SLIDE: Worman; HENEFER : Worman:
HOOPER: Worman: HUNTSVILLE: Worman:
KATSV1LLE: Worman; NORTH Ogden: Ogden:
OGDEN: 21st Ward: PLAIN CITY: Worman:
ROY: Worman: WILLARD: Worman.
VOOST, WILLIAM, CIRCUIT
206 E. 31st St., New York, N. Y.
President-Film Buyer William Yoosi
General Manager H. Dean
THEATERS (6) :
New York, NEW YORK: Chaloner. Chelsea
Regent. Royal. Superior. 34th Street.
YOUNG, R. E., THEATERS
Palace Theater, Ferrysburg, O.
President R. E. Young
THEATERS (4) :
Ohio, MAUMEE: Strand: PERRYSBURG: Pal-
ace; POINT PLACE: Shoreway: TOLEDO: Bijou.
ZANESVILLE THEATERS, INC.
13 S. Fifth St., Zancsville, O.
President W. P. Wilee
Vice-President Frances F. Brown
Secretary-Treasurer Caldwell Brown
THEATERS (4) :
Ohio, ZANESVILLE: Grand. Liberty. Imperial.
Quunby.
978
mmm
Financial Histories
Balance Sheets
Price Ranges
Dividends
Earnings
AMERICAN SEATING CO.
Seats and Equipment
Incorporated June 21, 1926, in New Jersey
General Office, Grand Rapids, Michigan
Present company is successor to company of
same name organized in New Jersey, April 24,
1906.
Capitalization: Common stock, no par, 221.062
shares.
Dividend: $.50 in 1938.
PRICE RANGE OE STOCK
Earned
Year
High
Low
Per Sh.
1939
20
9
1938
23'A
7'A
$1.08
2.88
1937
29
7 A
18
1936
28^
2.45
1935
1934
1933
1932
1931
1930
1929
1928
1927
1926
21%
1.63
7H
2'/i
.66
7%
%
.861)
44
2.461)
9
1%
3.4811
26/2
5
.90
41%
17
2.38
45
27%
2.99
51
38%
4.08
45 H
32%
6.14
D — Deficit.
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET, JANUARY 1, 1939
Assets
Current: Cash on hand and demand deposits, $277,357.76; Cash surrender value of officers' life
insurance policies (face amount $200,000), $66,293.37; Customers receivables, $2,316,-
502.86, Less, Reserve for losses ($157,225.60) an-i installation costs, $175,086.76, total,
$2,141,416.10; Other receivables (employes $10,313.81), $12,042.96; Inventories: Finished
products, work in process, raw materials and manufacturing supplies, $1,491,256.03, School
supplies purchased for resale, $342,277.23, total, $1,833,533.26 $ 4,330,643.45
Fixed: Land, buildings, machinery and equipment, $4,746,802.42; Less: Reserves for deprecia-
tion, $2,034,729.95 2,712,072.47
Other: Unamortized long term debt expense, $51,812.10; Prepaid and deferred expenses,
$73,938.45; Miscellaneous investments and claims (less reserves), $5.227.84 130,978.39
Total Assets $ 7,173,694.31
Liabilities
Current: Accounts payable, $217,478.42; Accrued payrolls, commissioni, taxes, etc., $216,490.98 $ 433,969.40
Long Term: Ten-year 6% convertible notes due July 1, 1946 1,668,000.00
Total Liabilities $ 2,101,969.40
Deferred income 29,479.92
Capital
Capital Stock: Common Stock, No Par Value: Shares authorized — 472,875; unissued 251,813
(33,360 shares reserved for conversion of ten-year 6% notes). Shares outstanding — 221,062,
at stated values (200,000 shares at $16.60; 2,875 shares at $33; 18,187 shares at $20),
$3,778,615; Surplus: Capital surplus (no change during 1938), $758,734.03, Earned surplus
since January 1, 1937 (deficit at that date transferred to capital surplus), $504,895.96,
total, $1,263,629.99 5,042,244.99
Total Liabilities and Capital $ 7,173,694.31
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF PROFIT AND LOSS
Year Ended December 31, 1938
Cross sales, less returns and allowances $ 7,029,737.24
Cost of goods sold 5,117,059.03
Gross Profit Before Depreciation $ 1,912,678.21
Selling and administrative expenses 1,401,446.43
Operating Profit Before Depreciation $ 511,231.78
Provision for depreciation 189,295.92
Net Operating Profit $ 321,935.86
Add: Interest earned ($50,811.51) and dividends received, $51,354.01; Cash discounts on pur-
chases, $35,465.92; Sundry other income, $16,381.05 103,200.98
Total $ 425,136.84
Deduct: Interest ($100,080) and amortization of expense on long term debt, $106,988.28;
Cash discount on sales, $20,745.76; Provision for losses on customers receivables, $4,293.42;
Sundry other deductions, $9,001.37 141,028.83
Profit Before Federal Income Taxes $ 284,108.01
Provision for Federal income taxes 45,800.00
Net Profit for Year $ 238,308.01
980
STATEMENT OF CONSOLIDATED SURPLUS ACCOUNTS
Year Ended December 31, 1938
Balance, January 1, 1938 $ 370,418.95
Add: Net profit for the year ended December 31, 1938, $238,308.01; Partial realization on
miscellaneous investments written down to $1 by valuation reserve provided for by a charge
against earned surplus (deficit account) in 1932, $6,700, total, $245,008.01; Less: Cash
dividends on common stock — $.50 per share, $110,531 134,477.01
Balance, December 31, 1938 $ 504,895.96
COLUMBIA PICTURES CORPORATION
Producer and Distributor
Incorporated Jan. 10, 1924, in New York
— General Office, 729 Seventh Ave., New York --
Capitalization: (After new financing effected in
1935 and payment of 50% common stock dividend
Dec. 10, 1935). No par common stock, 1,000,000
shares authorized, 367,161 outstanding. No par
$2.75 preference stock, cumulative and convertible
75,000 shares authorized and outstanding. Of the
authorized common, 135,000 shares are reserved, of
which 78,280 share are issuable upon the con-
version of the 75,000 shares of $2.75 preferred
convertible stock, at the present conversion rates;
and of which 56,720 shares are issuable in the
event of the increase, from time to time, in the
number of shares of common stock issuable upon
the conversion of the $2.75 preferred convertible
stock. Cumulative $2.75 preferred convertible stock
is redeemable at or entitled in liquidation to $53
per share. Of the comon stock 163,893 shares
are reserved for the following purposes: 28,893
shares are salable under options at approximately
$13.00 a share; of which 7,880 shares are salable
on or before Aug. 10, 1941, 18,386 shares are
salable on or before Aug. 10, 1943 and 2,627 shares
are salable at any time between June 10, 1940
and Aug. 10, 1943 ; such number of shares and
such price being subject to adjustment from time
to time. These options are not exercisable until
such shares have been registered under the Securi-
ties Act of 1933, if, in the opinion of the Corpora-
tion's counsel, such registration shall be required.
In addition, an option for 2,627 shares, included in
the 18,386 shares mentioned above, is not exer-
cisable until approved by the stockholders, and
registration has become effective under the Securi-
ties Exchange Act of 1934, and formal listings be-
come effective on the New York Stock and Curb
Exchanges. Majority of common stock held in a
voting trust to continue for 10 years to April
1, 1940. Voting trustees are Harry Cohn, Jack
Cohn and A. H. Giannini.
Dividend, preferred, $2.40; common, 2'/2%.
PRICE RANGE OF STOCK
Common Preferred Earned Per Sh.
Year High Low High Low Common Pfd.
1939 1SH 6'A 30'A 15J4
1938 19 9 35H 25J-S $.07D $2.45
1937 39J4 10 46'A 2554 3.26 17.57
1936 45^ 31J4 51 »4 39% 4.96 20.92
1935 81* 34^ 50 4&Vi 9.91 105.17
(Old $3 preferred stock retired in 1935 and
replaced by new $2.75 issue.)
1934 4lH 2V/2 $5.69 $58.45
1933 28 Wi 4.10 42.89
1932 15 4'/2 3.09 32.73
1931 23 iyi 3.09 31.60
1930 55J* 24 6.12' 56.93
1929 38J4 4.78 27.07
1928 1.75 10.00
1927 81 6.22
1926 Nil 2.40
D — Deficit.
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET AS AT JULY 1, 1939
Assets
Cash $ 1,138,681.92
Notes receivable 14,072.44
Accounts Receivable: Due from employees, $7,745.74; Film customers and sundries (after re-
serve of $55,102.74), $494,962.57 502,708.31
Advances to outside producers, less amortization (secured by films) 357,101.09
Inventory: Released productions at cost, less amortization, $5,775,147.54; Completed produc-
tions not yet released, at cost, $1,997,879.85; Cost of productions in process, $2,408,821.21;
Rights and scenarios, at cost or written down value, $646,290.43; Advertising accessories,
at cost or written down value, $61,324.67; Film stock and supplies, at cost or written
down value, $85,823.81 10,975,287.51
Total Current and Working Assets $12,987,851.27
Investment in wholly owned foreign subsidiary companies at May 27, 1939, per statement
attached, $468,235.48; Deduct — Cash remitted to New York by foreign subsidiary companies
subsequent to May 27, 1939, $278,848.08 189,387.40
Sundry receivables (after reserve of $55,526.96) 80,789.29
Cash withheld from outside producers (per contra) 22,634.02
Deposits 9k257.21
Other Investments: Miscellaneous securities, cost less reserve, $1,260; Cash surrender value
of life insurance, $118,183 119,443.00
Fixed assets as appraised by Pacific States Appraisal Company, December 31, 1926, and
July 12, 1927, with subsequent additions at cost: Land, $669,174.89; Buildings, equipment
and fixtures, $3,353,420.72, total $4022,595.61; Deduct — Reserve for depreciation,
$1,872,180.79 2,150,414.64
Prepaid Expenses 230,197.66
$15,789,974.49
981
Liabilities and Capital
Notes payable — banks $ 400,000.00
Accounts payable and accrued expenses 1,161,961.85
Due to outside producers and participants 144,301.25
Six-Year 4"4% sinking fund debentures 250,000.00
Reserve for Federal taxes (estimated) 47,636.08
Total Current Liabilities $ 2,003,899.18
Deposits payable 50,143.62
Deferred Income: Advance payments f self-liquidating) : Foreign customers, $21,054.93;
Domestic customers, $282,161.73 303,216.66
Funds withheld from outside producers account of contingent claims (per contra) 22,634.02
Reserve for contingencies 259,347.03
Six-year 4J4% sinking fund debentures maturing serially to May 1, 1944 1,000,000.00
Capital: $2.75 preferred convertible stock without par value, shares authorized and outstanding,
75,000 3,487,500.0(1
Common stock without par value, shares authorized 1.000,000, outstanding, 367,161, $4,-
858.567.35; Less: Treasury stock, 893 shares outstanding, $11,487.72 4,847,079.63
Capital Surplus: Balance at June 25, 1938, $67,398.66; Profit on sale of fractional shares
of common stock, $116.11 67,514.77
Earned surplus, per statement attached 3,748,639.58
$15,789,974.49
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
AND EARNED SURPLUS ACCOUNT
For the Twelve Months (53 Weeks) Ended July 1, 1939
flncluding operations of the foreign subsidiary companies for the twelve months ended May 27, 1939,
converted at prevailing rates of exchange, except depreciation of fixed assets, valued at dollar cost.)
Gross income from rentals and sales of film and accessories $19,413,794.83
Deduct: Amortization of production costs, $11,571,371.02; Share to producers and participants,
$762,529.04; Cost of accessories and prints, $396,443.25 12,730,343.31
$ 6,683,451.52
General, administrative and selling expenses 6,663,946.52
Net Operating Profit .. $ 19,505.00
Other income, including discount on purchases, excess duties recovered, interest income,
recoveries from obsolete prints, etc., $91,149.55; Other deductions, including profit and loss
on foreign exchange (net), interest expense, etc., $21,753.63 69,395.92
$ 88,900.92
Interest on debentures of Columbia Pictures Corporation 61,979.16
$ 26.921.76
Provision for Federal Taxes: Income taxes (estimated), $7,500; Capital stock taxes, $17,375.. 24,875.00
Net Profit $ 2,046.76
Earned surplus at June 25, 1938, $4,09(8,680.16; Deduct: Additional assessments of taxes
applicable to prior years (net), $25,677.26 4,073,002.90
$ 4,075,049.66
Deduct — Dividends: On $2.75 preferred convertible stock, $206,261.74; On common stock
(in stock), $120,148.34 326,410.08
Earned Surplus at July 1, 1939, per Balance Sheet (Including Undistributed Profits of
Foreign Subsidiary Companies of Approximately $256,000) $ 3,748,639.58
COMBINED STATEMENT OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES
OF FOREIGN SUBSIDIARY COMPANIES
As at May 27, 1939
(Converted at rates of exchange prevailing at May 27, 1939, excepting fixed assets, less
depreciation, valued at dollar cost)
Assets: Cash $ 218,533.31
Notes receivable 6.017.23
Accounts receivable, less reserves 453,702.01
Funds held by banks as security for loans — per contra 1,637.937.50
Advances to outside producers (secured by films) 323,854.12
Inventories, less amortization 45,717.77
Sundry receivables, less reserves 96.836.14
Deposits 2,546.98
Furniture and fixtures, at cost, after depreciation 58,109.79
Prepaid expenses 116,592.67
Total Assets
Liabilities: Bank loan (secured by share of rentals on certain British pictures)
Bank overdrafts (guaranteed by the corporation)
Bank loans — per contra
Accounts payable and accrued expenses
Reserve for foreign income taxes
Deposits payable ; • • •
Deferred Income: Advance payments (self-liquidating)
$ 2,959,847.52
$ 234,062.50
145,091.47
1,637.937 50
254.194.29
158,851.65
24,043.53
12,431.10
982
Total Liabilities
$ 2,466,612.04
Net Assets $ «JW*U8
Deduct — Reserve for investment in Spanish subsidiary company 25,000.00
Contingent liabilities (approximately) $50,000
Balance of Net Assets at May 27, 1939, per Balance Sheet $ 468,235.48
CONSOLIDATED FILM INDUSTRIES, INC.
Film Laboratories, etc.
Incorporated Jan. 7, 1928, in Delaware
= General Office, 1776 Broadway, New York =
Organized in 1928 to succeed company of same Capitalization: Common stock, $1 par, 600,000
name formed in 1924 in New York as a consolida- sha^s. authorized, 524,973 outstanding Cum $2
. participating preferred stock, no par, 400,000 shares
tion of various laboratories in California and the authorized and outstanding.
East. Subsidiaries include Cinema Patents Co. Dividends: Preferred, paid $1 in 1939;
and Consolidated Molded Products Corp. Common, none at present.
PRICE RANGE OF STOCK
— Common — Earned
Year High Low Per Sh.
1939 2% H
1938 2Yi 1 $.34D
1937 SH 1 .37D
1936 7ys 4A .23
1935 7'A 3A .53
1934 6'A lft .22
1933 5J4 1M -21
1932 5H 1 -12
1931 15 3yi .96
1930 27^ 77A 2.50
1929 27Vi 10 3.41
1928 23 12^ 2.25
1927 1.35
1926 .47 D— Deficit.
Preferred-
Earned
High
Low
Per Sh.
12%
7%
12%
4/2
$Y.54
isy4
ty4
1.51
20 Yi
ISA
2.30
22Vi
UA
2.69
2oys
10 M
2.29
HM
SA
2.27
ny4
2y4
2.16
WA
7H
3.26
28 A
12A
5.77
3oy4
ISA
7.96
29y2
23
5.25
3.80
2.62
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET AS OF JANUARY 1, 1939
Assets
Current and Working Assets: Cash in banks and on hand $ 368,907.78
Trade acceptances, notes and loans receivable, $2,803,525.73; Accounts receivable, trade,
$1,575,261.02, total, $4,378,786.75; Less, reserves, $123,601.08 4,255,185.67
Interest receivable 59,203.48
Inventories — Raw materials, manufacturing supplies, goods in process and finished products,
at cost or market, whichever lower 393,359.79
Total Current and Working Assets $ 5,076,656.72
Secured Notes Receivable, Maturing after 1939: Motion Picture Realty Co., and "Universal"
real estate and chattel mortgages 1,000,000.00
Cash surrender value of life insurance 127,799.52
Investments in securities of other companies 902,1090.00
Propert.es and Plants: Land, buildings, machinery and equipment, at cost, less, reduction
of $906,406.95 by the management as at December 31, 1931, $5,467,403.48; Less, reserve
for depreciation, $1,413,041.03 4,054,362.45
Prints and negatives 233,436.11
Goodwill, patents, etc 1.00
Prepaid expenses and deferred charges 64,176.01
$11,458,531.81
Liabilities, Capital Stock and Surplus
Current Liabilities: Notes payable, trade $ 544,970.97
Accounts and vouchers payable, trade 387,990.75
Accruals and reserves — payrolls, royalties, etc 111,759.36
Taxes — Excise, sales, franchise, social security, unemployment and estimated Federal
income taxes 191,267.94
Total Current Liabilities $ 1,235,989.02
Deferred income 11,590.00
Capital Stock: 400,000 shares, $2 cumulative paiticipating preferred stock, no par value,
authorized and issued, stated value fixed by board of directors at $15 per share, $6,000,000;
Arrearages of dividends on above, ($7 per share) $2,800,000; 524,973 shares, common stock
par value $1 per share, issued and outstanding, 600,000 shares authorized, $524,973 6,524,973.00
Surplus: Capital surplus balance 101,780.77
Earned surplus 3,584,199.02
$11,458,531.81
983
CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF INCOME
AND PROFIT AND LOSS AND EARNED SURPLUS ACCOUNT
For the Year Ended December 31, 1938
Net sales and royalties $ 8,799,875.68
Cost of sales and operating expenses, including ilrpieciation of $27 S, 200.74 8,266,301.46
Net Pofit from Sales and Royalties 533,574.22
Other Income: Interest. $201,288.62; Rents. $65,591.78; Miscellaneous — discounts, bad debts
ecovered. etc., $34,073.54 300,953.94
$ 834,528.16
Deductions frcim Income: Provision for bad debts, $29,337.23; Interest, $39,544.53; Idle plant
and re.ited property expenses, $33,949.46 102,831.22
Net Income for the Year Ended December 31. 1938, Before Federal Income Taxes... $ 731,696.94
Less, provision for Federal income taxes, estimated 115,000.00
Amount Transferred to Earned Surplus Account $ 616,696.94
Consolidated earned surplus, January 1, 1938 4,478,180.95
$5,094,877.89
Deduct: Assets at book value after deducting liabilities, of American Record Corporation and
its subsidiaries, less net proceeds from sale of outstanding capital stock of American
Record Corporation on December 17. 1938. in the amount of $690,100, $1,110,678.87;
Dividends declared and paid on cumulative participating preferred stock, $400.000 1,510,678.87
Consolidated Earned Surplus. December 31. 1938 $ 3,584,199.02
EASTMAN KODAK CO.
Manufacturer of film, cameras and photographic supplies
Incorporated Oct. 24, 1901, in New Jersey
General Office. Rochester, N. Y.
A holding company. Has more than 60 wholly
owned subsidiaries.
Capitalization: Common stock, no par, 2,500,000
shares authorized, 2,476,013 outstanding of which
12,229 shares are in the treasury. Preferred, $100
par, 6^ cumulative, 100,000 shares authorized.
61.657 outstanding.
Dividend: Common, present rate $6 annually;
preferred. $6 annually.
PRICE RANGE OF STOCK
—Common — Earned
Year High Low Per Sh.
1939 18654 13854
1938 187 \2\yi $7.54
1937 198 144 9.76
1936 185 156 8.23
1935 17254 11054 6.90
1934 116*4 79 6.28
1933 89*4 46 4.76
1932 87*4 3554 2.52
1931 18544 77 5.78
1930 25554 142H 8.84
1929 264*4 150 9.57
1928 19454 163 9.60
1927 175}4 126*4 9.61
1926 136*4 106*4 9.50
1925 118 104*4 8.84
1924 1H% 10454 8.26
1923 115*4 89*4 9.13
1922 9054 70 8.72
PRICE RANGE OF STOCK
— Preferred — Earned
Year High Low Per Sh.
1939 18354 15 5 54
1938 173 157 $281.22
1937 164 150 362.45
1936 166 152 306.64
1935 164 141 258.09
1934 147 120 235.22
1933 130 110 180.34
1932 125 104*4 98.27
1931 135 103 217.47
1930 134 120J4 330.11
1929 128 117 356.89
1928 134 12354 326.17
1927 131% 11954 326.68
1926 11754 115*4 322.11
1925 115*4 112 299.51
1924 115 108*4 278.99
1923 114*4 10854 306.17
1922 10854 10554 291.17
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET, DECEMBER 31, 1938
(With comparative figures as at December 25, 1937)
Assets
1938 1937
December 31, December 25,
Current Assets: Cash in banks and on hand $11,893,583.81 $10,189,568.65
Marketable bonds and stocks, at cost, less reserves to reduce to aggregate
market quotations S,695,939.48 12,397,851.92
Accounts and bills receivable (less reserve) 17.240,655.54 17,090,214.34
Inventories of raw materials, work in process, fini-hed goods and supplies, at
cost or market, whichever is lower 47,860,011.09 50,112,595.18
$85,690,189.92 $89,790,230.09
984
Investments and Advances (at cost, less reserves): Affiliated companiei $ 796,270.43 $ 824,140.65
Marketable securities on deposit with workmen's compensation commissions. . 390,389.03 382,560.12
Kodak Employes Association and housing projects 1,068,394.74 1,545,674.34
Non-current receivables and investments 2,009,372.89 1,931,902.56
$ 4,264,427.09 $ 4,684,277.67
Land, buildings, machinery and equipment, at cost $156,263,078.99 $147,908,645.39
Less: Reserves for depreciation and obsolescence 69,879,344.28 64,082,646.58
$86,383,734.71 $83,825,998 81
Prepaid insurance, taxes, and other deferred charges $ 723,547.65 $ 1,087,257.14
$177,061,899.37 $179,387,763.71
Liabilities
1938 1937
December 31, December 25,
Current Liabilities: Accounts payable and accrued liabilities $ 6,213,178.42 $ 6,964,277.58
Wage dividend payable March 27, 1939 2,144,334.32 3,421,160.18
Provision for taxes 6,821,644.17 8,577,287.66
Foreign bills discounted 1,559,005.06 640,067.36
Dividends payable January 3, 1939: Preferred 92,485.50 92,485.50
Common 3,376,381.50 4,501,842.00
$20,207,028.97 $24,197,120.28
Reserves: Workmen's Compensation and sundry insurance reserves $ 1,256,338.54 $ 1,206,368.13
Reserve for contingencies 8,611,205.62 8,805,468.81
Capital Stock: 6% Cumulative Preferred Stock — 100 par value: Authorized —
100,000 shares; Issued— 61,657 shares 6,165,700.00 6,165,700.00
Common Stock — No par value: Authorized — 2,500,000 shares; Issued — 2,263,150
shares; Less: In treasury, 12,229 shares, total, 2,250,921 shares at stated
value of $40 per share 90,036,840.00 90,036,840.00
$96,202,540.00 $96,202,540.00
Earned surplus, as per annexed statement $50,784,786.24 $48,976,266.49
$177,061,899.37 $179,387,763.71
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF
PROFIT AND LOSS AND EARNED SURPLUS
For the Year Ended December 31, 1938
(With comparative figures for the previous year)
13 Periods Ended
1938 1937
December 31, December 25,
(53 Weeks) (52 Weeks')
Net sales $132,766,452.13 $136,114,878.42
Cost of sales and expenses (depreciation charged to operations $7,463,959
in 1938, and $6,761,147 in 1937) 112,052,460.85 108,628,780.69
Income from Operations $20,713,991.29 $27,486,097.73
Interest and dividends 664,477.43 940,928.18
Net profit on sales of securities 18,726.67 60,802.06
Other income 108,617.02 40,834.04
$21,505,812.41 $28,528,662.01
Deduct: Provision for reduction of securities to market value 444,247.00
Other charges 509,955.22 151,183.16
Net Income Before Provision for Income Taxes $20,995,857.19 $27,933,231.85
Provision for United States and foreign income taxes 3,656,449.04 5, 155^157.96
Provision for United States surtax on undistributed profits 430,728.86
Net Profit for the Year $17,339,408.15 $22,347,345.03
Earned Surplus
Earned surplus, beginning of year $48,976,266.49 $84,915,999.92
Net profit for the year 17,339,408.15 22,347,345.03
$66,315,674.64 $107,263,344.95
Deduct: Amount transferred to reserve for contingencies 1,500,000.00 1,000,000.00
Goodwill of Photostat, Limited 155,420.40
Amount transferred to common stock capital account 38,909,768.46
Dividends: Preferred — 6% 369,942.00 369,942.00
Common — $8 per share 18,007,368.00
Common — $6 per share 13,505,526.00
$15,530,888.40 $58,287,078.46
Earned Surplus, End of Year $50,784,786.24 $48,976,266.49
985
FAMOUS PLAYERS CANADIAN CORP., Ltd-
(Controlled by Paramount Pictures)
Theater Circuit
Incorporated Jan. 23, 1920, in Canada
General Office, Royal Bank Bldg., Toronto -
Company has interest in United Amusement
Corp., Ltd., Eastern Theaters, etc.
In 1930 stock of Famous Players Canadian was
exchanged for stock of Paramount Publix Corp.
Exchange plan declared operative May 27, 1930.
Capitalization: Common stock, no par, 600,000
-hares authorized. 397,524, outstanding. Listed on
Toronto and Montreal stock exchanges.
Dividends paid: $1 in 1932, $2 in 1931, $2 in
1930. 50 cents in 1935, 60 cents in 1936 and 1937,
80 cents in 1938.
PRICE RANGE OF STOCK
Earned
Year High Low Per Sh.
1937 35 16 $1.68*
1936 25 18 1.45
1935 16 9'A .72
1934 (No trading) .80
1933 15 4 .06U
1932 10 6 .21
1931 39'/, 16 2.17
1930 63'/2 3Sy2 5.03
1929 80 32 6.24
1928 100 20 1.44
1927 51 20 .85
1926 20 11 .11
* 6 months.
D— Deficit.
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET AT JANUARY 1, 1939
(Comprising the assets and liabilities of Famous Players Canadian Corporation Limited and of those
subsidiaries in which the parent company's interest in the common stock represents 85% or more)
Assets
Cash on hand and in banks $ 436,465.79
Call loans 858,000.00
Dominion and Provincial Government bonds, at cost (market value — $302,930) 298,186.30
Accounts Receivable, Less Reserves: Advances to subsidiary companies (50% to 85% owned),
$80,330.72; Advance, to affiliated companies (50% and less owned), $82,872.39; Sundry
debtors, $92,909.31 256,112.42
Inventory of supplies, at or below cost 51,189.37
Prepaid expenses 138,314.34
Total Current and Working Assets $ 2,038,268.22
Deposits to secure contracts ■ 90,120.15
Notes and mortgages receivable (due after one year) 52,575.00
Investments in Shares and Advances to Subsidiary Companies (50% to 85% owned): In-
vestment in shares. $719,297.16; Advances, $133,435.71 ; Mortgage and bonds, $143,-
345.28, total, $996,078.15; Less— Current indebtedness shown above, $80,330.72 915,747.43
Investment in Shares and Advances to Affiliated Companies (50% and less owned): Invest-
ment in shares, $1,060,337.75; Advances (due after one year), $88,385.39 1,148,723.14
Fixed Assets, at Cost: Land, $5,361,695.37; Buildings, improvements and equipment, $11,-
906,570.90; Less — Reserves for depreciation, $6,426,051.07, total, $5,480,519.83; Sound
equipment and installation costs, $1,337,381.69; Less — Reserves for depreciation, $1,277,-
551.87, total, $59,829.82 10.902,045 02
Franchises, leaseholds, etc., less amounts written off 296,601.58
Deferred charges 48,749.94
Expenditures in connection with reorganization of funded deht, less amounts written off 643.690.37
Premiums paid for capital stocks of subsidiary companies consolidated, less amounts written of 48,704.13
$16,185,224.98
Liabilities and Capital
Accounts payable $ 176,106.39
Sundry taxes payable and accrued 18,933.64
Accrued interest, rents, etc 67,262.37
Reserve for dominion and provincial income taxes 200,000.00
Note payable May 1, 1940 (paid Jan. 1939) 100,000.00
Total Current Liabilities (exclusive of bonds and mortgages payable within one year
as indicated below) $ 562,302.40
First Mortgage and Collateral Trust Bonds: Authorized. $10,000,000; Series A — Issued
June 1, 1936: Serial Bonds— 3% maturing June 1, 1939, $350,000; 3V2% ($350,000 matur-
ing annually June 1, 1940-1942), $1,050,000; Fifteen Year Bonds: 4J4% maturing
June 1, 1951, $5,000,000, total, $6,400,000: Series B— Issued June 1, 1937: Fifteen Year
Bonds: 4!^% maturing June 1 1951, $300,000. total, $6,700,000; Mortgages, etc., on
theater properties (including $110,599.47 due within one year), $587,015.22 7,287,015.22
Advance payments, etc. (self-liquidating) ilc'nnn'nn
Reserve for contingencies 145,000.00
Total Liabilities y • • • $ 8,004,955.27
Interest of minority stockholders in capital and surplus of subsidiary companies (including
$654,205.33 preferred stock and accumulated dividends thereon) 697,343.67
Capital Stock and Surplus: Capital Stock: Authorized — 600,000 shares without nominal
or par value. Issued, fully paid — 408,524 shares, $4,118,240; Note— 44,000 of the unissued
986
shaics are under options in favor of certain executives and director! of the company,
one-fourth thereof at $13.65, $15, $16, and $17 a share respectively, at various dates up
to July 31, 1941. Earned surplus, per statement attached, $3,364,686.04 ; 7,482,926.04
Contingent Liabilities: Under guarantees, etc. for account of associated companies, $718,860.14
$16,185,224.98
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF
PROFIT AND LOSS AND SURPLUS
For the Year Ending December 31, 1938
(Comprising the income and expenditure of Famous Players Canadian Corporation Limited and of
those subsidiaries in which the parent company's interest in the common stock represents 85% or more)
Profit and Loss for the year ended December 31, 1938: Profit from operations, before providing
for depreciation, interest, etc., as under, $2,231,659.97; Dividends received, $145,485.99;
Interest earned, $48,976.63; Profit (net) cn disposal of capital assets, $20,060.97; Prior year
income tax adjustments, $5,046.22 $ 2,451,229.78
Less — Officers' salaries, $135,460.74; Directors' fees, $4,300; Legal fees paid $11,098.72, less
portion thereof relating to acquisition of new properties, $1,146.16, $9.952.56 149,713.30
$ 2,301,516.48
Less — Interest on bonds, mortgages, etc 328,531.84
$ 1,972,984.64
Less — Depreciation: Buildings, improvements and equipment, $560,807.40; Amortization of
leases, franchise, investments, etc., $138,066.59; Amortization of expenditures in connec-
tion with re-organization of funded debt, $51,000 749,873.99
Profit for the Year, Before Income Taxes $ 1,223,110.65
Deduct— Provision for Income Taxes (estimated) 200,000.00
Balance of Profits $ 1,023,110.65
Deduct — Proportion thereof applicable to interest of minority stockholders in subsidiary companies 48,322.44
Balance of Net Profits $ 974,788.21
Earned surplus as at January 1, 1938 2,716,717.03
$ 3,691,505.24
Deduct— Dividends paid '■ 326,819.20
Earned Surplus as at December 31, 1938 $ 3,364,686.04
GENERAL THEATERS EQUIPMENT CORP.
Holding Company
Incorporated July 11, 1929, in Delaware
General Office, 92 Gold St., New York, N. Y.
In addition to being a holding company control-
ling various firms engaged in the manufacture and
distribution of theater equipment, the company on
April 7, 1930, acquired voting control of Fox Film
Corp., and Fox Theaters Corp. through pur-
chase from William Fox of his voting stock in
these companies. General Theaters also has a
50% interest in Grandeur, Inc.
Subsidiaries of General Theaters include:
International Projector Corp.
National Theater Supply Co.
Theater Equipment Contracts Corp.
J. E. McAuley Manufacturing Co.
Hall & Connolly, Inc.
Strong Electric Co.
J. M. Wall Machine Co.
Cinema Building Corp.
Zephyr Shaver Corp.
Capitalization: 800,000 shares of no par common
stock authorized of which 597,887 is issued or
irrevocably authorized for issue.
Dividends: Paid $1 in 1938; .80 in 1939.
PRICE RANGE OF STOCK
(Stricken from listing by New York Stock Ex-
change, June 9, 1932. Transferred to Chicago
Stock Exchange. Removed in Dec. 1932 to New
York Curb. Stricken from Curb Jan. 11, 1934
Listed on N. Y. Stock Exchange.)
Earned
Year High Low Per Sh.
1939 IS'A S'A
1938 16J4 854 $.85
1937 3344 9*A 1.45*
1936 3144 17 1.80
1933 % 'A
(New Common)
1932 VA >A
1931 15'A 'A $1.97D
1930 lS'A S'A .85
(Old Common)
1930 14'4 51J4 $1.44"
1929 66/, 24 1.72
1928 .34
1927 .34
NEW $3 PREFERRED STOCK
Earned
Year High Low Per Sh.
1932 14* Vi
1931 31K H $1.05D
1930 37!4 2244 4.71
D— Deficit.
* 9 months.
"* $2,000,000 loan paid off.
987
CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET AS OF
JANUARY 1, 1939
Assets
I urrrrit Assets: Cash in banks and on hand $ J, 635, 588. 91
Notes and Accounts Receivable: Customers: Notes receivable— instalments maturing with-
in one year, $1,386,484.17; Notes receivable — instalments maturing later than one year,
$506,964.33; Accounts receivable, $1,280,847.13, total, $3,174,295.63; Less reserve, $258,-
520.89, total receivables from customers, less reserve, $2,915,774.74; Other accounts re-
ceivable, $9,922.44 2,925,697.18
Interest receivable 2,515.64
Inventories, at cost or market, whichever is lower 1,670,246.02
Total Current Assets, Including Instalment Notes Maturing Later than One Year, as Above $ 6,234.047.75
Investments: Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corporation, common stock — 185,600 shares (quoted
market value at December 31, 1938— $4,872,000), $5,016,816.15; Fox Theaters Corporation
(in receivership) — Class B common stock — 100 shares (no quoted market value obtainable),
$255 5,017,071.15
Capital Assets: Machinery, equipment, furniture, fixtures, etc. (less reserve of $963,260.01),
$598,463.36; Claims, patents, etc. (less reserve of $1,933.78), $31,553; Goodwill, $2 630,018.36
Investments in and Amounts Due from Subsidiary Companies (Not Consolidated): Cinema
Building Corporation (wholly owned), $307,642.74; Less reserve, $220,999, total, $86,643.74;
Zephyr Shaver Corporation (wholly owned), $157,184.03; J. M. Wall Machine Company.
Inc., $267,568.57, total, $424,752.60; Less reserve (see accompanving statement of profit
and loss), $225,000, total, $199,752.60 286,396.34
Deferred charges — prepaid expenses 90,673.24
Total $12,258,206.84
Liabilities
Current Liabilities: Accounts payable — trade creditors $ 430,216.61
Provision for state and Federal taxes — estimated 136,974.57
Other accounts payable and accrued liabilities 79,028.78
Total Current Liabilities $ 646,219.96
Deferred credits to income 160,425.92
Reserve for factory reorganization 36,317.90
Reserve for fire insurance 4,600.00
Capital Stock and Surplus: Capital stock: General Theaters Equipment Corporation: Author-
ized, 800,000 shares, no par value. Outstanding or irrevocably authorized to be issued,
597,887 shares, $6,014,870; Surplus— Paid-in, $4,751,796.25; Earned, $643,976.81, total,
$5,395,773.06 11,410,643.06
Total $12,258,206.84
CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF PROFIT AND LOSS
For the Year Ended December 31, 1938
Net sales $ 8,326,246.65
Cost of sales 6,267,303.19
Gross Profit on Sales $ 2,058,943.46
Selling expenses 1,323,335.29
Net Profit from Manufacturing and Selling $ 735,608.17
Interest and discount fees earned on instalment notes 206,163.51
Profit from Trading $ '^'JZHS
(leneral and administrative expenses 553,876.57
Income from Operations ; ■ $ 387.895.11
Other Income: Cash dividend> received, $371,200; Discount on purchases, interest, commis-
sions, etc. (includes interest and royalties of $29,743.08 received from subsidiaries not
consolidated), $166,130.75 537,330.75
$ 925,225.86
Other Deductions: Discount on sales, interest, etc 114,958.45
$ 810,267.41
Reserve against investments in and advances to subsidiaries not consolidated (net loss of _
subsidiaries not consolidated for the year ended December 31, 1938 aggregated $209,156.68) 223,000.00
Net Profit Before Providing for Federal Income Tax $ 5f|'^^'
Provision for Federal income tax— estimated /B.uuu.uu
Consolidated Net Profit (After provision for depreciation of $98,209.53) $ 507,267.41
CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF SURPLUS
For the Year Ended December 31, 1938
Paid-in Surplus: Balance, January 1, 1938 ■ $ 4,808,604.90
Addition: Consideration received for capital stock issued in excess of amount allocated to
capital stock at $10 per share 1,922.80
Total $ 4,810,527.76
Deductions- Purchase of 3,600 shares capital stock (retired) less cost of 200 shares pur-
chased and charged to paid-in surplus in 1937, $33,312.50; Reversal of adjustment for ma-
988
chinery and equipment disposed of and credited to paid-in surplus in 1937, due to can-
cellation of sale and reacquisition of said machinery and equipment, $25,319.01; Increase
in excess cost arising from purchase of common stock of National Theater Supply Com-
pany during the year 1938, $100 58,731.51
Paid-in Surplus, December 31, 1938 $ 4,751,796.26
Earned Surplus: Balance, January 1, 1938 $ 747,125.98
Addition: Consolidated net profit for the year 1938 507,267.41
Total $ 1,254,393.39
Deductions: Cash dividends paid by parent company, $597,283.25; Cost of patent infringe-
ment suit in excess of provision made in prior years, $11,323.50; Additional Federal income
taxes — prior years, $1,809.83 610,416.58
Earned Surplus, December 31, 1938 $ 643,976.81
KEITH-ALBEE-ORPHEUM CORP.
{Controlled by Radio-Keith-Orpheum)
Theater and Vaudeville Operator
Incorporated Jan. 28, 1928, in Delaware
^=General Office, 1270 Sixth Avenue, New York
Capitalization: Preferred stock (par $100), 7%
cumulative and convertible, (100,000 shares author-
ized, 64,304 outstanding. Common stock, $.01 par,
1,400,000 shares authorized, 1,206,381 outstanding.
Practically all of common stock controlled by
Radio-Keith-Orpheum.
Dividend: $8.75 in 1938; $8.75 in 1939.
PRICE RANGE OF PREFERRED STOCK
Earned
Year High Low Per Sh.
1939 100J4 85
1938 91 63 $15.50
1937 110 80 20.23
1936
1935
1934
1933
1932
1931
1930
1929
1928
1927
1926
1925
110
80
19.24
90H
34
6.27
37^
20
2.74D
25
8
9.99D
30
7
21.06D
ioi 'A
10
2.83D
150
85
7.04
138
70
8.19D
160
7S'A
6.90D
25.00
38.88
37.34
D— Deficit.
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET, JANUARY 1, 1939
Assets
Current Assets: Cash, $2,832,777.73; Notes and accounts receivable, less reserve, $72,039.52;
Accrued interest, $822.99 $ 2,905,640.24
Capital Assets: Land, $10,454,706.12; Buildings, equipment and improvements as revalued as
at January 1, 1932, together with subsequent additions at cost: Buildings and equipment,
$15,740,052.25, Less — Reserve for depreciation, $10,028,013.22, total, $5,712,039.03; Lease-
hold improvements and equipment, $9,812,295.86, Less — Amortization, $5,217,990.98, total,
$4,594,304.88; Leaseholds and goodwill, $1.00 20,761,051.03
Investments in Affiliated and Other Companies: Capital stocks pledged as collateral for the
B. F. Keith Corporation first and general refunding mortgage bonds, less reserve (see
note below), $1,679,186.92; Capital stocks not pledged, less reserve, $399,515.19; Advances to
and notes and accounts receivable from affiliated companies, less reserve, $368,128.53 2,446,830.64
Other Assets: Cash and securities deposited with trustee under terms of !>ond indenture,
$102,652.22; Deposits under leases and sundry advances, $47,622.61; Mortgage receivable,
$41,337.81; Sundry investments and deposits, less reserve, $59,238.23 250,850.87
Deferred Charges: Unamortized bond discount and expense (being amortized over terms of
debts), $123,559.48; Prepaid insurance and sundry deferred expenses, $126,353.31 249,912.79
NOTE — In addition to the capital stocks pledged, as noted above, there have also been pledged
the capital stocks of certain subsidiary companies whose assets and liabilities are con-
solidated herein.
$26,614,285.57
Liabilities
Current Liabilities: (Other than accounts payable to affiliated companies and funded debt pay-
able within one year under sinking and provisions, as below), Notes Payable: Bank (due De-
cember 31, 1939 and secured by bonds, as noted below), $125,000, Others, $4,481.15, total,
$129,481.15; Accounts payable, $294,652.92; Accrued taxes, $419,837.84; Accrued interest,
$127,497.25; Other accrued expenses, $34,143.91; Mortgage instalments due within one year,
$136,890.41 $ 1,142,503 48
Accounts payable to affiliated companies 26,623-67
Rent and other deposits 86,555 49
Deferred accounts payable 10,573.-31
Funded Debt: B. F. Keith Corporation: First and general refunding mortgage, twenty-year
6% gold bonds. Series A (less $73,000 in treasury), $5,012,000; First and general refund-
ing mortgage 6% bonds, Series B, $1,000,000, Less — Deposited as collateral for notes pay-
able, $1,000,000, total, nil; Keith Memorial Theater Corporation first mortgage leasehold,
fifteen-year sinking fund 6% gold bonds (less $45,000 in treasury), $805,000; Other mort-
gage bonds and mortgages, including standing demand mortgages of $168,425, $2,895,891.64;
Notes payable to bank (maturing after one year and secured by bonds as noted above), $750,-
989
000; Total funded debt (payable within one year under sinking fund provisions, $200,185.
of which bonds of a principal amount of $118,000 are in treasury) 9,462,891.64
Deferred income 15,643.33
Reserves: For discount on bonds purchased and held in treasury, $13,622.50; For taxes and
contingencies, $653,553.32 667,175.82
C apitol Stock: Preferred 7% cumulative convertible (entitled in liquidation to $110 per share
and accrued dividends): Authorized and issued — -64,304 shares of $100 each (dividends
paid to March 31, 1936— arrears $19.25 per share, or $1,237,852), $6,430,400; Common:
Authorized — 1,400,000 shares of par value of one cent each, issued and outstanding —
1,206,381 shares, $12,063.81 6,442,463.81
Surplus: Capital surplus, per statement attached, $7,868,888.05; Operating surplus, per
statement attached (see note appended to statement), $890,966 8,759,855.02
Contingent Liabilities: Pending lawsuits against the companies; amount of liability not determin-
able. Keith-Albee-Orpheum Corporation and a subsidiary company have guaranteed per-
formance of the terms of various contracts made by affiliated companies.
$26,614,285.57
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF PROFIT AND LOSS
For the Year Ending December 31, 1938
Income: Theater admissions, $13,171,210.42; Rents and other income, $1,757,677.44 $14,928, 887.8«
Expenses: Film service, $3,801,583.76; Artists' salaries and production expenses. $436,368.30;
Other salaries and wages, $3,145,980.95; Operating expenses and theater overhead, $5,-
254,886.96 12,638,819.97
$ 2,290,067.89
Deduct — Depreciation and amortization of capital assets 781,167.42
$ 1.508.900.47
Other Income: Dividends received on investments in other companies (including approximately
$40,000 not represented by current year's earnings), $280,027.06; Interest earned, $16,386.20;
Recoveries on notes and accounts receivable written off in prior vears, $8,929.14; Sundry
other income, $26,886.30 332,227.70
$ 1,841.128.17
Other Charges: Interest and discount, $580,018.65; Losses on capital assets, $3,257.36; Provision
for losses of affiliated companies not consolidated (Note — Unrealized profits of approximately
$115,000 have not been taken up), $56,103.80; Sundry other charges, $13,186.77 652,566.58
$ 1,188,561.59
Provision for income and excess profits taxes (less taxes on bond discount charged to surplus
account) 191,565.69
Net Profit for the Year $ 996,995.90
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF OPERATING SURPLUS
For the Year Ending December 31, 1938
Balance ("deficit), January 1, 1938 $ 168,343.93
Credits: Net profit for the year ending December 31, 1938. per statement attached, $996,995.90;
Discount on bonds retired, less Federal taxes thereon, $30,565; Reversal of provision for loss
under lease, $18,750; Liquidating dividend from affiliated company, the investment in which
is carried at a nominal amount. $13,000 1.059,310.90
Balance (surplus), December 31, 1938. . $ 890,966.97
Note — Dividends on preferred stock amounting to $2,025,576 have been paid out of capital sur-
plus to December 31. 1938 in accordance with resolutions of the Board of Directors. These
dividends and possibly certain other charges and credits to capital surplus should be con-
sidered in determining the amount of "consolidated net earnings of the corporation subsequent
to January 1, 1928" for the purposes set out in the Cerificate of Incorporation.
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF CAPITAL SURPLUS
For the Year Ending December 31, 1938
Balance, January 1, 1938 (after deducting dividends on preferred stock amounting to $1,462,916
paid out of capital surplus in 1936 and 1937 in accordance with resolutions of the Board
of Directors) $ 8,431,548.05
Dividends on preferred stock paid out of capital surplus during the year in accordance with
resolutions of the Board of Directors (declared prior to the elimination of the operating
deficit on the books of the parent company) 562,660.00
Balance, December 31, 1938 $ 7,868,888.05
LOEWS, INCORPORATED
Incorporated Oct. 18, 1919, in Delaware
General Office, 1540 Broadway, New York %
As of Jan. 3, 1938, Loew's, Inc. absorbed Metro- owned or controlled. Move was voted by the
Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures, Metro-Goldwyn Distrib- board of directors to simplify the tax problems of
uting CoTp. and all other subsidiaries it formerly the organization- Combined organization includes
990
film production, distribution, exhibition, vaude-
ville, legitimate stage production, etc. Controlling
stock interest in the company is held by Film
Securities Corp. incorporated in Delaware, Oct. 18,
1919.
Year
1939
1938
1937
1936
1935
1934
1933
1932
1931
1930
1929
1928
1927
1926
1925
1924
1923
1922
1921
1920
Capitalization: Preferred stock, no par, $6.50
cumulative, 300,000 shares authorized, 136,722 out-
standing. Common stock, no par, 4,000,000 shares
authorized, 1,665,713, outstanding.
Dividend: Common, $2.50 in 1939; Preferred,
$6.50 annually.
STOCK
PRICE
RANGE
Common
Earned
Preferred
Earned
High
Low
Per. Sh.
High
Low
Per. Sh.
S4'/2
3oy2
109^4
1015-8
62 Yz
33
$5.65**
111 !4
99
$72.59**
435/j;
8.62*
110
99-54
105.51*
■ 67 ya
43
6.73**
108'/8
104;/,
81.02**
31J4
4.43
IO854
102
54.87
. 37
20 H
4.50
105
72
54.39
. 36'A
&•/*
2.15
78/8
35
29.15
• 37y4
13'A
4.80
80
39
56.67
23%
7.43
98
56
81.47
. 9sy4
4154
9.65
1123-8-
85 54
99.48
. 84H
32
7.91
11054
80
79.22'
. 77
49}£
5.98
HO5-8
57.12
46 A
34'A
6.35
6.17
. 44J4
22
4.69
15 K8
2.89
• 2VA
14
2.28
. 2354
WA
2.14
10
1.70
14J4
1.94
* 6 months.
"* Fiscal yecr.
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET, AUGUST 31, 1939
Assets
Current and Working: Cash in banks and on hand, $13,781,161.11; United States Gov-
ernment and agency securities — at cost: market value $3,370,757.82, $3,380,651.43 $17,161,812.54
Notes receivable, $48,686.47; Accounts receivable, $2,447,689.46 2,496,375.93
Inventories — At cost: Film productions in process, $18,365,949.50; Film productions com-
pleted— not released, $2,139,699.21; Film productions released, after amortization, $18.-
406,351.96, total, $38,912,000.67; Books and rights, after reserve of $1,400,833.51,
$4,651,614.70; Film advertising accessories, $456,361.63; Theater and studio supplies,
$334,161.30 44,354,138.30
Due from partly owned subsidiary and affiliated corporations 64,254.41
Advances: To outside producers, secured by film productions, $1,443,660.17; Mortgage and
interest payments, $155,115.12 1,598,775.29
Total Current and Working Assets $65,675,356.47
Investments: Partly owned subsidiary and affiliated corporations: Securities, $6,002,633.16; Ad-
vances, _ $2,21 5,967.75, total, $8,218,600.91; Investments in and advances to allied corpora-
tions, including interest in Gaumont-British Picture Corporation, Ltd. through holding
companies— at cost — $3,500,330.26, $4,519,484.57; Other investments, $1,923,258.15; Sinking
fund requirements anticipated — at cost, $137,660.41; Deposits on leases and contracts,
$979,079.06 15,778,083.10
Fixed Assets: Land, $28,973,217.66; Buildings and equipment, $66,101,676.36; Leaseholds,
$5,484,762.43, total, $100,559,656.45: Less— Reserve for depreciation $27,580,640.96 72,979,015.49
Deferred Charges: Prepayments and general, $1,084,634.88; Bond discount and expense,
$1,306,116.14; Preliminary and development expense — foreign, $510,002.65 2,900,753.67
$157,333,208.73
Liabilities and Capital
Current: Accounts payable and accruals, $4,819,365.12; Accrued interest, $166,566.91; Domestic
and foreign taxes, $4,143,832.07; Due to foreign banks, $309,356.53 $ 9,439,120.63
Sinking fund and instalment payments due within one year: Loew's Incorporated 3J4% sink-
ing fund debentures, $750,000; Loew's Incorporated 2 54% promissory note, $750,000;
Bonds and mortgages of wholly owned subsidiaries (including bonds called for payment
January 15, 1940— $1,402,500), $1,828,316.57 3.328,316.57
Total Current Liabilities $12,767,437,-20
Securities from tenants, film rentals and other deferred credits 942,618.47
Reserve for contingencies 215,000.00
Funded Debt: Loew's Incorporated 3K% sinking fund debentures — maturity 1946, $12,331,-
000; Loew's Incorporated 254% promissory notes — payable semi-annually February 1.
1940 to August 1, 1944, $3,750,000; First lien 3K% bonds of wholly owned subsidiary
— Maturity 1954, $11,250,000; Bonds and mortgages of other wholly owned subsidiaries,
including open mortgages and those maturing within one year, which usually are renewed —
$560,304.01, $8,992,954.42, total funded debt, $36,323,954.42; Less— Sinking fund and
instalment payments due within one year, $3,328,316.57 32,995,637.85
Wholly owned subsidiaries' preferred stock 1,319,900.00
Capital Stock: Preferred — No Par Value: Originally authorized — 300,000 shares; Outstand-
ing— 136,722 shares — $6.50 cumulative (entitled upon liquidation to $105 per share —
aggregate $14,355,810) 12,920,229.00
Common — No Par Value: Authorized— 4,000,000 shares; Outstanding — 1,665,713 shares 43,833,210.64
Earned surplus 52,339,175.57
$157,333,208.73
991
CONSOLIDATED PROFIT AND LOSS STATEMENT
Fiscal Year Ended August 31, 1939
Operating Revenues: Theater receipts, rentals an'] sales of films and accessories, $122,577,-
542.84; Kent income, $2,541,801.58; Miscellaneous $1,222,380.40; ($14,175,624.80 od opera-
tions of partly owned corporations) $126,341,724.82
Operating and General Expense: Theaters and office buildings, including film rental expense.
$32,209,153.18; Distribution and other film expenses, $12,860,741.47; Amortization and
write-off of film costs, $46,692,078.89; Film advertising accessories, $879,121.40; Outside
producers' share of film rentals, $5,148,216.65; General and administrative. $1,917,131.69 99,706,443.28
- $26,635,281.54
Depreciation of buildings and equipment, excluding studio depreciation charged to film costs
$(1,038,418.67 on properties of partly owned corporations), $3,815,096.94; Real estate
and other taxes, $5,353,050.77; Rent on leased properties, $3,634,938.82 12,803,086.53
~. • , , $13,832,195.01
Other Income: Dividends received. $139,952.80; Interest and discount earned, $50,792.01;
Discount on securities retired from sinking funds, $118,427; Reduction of reserve for
contingencies, $400,000; Net recovery under court decree re compensation, $312,987.82;
Miscellaneous, $38,705.94 1,060,865.57
$14,893,060.58
Other Deductions: Interest on debentures, $448,207.75; Interest on bonds and mortgages
(of which $585,779.44 is on bonds and mortgages of partly owned corporations), $1,471,-
471.31; Preferred dividends — subsidiary and affiliated corporations, $88,805.44; Amortiza-
tion of debt discount and expense, $267,160.80; Writedowns of investments and ad-
vances, $278,663.45 2,554,308.75
Net Income Before Taxes $12,338 751.83
Federal income taxes 1,958,851.13
Net Income After Taxes $10,379,900.70
Minority interests' share 538,370.09
Loew's Incorporated Share of Net Income — All Corporations $ 9,841.530.61
CONSOLIDATED EARNED SURPLUS ACCOUNT
Balance— September 1, 1938 $47,787,157.15
Loew's Incorporated share of net income (as above) 9,841,530.61
$57,628,687.76
Less: Undistributed income — partly owned corporations. $303,254.19; Dividends paid by
Loew's Incorporated: Preferred, $888,693; Common, $4,097,565 5,289,512.19
Balance— August 31, 1939 $52,339,175.57
MONOGRAM PICTURES CORP.
Producer and Distributor
General Office, 1270 Sixth Ave., New York, N. Y.
Organized in 1937, Monogram produces pictures
and releases them through company owned ex-
changes in New York, Philadelphia and Washing-
ton and through individual franchise holders in
27 exchange centers.
Capitalization: Authorized. 1.000,000 shares of
$1 par value of which 300,834 shares are re-
served for exercise of options to purchase capital
stock. Issued, 360,586 shares.
Dividends : None paid.
PRICE RANGE OF STOCK
Year
1939
1938
High
Wt
3%
Low
VA
Earned
Per Sh.
PARAMOUNT PICTURES, INC.
Holding and Operating Company
Producer, Distributor, Exhibitor
Incorporated July 19, 1916, in New York
General Offices, 1501 Broadway, New York
In reorganization of Paramount Publix Corp. Pictures, Inc., was formed as the new parent
approved by the court in Tune, 1935, Paramount company. Originally company was organized in
992
1916 as Famous Players-Lasky Corp., a merger
of Famous Players Film Co., Paramount Pictures
Corp., and Jesse L. Lasky Feature Play Co., Inc.
Changed to Paramount-Famous Lasky on April 1,
1927, and to Paramount Publix Corp., on April
24, 1930.
New capitalization: 20-year 6% sinking fund
debentures, $27,110,000; cumulative convertible 6%
first Preferred stock ($100 par), 196,055 shares
authorized, 142,171 outstanding; cumulative con-
vertible 6% second Preferred stock ($10 par),
579,400 shares authorized, 555,100 outstanding;
Common stock ($1) par, 4,467,149 shares author-
ized, 2,465,900 shares outstanding.
In recapitalization, holders of old stock re-
ceived one share of new common plus warrants
for each four shares of old common stock.
Dividends: Common, 15 cents in 1939; 1st Pre-
ferred, $6.00 in 1939; 2nd Preferred, $.60 in 1939.
PRICE RANGE OF STOCK
COMMON
Earned
Year High Low Per Sh.
1939 145* 6%
1938 13** SH $.55
1937 28 J4 8/ 1.78**
1936 25 7*A 1.18
1935 12 8 .79
1ST PREFERRED
Earned
Year High Low Per Sh.
1939 107J4 72
1938 103 65 $17.82
1937 200/ 80/ 37.05**
1936 174 59 18.51
1935 lOlfi" 67 12.61
2ND PREFERRED
1939 15 J* ?tt
1938 1354 6H $3.03
1937 26H 8 8.23**
1936 22H 85* 4.08
1935 1454 9'A 2.57
PRICE RANGE OF OLD STOCK
1935 SH 2/ $.60***
1934 Sys 1H X
1933 2H 'A t
1932 11/ 1/ 6.30*
1931 50<4 5/ 2.02
1930 77/ 34/ 6.15
1929 7S'A 35 6.36
1928 S6H 47-4 4.22
(Old stock, before 3-for-l split)
1928 153*4 111*4
1927 115 J* 92 12.85
1920 127/ 103/ 10.82
1925 114^4 90/ 18.39
1924 98/ 61 20.08
1923 93 52 14.96
1922 107 76/ 14.70
1921 S2'A 44SA 18.95
1920 95 40 21.37
* Estimated deficit,
t $5,692,000 operating net.
t $6,000,000 approx. operating net.
** 9 months.
*** Estimated in 6 months to June 30.
PATHE FILM CORP.
Holding Company
Incorporated Dec. 28, 1914, in New York
General Office, 30 Rockefeller Plaza, New York
Company incorporated as Pathe Exchange, Inc.,
in 1914 as a continuation of the business organized
in this country in 1904 (started in France in
1898). Certain major assets sold to RKO in 1931.
In reorganization effected in August, 1935, name
changed from Pathe Exchange, Inc., to Pathe
Film Corp.
Under a plan approved by the stockholders of
Pathe Film Corp. on Feb. 16, 1939, a new com-
pany, Pathe Laboratories, Inc., was formed. To
this company were transferred the two laboratory
properties, Monogram Pictures stock, Radio-Keith-
Orpheum notes, capital stock and properties of all
subsidiary companies and other Pathe assets ex-
cept 3,500 shares of Du Pont Film Mfg. Corp.
stock. In addition, Pathe borrowed $200,000 on
the Du Pont stock and transferred it to the new
company for operating capital. In return Pathe
received 11,620 shares of Pathe Laboratories, Inc.
— total amount of outstanding stock. The new com-
pany assumed all obligations and liabilities of
Pathe except a bank indebtedness of $275,000. Half
of the new company's stock was distributed to Pathe
Film's Common stockholders on March 29, 1939, in
the ratio of 1 share for each 100 shares held. The
remaining 50 par cent was distributed on April 28,
1939.
Capitalization: Common, $1 par, 2,000,000 shares
authorized, 581,679 outstanding; $7 convertible
preferred stock, no par, 30.000 shares authorized.
7,734 outstanding. (40,215 shares of common stock
are reserved for conversion of 8,043 shares of
preferred stock. The preferred stock is redeem-
able at the option of the corporation at any time
on 60 days notice at $110 per share and accrued
dividends, and entitled in liquidation to $100 per
share and accrued dividends).
Dividends: Preferred $7.00 in 1937.
PRICE RANGE OF STOCK
(Following reorganization)
Common Earned 7% Preferred Earned
Year
High
Low
Per Sh.
High
Low
Per Sh.
1939
13/8
SH
1938
14*4
3/
$'.04
$2*.76t
1937
10J4
4
.40t
103
92"
34.38
1936
HZ*
6H
.22
22.87
1935
7'/4
m
.33*
OLD PATHE
EXCHANGE INC., STOCKS
Common
Earned
Class
"A"
Earned
Year
High
Low
Per Sh.
High
Low
Per Sh.
1936
WA
6*4
D
1935
1/2
/
D
1754
S
""d
1934
V*
$1,181)
24*4
WA
$.59D
1933
2/
H
.68D
1454
154
1.22
1932
l 'A
54
1.21D
SH
154
.72D
1931
2/8
54
1.67D
8/s
15*
2.54D
1930
9
1/
3.21D
19/8
2%
8.52D
1929
14 '/8
2/
.60D
30
4/
1.74
1928
15
2
1.07D
34
854
.49
1927
12
3*4
50
1854
8.81D
8% Preferred
1934
$9.75D
1929
$62.41
1933
3.35D
1928
23.30
1932
23.46D
1927
267. 56D
1931
68.59D
1926
106.07
1930
249.66D
1925
168.80
D— Deficit.
•From Aug. 15 to Dec. 28, 1935.
993
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET, JANUARY 1, 1939
Assets
Current and Working Assets: Cash in banks and on hand, $79,846.91; Notes and loans re
ceivable from producers, $73,465.59; Accounts receivable: Monogram Pictures Corpora-
tion, $182,985.06; Other trade customers, less reserve of $17,558.48. $204,275.91; Mis-
cellaneous, $15,567.61, $402,828.58; Inventories of prints, raw film and supplies (certified
to by responsible officials as to quantities and condition) at cost or market whichever is
lower, $102,307.37 $ 658,448.45
Unliquidated advances to outside producers on released productions,, $191,883.74; Less — Re-
serves for doubtful advances, $172,175.02 19,708.72
Investments: Investment in 3,500 shares (35%) of the capital stock of Du Pont Film Manufac-
turing Corporation, at amount acquired from predecessor company, pledged to secure bank
loan (see contra), $2,857,143; Investment in 65,866 2-3 shares of capital stock of Monogram
Pictures Corporation at cost (see note), $197,600; Miscellaneous investments, $4,300 3,059,043.00
Land ($24,788.58) buildings, machinery and equipment, furniture and fixtures and lease-
hold improvements, $475,501.87; Less — Reserves for depreciation and amortization, $136,159.26 339,342.61
Deposits to secure contracts 5,125.00
Notes receivable from Radio-Keith-Orpheum Corporation (debtor, in proceedings for the re-
organization of a corporation)* 48,360.00
*$248,000 principal amount of past due notes at amount acquired from predecessor company.
Deferred charges 49,338.75
Note — No provision has been made for the excess of the cost of investment in these shares over
the quoted market value thereof at December 31, 1938 which amounted to about $65,000.
$4,179,366.53
Current Liabilities: Note payable to bank, secured by investment in Du Pont Film Manufactur-
ing Corporation (see contra), $275,000; Accounts payable, $211,177.45; Sundry accruals,
$21,817.33; Owing to producers, $504.53; Reserve for Federal income tax, $6,016.43 $ 514,515.74
Reserve for contingencies 17,978.52
Proportion of capital stock of subsidiary company applicable to minority stockholders 1.00
Capital Stock: Authorized: 2,000,000 shares of common stock of par value $1 each. 30,000
shares of $7 cumulative convertible preferred stock without par value. Issued and out-
standing: 581,679.42 shares of common stock after deducting 3,415.63 shares held in treas-
ury, $581,679.42; 7,796 shares of $7 cumulative convertible preferred stock after deducting,
at cost, 247 shares held in treasury which were acquired for $24,285.09, $780,014.91 1,361,694.33
Capital surplus, per exhibit B 1,718,539.33
Surplus, per exhibit B 566.637.61
Contingent Liabilities: Under pending litigation — amount indeterminable. In respect of leases
assigned by predecessor company to Radio-Keith-Orpheum Corporation n 1931 (assumed)
maximum amount estimated by company. $225,000
$4,179,366.53
STATEMENT OF SURPLUS AND CAPITAL SURPLUS
For the Year Ending December 31, 1938
Surplus: Balance, December 31, 1937 $ 544,245.50
Add — Profit for the year ending December 31, 1938, per Exhibit C 77,158.36
$ 621,403.86
Dividends paid on $7 cumulative preferred stock to and including January 1, 1939 *54,766.25
Balance, December 31, 1938, Carried to Balance Sheet, Exhibit A $ 566,637.61
"Includes $13,643 paid to transfer agent on December 27, 1938 for payment to stockholders
on January 3, 1939.
Capital Surplus: Balance, December 31, 1937. $ 1,737,212.32
Deduct — Excess of cost of common stock, acquired and held in treasury, over par value thereof 18,672.99
Balance, December 31, 1938, Carried to Balance Sheet, Exhibit A $ 1.718,539.33
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF PROFIT AND LOSS
For the Year Ending December 31, 1938
Film developing, printing and sales (net), $989,887.75; Film rental income (net of dis-
tributors' allowances), $21,982.76 $ 1,011,870.51
Deduct — Cost of sales and services: Producers' participations, $43,553.77; Operating expenses
(other than depreciation and selling, general and administrative expenses), $865,369.93;
Depreciation, $32,502.66; Selling, general and administrative expenses, $217,398.76; Loss
from other operations (net), $2,333.68 1,161,158.80
Loss from Operations $ 149,288.29
Add — Other income: Dividends received from Du Pont Film Manufacturing Corporation, $245,-
000; Other dividends received, $224; Interest and discount earned, $3,888.51; Miscellaneous,
$9,430.35 258,542.86
Profit Before Other Items Shown Below $ 109,254.57
Deduct — Other charges: Interest and discount expense, $4,147.19; Development expense,
$21,205.41; Miscellaneous, $5,543.61 30,896.21
Profit Before Providing for Federal Income Taxes $ 78,358.36
Deduct — Provision for Federal income taxes 1,200.00
Profit for the Year Ending December 31, 1938, Carried to Surplus, Exhibit B $ 77,158.36.
994
RADIO CORPORATION OF AMERICA
Holding Company
Incorporated Oct. 17, 1919, in Delaware
— - General Office, 233 Broadway, New York -
Capitalization: Under a recapitalization plan
adopted by stockholders on Apr. 7, 1936, the A
preferred stock was retired by cash payment and all
but 2 per cent of the B preferred had been turned
in on Nov. 5, 1937, for a new first preferred stock
and common stock. The new capitalization is
18,500,000 shares of common stock of which 13,-
881.016 is outstanding and 920,300 authorized
shares of first preferred of which 900,844 shares
are outstanding.
Organized by General Electric Co. Acquired
stations of Marconi Wireless Tel. Co. of America.
Owns numerous patents upon which royalties are
collected from manufacturers. In October, 1928,
company received 500,000 shares of Class "B"
stock of Radio-Keith-Orpheum Corp. in return for
use of Photophone and for contract under which
National Broadcasting Co., affiliated with Radio
Corp., will broadcast R-K-O programs. Owns
Radio-Victor Corp., of America. Affiliated with
General Motors and Westinghouse Electric in a
radio manufacturing company formed in Sep-
tember, 1929. In January, 1932, increased its con-
trolling interest in RKO to about 70 per cent.
In October, 1935, sold part of its controlling
interest in RKO, and gave option on balance, to
Atlas Corp. and Lehman Bros. Option was not
taken up.
Dividends: Arrears on Class "A" to end of
1934 cleared up by action of board on Jan. 18,
1935, payable Feb. 19 to stock of record Jan. 29.
1935.
Arrears on "B" or common stock to Dec. 31,
1937 cleared up by action of the board on Nov. 5,
1937, payable Dec. 21 to holders of record Dec. 10.
Common, 20 cents in 1938; Preferred, $3.50 in
1939.
PRICE RAN<;E OV STOCK
Year
1939
1938
1937
1936
1935
1934
1933
1932
1931
1930
1929
1929
1928
1939
1938
1937
1936
Year
1936
1935
1934
1933
1932
1931
1930
1929
Pfd. '
High
62/2
565*6
40
mi
55/s
57
57
Co
Hi eh
...
• ■ ■ 9 Mi
... 12 J*
. .. 1454
• .. 13«
... 9'A
... 1254
... 1354
... 27/2
. .. 69^
. . .114*4
Old Common
...549 333
...420 85 54
New Preferred
Low
s
4*4
434
934
4
4*4
3
2 'A
S'A
UH
26
•A"
Low
50 ' '
23 54
135-4
10
20
47
50
67%
■ 66%
. 80
. 80
Earned
Per Sh.
$5^65*
8.57
1.17
2.291)
1.94
13.97
40.17
1928 60
5454 50.14
5354
37/4
44
6854
Pfd. '
High
10854
92
46
27
23*4
60
85
82 54
"B"
Low
35 54
15
654
3*4
9'A
31 'A
62
Earned
Per Sh.
$.12*
.30*
.21
,01D
.10
.47D
.49D
.34D
.02
1.59
15.98
$4.60"
7.17*
6.85
Earned
Per Sh.
$1.92**
4.84
3.28
3.02D
3.321)
.790
5.17
18.06
D— Deficit. * 9 Months
6 Months to June 30.
RADIO-KEITH-ORPHEUM CORP.
Holding Company
Incorporated Oct. 25, 1928, in Maryland
General Office, 1270 Sixth Ave., New York
Under the plan of reorganization each common
share is entitled to one-sixth new share plus a
warrant to buy within five years one-half share at
$10 a share, or buy within ten years one share
at $15. Each $100 of debentures is entitled to
one share of new preferred and five common, while
-ecured creditors were paid in common at $10 a
share. New preferred is 6%, $100 par. convertible
into 8 common for 8 years. 500,000 shares of
common were offered to unsecured creditors at $3
a share, the funds going to expand working capital.
Owns RKO Productions (Radio Pictures) and
RKO Pathe; controls Keith-Albee-Orpheum Corp..
RKO Orpheum Circuit, RKO Proctor Corp., and
various other subsidiaries. Entire organization em-
braces production, distribution, theater operation,
vaudeville, etc.
Capitalization: Common stock, no par, author-
ized, 4,500,000 shares; outstanding 2,593.992 shares,
less 16,437 shares in treasury.
Dividends, None.
STOCK PRICL KANGE
Year
1939
1938
1937
1«36
1935
1934
1933
1932
1931
1931
1930
1929
1928
CI a
D — Deficit. * 39 weeks to Sept. 29.
Common
High
Low
Earned
Per Sh.
m
154
s*4
1*4
105-6
2 54
mi
5
$.56*
6
154
.27
454
154
1)
5 -54
1
D
7*4
154
4.47D
4
2J4
2.44 D
ss A.
Stock
24 'A
%
so
14J4
V.44
mi
12
.63
51/
34/,
.82
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF PROFIT AND LOSS
For the Year Ending December 31, 1938
Income: Theater admissions, $22,951,936.21; Film rentals and sales, $30,467,583.43; Rents
and other income, $2,855,898.93 $56,275 ,4 lg.S7
995
Expenses: Film service. S6.350.648. 34 ; Artists' salaries and production expenses, $1,157,-
166.93; Other salaries and wages, $5,349,660.11; Cost of film sales and service, $27,029,-
046.82; Film selling and general expenses, $4,261,847.17; Other operating and general ex-
penses, $8,945,357.50 53,093,726.87
$ 3,181.691.70
Other Income: Equity in profits (net) of subsidiary companies not consolidated operating in
foreign territories, including exchange adjustments, $511,258.38: Dividends received on in-
vestments in other companies (including approximately $25,000 in excess of current year's
earnings of affiliated companies). $232,277.06; Interest earned. $36,656.50; Trailer income,
$94,165.94; Sale of junk film. $47,950.74; Forfeited deposits, $34,789.90; Recoveries on
notes and accounts receivable written off in prior years, $9,923.34; Sundrv other income,
$94,566.24 1,061,388.10
$ 4,243,079.80
Other Charges: Interest and discount, $2,008,405.37; Depreciation of capital assets and amorti-
zation of leaseholds (other than $243,050.57 in respect of studio properties and other equip-
ment charged to film costs). $1,602,164.64; Loss on investments and capital assets, $30,353.42:
Provision for losses of affiliated companies not consolidated (Note — Unrealized profits of ap-
proximately $113,000 have not been taken up), $26,643.34; Participation of officers and em-
ployees in profits, $47,782.48; Trustee's administrative expenses. $177,246.82; Sundry other
charges (including adjustment of minority interest in subsidiary company — $1,312.32), $49,-
873.61 3,942,469.68
$ 300,610.12
Provision for income and excess profits taxes (less taxes on bond discount charged to surplus
account) 282,005.69
Net Profit for the ear. Before Providing for Dividends of $297,801 Accrued in the Year
1938 on Preferred 77c Cumulative Convertible Stock of Keith-Albee-Orpheum Corpora-
tion, a Subsidiary Company $ 18,604.43
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET, JANUARY 1, 1939
Assets
Current and Working Assets: Cash (including $598,678.50 cash of the parent company the
use of which is subject to certain restrictions), $7,652,741.93; Notes and accounts receiv-
able, less reserve. $637,420.71; Accounts receivable from officers and employes, $31,166.81;
Accrued interest. $1,406.11; Advances to outside producers, less reserve, $551,767.58; In-
ventories: Completed pictures, not released, at cost, $724,106.97. released pictures, at cost less
amortization, $3,823,738.02, productions in progress, at cost, $4.415.554.85.. accessories and
supplies. $131,237.39, total, $9,094,637.23; Scenarios and continuities not produced, at cost,
less amounts written off. S250.227.35 . $18,219,367.72
Capital Assets: Land (revalued in the case of certain subsidiary companies as at February
18, 1937), $21,502,053.53; Buildings, equipment and improvements as revalued as at Janu-
ary 1, 1932 and as subsequently revalued in the case of certain subsidiary companies as at
February 18, 1937. together with additions at cost: Buildings and equipment on land owned
and on land partlv owned and partly leased, $36,096,248.49. Less — Reserve for depreciation.
$21,731,120.56. total. $14,365,127.93; Leasehold improvements and equipment. $13,923,981.65,
Less — Amortization. $7,925,513.50, total, $5,998,468.15: Leaseholds, goodwill and contracts
$5,850,267.92 •• •• 47,715,917.53
Investments in Affiliated and Other Companies: Equity in net assets of subsidiary companies
not consolidated operating in foreign territories, subject to contingent liabilities reported, per
supplementary statement attached. $1,932,925.45; Capital stocks of affiliated and other com-
panies, less reserve. SI. 220.260.59 ; Advances to and mortgages of affiliated companies, less
reserve. $107,390.25 3.260.576.29
Other Assets: Subscriptions to debentures and stock, including interest. S169.872.97; Cash and
securities deposited with trustees under terms of bond indentures. $162,642.91; Deposits under
contracts and sundry advances, less reserve. $174,786.23: Mortgage receivable, $41,337.81;
Sundry investments and deposits, less reserve. $79,389.63 628,029.55
Deferred Charges: Unamortized bond discount and expense (being amortized over terms of
debts). $162,773.77; Prepaid insurance and sundrv deferred charges, $414,956.76; General
publicity deferred. $285,598.21: Film production charges deferred. S242.459.37 1,105,788.11
Total Assets $70,929,679.20
Deficit- Capital deficit, per statement attached. S10.775.S19.65 ; Operating deficit, per state-
ment attached. $13.656.276.83 24,432.096.48
$95,361,775.68
Liabilities
Current Liabilities: (Other than funded debt payable within one year under sinking fund pro-
visions, as follows): Note payable to bank, due December 31. 1939 and secured by bonds,
S125.000; Notes and trade acceptances payable (including $2,814,500 in default), $3,110,783.17;
Accounts payable. $1,632,043.79; Accounts payable to foreign subsidiary companies not
consolidated, per supplementary statement attached, S270.211.67; Accounts payable to other
affiliated and subsidiarv companies not consolidated, S14.462.09; Accounts payable to officers
and emploves. $13,190.'81; Accrued taxes. $950,159.99; Accrued interest, $4,937,468; Other
accrued expenses. $313,613.43; Mortgage instalments payable within one year, $391,735.05 . . $11,758,668.00
Deposits: Collections in respect of film service rendered or to be rendered, unapplied, $478,968.-
09; Rent and other deposits, S107.076.83 586,045.52
Remittances from foreign subsidiarv companies, held in abeyance, per supplementary statement
attached I«25,££i£
Deferred notes and accounts payable ,','Vl ," 330,3-0.-6
Ten-year 6% gold debentures, dated December 1, 1931 (declared due by virtue of defaults under ^ 600 000 00
996
Other Funded Debt: (Payable within one year $341,285, exclusive of standing demand mort-
gages of $168,425, amounts which may be due by default, and amounts which are to be
amortized in accordance with terms of certain agreements) : Mortgage bonds and mortgages
(less $279,642.74 bonds and mortgage certificates in treasury), $21,056,0.15.96; Notes pay-
able to bank maturing after one year and secured by bonds, $750,000 21,806,035.96
General claims allowed pursuant to court orders (unsecured) 6.087,426.79
Deferred income 60,533.11
Reserves: For discount on bonds and mortgage certificates purchased and held in treasury,
$35,470.70; For taxes and contingencies, $987,906.11; For abandonment of unnecessary
properties and rehabilitation of theaters (unapplied balance), $1,302,351.02; For revaluation
of capital assets (unapplied balance), $10,377,864.56 12,703.592.39
Capital Stocks of Subsidiary Company in the hands of the Public: Preferred 7% cumulative
convertible stock of Keith-Albee-Orpheum Corporation (entitled in liquidation to $110 per
share and accrued dividends) — dividends paid to March 31, 1936 — arrears $19.25 per share,
or $818,952.75 on 42,543 shares: 64.304 shares of $100 each outstanding, less 21.761 shares
eliminated on consolidation of accounts, $4,254,300; Equity in common stock of Keith-Albee-
Orpheum Corporation, $9,917.22 4.264.217.22
Capital Stock: Common stock without par value: Authorized — 4,500,000 shares, issued (includ-
ing shares reserved for exchange of Class A stock) — 2,593,99154 shares, less 16,437 shares
in treasury 25,057,580.97
$95,361,775.68
STANLEY COMPANY OF AMERICA
(.Subsidiary of Wamtr Bros.)
Exhibitor and Theater Operator
Incorporated June 2, 1919, in Delaware
= General Office, 321 West 44th St., New York
Capitalization: Common stock, 1,000,000 shares, (Stricken from list
$5 par, authorized, 904,846 outstanding. Over jg^j
99 per cent of common stock owned by Warner
Bros. 1930
PRICE RANGE OF STOCK 1929
Earned
Year High Low Per. Sh
1939
1928
1927
1938 $2.06** 1926
1937 2.46 1925
1936 1.61
1935 .45 1924
1934 2.86D 1923
1933 .... 2.70D
1932 1.94D * 35 weeks. D — Deficit. *» Year ended Aug. 27.
March 10, 1931)
1.88
73y2 25
1.50
45 20
.33*
69^ 30^
1.23
90 51
3.47
90yi 49
3.01
3.81
1.86
2.04
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET, AUGUST 26, 1939
Assets
Current Assets: Cash, $508,743.87; Uue from Circuit Settlement Corporation (receiving
and disbursing agent), $21,951.98; Accounts receivable, less reserves of $38,319.91.
$144,475.06 $ 675,170.91
Investments in Affiliated Companies: Investments, at cost less reserves of $570,180.86,
$620,394.17; Advances, less reserves of $17,445.86, $8,701.25 629,095.42
Fixed Assets: Properties owned and equipment at cost less reserves, including reserves for
depreciation. $63,980,854.36; Properties leased and equipment, at cost less reserves for
depreciation and amortization, $6,606,887.33 70,587,741.69
Other Assets: Mortgage receivable. $215,000; Other accounts receivable, $19,008; Deposits
to secure contracts. $281,713.30; Sinking fund deposits, $10,800.24; Miscellaneous invest-
ments, $28,171.50 554,693.04
Deferred Charges: Prepaid taxes, insurance, rents and other expenses 433,740.80
Goodwill 107,969.15
$72,988,411.01
Liabilities
Current Liabilities (except as included under funded and other long term debt): Accounts
payable. $713,011.98; Accrued liabilities. $818,439.20; Reserve for Federal income taxes,
$607,623.05 ; Serial bonds, sinking fund requirements, purchase money and contractual
obligations and mortgage instalments maturing within one year (less $258,000 bonds held
in treasury), $1,160,219.56; Owing to participants, $42,316.47; Deposits, $27,825.47; Owing
to Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc. and its wholly owned subsidiary companies, $2,304,448.36 $ 5,673.884.09
Funded and Other Long Term Debt: Bond issues and mortgages maturing after one year
(less $30,800 bonds held in treasury), $20,404,879.37; Bond issues and mortgages matur-
ing within one year, subject in part to renewal, and standing demand mortgages (less $46,-
000 bonds held in treasury), $4,060,793; Purchase money and contractual obligations ma-
turing serially after one year, $87,581.59 24,553,253.96
997
Deferred Credits: Discount arising from purchase of bonds (including bonds of subsidiary
companies) held in treasury, $34,048.84; Miscellaneous, $211,349.77 245,398.01
Capital Stock: Authorized — 1,000,000 shares of common stock of par value of $5 each;
Issued and outstanding — 904.846.5 shares, including shares reserved for consolidation of
fractional scrip outstanding ; 4,524,232.50
Capital Surplus 33,044,850.92
Earned surplus, per annexed statement 4,946,790.93
Contingent Liabilities: Under pending litigation — amount indeterminable as guarantors
and/or endorsers of other mortgages, $395,000; As guarantors of leases of other com-
panies, approximate annual rentals, $70,000
$72,988,411 ,01
STATEMENT OF CONSOLIDATED PROFIT AND LOSS
AND EARNED SURPLUS
For the Year Ending August 26, 1939
Net income before other income and charges shown below $ 5,747,951.35
Deduct: Amortization and depreciation of properties, $2,332,860.86; Interest expense, $1,-
427,946.35; Provision for investments in affiliated companies (net), $4,957.64 3,765,764.85
Profit Before Other Income and Federal Income Taxes $ 1,982,186.50
Other Income: Interest earned, $21,781.26; Dividends received, $56,595 78,376.26
Profit Before Providing for Federal Income Taxes $ 2,060,562.76
Provision for Federal income taxes 326,000.00
Net Profit from Operations for the Year Ending August 26, 1939, Carried to Earned
Surplus $ 1,734,562.76
Earned surplus, August 27, 1938, $5,007,582.14; Add: Discount realized on redemption of
bonds of the company and its subsidiaries, $78,188.25; Profit on sales of capital assets,
$714.90; Profit on sale of investment in an affiliated company, $666.66, total, $79,569.81,
grand total, $5,087,151.95; Deduct: Provision for demolition of property, $65,230.78; Divi-
dend declared and paid during the year ending August 26, 1939, $1,809,693 total,
$1,874,923.78 3,212,228.17
Earned Surplus, August 26, 1939, Carried to Balance Sheet $ 4,946,790.93
TECHNICOLOR, INC.
Holding Company
Incorporated Sept. 12, 1922, in Delaware
. General Office, 15 Broad St., New York
Owns Technicolor Motion Picture Corp., Holly-
wood.
Technicolor Motion Picture Corp. is engaged
in the manufacture and developing of color film,
also owns the cameras used in the shooting of color
productions.
Capitalization: Common stock, no par, 1,500,000
shares authorized, 842,664 outstanding.
Paid dividend of $1 in 1939.
COMMON STOCK PRICE RANGE
Earned
Year High Low Per Sh.
1939 22% 9%
1938
1937
1936
1935
1934
1933
1932
1931
1930
1929
1928
26>/2
H!4
$1.25
34
14
.65*
32 y2
.65
27
1154
.04D
14K
41D
14
.43D
5!4
.77D
1554
i«
1.19D
86^
S'A
1.31
90
12
2.29
.12
8 months.
CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET JANUARY 1, 1939
Assets
Current Assets: Cash, $3,315,337.61; Trade accounts receivable — less reserve of $5,000,
$30,641.79; Inventories — at lower of cost or market: Raw materials, $130,128.97, Films in
process and finished, $44,186.55, total, $174,315.52 $ 3,870,294.92
Investments and Other Assets: Capital stcck (50.31%) of Technicolor, Ltd., London, England,
$276,555.48; Notes receivable (for customer contract deposits) and accrued interest, $78,-
418.75; Cash surrender value of insurance on life of officer, $28,909.97; Employee and sundry
accounts receivable, $6,230.11 390,114.31
Property, Plant and Equipment: Land, buildings, machinery and equipment, $2,623,252.62;
Less reserves for depreciation, $1,087,842.79 1,535,409.83
Research, development, patents and good-will, $4,054,881.74; Less reserves for amortization,
$1,939,761.35 2,115,120.39
Deferred Charges: Inventory of supplies, prepaid insurance, taxes, etc 56,326.79
$ 7,967,266.24
Liabilities
Current Liabilities: Accounts payable, $248,287.13; Property purchase obligation (secured by
mortgage) $21,000; Due on contract for plant construction, $51,275.68; Customers deposits:
On current orders, $98,085.93, on contracts, $200,000, total, $298,085.93; Accrued Federal
capital stock taxes, $23,945; Provision for Federal taxes on income — estimated, $258,072.18... $ 900,665.92
998
Customers deposits (not current) — on contracts for future delivery 475, 000. Oil
Deferred income — supervisory service fees applicable to future periods 23,759.85
Capital Stock and Surplus: Capital stock — no nominal or par value: Authorized, 1,500,000
shares; Less: Unissued 647,336 shares, in treasury 10,000 shares, total, 657,336 shares;
Outstanding, 842,664 shares, $6,214,867.51; Surplus. $352,972.96 6,567,840.47
$ 7,967,266.24
Contingent Liability:
Technicolor Motion Picture Corporation is defendant in a patent infringement suit, trial of
which was completed in a United States District Court during 1937. but on which no de-
cision has as yet been rendered.
CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF PROFIT AND
LOSS AND SURPLUS, JANUARY 1, 1939
Sales — net > $ 4,646,991.87
Less cost of goods sold (excluding provision for depreciation and amortization of accumulated
research, development and patent costs) 2,820,714.96
$ 1.826,276.91
F.xpenses (excluding provision for depreciation): Selling and shipping, $63,047.51: Adminis-
trative and general, $309,240.92 372,288.43
Operating Profit Before Provision for Depreciation and Amortization $ 1,453,988.48
Other Income: Royalties received, $120,885.39; Sundry income from British affiliate, $88,-
276.69; Interest received on refunds of prior year Federal income taxes, $18,431.03; Other
interest income, $3,316.68; Sundry other income, $11,883.63 242,793.42
$ 1.696,781.90
Other deductions: Market value of stock issued in cancellation of stock option. $21,875; Ex-
penses in connection; with refunds of prior year Federal income taxes, $18,195.27; Interest
paid, $3,080.69; Sundry other deductions, $228.12 43,379.08
$ 1,653,402.82
Depreciation and amortization: Provision for depreciation of plant and equipment, $164,205.45;
Amortization of research, development and patent costs, $154,953.70 319,159.15
Net Profit Before Federal Income Tax and Life Insurance Expense $ 1,334,243.67
Provision for Federal taxes on income — estimated 258,072.18
Net Profit Before Life Insurance Expense $ 1,076,171.49
Premiums on life insurance on president and general manager, less increase in cash surrender
value 25,635.43
Net Profit *$ 1,050,536.06
"Net profit for the vear is after capitalizing patent costs of $33,846.77 and research costs
of $20,922.59.
CONSOLIDATED SURPLUS
Balance at January 1, 1938 $ 1,163,346.60
Add: Net profit for the year, $1,050,536.06; Paid-in surplus arising from sale of 35,000 shares
of capital stock. $210,000; Refunds of overpayments of 1929 and 1930 Federal income
taxes, $40,280.11 1,300,816.17
„ , $ 2,464,162.77
Deduct: Dividends paid ($1 per share), $840,295.76: Adjustment of reserves for amortiza-
tion of research, development and patents to the basis approved by the U. S. Treasury De-
partment for income tax purposes. $1.270,894.05 2,111,189.81
Balance — December 31, 1938 $ 352,972.96
TRANS-LUX CORP.
Screen and Projection Apparatus and Theaters
Incorporated Feb. 5, 1920, in Delaware
— General Office, 1270 Sixth Ave., New York —
Present company succeeded business established
1938
... VA
m
.19
in 1915. Present corporate title adopted July 9.
1937
. . S'4
.25*
1925. Owns entire capital stock of Trans-Lux
1936
.. S'A
i'A
.40
Movies Corp., 50% of this stock being acquired
1935
2
.15
from RKO in 1932.
1934
... i'A
VA
.23
Capitalization: Common stock, $1 par, 1,000.000
1933
... 6'A
.16
shares authorized, 785,160 outstanding, 64,857 in
1932
... 3'A
V*
.13
treasury.
1931
... 13%
m
.36
Dividends: Paid 20 cents in 1934 and 1935. 25
1930
■ ■■ 7%
4'A
.60
cents in 1936. 30 cents in 1937. 10 cents in
1929
. . 24
3
.67
1938.
1928
7
2 'A
.35
PRICE RANGE OF STOCK
1927
• . .
3>/_
.14
Earned
1926
14
6n
.07
Year High Low Per Sh.
1939 2V» 1 $.20
* 6 months.
999
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET, JANUARY 1, 1939
Assets
Current Assets: Cash in banks and on hand, $71,723.58; Accounts and notes receivable, $29.-
361.79; Marketable securities at cost, $146,674.31, Less reserve for difference between cost
and quoted market value, $42,548.06, total, $104,126.25; Inventories of materials, finished
goods and supplies — At or below cost, $12,328.84 $ 217,540.46
Investments, Etc. ; Investment in Trans-Lux Movie Ticker Corporation partly owned affiliate,
$276,388.82; Investment in and advances to partly owned theater affiliates — less reserve,
$586,530.35 862,919.17
Other notes and accounts receivable. $14,246.95, Less reserve for doubtful, $6,740.15 7,506.80
Fixed Assets: Land, building, machinery and equipment (as valued by the directors in 1923,
with subsequent additions at cost), $133,948.24, Less reserve for depreciation, $75,163.64,
total, $58,784.60; Ticker machines on rental or held in reserve — At cost, $259,154.98, Less re-
serve for depreciation, $209,483.14, total, $49,671.84; Other equipment at depreciated
value, $20,902.45 129,358.89
Capital Assets of Theater Companies: Theater equipment, $61,471.20, Less reserve for de-
preciation, $34,651.93, total, $26,819.27; Improvement to leased premises, $187,649.66, Less
reserve for amortization, $60,457.15, total, $127,192.51 154.011.78
Deferred Charges: Prepared commissions, insurance, taxes, etc., $17,783.52; Advances in con-
nection with proposed theater, $19,823.49; Advances for development of prospective foreign
business, $25,346.66; Costs in connection with development of patents, $8,866.52 71,820.19
Patents 1-00
$1,443,158.29
Liabilities
Current Liabilities: Accounts payable, $17,526.79; Purchase agreement $21,776.46; Accrued
taxes and expenses, $23,276.62; Reserve for State, Federal and Canadian taxes. $26,976.25..
Other Liabilities: Tenants' deposits on subleases, $25,000; Rents received in advance, $1,800..
Capital Stock: Authorized — 1,000,000 shares of common stock of $1 par value. Issued, $785,160
shares, $785,160, Less in treasury, 64,857 shares, $64,857
Earned Surplus — Per Exhibit B
$1,443,158.29
$ 89,556.12
26.800.00
720,303.00
606,499.17
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF PROFIT AND LOSS
AND EARNED SURPLUS
For the Year Ended December 31, 1938
Income From Ticker Operations: Dividends from affiliated ticker company, $244,952.70;
Machine rentals, $166,204.26, Less cost of rentals, exclusive of depreciation, $56,144.47, total,
$110,059.79; Profit from sale of parts, etc., $1,599.42 $ 356,611.91
Less: Selling, administrative and general expenses, $178,663; Provision for depreciation, $21.-
185.74 199,848.74
Net Income From Ticker Operations $ 156.763.17
Income From Theater Operations: Income from theaters operated by wholly-owned subsidiaries.
$321,913.25, Less operating expenses, exclusive of depreciation and amortization, $215,387.44,
total. $106,525.81; Rental income from theater equipment. $2,155.70; Dividend income from
affiliated theater company, $10,000, total, $118,681.51; Less administrative and gen-
eral expenses. $43,976.60, Trans-Lux Movies Corporation's portion of losses sustained
by partly-owned subsidiaries not consolidated, $39,897.43, provisions for deprecia-
tion and leasehold improvement amortization, $11,202.39, total $95,076.42; Net income from
theaters operated, $23,605.09; Less net cost of carrying sub-let properties (including $15,-
187.82 depreciation and leasehold improvement amortization). $49,473.75; Deduct net loss
from theater operations 25,868.66
Net Income From Operations $ 130,894.51
Other Income: Interest, other dividends and miscellaneous 29,101.79
Total * 159,996.30
Other Deductions: Miscellaneous 1,098.31
Total Net Income Before Provision For Income Taxes $ 158.897.79
Provision for State, Federal and Canadian income taxes 25,180.44
Net Profit For the Year $ 133,717.35
Consolidated earned surplus as at December 31, 1937 $ 548,272.97
Add: Difference between par value and cost of 3,500 shares of treasury stock issued. $1,907.50;
Adjustment of reserve for fluctuations in value of marketable securities to reflect appreciation
during the year 1938, $19,188.81; Adjustment of depreciation reserves provided in prior
years, $2,857.47 23,953.78
$ 705,944.10
Deduct- Cash dividend paid — 10 cents per outstanding share of capital stock exclusive of
shares held in the treasury, $72,030.30; Reserve provided for depreciation of value of
investments in partly-owned theater affiliates, $27,414.63 99,444.93
Consolidated Earned Surplus As At Deoember 31, 1938 $ 606,499.17
1000
20th CENTURY-FOX FILM CORPORATION
Producer, Distributor, Exhibitor
Incorporated Feb. 1, 1915, in New York
- ■- General Office, 444 West 56th St., New York =====
Company originally incorporated Feb. 1, 1915, in
New York, with perpetual charter. On Aug. IS.
1935, name changed to present title by vote of
stockholders following merger of Fox Film Corp.
with 20th Century Pictures under the following
capital setup:
Cumulative convertible $1.50 preferred stock.
1,500,000 shares authorized, 938,745 issued and
outstanding; no par common stock, 3,100,000 shares
authorized (of which 1,183,649 are reserved for
possible conversion of preferred), 1,741,984 shares
outstanding.
Dividends, Preferred, $1.50 annually; Common,
paid $2 in 1938; $1 in 1939.
PRICE RANGE OF STOCKS
Earned
Year High Low Per Sh.
COMMON
1939 26% UVt
1938 2SH 16'A $3-35
1937 40^ 18'A 2.21
1936 38^ 22y2 3.67
1935 24J6 13 1.14
PREFERRED
1939
34 '4
19J4
1938
38
25 "/a
$7.73
1937
50
25
5 12*
1936
.. 47U
31 H
7.68
1935
... 33'/2
24^
2.53
NEW
FOX FILM
STOCK
1934
... ny2
8K
.52
1933
19
12
.581
OLD
FOX FILM
STOCK
1933
• • 4%
X
1932
... SVi
1
V.39D
1931
... 3m
2'A
1.69D
1930
... 57H
16%
4.06
1929
. . .105^
19Ks
10.28
1928
...119^8
72
6.47
1927
. .. &sy2
50
6.24
1926
. . 85
6.25
1925
85
68 y2
5.21
1924
4.02
1923
3.62
D — Deficit. * 9 months. t Estimated.
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET, JANUARY 1, 1939
Assets
Current Assets: Cash on demand deposit and on hand $ 6,502,168.43
Accounts and notes receivable, less reserves of $111,697.09 2,401,079.17
Inventories: Productions: Released, at cost less amortization, $9,658,738.27; Unreleased, at cost,
$7,609,247.82; In progress at cost, $2,888,162.83; Stories and scenarios, at cost, $1,-
278,415.73; Accessories, at cost less amortization, $223.773.03 21,658,337.68
Prepaid operating expenses 714,322.92
$31,275,908.20
Investments in and Advances to Affiliated Companies, at Cost or Written-Down Value: United
American Investing Corporation (50% owned) and Metropolis and Bradford Trust Co.,
Ltd.: (Holding companies for investment in Gaumont-British Picture Corporation, Ltd.),
$3,737,567.68; National Theaters Corp, representing investment in 42% of the capital
stock, $8,859,886.76; Roxy Theater, Inc., at cost (see attached Balance Sheet), $893,-
636.66; Hoyts Theaters, Ltd. (advances only), $372,000; Movietonews, Inc., and sundry
other companies, adjusted by results of operations to date, $608,619.90 14,471,711.00
Fixed Assets: Land, buildings and equipment, at cost, $22,208,675.51; Less reserves for
depreciation, $8,741,306.78 13,467,368.73
Other Assets: Assets in countries having currency restrictions, less liabilities of $328,-
394.39, $1,106,797.46; Sundry, $381,327.70 1,488,125.16
$60,703,113.09
* Script certificates are outstanding for 42',013/1000ths shares of common stock, convertible
into full shares only.
No dividends on common stock may be declared which would reduce the net assets to an amount
less than $30 per share of preferred stock outstanding.
Pursuant to the provisions of the certificate of incorporation, the Corporation is obliged to
set apart out of its surplus, on or before April 30, 1939, a preferred stock retirement
fund of $291,857.33 to be applied during the twelve-month period following the date said
amount is so set apart, to the purchase of its preferred stock at prices not exceeding the
redemption price.
Liabilities
Current Liabilities: Note payable
Accounts payable and accrued expenses
Reserve for Federal income taxes
$ 1,000,000.00
4,139,354.86
1,072,160.41
$ 6,211,515.27
Deferred Credits: Film rentals received in advance, foreign remittances held in abeyance,
etc., 1,391,230.00
Reserves: For contingencies, after deducting $4,123.69 for expenses of litigation paid during
year, applicable to period prior to reorganization, $831,574.23; For fluctuation in dollar
value of assets in foreign countries, $850,000 1.681,574.23
Capital Stock and Surplus: Capital stock — staled at, $15,910,933.75; Consisting of: $1.50
dividend cumulative convertible preferred of no par value, redeemable on call or in liquida-
tion at $35 per share plus accrued dividends: Authorized, 1,500,000 shares; Originally
issued, 1,359,042 shares; Deduct shares not reissuable: Surrendered for conversion, 412,397,
1001
Purchases for stock retirement fund, 7,900, total, 420,297; Issued and outstanding,
938,745 shares; Common, of no par value: Authorized, 3,100,000 shares, of which
1,173,473 shares are reserved for possible conversion of preferred stcck, and 100,000
shares are reserved for issuance against options to officers in respect of which, options for
60,000 shares have been granted at $18.24 per share; Issued and outstanding* 1,741,984
shares; Paid-in surplus, after deduction for preferred stock retirement fund, $21,4.13.235.60;
Appropriated paid-in surplus for preferred stock retirement fund: Transferred from a
paid-in surplus, March 26. 1938. $358,354.51, Less cost of 7,900 shares acquired. $253,011,
total, $105,343.51; Earned surplus since April 1, 1933, per attached statement. $13,-
969,280.73 .'. 51,418,793.59
$60,703,113.09
Contingent Liabilities: Guarantee of long term notes of theater company, $128,541.62
Kor pending litigation with respect to which the Corporation denies liability — amount not
determinable.
CONSOLIDATED PROFIT AND LOSS AND EARNED SURPLUS
SINCE APRIL 1, 1933
Year (53 Weeks) Ended December 31, 193.^
Operating Profit: Income: Gross income from sales and rentals of film and acce-sorie* $58,201,314.19
Dividends, including $882,000 from National Theaters Corporation 1,042,242.75
Other income 1,157,917.04
$60,401,473.98
Expenses: Operating expenses of exchanges, head office and administration expenses, etc.,
$15,062,186.15; Amortization of production costs, $30,554,895.67 Participation in film rent-
als, $6,353,115.72 51,970,197.54
Net Operating Profit Before Interest and Depreciation $ 8,431,276.44
Deduct: Interest expense, $68,815.39; Depreciation of fixed assets, not including depreciation
of $825,222.18 on studio buildings and equipment, absorbed in production costs, $304,276.58 373,091.97
Net Operating Profit Before Federal Income Taxes $ 8,058,184.47
Provision for Federal income taxes 805,717.92
Net Operating Profit After Federal Income Taxes $ 7,252,466.55
Earned surplus, December 25, 1937 11,616,032.79
$18,868,499.34
Deduct Cash Dividends Paid On: $1.50 dividend cumulative convertible preferred stock,
$1,415,320; Common stock, $2 per share, $3,483,898.61 4,899,218.61
Earned Surplus, December 31, 1938, Carried to Balance Sheet $13,969,280.73
UNITED ARTISTS THEATER CIRCUIT
Theater Operator
Incorporated May 22, 1926, in Maryland
- General Office, 1501 Broadway, New York =====
Capitalization: Preferred stock (par $100), 5% 1*36 $142D. °-8.t,
cumulative preferred, 40,000 shares authorized, 1935 1„,R ™fi
26.921 shares outstanding; redeemable at the option 1934 ^™ t'tm
of the company upon any quarterly dividend pay- 1933 c oSn a-n
ment date; entitled in redemption, liquidation or 1932 5 .93D .83 V
dissolution to $105 a share plus dividends accrued 1931 11-39 .28
or in arrears. Common stock, no par, 600,000 1930 21.74 1.18
shares authorized and outstanding. 1929 27-8i .Z
1928 12 92 .47
EARNINGS 1927 6.54 .04D
Year Preferred Common —
1938 $.004* D — Deficit.
1937 .36 * Year ended Aug. 31.
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET, AUGUST 31, 1939
Assets
Current Assets: Cash, $375,713.03; Sundry receivables, $19,431.59; Due from affiliated compa-
nies. $58,414.90 * ?fo'?7n In
Cash surrender value of life insurance policies .... • ISnaSrS
Investment Security— At quoted market value, less than cost (deposited to secure lease) lo.US/.SU
Theater Investments: Land, leaseholds, buildings and equipment (at cost or appraised values,
less reserves for depreciation and amortization, $1,842,937.66), $3,489,110.26; Capital
stocks of and advances to affiliated companies less than 100% owned (adjusted, by pro-
portion of undistributed surpluses, $551,989.08, less proportion of deficits, $107,886.44, arising
since acquisition)— (including $100,000 for option in connection with capital stocks ot
1002
affiliated companies — directors valuation), $2,634,814.76; Equity in joint theater oper-
ating venture, $79,315.90 .. 6,203,240.92
Deferred Charges: Unamortized excess of cost of investments in a subsidiary and in affiliated
companies over book values at dates of acquisition, $1,009,567.98; Lease rent deposit, $128,-
333.34; Unamortized bond discount and expense, $25,463.69; Prepaid expenses, $34,141.60 1,197,506.61
Liabilities
$ 8,029,565.05
Current Liabilities: Accounts payable and sundry accruals, $85,820.93; Real estate taxes
accrued, $39,399.59; Federal income taxes accrued, $73,630.33; Long term debt items due
within one year, $91,749.87; Dividends payable on preferred stock on September 15,
1939, $33,651.25 $ 324,251.97
Long Term Debt: Chicago-United Artists Theater Corporation: First mortgage leasehold
bonds due March 1, 1948 ($200,000, including $75,000 in treasury, subordinated as to
principal and interest to remainder of issue); interest originally 6%% — now 4% to
March 1, 1943 and 5% thereafter, with participation feature: Issued (less $94,000 redeemed
and cancelled), $1,206,000; In treasury, $547,900, total, $658,100; Boulevard Theater
Company, Inc.: First closed mortgage 6% sinking fund bonds, due May 1,
1942: Issued (less $160,500 redeemed and cancelled), $339,500; In treasury, $125,000,
total, $214,500; United Artists Theaters of California, Ltd.: First mortgage 6l/2% serial
bonds, series A, of The Granada Co. (Stamped as extending original maturities for five
years, to become due 1939 to 1951): Assumed (less $22,000 redeemed and cancelled),
$278,000; In treasury, $36,000, total, $242,000; Less due within one year, classified
as current liability $10,000, $232,000; Real estate mortgage notes due 1940 to 1951,
$188,402.98; Illinois-United Artists Theater Co.: Building purchase obligations, due 1940
to 1946, $38,333.33; United Artists of Texas, Inc.: Notes payable, due 1941 to 1957,
$658,750 1,990,086.31
Deferred credit arising from release of rent guarantee 88,763.84
Capital Stock and Surplus: 5% cumulative preferred stock — authorized 40.000 shares of $100
each; outstanding 26,921 shares; redeemable at the option of the company upon any quarterly
dividend payment date; entitled in redemption, liquidation or dissolution to $105 a share plus
dividends accrued or in arrears, $2,692,100; Common stock — authorized and outstanding
600,000 shares without par value, $500,000; Capital surplus (increased during the year
by $128,991.08, representing excess of par value over cost of preferred stock repurchased for
retirement, $138,226.25, less depreciation on appreciated value of property, $9,235.17),
$1,145,719.29; Appropriated earned surplus, $81,417.28; Unappropriated Earned Surplus:
Balance, September 1, 1938 $1,112,833.59; Net income for the year, $138,811.93; Profit from
repurchase for retirement of bonds of subsidiaries, less Federal income taxes thereon, $6,-
763.56, and unamortized discount and expense applicable thereto, $2,989.27, $30,595.54; Pro-
portion of profit from repurchase for retirement of bonds of affiliated companies, less Federal
income taxes thereon, $4,170.07, and unamortized discount and expense applicable thereto,
$672.94, $65,520.30, total, $1,347,761.36; Less dividends declared on preferred stock — $5
a share, $140,535; Balance, August 31, 1939 (including $444,102.64 representing proportion
of undistributed surpluses, less deficits, of affiliated companies less than 100% owned, arising
since acquisition, $1,207,226.36 5,626,462.93
$ 8,029,565.05
SUMMARY OF CONSOLIDATED NET INCOME
For the Year Ended August 31, 1939
Net income before deducting interest, depreciation, amortization, and provision for Federal
income taxes (including proportion of profits of affiliated companies less than 100% owned
— to the extent paid in dividends during the year by said companies, $137,691.22 $ 509,134.77
Less: Interest, $100,186.87; Depreciation and amortization of theater leaseholds, buildings
and equipment, $156,729.67; Amortization of excess of cost of investments in a subsidiary
and in affiliated companies over book values at dates of acquisition, $65,418.25; Amortization
of bond discount and expense, $3,970.86; Provision for Federal income taxes, $49,974.92... 376,280.57
$ 132,854.20
Add proportion of undistributed net income, less proportion of net losses, of affiliated companies
less than 100% owned (exclusive of proportion of profits included above 5,957.73
Net Income $ 138,811.93
UNIVERSAL PICTURES CO., INC.
Producer and Distributor
Incorporated Jan. 15, 1925, in Delaware
=: General Office, 1250 Sixth Ave., New York ======^
standing. Second preferred (cumulative) 7%
stock, 40,000 shares authorized, 20,000 outstanding
(unlisted).
Dividends: None being paid at present.
Company is outgrowth of original business estab-
lished as Imp. Films Co.
Capitalization: Common stock, $1 par, 250,000
shares outstanding. First preferred (cumulative)
8% stock, 30,000 shares authorized, 17,864 out-
1003
PRICE RANGE OF STOCKS
(8% Pfd. listed
on New York Stock Exchange.
Com
T\ont listed on
New York Curb.)
Year
Common
Earned
Q Of
o 70
1st ptci.
Earned
7% 2nd Ffd
High
Low
Per Sh.
Low
rer. on.
tar nee
1939
9'A
6
....
7ft
/o
i ota
10
3
$3.94D*
27J4
t oont
$44,021)
1937
19
i'A
1 08
29
^OJ.OJ I)
1 936
164*
A%
$V.66d
1 1 c
111 ii r i » *
III. 0 11)
....
IQ4G
8
2
3.79D*
73
29
41.19D*
$42.15
1 Q1A
sy>
3
.18D
13.37
4.79
ion
4
1
5.48D
10
60.90D
61.55D
1932
1
6.42D
10^4
73.69D
73. 24D
1 Q 1 1
7'A
4
i 91
OA
30.46
22.17
1930
23H
S
10.79D
76
27
109.51D
73.62D
1929
29
S'A
.66
92
28
22.02
15.27
1928
33
13/8
2.69
100
91 Va
42.10
40.64
1927
46'A
26'A
4.60
103H
96H
60.90
64.58
1926
43
29 y2
6.41
98/2
90
71.60
87.19
1925
47
24
5.12
10354
94^
56.10
72.00
D— Deficit
* 39 weeks.
** Fiscal
year. *** 9 months.
WARNER BROS. PICTURES, INC.
Producer, Distributor, Theater Operator, Etc.
Incorporated April 4, 1923, in Delaware
General Office, 312 West 44th St., New York
Owns, controls or is affiliated with about 70 sub-
sidiaries, including First National Pictures, Inc.,
The Vitaphone Corp., Stanley Co. of America,
Vitagraph, Inc., Continental Lithograph Corp.,
Warner Bros. Broadcasting Corp., M. Witmark &
Sons, Remick Music Corp., Harms, Brunswick Radio
Corp., and others.
Capitalization: Common stock, $5 par, 7,500,000
shares authorized, 3,801,344 outstanding. Pre-
ferred, no par, cumulative and convertible, redeem-
able at $55 a share, 103,107 authorized and
outstanding.
Dividends: None being paid at present.
STOCK PRICE RANGE
Common Earned Preferred Earned
Year High Low Per Sh. High Low Per Sh.
1939 6% I'A 58 36 ....
19.18
8
$.41t
45
20
$18.72t
1937
18
1.48**
69/,
33
56.991
1936
184*
9'A
.75t
69
44
30.83t
1935
10^
2'A
.07D
52
U'A
6.54
1934
S'A
2M
.77D
i\V%
15
24.541)
1933
9'A
1
1.76D
24'A
4'A
61.021)
1932
A 'A
•A
3.81D
20
4
136.701)
1931
20M
2'A
2.19D
*0'A
8*4
76.801)
1930
80J4
1.77
70}4
31
68.61
1929
64'A
30
6.33
59'A
25'A
59.96
1929*
134
97
12.66
S7'A
1928*
138
13J<
4.98
1927*
3334
9Y*.
.77D
* Old stock, before 2-for-l splitup. D -Deficit
** 6 months. t Fiscal year.
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET, AUGUST 26, 1939
Assets
Current and Working Assets: Cash, $5,539,975.70; Accounts and notes receivable: Trade
customers, less reserves of $317,836.80, $1,665,672.11; Officers, directors and employes,
$88,363.99; Sundry, $245,739.09, total, $1,999,775.19; Inventories: Released productions.
$7,712,131.16; Productions completed but not released, at cost $5,982,280.85; Productions in
progress and charges to future productions, at cost, $2,660,651.50; Rights and scenarios un-
produced, at cost less reserves of $810,879.82, $1,160,867.47; Raw materials, accessories,
supplies, etc., at cost or less, $380,267.21 total, $17,896,198.19 $25,435,949.08
Current assets of subsidiaries operating in certain foreign territories having exchange restrictions 240,118.0-
Investments in subsidiary and affiliated companies: Investments, at cost less reserves of
$604,516.13, $747,616.32; Advances, less reserves of $50,519.57, $115,738.07 863,354.39
Fixed Assets: Land, at cost, $57,215,150.62; Buildings and equipment on owned properties
including construction in progress of $251,945.55) at cost less special reserves, $90,998,555.-
93; Less— Reserves for depreciation, $32,268,974.37, total, $58,729,581.56; Leaseholds,
buildings and equipment on leased properties, at cost, $25,970,436.91; Less — Reserves for
depreciation and amortization $11,017,814.32, total, $14,952,622.59. 130.897,354.77
Other Assets: Mortgages, long term notes and special accounts receivable, less reserve of
$12,361.69, $604,138.98; Accounts receivable from officers under February 193o agreement,
$110,000; Deposits to secure contracts, $1,057,588.78; Sinking fund deposits, $109,932.47;
Miscellaneous investments (including 100,254.55 shares of the company's common stock
carried at $1), $103,573.64 1,985,233.87
Deferred Charges: Prepaid taxes, insurance, rent and other expenses 864,188.17
Goodwill 8,331,792.24
$168,617,990.54
Liabilities
Current Liabilities (except as included under Funded and Other Long Term Debt): Notes
and loans payable: Secured— Banks, $500,000; Others, $60,500, total, $560,500; Unsecured
—Foreign bank, $2,622,000; Others, $106,961.34, total, $2,728,961.34; Accounts payable,
1004
$2,675,754.87; Interest accrued, $1 .092.789.67 ; Otlier accrued liabilities, $3,065,894.02; Re-
serve for Federal income taxes, $2,937,317.35; Serial !x>nds sinking fund requirements,
purchase money and contractual obligations and mortgage instalments maturing within one
year (less $340,000 bonds held in treasury), $2,441,636.90; Owing to affiliated companies.
$73,465.84; Royalties and participations payable, $853,472.79; Advance payments for film,
deposits, etc., $320,527.22; Current liabilities of subsidiaries operating in certain foreign
territories having exchange restrictions. $94,889.83 $16.84o.209.83
Funded and Other Long Term Debt: 6% Debentures, Series due 1948, $18,800,000; Other bond
issues and mortgages maturing after one year (less $1,482,480 bonds held in treasury),
$33,826,872.22; Other bond issues and mortgages maturing within one year, subject in part
to renewal, and standing demand mortgages (less $46,000 bonds held in treasury), $6,-
578,719.77; Purchase money and contractual obligations maturing serially after one year,
$383,052.71; Secured notes payable to banks, maturing after one year. $5,500.000....... 65,088,644.70
Deferred Credits: Discount arising from purchase of preferred stock and bonds of subsidiary
companies held in treasury, $903,824.18; Remittances from foreign subsidiaries, held in
abeyance, $640,545.33; Miscellaneous, $488,162.44; Deferred foreign exchange credit (net),
$541,380.21 2,573,912.16
Reserve for contingencies : " • V ' 366.000.00
Proportion of Capital Stock and Surplus of Subsidiary Companies Applicable to Minority
Stockholders: Capital stock (including $151,185 of preferred stock), $156,536; Surplus (repre-
senting accrued dividends and equity, less share of deficits), $88,425.57 244,951.57
Capital and Surplus: Capital stock: Authorized — 7,500,000 shares of common stock of par
value of $5 each; 103,107 shares of preferred stock without par value, (Liquidating value $55
per share. Entitled to cumulative dividends at the rate of $3.85 per share per annum);
Issued and outstanding — 3,801,344.55 shres of common stock (without deduction of shares
held in treasury, per contra), $19,006,722.75; 103.107 shares of preferred stock of stated
value of $55 per share, $5,670,885, total, $24,677,607.75; Capital surplus per annexed
statement, $57,241,427.59; Earned surplus, per annexed statement, $1,612,046.59. total,
$83,531,081.93; Deduct— Cost of 610 shares of preferred stock held in treasury, $31,809.65 83,499,272.28
(Unpaid dividends on 102,497 snares of preferred stock to and including September 1, 1939
amount to $2,959,600.88 or $28,875 per share)
$168,617,990.54
STATEMENT OF CONSOLIDATED PROFIT AND LOSS
AND EARNED SURPLUS
For the Year Ending August 26, 1939
Income: Film rental income, theater admissions, sales and miscellaneous income $98,024,760.55
Rents from tenants and royalties 4,058,370.70
$102,083,131.25
Cost of Sales and Expenses: Amortization of film costs, $29,596,777.04; Special adjustment
of inventory of released productions, $551,371.17; Other costs, including royalties and par-
ticipations, $2,142,837.58; Operating and general expenses, $58.280,542.05 90,571,527.84
Net Income Before Other Income and Charges Shown Below $11,511,603.41
Deduct: Amortization and depreciation of properties (other than $995,207.52 in respect of
studio properties charged to film costs), $4,851,773.27; Interest expense, $4,172,835.02;
Provision for miscellaneous investments, $178,444.02; Provision for possible additional taxes
of prior years, $140,000; Provision for investments in affiliated companies, $26,301.70; Pro-
vision for contingencies, $12,000 9,381,354.01
Profit Before Other Income and Charges Shown Below $ 2,130,249.40
Other Income: Interest and discount earned, $180,974.77; Dividends received, $105,428.40... 286,403.17
Profit Before Minority Interests' Share of Profits and Losses and Federal Income Taxes $ 2,416,652.57
Add — Proportion of loss applicable to minority stockholders (net) 11,255.29
Profit Before Providing for Federal Income Taxes $ 2,427,907.86
Provision for Federal income taxes 687,000.00
Net Profit From Operations for the Year Ending August 26, 1939, Carried to Earned
Surplus $ 1.740.907.86
Deduct -Deficit, August 27, 1938 327,298.60
$ 1,413,609.26
Add: Discount realized on redemption of debentures and bonds of subsidiary companies,
$388,202.52; Profit on sale of subsidiary and affiliated companies, $122,150.72;, total.
$510,353.24; Less — Loss on sales and abandonment and provisions for demolition of
properties, $311,915.91 198,437.33
Earned Surplus, August 26. 1939. Carried to Balance Sheet $ 1.612,046.59
STATEMENT OF CAPITAL SURPLUS
For the Year Ending August 26, 1939
Capital surplus, August 27, 1938 $57,134,330.74
Add — Appropriations authorized by the Board of Directors as of August 27, 1932 not re-
quired in respect of: Investment in participation of profits, license rights, etc., $60,000;
Properties owned and equipment, $47,096.85 107,096.85
Capital Surplus, August 26, 1939, Carried to Balance Sheet $57,241,427.59
1005
1006
Equipment
Supply Dealers
Manufacturers
Laboratories
Trailers
Eberson
1007
Everywhere in the United States
. . .Your Altec Service Man
THE NATION-WIDE Altec organiza-
tion, composed of scientists, engi-
neers and practical technicians, pro-
vides exhibitors with a time-tested, de-
pendable service for sound motion pic-
ture and other specialized theatre
equipment, maintaining it at its high-
est possible efficiency, no matter what
the age, the model, or the make of the
equipment. Altec Service Corporation
maintains warehouses and emergency
stock points strategically located
throughout the country, containing the
largest inventory of emergency parts of
any organization in the field. Stock
points operate on a twenty-four-hour-
a-day basis. Exhibitors recognize Altec
protection as good business judgment.
JjjJEC
250 West 57th Street, New York City
Branch Offices in Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Detroit, Cincinnati, Kansas City,
Dallas, Philadelphia and Los Angeles ond stock offices in thirty-eight cities.
THE SERVICE ORGANIZATION OF THE MOTION PICTURE INDUSTRY
1008
EQUIPMENT
A D VA NCES
OF 1939
By GEORGE H. MORRIS
Equipment Editor of THE FILM DAILY
NUMEROUS innovations and improvements were effected in the field of film
equipment during the twelve-month span. Both production and exhibition
channels benefited from the technical findings and their application. In the
following resume, accent is chiefly upon advances wrought by research labora-
tories, engineers and designers with respect to the public's greater enjoyment
of motion picture entertainment.
Preliminary estimates at the year's close
placed the sale in the U. S. of incandescent
lamps at more than 970,000.000, setting a new
volume record. Figure included some 540,-
000.000 large and approximately 430.000.000
miniature lamps. Of the former, a large per*
centage increment was used by the film in-
dustry, chiefly by exhibition outlets.
In the realm of fluorescent lighting, a new
white color was developed for all sizes of
fluorescent lamps. Specifications covering
principles of illumination, safety and mechan-
ical construction were set up by the Mazda
lamp manufacturers, and on independent elec-
trical testing laboratory was retained to pro-
vide a testing and inspection service which
insures that equipments meet specifications.
One of the salient trends of 1939 in interior
lighting was the growing use of down units,
at the expense of direct fixtures and cove
lights.
Air conditioning's outstanding advances
were reported particularly with respect to oil
burners and furnaces, warm air conditioners,
complete self-contained air conditioning units,
and special air conditioners, for use in con-
nection with a remote source of refrigeration
or heating. A complete new line of evapora-
tive condensers was also developed, and
several new fields of application for various
products were uncovered.
A new warm air conditioner of 100,000 Btu
per hour capacity superceded the previous
model of the same capacity. The line became
complete via a unit rated at 160.000 Btu per
hour. All provide winter air conditioning, in-
cluding heating, circulating, cleaning, and ven-
tilating, if desired. Humidification is available
optionally.
Large centrifugal fans, designed to operate
against relatively high duct pressures, assure
quiet operation and delivery of adequate air
to provide proper circulation. Rubber mount-
ings and flexible canvas connectors, isolating
the fan and motor assembly, provide freedom
from vibration.
Manufacturers effectuated considerable im-
provements to their lines of self-contained units,
increases being noted from a single unit of
3-ton cooling capacity to six units, from IV2
to 10 tons. Developments and refinements
were also noteworthy in evaporative con-
densers.
Not the least of the advances of 1939 was
the engineering of air conditioning units and
the experience gained by their manufacturers
and theater architects as regards their most
advantageous and strategic placement in the
motion picture house. Architects, too, made
progress in refining the average auditorium
layout, economizing in duct work, eliminating
noise, and arranging even distribution. Manu-
facturers' laboratories vied with one another
to solve problems concerning these same fac-
tors. Hence there accrued a cost reduction
of air conditioning installations, plus a low-
ering of maintenance costs.
New theater construction and remodelling
operations disclosed a wider use of structural
glass in various forms both for exterior and
interior use. Partiality for such material was
evidenced by a number of leading architects,
with whom the glass product manufacturers
worked closely in the execution of unusual
designs, created to enhance the appearance of
facades both during the daylight and night
hours. Glass blocks served widely to give
1009
types of
RETAIL STORES
HOTELS AND
CLUB LOBBIES
TRANSPORTATION
TERMINALS
OFFICE BLDG'S
7n PRODUCE, W a M £(
exhibited
in all
STORE DISPLA
EXPOSITION
STADIUMS
, PRODUCE, q ,e P (
„ coming o«. n>»n- euoU5 pio\ecW'; *.
VW6' tUii «BS°m , t0 coast a.e -T^Utf-
'aU,C 15 u tots Wo- I! end Wove sp-ce coS, . . .
c, u,c di*"*0"? * short WmV Comn»«nrtv- 1, ptom»«Bl
f\ol«« | „Jveit'se's 5 • e0ch c° most v
n<"io°a £ one ^-e, « .|ng( ,n » . oP.
4' 0,«s>dl'»l • -
fcCo'f""31
ADV IT AGRA PHW COR PO RATION
Manufacturers of FLO LITE CONTINUOUS PROJECTORS • Producers-Distributors of Advertising Motion Pictures
General Offices: 305 WEST BROADWAY, LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY
Hollywood, Calif-
Minneapolis. Minn-
San Francisco, Calif-
Newark, N. J.
New York City
St. Louis, Mo.
Portland, Ore.
Lexington. Ky.
Chicago. III.
Cleveland. Ohio
Mobile. Ala.
Kalamazoo, Mich.
Detroit, Mich.
Kansas City, Mo.
Baton Rouge, La.
Columbus, Ga.
Rochester, N. Y.
Dallas, Texas
New Haven, Conn.
Charleston. W. Va.
IN CANADA: Toronto, Ont.; Regina. Sask.
Member; Advertising Federation of America • Factory distributors in the above cities
practical and unusual eifects, particularly with
relation to electrical illumination.
Seating generally made substantial ad-
vances at the hands oi the leading manufac-
turers. The foam sponge cushion seat rose to
considerable favor because of its advantages,
which include elimination of springs, added
comfort provided, assured sanitation, and
avoidance of the use of fibres, felts, stuffing
and other protective materials in upholstering.
A significant trend demanding mention is
the fact that theaters went in for better grade
of carpet and chair upholstery material, mohair
enjoying strong vogue among the fabrics in the
latter classification. It was apparent during
the year that buyers of carpets have become
technical, and architects have learned the
value of fine, thoroughly-scoured yarns, in con-
trast to the greasy, gritty yarns so often used
in inferior carpet.
The rising tide of color features brought
further into prominence the need for snowy
white projection light. The low intensity arc.
on which the small theater had been depen-
dent, gives a light of definitely yellowish tint,
with yellow, orange and red comprising almost
two-thirds of its light output. The high in-
tensity arc, on the other hand, gives almost
equal output of all the primary colors. This
is the quality of light for which color films
are processed and is the only type of light
that gives accurate color reproduction on the
screen. Excess or deficiency of any color in
the projection light gives a distorted color
impression.
Coincident with improvements in steadiness,
light quality and power of the carbon arc, have
come striking improvements in its efficiency
and economy as a light source. Currently,
simplified high intensity projection lamps give
sixteen times as much light on the screen as
the low intensity condenser type lamps of 20
years ago provided at the same consumption
of electrical power. There are few items of
expense associated with theater operation in
which such striking gain in economy has been
effected.
These points are delineated because they
form the basis for the wider recognition of
high intensity projection on the part of theaters
in 1939.
Corresponding progress was made during
the year in the adaptation of the carbon arc
to the needs of the studio. The photographic
speed and deep penetration of carbon arc
lighting have long been recognized. The
high level of illumination now used on the
studio stage brings into prominence another
important characteristic of the arc, namely its
relatively small percentage of radiant heat
and the increased comfort for the actors re-
sulting from the use of carbon arc illumination.
RCA effected a number of improvements and
refinements in sound and projection equipment.
as did other leading manufacturers. DeVry
marketed its new Super Theater Projector, em-
bodying the following outstanding advantages:
(1) Visible oil level in intermittent system for
prolonged life, smoother, quieter operation;
(2) Prefocus dual exciter lamps; (3) New,
heavier duty aperture; (4) Pressure plate, re-
movable quickly for inspection and cleaning;
(5) New framing picture device; (6) Heavier
duty synchronized motor; (7) Accessible exter-
nal lens focus; (8) Improved sound lens; and
(9) Heavier silent chain drive, resulting in
steadier, smoother, more silent operation than
ever before.
Interest of International Projector Corp. in
developing equipment for the small and
medium size theaters, as well as for the larger
theaters, resulted during 1939 in the introduc-
tion and manufacture of Simplex Sound System
Type E, and the new SI Projector, which in-
cludes the SI Mechanism, the SI Pedestal and
SI Lamp House. Also of great importance to
owners of small size theaters seeking to mod-
ernize their equipment at small cost is the
Synchronized Front and Rear Shutter Attach-
ment for the Super Simplex and Regular Sim-
plex Mechanisms, which greatly increase
screen illumination. The progress made by
IPC in 1939 is hardly less important than the
revolutionary improvements which the com-
pany introduced in 1938. Importance of the
1939 improvements also lies in the fact that
for the first time a complete line of motion
picture equipment is manufactured by one
company to meet the requirements of all
theaters regardless of size.
Theater owners desiring to give their
patrons the finest possible entertainment, as
far as projection and sound are concerned,
need no longer risk the purchase of inferior,
obsolete and second-hand equipment. For the
thousands of small theaters in the U. S. and
throughout the world, the advance Simplex
equipment made in 1939 represents very
definite and outstanding progress.
As the year drew to a close. National Thea-
ter Supply Co. announced that it was extending
its services to the field of public address equip-
ment for theaters, via a new line of fully
licensed systems.
The new line, under the name of RDR equip-
ment, was the first line of licensed public
address sound to be sold with an unqualified
one-year guarantee and installation supervi-
sion by Altec. The line was developed for
National Theater Supply by the Radio Devel-
opment and Research Corp., comprising a
group of well-known engineers and sound
technicians, long specializing in the public
address field.
During 1939 three new Du Pont Films made
their debut, — Superior-2, a high speed pan-
chromatic picture negative; Type 224 Fine
Grain Master Positive, an improved duplicat-
ion
ing material; and Type 222 Tine Grain Sound
Recording Film.
Superior- 2 is twice as fast as Superior- 1.
This extra speed permits a cinematographer
either to use less light on a set, or to increase
the field of sharp focus in front of his lens.
An increase in sensitivity of this order normally
would entail a sacrifice of some other photo-
graphic quality. But Superior-2 is an exception.
It retains the fine grain size, wide latitude,
and ability to render details, particularly in
shadows, for which Superior-1 has been noted.
Fine Grain Master Positive, Type 224, was
developed to reduce to a minimum the loss
of photographic quality encountered in mak-
ing a duplicate of the original camera nega-
tive. Fine grain materials have always been
used for this critical work. Type 224. with its
improved gradation and ultra-fine grain size,
brings the image quality of the "dupe" one
step closer to parity with that of the original.
Type 222. Fine Grain Sound Recording Rim.
improves the reproduction of sound by the
variable density method. Its extremely fine
grain size reduces background noise and
renders more faithful the higher pitched
sounds.
In the past year, the contributions of the
Agfa Ansco research laboratories have per-
haps not been as sensational as their intro-
duction of Ultra-Speed Pan and Supreme, which
ushers in the era of high-speed films in 1937
and 1938, but the improvements have never-
theless been important and worthy of appre-
ciation by technicians in the field.
The Agfa Supreme negative emulsion, which
won the Class I Award of the Academy of
Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in 1938, has
been still further refined in 1939 to better
adapt it to modern scene-lighting conditions,
without changing its general photographic
characteristics. It is interesting to note that
one of the rigorous, practical tests to which
this and other Agfa cine films were subjected
in the past year was their use by Father
Hubbard, the Glacier Priest, on his 1939 north-
ern expedition. The success and trouble-free
employment of Agfa Ansco cine films by
Father Hubbard in Actic weather conditions
was, in part, due to the important physical
improvements that have been made this past
year in negative raw stock. A further tech-
nical improvement of a physical nature, which
has resulted in increased wearing quality and
life expectancy of exchange prints, was the
standardization of dielectric characteristics of
Agfa positive raw stock, a refinement which
dissipates the problem of static during print-
ing in laboratories that lack adequate control
of humidity.
Governed by the policy of recognition for
only those achievements which are of out-
standing merit and which promise to have
a lasting influence on the industry, the Re-
search Council of the Academy of Motion
Picture Arts and Sciences considered 35 nom-
inations for scientific or technical awards.
While the industry noted steady progress
during 1939, no achievement, in the opinion
of the Council, was held of sufficient merit
to receive a major award.
A number of developments, however, were
judged worthy of recognition, and the Research
Council, with the approval of the Academy
Awards Committee, issued Certificates of
Honorable Mention for Scientific or Technical
Achievement to the following:
George Anderson of Warner Bros. Studios
for an improved Positive Head for Sun Arcs;
John Arnold of M-G-M Studios for the M-G-M
Mobile Camera Crane; T. T. Moulton. Fred
Albin, and the Sound Department of the Sam-
uel Goldwyn Studios, for the origination and
for the application of the Delta db Test to
sound recording in motion pictures; Emery
Huse and Ralph B. Atkinson of Eastman Kodak
Co. for their Specifications for Chemical Analy-
sis of Photographic Developers and Fixing
Baths; Farciot Edouart. Joseph E. Robbins, Wil-
liam Rudolph, and Paramount Pictures, Inc.,
for the design and construction of a quiet
portable Treadmill; Harold Nye of Warner
Bros. Studios for a Miniature Incandescent
Spot Lamp; and A. J. Tondreau of Warner
Bros. Studios for the design and manufacture
of an improved Sound Track Printer.
Certiiiciates of Honorable Mention were also
accorded by the Research Council of the
Academy, for important contributions in the
cooperative development of new improved
Process Projection Equipment to F. R. Abbott,
Haller Belt, Alan Cook, and the Bausch and
Lomb Optical Co., for faster projection lenses;
The Mitchell Camera Co., for a new type
Process Projection Head; Mole-Richardson Co.,
for a new type automatically controlled Pro-
jection Arc Lamp; Charles Handley, David Joy,
and the National Carbon Co., for improved and
more stable high-intensity carbons; Winton
Hoch and the Technicolor Motion Picture Corp.
for an Auxiliary Optical System; and Don
Musgrave and Selznick International Pictures,
Inc., for pioneering in the use of the coordinated
equipment in the production. "Gone With the
Wind."
This cooperative development improves the
already invaluable Process Projection method,
which in the past has been largely limited
by insufficient light intensity and screen size.
In addition to the aforementioned, some of
the important advances were: (1) the develop-
ment of fine-grain film for sound recording,
as used by several of the major companies;
(2) development of fine-grain film for release
prints, used by Paramount for "The Great
Victor Herbert," "Geronimo," etc.; (3) develop-
ment of Mercury Lamps for Film Processing;
(4) the Method of Reversed Bias Recording
developed by 20th Century-Fox Sound Dept.;
(5) development of Class B Push-Pull Variable
Recording by RCA; (6) development of a new
Sound Track Projection Microscope by Warner
Bros.; (7) the use of new High-Speed Films by
Technicolor; and (8) the new HI Lamps de-
veloped by Mole-Richardson,
John Eberson
Architect
1014
THE PRESENT DAY
FILM THEATER
An Exposition of Current Trends, and a Practical Long-Range
Appraisement of Future Motion Picture Houses
- By JOHN EBERSON, Architect —
(Editor's Note: In the following article, John Eberson, prominent film
theater builder, designer and decorator, recounts some of the salient consid-
erations confronting circuits, individual exhibitors, and architects in the con-
struction of new theaters, as well as the remodeling of existing ones. Addi-
tionally, the author treats with modern equipment for motion picture houses
of today, and with the probabilities which the future holds with respect to
design and appointments.)
w
1 1 here there is progress, there must of necessity be change. This
precept is particularly applicable to the motion picture houses of today,
and to all mechanical and esthetic appointments which they contain. Were
it not for the application of this principle on the part of practical industry
minds, not merely a static situation would develop, but outright retro-
gression.
Actually, a stubborn attitude toward change would mean the decay of
what we call showmanship, and, too, such resistance to progress would soon
witness a vast recession of public interest in films themselves.
Much of the strength of the industry today, — and it will be equally
true of the future, — arises from the combination of ever-improving studio
product, and the provision by circuits and independent exhibition interest
of conditions under which film entertainment can be better enjoyed.
What, therefore, is accomplished along the line of new theater con-
struction and remodeling by retail film outlets should receive the utmost
encouragement in Hollywood, just as what is accomplished in Hollywood
should command the profoundest interest of the retail showman. Make no
mistake about it, the public, which is after all the court of last resort, is
certainly interested both in the best of pictures and in the best of surround-
ings for their being viewed.
Filmland is fortunate in that its majority eyes have ever been turned
toward improvement. How else could arise in the span of about two
decades an industry of such magnitude and capability?
The number of better houses is growing, and it is encouraging to
filmland and the public generally that the growth brings with it new theaters
of thoroughly modern design, as well as remodeled houses having most of
the virtues and advantages of the newly constructed ones. Many of both
classes are contained in the theater census figures of Jan. 1, 1940, which
reported total outlets in the U. S. at 17,003, as compared with 15,701 at
the outset of 1939, according to probes by The Film Daily.
1015
B AMERICAN
odifc
■HBHHMMI^HaiHM RESTFUL I C
orm
Chairs
since mis one 01 our many
lines of theatre chairs first appeared one year ago!
Why not visit the theatre listed below which is nearest you?
Ask the manager what he thinks about the American Bodiform
Chairs. Then let us show you ivhy.
NEW ENGLAND
Pu.ace Penacook. N. II.
Orm a llotsr Bellow* Fall*. Vt.
H\tks Auleboro, Mam.
Middlbboro Midtlleboro, M ■■■
Grbbndalb . Worccwlcr. Mjm.
Avon Stamford, Conn.
Jewett Jewell, Conn.
Pi.\/\ % ui.i . Conn.
Hippodrome Bridgeport, Conn.
Whitnbi Elajnden, Conn.
MAN YORK
Nbwsrrbi New York City
State Fndicnii. N. Y.
CENTURY ... - Buffalo. N. Y.
FlaTBUSH Brooklyn, N. Y.
Court House K aieriow n. N. Y.
Century New York. N. Y.
RKOBIstSt New York. N. Y.
New Theatre New York. N. Y.
Cham elloh's H am Albany, N. Y.
Riviera Syracuse, N. Y.
Strand Brooklyn, N. Y.
New Theatre. . .... New York cit>
MIDDLE EAST
StonEhurst Upper Darby, P.i
Mack Chesiet. Pa
Mile Beihleht Ps
Fox Philadelphia, P«
Mkt Oxford, Pa
Opera House Wayncehurg, Pa
Penn Weal Hcii.lii.t-. Pa
Palace Pittsburgh, Pa
Shore Wildwood, N. J
Adams Newark, N. J
Cameo Newark, N. J
Towers Camden. N. J
\jain Guttenberx, N. J
Faih I.awn Washington, D. C
I ■ ii i i Washington, D. C
SOUTH EAST
Millwald, . . Wyibeville, Va
Coiony Portsmouth, Va
Grundy, Va
Hi.
Win
n, Va
Pe
1-1.,
Dm
Robinson -Grand .Clark-burg. W. '
Browns Cabin Creek, W. '
CapitOi » beeting, V. 1
Pleasant V vLLEy \* heeling, W. 1
Parker Parkcrsburg, W. 1
New Theatre Marmei, W. 1
Liberty Whiteaville, W. 1
State Bet he-da. IV
Hvattsviixe Hyatuville, S
It
Alia
SOUTH EAST (Continued)
l)i n. vn HvLi Aulmrn, All.
M iDISON Memphis I
Minos* Morganlown. N. C.
Hmuw khii Kl. Lauderdale, Fla.
New Theatre Lake Worth. H».
Palace. . . . Lecaburg, Fla.
New Sparks Winter Park, Fla.
MIDDLE WEST
Valentine. Defiance. Ohio
MADISON, . .Cincinnati, Ohio
Fohest Cincinnati, Ohio
It K< I -i< in hkht Cincinnati, Ohio
KKO PALACE Cincinnati. Ohio
GRANADA.. . Cleveland, Ohio
RKO Keiths Day Ion. Ohio
RKO Grand.. . Cincinnati. Ohio
Times Cinrinnati, Ohio
Mt. LOOKOUT. ........ Cincinnati, Ohio
Shi: v's PaLaCE. Ashtabula, Ohio
RKO Keiths Dayton, Ohio
HIKES Portland, I ml.
Strand ShelbyviUe, Ind.
Pare Indianapolis, End.
Ami \mmk * Shell>> t ille, Ind.
Illinois .Jacksonville, HI.
St»te Ouinc*. III.
Kko Virginia ... . .Chsmpaiin, III.
Family North Branch. III.
TeLENBWS Chicago. III.
Lincoln Belleville. Hi.
Pot k Star .Grand Hapida, Mich.
Center Cadillac. Mich,
Senate. .Detroit, Mich.
Marshal! Marshall, Mich.
02 THEATRE Fremont, Mich.
CoZY .Decatur, Mich.
CoHHUNITT. Harbor Beach. Mich.
Recent Muskegon, Mich.
M wine Croswell, Midi.
Recent Allegan, Mich.
Garden Flim. Mich.
Gladheb Lansing. Mich.
Si n Bangor. Mich.
North town Lansing, M ids.
Regent Flint, Mich.
WestOWN Landing, Mich.
Strand Holland, Mich.
Nor Tow n Hint. Mich.
Lyric Traverse City, Mich.
Harper Detroit. Mich.
Mace-Uptown . .Detroit, Mich.
UNIVERSITY Ann Arbor, Mich.
GRAND Crookslnn, Minn.
LUX. . Perham, Minn.
MAIN STREET Sauk Center, Minn.
Awkkk *n Lei. ion Ga> lord. Minn.
Cr > a l . . . Glencoe, Minn.
ARROWHEAD Omaniia, Minn.
AVALON White Bear l ake, Minn.
MIDDLE WEST
(Continued)
PlX Sleepy Eye. Minn.
Candy Canb) . Minn.
MajMSUA Madelia. Minn.
llol.i t wooli .Tracy, Minn.
Vogue... St. Mathewe, K>.
Liberty Lincoln. Nehr.
Broadway
Cape Girardeau, Mo.
Isis Kansas City, Mo.
Auditorii w MarahaU, \l<>.
Pacbant ... .Si. Lovisi Mo.
Plaza Kansas City, Mo.
De Graw. .Brookfleld, Mo.
Rivervieh St. Louie, Mo.
Palace . ft ichiia, Kane.
Miller Wichita, Kane.
Jvliar Barahoo, Wis.
Moojeska Milwaukee, Ml i-.
Plaza D)er*»ille. la.
Hardacrr Upton, la.
Palace Cedar Rapids, 1...
Wampas Kaoaaoque. la.
Hi alto . Pocahontas, la.
Palace
WEST
New Fox Sterling, Coin.
Broadway Denver, Colo.
COURT House. Denver, Colo.
Fox LongRsonii Colo,
Granada, Monte Vieta, Colo.
Pioneer Lamar. Colo.
SALIDA Salida, Colo.
PaRTACBS Sioux Fall-. S D.
Grand Lemmnn. S. D.
SOUTHWEST
Texas
Texas
Navaw ay ....
Houston, Tex.
River Oaks
Houston, Tex.
Ritz
BIytbeville, Ark.
Duncan
Clovis
Chnie, N. M.
Fox Mission.
Mesitlu Park. N. M.
CALIFORNIA
La Reina Van Nnya
Meh«Lta Los Angele-
HARVEY San Francisco
State Long Beach
Brvvton Long Beach
De AREA. . . Riverside
NEWS Heei. , . . .San Francisco
CALIFORNIA
(< Continued)
Paramount Ln. \n?dei
Porter Woodland
GlendiI.E Glendale
Fox P.fo Alto
A< UYBMl Inglewond
Tower Fresno
los AhCELES As** Angele.
Ventura Veniura
FOX OrPHEUM Oakland
MaYWOOO Lo* Angele.
River Oildatr
NORT1IW EST
DlEON U Willi.
State S|>okane. ff/nS
Liberty LaCrandc. Ore.
Roxv Fargo. N. D.
Munror. Rolla. N. D.
Grind Oakca, N. D.
Walhalla Walhatta, N. D.
STATE Bottineau. Hi D.
Fox Helena. Mont.
FOX HvacocE Rilling>. Mon!.
Liberty Great Fall-, Moot.
Castle. Newcastle. %%o.
RmprESS Laramie. * »o.
EXPORT
Roy vi. . ... . . .Trinidad. Spain
Cine Avenidi ... .Lima. Peru
New Theatre . Montreal, Canada
Princess . . Satdt Ste. Marie, Canada
Riviera San Juan. P. R.
M 4 hello San Juan. P. R.
P» lon Toronto. Onl., Can.
Roxy San Juan. P. R.
20TH CENTURY Juneau. Alaska
N bw Thextre Hav ana, Cuba
M*Titx/o San Juan, P. R.
N. ew THEATRE Montreal. Ont.. Canada
In addition to the theatres
liste€ty American Bodiform
chairs are installed In 47
school and other auditoriums.
GRAND RAPIDS. MICHIGAN
Pioneers and pacemakers in theatre, auditorium, school, church,
stadium and transportation seating
Branch Offices and Distributors in Principal Cities
CHARM
Executed in light brick
with black trimmings,
contrasting marquee of
stainless steel and enam-
eled iron, this 900-seat,
Eberson-designed house,
is the new Hyattsville
(Md.) Theater. Note at-
traction sign treatment.
Existence of so many model theaters at present, — although a great
many outmoded houses still remain in many sections of the country, — is
due primarily to the progressiveness of exhibitors, large and small, who
recognize the commercial advantages attending the ownership and opera-
tion of up-to-date outlets.
Additionally, these exhibitors have taken a great interest in the plan-
ning of their houses, and have given invaluable aid to both theater archi-
tects designing the building, and to engineers and contractors specializing
in their construction.
The most certain prediction which can be made for the current and
coming year is that a sophisticated public will continue to exert a strong
influence upon the provision of better theater, and that the sophisticated
showmen will respond to their public's dictates and wishes.
A Specialty Building
What will be the architectural and appointment trends of the imme-
diate future? First of all shall be the consideration of permanency
in design and equipment, so that houses cannot be outmoded except with
the passing of many years of practical commercial usefulness and profit to
their owners.
Secondly, there must be a veering away from the idea of just a
"theater," and a better concept substituted, namely the thought of a room
or auditorium specially designed and fully adapted to the presentation of
a Shadow Play.
The industry's large coterie of skilled architects in all sections of the
1017
If Nearly Right Won t Do in
Your Theatre Carpets . . .
BUY
ALEXANDER SMITH
CRESTWOOD
ALEXANDER SMITH & SONS CARPET CO.
295 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y.
1018
land generally and happily recognize that the oral and optical nerves of
the human being must be catered to, and that the day of the garish, ornate
and non-functional elements, which have marked, — yes, and marred, —
theaters of the past, is gone forever in the interest of patrons for whom
must be provided essentially such tangible advantages as bodily comfort,
and an atmosphere and surroundings which will place the patron imme-
diately in the right frame of mind to receive Shadow Performances.
Community Architecture
There will and must be a mandatory relationship of design to com-
munity architecture and community taste. Hence the modern theater
TRADITION
Highly successful merg-
ing of past and present
is apparent in the red
brick and stone facade of
Warners' new Kennedy-
Theater, Washington,
D. C, neighborhood
house, which is Colonial
in all respects.
architect will choose for a design for his theater the style of architecture
predominating in the locality where the theater is to be built. He must be
experienced enough to command taste and judgment which will allow him
to transpose this type of architecture into the scale of the theater, and
must adopt details prevailing in such local architecture so as to make
for serviceability and the practical in the house's auditorium, lounges and
reception rooms, so as to carry the underlying principles which govern the
home surroundings of the locality into the theater structure itself.
Such a suggestion, I am sure, can be sold convincingly to the local
exhibitor, — and it is not necessary to "ape" or try to overdo the design,
furnishings or colorings of any old theater seen in this or that town.
A careful study and knowledge of such building and furnishing quali-
1019
ADLER
6"-8"-10"-12"-16"-24'
SILHOUETTE LETTERS
and Loched-in-Line
MULTI-DECKER
GLASS-IN-FRAME UNITS
Fully Covered by U. S. and Canadian Patents
ADLER SIGN LETTER CO.
2909 S. Indiana Ave., Chicago
33 W. 60th St., New York
Chicago • New York • Toronto, Canada • London, England
1020
ties, — together with dependable engineering ability and a few grains of
common sense, — will always bring the best results.
Credit to Architects
IT has been my observation, and I am grateful to have noted, that
theater architects generally have adopted during the past year the
rules and standards of art in the design of the modern theater, while still
avoiding the stereotype classic period styles. Hence these architects have
achieved a great deal of unity, balance, symmetry, good composition of
color, and rhythmic vitality.
Medium, graceful lines, — void of staccato, sharp ornament, — applied
to the interior and exterior design of the modern moving picture theater
have produced some very worth-while cinemas, and a great deal has been
accomplished by the architects in arranging proportions so that a pleasing,
homogeneous effect is achieved.
Personally, I admit that my inclination toward selection of colors for
auditorium, lobby, retiring room, and foyer, has undergone a great change,
— away from contrasts, and in favor of simpler colors chosen in "families"
which blend and harmonize, by using, in a carefully-planned manner, a
related color pitch to create interest.
Neighborhood Houses
Theater audiences, and the number of people in a family taking an
interest in the moving picture, are, according to statistical evidence,
growing. One of the factors in this trend is that theater-going is being
TASTEFUL
Section of the foyer of
the State Theater, Ches-
ter, Pa., showing Formica
exit doors, double fix-
tures, and the unusually
rich atmosphere which is
achieved by the selection
of novelty carpet which
accents color scheme.
1021
John Eberson specifies and uses:
View of the Kennedy
Theatre in Washing-
ton, D. C. . . . a John
Eberson showplace,
with wall fabrics and
draperies by Dazian's.
"fOBRICS by DflZlflflY Inc.
who have served the Theatre for almost a century!
DAZIAN'S, Inc.
142 WEST 44th STREET NEW YORK, N. Y.
HOW TO DO BETTER THEATRE LIGHTING, AT HALF THE COST, WITH
RnmBuscH
D0UUIHITE5
The ideal unit for downlighting in
motion picture theatres. The direct
light is controlled while the spill
light is completely trapped by
baffle plates.
COSTS REDUCED BY:
1. Less wiring.
2. Elimination of chandeliers.
3. Elimination of side wall fixtures.
4. Elimination of plaster coves and
cove strips.
5. Elimination of aisle lights.
6. Lower electric bills.
(a) By actual current consumption.
(b) By reduced demand charge.
7. Less maintenance cost.
(a) Fewer and cheaper lamps.
(b) Simplified relamping labor.
Silver Springs Theatre, Silver Soring*. Md , John Eberson. Arch.
LIGHTING IMPROVED BY:
1. Invisible light source.
2. Even illumination.
3. No spill light on screen.
4. High and low level lighting
h T M Reg opol'd for.
from one source.
S. Patents No. 2,094,670 and 2.179,161. Other patents pending.
Send your plans to our Engineering
Oeoartment for layout and suggestions
RAMBUSCH, Designers, Engineers and Craftsmen, 2 West 45th St., New York
1022
MODERNITY
Proscenium and audi-
torium walls of the State
Theater, Chester, Pa.
Noteworthy are the "bub-
ble" panel, downlighting,
and vertical creeping-
vine damask in rust color.
House uses giant novelty
sidewall lighting fixtures.
made easier for the city as well as the rural patron. Placement of houses
and ever-increasing transportation facilities are contributing causes. It is
noteworthy that neighborhood houses are invariably within the customer's
convenient walking-distance. For the automobilist, more and better free
parking space is being provided. In small communities, theaters are
strategically located where country roads meet and center, making it
simpler for the rural citizen and farmer to gain access to screen enter-
tainment. The improvement of country roads, and the modestly-priced
automobile of today, have tended also to eliminate distances. It must be
cited also that the rural film houses have learned to advertise their attrac-
tions more efficiently, thus accounting to a degree for the upswing in
popularity of the small community houses.
Product is undeniably better, and producer-distributor ad campaigns
are wider in scope and more convincing. These campaigns have assumed
a character of greater sincerity.
Obsolescence of old theaters is around 30 per cent, and I believe I am
not exaggerating when I state that more than 50 per cent of existing
theaters need vital and extensive remodeling.
General business conditions having improved, the exhibitor has been
able in many instances to set aside receipts in a renewal account, ready and
prepared to make improvements at the proper time.
I do not anticipate any appreciable rise in either the cost of theater-
buildings or equipment, with the probable exception of carpets.
1023
DRESS UP YOUR LOBBY
with
"ORMICA
You can find nothing more striking or handsomer for your main doors,
ticket booth and lobby walls than Formica. Highly theatrical and attrac-
tive use of this modern decorative material for these purposes have been
worked out by all the leading architects — and particularly by John Eberson.
Formica is easy to erect, moderate in cost, very good looking. It retains
its colors and surfaces unaffected by time and is easy to keep clean and
fresh looking. When you build or modernize insist on getting all the
facts about Formica.
The Formica Insulation Company
4652 SPRING GROVE AVENUE, CINCINNATI, OHIO
Qsvicj aM&cicJ-td
EIECIflNO
PAINTING. . . .
DECORATING . .
MURAL1)
50) WEST Al-J STREET
NEW YORK CITY
1024
What About Design?
A great deal of study should be given to the selection of design for the
front facade of a theater building, — a design which will fit a certain
setting in the block and will be outstanding, yet harmonious, — with lighting
effects which carry vibration and pulsation, but are not as garish and
piercing as last year's white-green and blue canopy. It is the scale of
the motifs which make the front facade, and the readability of the signs.
We are leaning strongly toward silhouette letters which are back-
lighted, capitalizing upon such back-lighting via flood-lighting the medium
used in the finish of the front elevation.
Every theater, if carefully studied, can be made to take on an attrac-
tive individuality even to the arrangement of advertising matter and ticket
booth arrangement.
INGENIOUS
Cleverly and effec-
tively employing Colonial
damask wall treatment
over rockwool, this stan-
dee space in Warners'
Kennedy Theater in
Washington, D. C, is an
artistic oasis of silver and
light blue. Venetian
blinds are provided at the
standee rail.
The Box Office
AVOID AN "island" box office whenever possible, particularly in towns
where the number of theaters is small, and the competition is not as
great as on Broadway.
In a small town, an island box office is, at best, more of an obstruction
than a convenience. It works out that way both for the public and the
management.
A convenient box office within a few feet of the front building line with
direct connection to the inner lobby will be found most convenient, and if
removed from the vestibule will create freedom of space under the marquee.
1025
"For Carpets That WEAR"
Leading Motion Picture Houses select
J. Rosenheim & Co.
71 West 45th Street, New York, N. Y.
^ "Years of dependable service have earned a worthy reputation."
A partial list of our installations:
• Capitol Theatre, New York • Metro Theatres
• News Reel Theatres Australia
• International Casino South America
• Loew's Theatres India
• Skouras Theatres • Consolidated Amusement
• Century Circuit Enterprises
Featuring IMPERIAL VI IMM WILTON
"Known for its lasting wear, and beauty of design"
Manufactured by: HARDWICK & MAGEE CO.
Charles J. Winston & Co., Inc.
IMPORTERS and MAKERS
"Distinctive Lighting Sffects
LEADING Architects, Decorators and Theatre
Owners select Charles J. Winston & Co. Inc.
for their creative ability in illuminating the Thea-
tre, Church, Club and Residence, due to years of
experience and a record of hundreds of creditable
installations the world over.
Special designs are available in modern and period
types.
Dealers, architects and illuminating engineers are
invited to bring us their lighting problems.
Telephone: BRyant 9-1936-7-8
2 West 47th Street New York
1026
Display Material
The composition AND ensemble of all advertising matter in vestibule
and lobby should be pleasing, tied together, and so lighted as to give
the poster matter and the "stills" an opportunity to be standout and easily
and comfortably scrutinized. I recommend cross-lobby flood-lighting for
poster frames rather than inside lighting, which tends to give the poster
merely a halo.
Lighting Ante-rooms
IF THE concentrated lighting of the marquee supplies 100 per cent, you
must light the vestibule and lobby not less than 80 per cent, and, in
entering the theater, the foyer should have its light intensity dropped
to 20 per cent if we are to call the picture lighting of the auditorium five
per cent.
Seating Capacities
THE all-around neighborhood theater in the Metropolitan area, seat-
ing from 1,000 to 1,200 on one floor, is the most successful. I am
satisfied to forego the discussion of any new downtown or loop theater.
Capacity in my estimation, when and if built, will be never greater than
2,500 seats.
The small town theater which seats 900 people on the main floor and
provides a balcony of 250 seats, — where a two-price policy is used, — is
the most desirable. A very small town theater belongs in the 500-600
seat class.
GRACEFUL
Expert blending of lin-
ear forms makes the au-
ditorium of the Kennedy
Theater in Washington,
D. C, particularly pleas-
ing. Lines of the opera
chairs, decorative ceiling
diffusers, and Colonial
sidewall brackets provide
soft contrast.
1027
SPACIOUS
This foyer and standee
space is eminently roomy
and interesting in treat-
ment. Damask wall cov-
ering is eggshell color,
with streamline ceiling in
pastel shades. A center
of interest is the combina-
tion plaque and lumiline
fixture.
Theater Carpets
Filmland has finally LEARNED to buy the better grade carpet, well-
constructed, with medium-size pile. Here is a good carpet specification:
Frame 5 Yarn — 3-Ply, one of cotton which is used
Wires 10 for the purpose of giving greater
Shot 2 coverage and smoothness of surface
Pitch 256 and to add to its strength and dura-
Cotton Chain 8/3 bility. Yarn used is thoroughly
Cotton Filling 8/5 scoured and of the finest imported
Stuff er 3-Ply Jute quality.
Height of Pile 384
As far as pattern is concerned, medium-scale details are becoming
popular in preference to the over-scaled patterns formerly used. A combi-
nation of dark red, tan, green and rust, with a sprinkling of black will
give a color scheme that will fit most any cheerful theater auditorium.
Lighting
It's a trying market for the lighting fixture manufacturer. More and
more indirect lighting schemes are being used; and more and more do
theater designers reduce the per cubic foot candlepower in the auditorium.
In a great many houses where restful light color schemes are used on walls
and ceilings, fixture and cove lighting both can be eliminated during the
presentation of a film, — all this, however, with the understanding that floor
louvre lighting, aisle standard lighting, and step-lighting have increased,
say 50 per cent over and above the former standards.
1028
Air Conditioning
AIR conditioning, and in many cases refrigeration, have become indis-
pensable. Great improvements have been made in proper air distri-
bution, diffuser construction, re-circulating systems, and the general cost
of improved compressor and evaporating apparatus have been reduced so
as to come within the reach of almost any builder who desires to maintain
a successful theater in his community.
Acoustics
Practical experience has been the greatest teacher in the last few years,
allowing the thinking theater architect to make recommendations for
the acoustical treatment of the auditorium and retiring rooms. Sur-
prising results have accrued, without the necessity of the large expendi-
tures of former times in this line.
Decorating
Secret of A well-decorated theater lies not in the expense but in the
idea behind it, and it is most gratifying to note that so many of our
well-known theater architects have found an opportunity in the suggested
decorative scheme, not only to express their own personality, but to prove
that leadership in the art of decorating still belongs to the architect.
It is the latter who can apply the underlying principles of art which
have come to him, not only via natural talent, but also through the media
of study, travel, and his general interest in art. I repeat that in designing
CHARACTER
General view of the
auditorium of the State
Theater in Chester, Pa.,
a thoroughly up-to-date
film house possessing in-
dividuality and every re-
quisite for patron comfort.
Seats are spring edge,
with full upholstered
back.
1029
and building theaters in various communities, the architect should know
the traditions of these communities, as the life and culture which their
people have had handed down to them, and which they cherish. It is not
amiss today to lavishly copy old ideas, and apply these ideas with taste
and common sense to the new theater. In other words, I believe that in
designing theaters throughout the country, we ought to try designing them
under the precept, "Let us be ourselves," and not try to create awe-
inspiring places, filled with misfit splendor and lavishness which is neither
within our reach . . . nor to our special liking.
"The play's the thing." It is the spirit of harmony and restful
atmosphere conducive to relaxation which makes the film theater of today
popular. Away, then, with the garish and the "dazzling" — and come down
to reality and a scale of comfort which makes for the Homey spirit, re-
flecting the average American's home surroundings.
We usually find that good color harmony has much to contribute
toward the enrichment of our lives. The modern theater architect can
do a great deal of good in applying himself to the carrying out of art
principles, and convey to the public his own personality and understanding
of their good tastes and appreciation of happiness-inspiring art.
Theater Chairs
The most popular type of theater seating belongs in the bracket we
designate as "luxury" seats. These reflect the best engineering talent,
finest materials, and mechanical construction of a high order. Such seats
have deep curved back, full upholstering, spring or rubber cushion. The
wise exhibitor sacrifices seating capacity for spaciousness, which, in my
estimation, goes farther today in popularizing certain auditoriums than
any other equipment or appointment feature which goes into the modern
film theater.
LUXURY
Right — A glimpse of
the exquisitely remod-
eled Ladies Retiring
Room in the Colony-
Theater, Union City,
N. J. Color scheme and
all furnishings cater to
feminine taste.
CORRECT
Left — A corner of the
Men's Smoking Room in
the Kennedy Theater,
Washington, D. C,
acoustically treated for
sound absorption. This
room is both practical
and manly in its fur-
nishings. Flooring of
sheet rubber.
1030
THEATER
SUPPLY DEALERS
Only dealers who sell directly to theaters are included in
this list. The BUYING GUIDE, which starts on page 1043
lists concerns that manufacture products or have services
for exhibitors and producers.
Birmingham, Ala.
Queen Feature Service, Inc.
1912% Morris Ave.
Los Angeles, Calif.
American Seating Co.
6900 Avalon Blvd TWinoaks 1116
Breck Photoplay Supply Co.
1969 S. Vermont Ave REpublic 3151
Flat Light Screen Co.
6233 y2 Santa Monica Blvd Hillside 9109
National Theater Supply Co.
1961 S. Vermont Ave REpublic 4193
Shearer, B. F., Co.
1968 S. Vermont Ave Rochester 1145
Thayer, Floyd
929 S. Longwood Ave WYoming 5912
Theater Specialty Co.
1654 Tarleton St PRospect 7293
Theater Upholstery & Equipment Co.
1358 W. 28th St PArkway 0740
Weaver Manufacturing Co.
1637 E. 102nd St LAfayette 0388
San Francisco, Calif.
DeVry Equipment Agency
821 Market St GArfield 1317
General Register Corp.
280 Golden Gate Ave TUxedo 2331
National Theater Supply Co.
255 Golden Gate Ave MArket 4171
Pacific Coast Theater Supply Co.
250 Golden Gate Ave ORdway 0750
Preddy, Walter G.
187 Golden Gate Ave UNderhill 7571
Western Theatrical Equipment Co.
222 Golden Gate Ave TUxedo 4484
Denver, Colo.
Graham Bros.
546 Lincoln St TAbor 5467
National Theater Supply Co.
2111 Champa St .KEystone 1621
New Haven, Conn.
Modern Theater Equipment Corp.
133 Meadow St 7-4579
National Theater Supply Co.
122 Meadow St 5-7371
Washington, D. C.
Lust, Ben
1001 New Jersey Ave., N.W NAtional 3672
Tampa, Fla.
Burgert, W. C, Inc.
117 S. Franklin St.
Atlanta, Ga.
DeVry Corp., Agent
109 Walton St DEarborn 3150
National Theater Supply Co.
187 Walton St., N.W JAckson 4075
Wil-Kin Theater Supply, Inc.
150 Walton St., N.W WAlnut 4613
Chicago, 111.
Abbott Theater Equipment Co.
1303 S. Michigan Ave ATlanta 4040
DeVry Corp.
1111 W. Armitagre St LINcoln 5200
Fulton, E. E., Co.
1018 S. Wabash Ave WEBster 2608
Goldberg, Joe, Inc.
1245 S. Wabash Ave CALumet 7830
McAuley, J. E., Manufacturing Co.
554 W. Adams St CENtral 8866
Movie Supply Co., Ltd.
1318 S. Wabash Ave CALumet 5932
National All-Movie Sales Co.
325 W. Huron St SUPerior 2075
National Theater Supply Co.
1325 S. Wabash Ave CALumet 7678
Indianapolis, Intl.
Ger-Bar Theater Equipment, Inc.
442 N. Illinois St Lincoln 1727
National Theater Supply Co.
436 N. Illinois St Lincoln 5758
Des Moines, la.
Des Moines Theater Supply Co.
1121 High St 3-6520
National Theater Supply Co.
1115 High St 4-2322
Service Theater Supply Co.
514 Twelfth St 4-6768
Louisville, Ky.
Falla City Theater Equipment Co.
211 W. Jefferson St.
New Orleans, La.
Electrical Supply Co.
201 Magazine St RAymond 7271
Louisiana Motion Picture Equipment Co.
1414 Cleveland Ave RAymond 8016
National Theater Supply Co.
220 S. Liberty St RAymond 4456
1031
Proven Cooling Equipment
Dual Deflector. Devel-
oped and patented by
UsAIRco. Assures com-
plete control of air dis-
tribution.
Arctic Nu-Air Blower. Guaranteed to
meet and often exceed all recognized
< ratings. Perfectly balanced, sturdy,
powerful, quiet. Simply, efficiently
engineered. Multi V-Belt silent drive.
Kooler-Aire Heat Transfer Chamber
(Air Washer). Correctly designed for
maximum cooling results, using water ^
of varying temperatures. Furnished
with multiple banks of atomizing
nozzles for cold water application.
Hydraulic I'ariable
Speed Pulley. Re-
mote Control. Used
on over 6000 Arctic
Nu-Air Blowers.
Air Velocity Equal-
izerand Atmospheric
Balancer.
THREE TYPES OF
COOLING EQUIPMENT
WRITE TODAY for prices and construction
details of USAIRCO Theatre Cooling Equip-
ment, the Biggest Buy in Theatre Air Con-
ditioning. Efficient design — quiet opera-
tion — low operating cost — long life,
USAIRCO equipment is the finest product
of an engineering staff that has specialized
for 15 years in the Theatre field. With this
equipment and USAIRCO's engineering ser-
vice, you can get 3 types of cooling: Arctic
i\u-.4ir — Fresh Air in Motion; Kooler-Aire
— Washed Air in Motion; Cold Water Kooler-
Aire — for 55° ivater application.
YOU GET MORE for your money from
USAIRCO — hetter equipment and engineer-
ing, with controls that make USAIRCO cool-
ing responsive to the needs of every day.
Baltimore, Md.
Dusinan, Henry C.
213 N. Calvert St PLaza 2433
National Theater Supply Co.
417 St. Paul Place VErnon 4846
Boston, Mass.
Capitol Theater Supply Co.
28 Piedmont St LIBerty 6797
Cifre, Joe, Inc.
37 Winchester St LIBerty 0445
Independent Theater Supply Co., Inc.
28 Winchester St LIBerty 0051
National Theater Supply Co.
40 Piedmont St LIBerty 3294
Springfield, Mass.
New England M. P. Equipment Corp.
356 Worthington St.
Betroit, Mich.
Amusement Supply Co.
208 W. Montcalm St CAdillac 3440
McArthur Theater Equipment Co.
2501 Cass Ave CAdillac 5524
Motion Picture Engineering Co.
134 Duffield St CHerry 1373
National Theater Supply Co.
2312 Cass Ave CAdillac 2447
Minneapolis, Minn.
Cinema Supplies, Inc.
38 Glenwood Ave BRidgeport 1166
National Theater Supply Co.
56 Glenwood Ave MAin 8273
Kansas City, Mo.
National Theater Supply Co.
233 W. 19th St HArrison 3256
Stebbins Theater Equipment Co.
1804 Wyandotte St GRanite 0134
St. Louis, Mo.
Erker Bros. Optical Co.
610 Olive St CHestnut 9410
Exhibitors Supply Co.
3238 Olive St JEfferson 5913
National Theater Supply Co.
3210 Olive St JEfferson 8494
Omaha, Neb.
Quality Theater Supply Co.
1511 Davenport St ATlantic 7253
Scott Ballantyne Co.
222 N. 16th St JAckson 4444
Western Theater Supply Co.
214 N. 15th St ATlantic 9046
Col vis. M. M.
Eastern N. Y. Theater Supply Co.
P. O. Box 1099 Phone 760
Albany, N. Y.
Empire Theater Supply Co.
1003 Broadway 3-2972
National Theater Supply Co.
1039 Broadway 6-1479
Auburn, N. Y.
Auburn Theater Equipment Co.
5 Court St.
Buffalo, N. Y.
Adams, J. F., Inc.
459 Washington St CLeveland 0940
Becker Theater Equipment, Inc.
492 Pearl St CLeveland 7276
National Theater Supply Co.
500 Pearl St WAshington 1736
United Projector & Film Corp.
228 Franklin St WAshington 8022
New York, N. Y.
Amusement Supply Co.
341 W. 44th St Circle 6-0850
Behrend Motion Picture Supplies
630 Ninth Ave Circle 6-9168
Capitol Motion Picture Supply Corp.
630 Ninth Ave Circle 6-0340
Consolidated Theater Supply Corp.
1600 Broadway Circle 6-9580
Continental Theater Accessories, Inc.
325 W. 44th St Circle 6-1010
Crown Motion Picture Supplies Corp.
619 Ninth Ave Circle 6-4780
Eastern Theater Supply Co.
326 W. 44th St Circle 5-9656
Empire Theater Supply Corp.
334 W. 44th St Circle 6-9383
Film Products, Inc.
630 Ninth Ave Circle 6-0478
Hornstein, Joe, Inc.
630 Ninth Ave Circle 6-6285
International Theater Accessories Corp.
636 Eleventh Ave Circle 6-9090
National Theater Supply Co.
356 W. 44th St Circle 5-6900
O. & W. Cine Enterprises
149 W. 48th St LOngacre 5-7640
Robin, J. E., Inc.
334 W. 44th St Circle 6-9383
S. O. S. Cinema Supply Corp.
636 Eleventh Ave Circle 6-9090
St. George Motion Picture Supplies
130 W. 46th St BRyant 9-5984
Charlotte, N. C.
National Theater Supply Co.
304 S. Church St 7763
Greensboro, N. C.
Mutual Theater Supply Co.
124 E. Washington St.
Cincinnati, O.
Mid-West Theater Supply Co., Inc.
1632 Central Parkway CHerry 7225
National Theater Supply Co., Inc.
1635 Central Parkway MAin 6581
Cleveland, O.
National Theater Supply Co.
Payne Ave PRospect 4613
Oliver Theater Supply, Inc.
1701 E. 23rd St PRospect 6934
Columbus, O.
American Theater Equipment Co.
165 N. High St.
Toledo, O.
American Theater Supply Co.
310 St Clair St.
Oklahoma City, Okla.
Davis, Henry O.
622 N. Broadway ,i-0BUB
National Theater Supply Co.
700 W. Grand Ave 3-8703
1033
Oklahoma Theater Supply Co.
708 W. Grand Ave 7-8691
Portland, Ore
Western Theater Equipment Co., Inc.
1923 N. W. Kearney St BEacon 2195
Philadelphia, Pa.
National Theater Supply Co.
1225 Vine St SPruce 6166
Penn Theater Equipment Co.
309 N. 13th St RITtenhouse 3273
Pittsburgh, Pa.
National Theater Supply Co.
1721 Blvd. of the Allies GRanite 4630
Superior Motion Picture Supply Co.
84 Van Braam St GRanite 0724
Providence, R. I.
Rhode Island Theater Supply Co.
357 Westminster St.
Memphis, Tenn.
Monarch Theater Supply Co.
494 S. Second St 8-4870
National Theater Supply Co.
400 S. Second St 8-5358
Southern Visual Equipment Co.
494 S. Second St 8-4870
Nashville, Tenn.
Southern Theater Supply Co.
425 Deaderick St.
Dallas, Tex.
DeVry Corp. Agency
306 S. Pearl St 7-6110
Hardin Theaters Supply Co.
714 Hampton Road 6-2235
Marlow, E. < • ., Co.
1610 Main St 2-8088
National Theater Supply Co.
300 S. Harwood St 7-2135
Parker, David F.
1909 Commerce St 7-6772
Houston, Tex.
Southwestern Theater Equipment Co.
510 Merchants & Manufacturers Bldgr.
Salt Lake City, V.
Inter-Mountain Theater Supply Co.
142 E. First South St WAsatah 4014
National Theater Supply Co.
248 E. First South St Wasatch 6959
Service Theater Supply Co.
256 E. First South St Wasatch 7800
Seattle, Wash.
National Theater Supply Co.
2400 First Ave MAln 4910
Shearer, B. F., Co.
2318 Second Ave ELiot 8247
Charleston, H . Va.
Charleston Theater Supply
506 State St.
Milwaukee, Wise.
DeVry, Herman A., Inc.
717 W. Wells St MArquette 2354
National Theater Supply Co.
1029 N. 8th St MArquette 7333
Smith, Ray, Co.
635 N. 7th St MArquette 2000
CANADA
Montreal
Burko Theater Supply Co.
1409 St. Alexander St PLateau 7696
Dominion Sound Equipments, Ltd.
1620 Notre Dame. W FItzroy 9663
General Theater Supply Co., Ltd.
366 Mayor St LAncaster 6477
Perkins Electric Co., Ltd.
2027 Bleury St HArbour 0179
Toronto
Coleman Electric Co.
258 Victoria St ELgin 7767
Dominion Sound Equipments, Ltd.
131 Simcoe St WAverly 6131
Perkins Electric Co., Ltd.
277 Victoria St ELgin 6209
Vancouver
Theater Equipment Supply Co.
906 Davie St.
Winnipeg
Rice, J. H., & Co.
Canada Bldgr.
T B A I L E It S
Los Angeles, Calif.
National Screen Service Corp.
7026 Santa Monica Blvd GLadstone 3136
2018 S. Vermont Ave REpublic 4166
Pacific Title & Art Studio
1123 N. Bronson Ave Hollywood 9220
Standard Screen Service
2028 S. Vermont Ave PArkway 1357
Trailer-Made, Inc.
1909 S. Vermont Ave PArkway 3173
San Francisco, Calif.
Alexander Preview Co.
125 Hyde St
GRaystone
2266
Blache Film Laboratories
292 Turk St
ORdway
0272
Motion Picture Service Co.
125 Hyde St
ORdway
9162
National Screen Service
168 Golden Gate Ave
. . ORdway
1511
Skinner, C. R., Manufacturing Co.
6909
1034
Colorado Springs, Colo.
Alexander Preview Co.
Alexander Film Bldg 4200
Denver, Colo.
National Screen Service
2144 Champa St CHerry 4413
Washington, D. C.
National Screen Service
920 New Jersey Ave.. N. W NAtional 1634
Trailer-Made Film Service
203 Eye St.. N. W REpublic 3150
Atlanta, Ga.
Alexander Preview Co.
163 Walton St.. N. W WAlnut 6674
National Screen Service Corp.
173 Walton St., N. W WAlnut 1563
Southern Trailer-Made, Inc.
163 Walton St., N. W.
Strickland Industrial Film Corp.
163 Walton St., N. W JAckson 2767
Chicago, 111.
Action Film Co.
2901 S. Prairie Ave CALumet 2475
Alexander Preview Co.
839 S. Wabash Ave HARrison 3165
Filmack Trailer Co.
843 S. Wabash Ave HARrison 9393
Midwest Film Studios
724 S. Wabash Ave WAbash 1515
National Screen Service
1307 S. Wabash Ave Victory 4411
Stern, Sidney
1229 S. State St CALumet 6378
Trailer-Made, Inc.
1300 S. Wabash Ave CAlumet 5900
Des Moines, la.
Trailer-Made, Inc.
1121 High St 3-6520
New Orleans, La.
Harcol Motion Picture Industries, Inc.
600 Barrone St MAgnolia 1744
Motion Picture Advertising Service Co.
1032 Carondelet St MAgnolia 4545
National Screen Service
1429 Cleveland St RAymond 9588
Southern Trailer-Made, Inc.
223 S. Liberty St.
Boston, Mass.
Ambuter Motion Picture Lab., Inc.
42 Melrose Ave HANcock 1158
Master Motion Picture Co., Inc.
48 Piedmont St HANcock 3592
National Screen Service Corp.
36 Melrose Ave LIBerty 4476
Trailer-Made Service of New England, Inc.
39 Church St HAncock 6151
Detroit, Mich.
National Screen Service
2949 Cass Ave TEmpIe 1-0790
Minneapolis, Minn.
National Screen Service Corp.
1105 Currie Ave ATlantic 6517
Sly Fox Films, Inc.
627 First Ave., N ATlantic 2818
Trailer-Made, Inc.
68 Glenwood Ave MAin 2086
St. Paul, Minn.
Ray-Bell Films, Inc.
2260 Highland Ford Parkway. . .EMerson 1393
Kansas City, Mo.
Andlaver Film Co.
Ozark Bldg Victor 4658
Missouri Film Laboratories
1704 Baltimore St GRanite 0708
National Screen Service Corp.
1706 Wyandotte St Victor 5893
Trailer-Made, Inc.
130 W. 18th St Victor 3535
St. Louis, Mo.
National Screen Service
3318 Olive St JEHerson 9694
Buffalo, IV. Y.
Greyhound Film Laboratories
265 Franklin St WAshington 7232
New York, IV. Y.
Alexander Preview Co.
630 Ninth Ave Circle 5-6952
National Screen Service, Inc.
630 Ninth Ave Circle 6-5700
Special Screen Service, Inc.
653 Eleventh Ave Circle 6-6950
Trailer-Made, Inc.
35 W. 45th St BRyant 9-1777
Welgot Trailer Service
630 Ninth Ave Circle 6-6450
Charlotte, IV. C.
Southern Trailer-Made, Inc.
214 S. Poplar St.
Cincinnati, O.
Trailer-Made Service, Inc.
1635 Central Parkway CHerry 7251
Cleveland, O.
National Screen Service Corp.
2336 Payne Ave PRospect 8282
Tri-State Pictures, Inc.
630 W. Superior Ave PRospect 4900
Oklahoma City, Okla.
Ramsey Pictures
Ramsey Tower 2-6111
Philadelphia, Pa.
McCurdy Films
56th & Woodland Aves SARatoga 0466
National Screen Service Corp.
1201 Vine St RITtenhouse 9580
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Atlantic Screen Service
1024 Forbes St GRant 2230
Memphis, Tenn.
National Screen Service Corp.
500 S. Second Ave 8-7454
Southern Trailer-Made, Inc.
295 S. Second St.
Dallas, Tex.
Alexander Preview Co.
308 S. Harwood St 7-4658
Jamieson Film Laboratories
2212 Live Oak St 2-6644
National Screen Service
2012 Jackson St 7-8316
Trailer-Made Service of Texas, Inc.
302 Vi S. Harwood St 7-1884
flouston, Tex.
Photo Arts
807 Texas Ave.
Seattle, Wash.
Cinema Screen Service
2419 Second Ave ELiot 6163
National Screen Service Corp.
2418 Second Ave SENeca 2882
CANADA
Montreal
Associated Screen News, Ltd.
6271 Western Ave DExter 1186
Toronto
Associated Screen News, Ltd.
21 Richmond St., E WAverly 3703
Filmart Motion Pictures
107 Richmond St., S ELgin 6564
General Films, Ltd.
156 King St.. W.
Vancouver
Vancouver Motion Pictures, Ltd.
Film Exchange Bldg SEymour 4620
1035
CHICK6RING 4-4232
244 W€$T 4^T.M$T. N.Y.C
CN6 BLOCK tVCST Or B'WAT
YEAR AFTER YEAR
FI
infill
I.I.IJ'I'I'l'I'l'I'I'J'l'I'M'J'l
GOOD
NEGATIVE DEVELOPING -PRINTS -TITLES
16 MM 35 MM
SOUND OR SILENT
COURTEOUS, DEPENDABLE SERVICE
FILMLAB, Inc.
130 West 46th St., New York City BRyant 9-4981
1036
LABORATORIES
Los Angeles, Calif.
Art Craft Screen Service
6C10 Santa Monica Blvd Hollywood 9875
Cinecolor, Inc.
2800 S. Olive Ave., Bev. Hills. . STanley 7-1126
Cinema Laboratories, Inc.
6823 Santa Monica Blvd Hollywood 3961
Cinema Title Studio
7936 Santa Monica Blvd Hillside 6388
Columbia Pictures Laboratory
1443 N. Beach wood Drive .... GLadstone 5122
Consolidated Film Industries, Inc.
950 Seward St Hollywood 1441
Cosmocolor Corp.
1001 N. Mansfield Ave Hillside 8244
Dunningcolor Process Co., Inc.
932 La Brea Ave GRanite 3174
Eastman Kodak Research Laboratory
6707 Santa Monica Blvd. . . . HEmpstead 3171
Great Western Laboratories
6616 Melrose Ave GLadstone 3124
Hollywood Col-film Corp.
320 S. Olwe St., Burbank ... CHarleston 6-6477
Hollywood Film Enterprises, Inc.
6060 Sunset Blvd Hillside 2181
Horn-Jeffreys & Co., Inc.
Burbank HEmpstead 1622
Jackman Color & Process Corp.
1809 S. Magnolia St.. Burbank . GLadstone 7191
Mercer, Ray
4241 Normal Ave OLympic 8436
Pacific Title & Art Studio
1123 N. Bronson Ave HOllywood 9220
Pathe Laboratories, Inc.
6823 Santa Monica Blvd HOllywood 3961
Kichters Film Lab.
7936 Santa Monica Blvd Hollywood 9072
Ries Laboratory
1605 N. Cahuengra Blvd GRanite 6711
Schlesinger, Leon
1123 N. Bronson Ave Hollywood 9220
Smallwood, Ray
7250 Santa Monica Blvd. ... HEmpstead 2992
Stillfilm Co.
4703 W. Pico Blvd YOrke 2002
Technicolor Motion Picture Corp.
6311 Romaine St GRanite 1101
United Process
7250 Santa Monica Blvd. ... HEmpstead 2992
Williams Shots (Composite Labs)
8111 Santa Monica Blvd HOllywood 7241
San Francisco, Calif.
Agfa Laboratory Service
125 Hyde St ORdway 9162
Ball Film Laboratory
1256 Howard St UNderhill 8638
Blache Film Laboratories
292 Turk St ORdway 0272
Duhem Motion Picture Manufacturing Co.
135 Hayes St HEmlock 1225
Motion Picture Service Co.
125 Hyde St ORdway 9162
San Francisco Cinema Laboratory
909 Hyde St ORdway 4259
Colorado Springs, Colo.
Alexander Film Co.
Alexander Film Bldg 4200
Atlanta, Ga.
Paramount News Laboratory
154 Walton St., N. W JAckson 2740
Strickland Industrial Film Corp.
163 Walton St., N. W JAckson 2767
Visugraphic Film Corp.
148 Walton St., N. W WAlnut 7171
Chicago, 111.
American Film Corp.
6227 N. Broadway ROgers Park 3202
Atlas Educational Film Co.
1111 Southern Blvd., Oak Park..AUstin 8620
Chicago Film Laboratories, Inc.
18 W. Walton St WHitehall 6971
Holmes, Burton, Films, Inc.
7510 N. Ashland Ave ROgers Park 6056
Midwest Film Studios
724 S. Wabash Ave WABash 1516
Mutual Film Laboratory
1737 N. Campbell Ave ARMitage 2073
Stern, Sidney
1229 S. State St CALumet 6378
New Orleans, La.
Hanoi Motion Picture Laboratories, Inc.
600 Barrone St MAgnolia 1744
Motion Picture Advertising Service Co., Inc.
1032 Carondelet St MAgnolia 4545
Baltimore, Md.
Alpha Film Laboratories
6000 Pimlieo Road Liberty 6216
Boston, Mass.
Ambuter Motion Picture Laboratory, Inc.
42 Melrose Ave HANcock 1158
Master Motion Picture Co., Inc.
48 Piedmont St HANcock 3692
Paramount Laboratories, Inc.
123 Heath St GARrison 4830
Detroit, Mich.
Hammond, Lloyd, Motion Picture Co.
2426 Cass Ave ARndolph 7978
Jam Handy Organization
2821 E. Grand Blvd MAdison 2450
Metropolitan Motion Picture Co.
121 Fisher Bldg MAdison 4266
Wilding Picture Productions
7635 Grand River Blvd TYler 5-8180
Minneapolis, Minn.
Sly-Fox Films, Inc.
627 First Ave., N ATlantic 2818
St. Paul, Minn.
Kay-Bell Films, Inc.
2269 Highland Ford Parkway ... EMerson 1393
1037
6
\
YOU NEED
PROFESSIONAL
16 mm. and 8 mm.
PRINTS
CINELAB, INC.
33 WEST 60th STREET
New York City Telephone CO 5-0877
• FILM •
» LABORATORIES *
A MODERN AND COMPLETE LABORATORY FOR
DEVELOPING AND PRINTING 35 M.M., 16 M.M.
also
Titles — Animation — Trick Photography
Personal Supervision and Service
NEW YORK, N. Y. TORONTO, CANADA
245 W. 55th Street 362 Adelaide St., W.
1038
Kansas City, Mo.
Missouri Film Laboratory
1704 Baltimore St GRand 0708
Bound Brook, V J.
1'athe Laboratory
E. Main & B. Streets BOund Brook 90
Camden, \ . J.
RCA Manufacturing Co.
Front & Cooper Sts.
Fort Lee, X. J.
Consolidated Film Industrie*, Inc.
Main St FOrt Lee 8-3400
Buffalo, V Y.
Greyhound Film Laboratories
265 Franklin St WAshington 7232
Brooklyn & Long Island, \.\ .
Ace Film Laboratories
1227 E. 14th St.. B'klyn ... Nightingale 4-8700
Paramount Laboratory
Sixth & Pierce Sts.. Astoria
RAvenswood 8-8000
New York, N. Y.
Cinelab. Inc.
33 W. 60th St COlumbus 5-0877
Consolidated Film Industries, Inc.
1776 Broadway COlumbus 5-1776
Plant: 302 W. 146th St BRadhurst 2-1220
DeLuxe Laboratories, Inc. (20th Century-Fox)
441 W. 55th St Circle 7-3220
Du-Art Film Laboratories, Inc.
245 W. 55th St COlumbus 5-5584
Film Laboratories of Canada, Inc.
American Representative, Arthur Gottlieb
245 W. 55th COlumbus 5-5584
Filmlab, Inc.
130 W. 46th St BRyant 9-4981
Film Service Laboratories Inc.
630 Ninth Ave Circle 6-6690
H. E. R. Laboratories
457 W. 46th St Circle 6-5232
Major Film Laboratories, Inc.
653 Eleventh Ave Circle 6-6950
Malcolm Film Laboratories
244 W. 49th St Circle 6-6150
Mecca Film Laboratories, Inc.
630 Ninth Ave Circle 6-5290
Mercury Film Laboratories, Inc.
723 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-2790
Movielab Film Laboratories
1600 Broadway Circle 6-9855
Paramount News Laboratory
Office: 544 W. 43rd St MEdallion 3-4300
Pathe Laboratories. Inc.
30 Rockefeller Plaza COlumbus 5-0760
Laboratories:
35 W. 45th St BRyant 9-6075
Bound Brook, N. J BOund Brook 90
Precision Film Laboratories, Inc.
21 W. 46th St BRyant 9-8396
Producers Laboratories, Inc.
1600 Broadway Circle 6-6446
Star Safety Films, Inc.
630 Ninth Ave Circle 6-0888
Cleveland, O.
Escar Motion Picture Service, Inc.
7315 Carnegie Ave ENdicott 2707
Tri-State Pictures, Inc.
630 W. Superior Ave PRospect 4900
Oklahoma City, Okla.
Ramsey Pictures
Ramsey Tower Bldg 2-6111
Philadelphia, Pa.
McCurdv Films
56th & Woodland Aves SARatoga 0466
News Reel Laboratory
1707 Sansom St RITtenhouse 3892
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Atlantic Screen Service, Inc.
1024 Forbes St GRant 2230
Dallas, Tex.
Jamieson Film Laboratories „ _„,..
2212 Live Oak St 2 5644
Houston, Tex.
Photo Arts
807 Texas Ave.
Seattle, Wash.
Cinema Screen Service
2419 Second Ave ELliot 6163
Milwaukee, Wise.
Film Arts Corp.
717 W. Wells St DAly o6/0
CANADA
Calgary
Barnes Calgary Film Production Co.
Montreal
Associated Screen News, Ltd.
5271 Western Ave DExter 118b
Cinecraft Studios, Inc.
1184 St. Catherine St.. W LAncaster 809-
Toronto
Associated Screen News, Ltd.
21 Richmond St.. E WAverly 3,03
Film Laboratories of Canada
362 Adelaide St.. W WAverly 2394
General Films. Ltd.
156 King St., W.
Ottawa
Canadian Government Motion Picture Bureau
John & Sissex Sts Dideau 5730
Begina, Sask.
General Films, Ltd.
1924 Rose St.
Vancouver
Motion Skreenadz, Ltd.
Film Exchange Bldg.
Vancouver Motion Pictures, Ltd.
Film Exchange Bldg.
1039
C. ROSS
CENTALS ■ A full line of modern equipment to-
gether with a staff of trained men to handle any job
large or small any time, anywhere. Generator trucks,
searchlights and floodlights, for premieres and general
lighting activities.
FO
SALES: Everything in the line of equipment for
motion picture and photographic studios.
SERVICE: We are prepared to offer the finest
service, equipment and technical advice obtainable
in the East. Your requirements taken care of to the
last minute detail.
CHARLES
2 4 4 - 5 0 WEST 49th ST., NEW YORK, N. Y.
1040
MOTION PICTURE
LIGHTING EQUIPMENT
Estimates Cheerfully Given
Let Us Enlighten You On Your
Lighting Problems
As Sole Eastern Distributors, we
carry the full and complete line
of equipment manufactured by: —
MOLE-RICHARDSON CO.
Hollywood, California
Incomparable Lighting Equipment
ROSS, INC.
TELEPHONES CIRCLE 6-5470-1-2
1041
MANUFACTURES A COMPLETE LINE
OF
SOUND AND VISUAL
PROJECTION EQUIPMENT
DESIGNED ond PRICED TO MEET YOUR EXACT NEEDS
LOOK 'EM OVER -MAKE YOUR SELECTION
YOU DON'T HAVE TO BUY MORE THAN YOU CAN
AFFORD OR INSTALL LESS THAN YOU REQUIRE
PROJECTORS
* SIMPLEX E-7-The World's Finest Projector.
Installed in America's Greatest Theatres.
* SUPER SIMPLEX -Proved in Leading Theatres
throughout the World.
* SIMPLEX Si-New Model-Specially Designed
and Moderately Priced for the limited budget theatre.
^3m&gk? ****
C^V ^ ST A R
* SIMPLEX SOUND SYSTEMS designed to give deluxe Sound in any theatre
regardless of size. Built to permit selection of a type which meets exact requirements
of any installation. Full flexibility give ample and complete range which permits utmost
economy while rigidly maintaining highest Simplex quality — The World's Standard.
MANUfACTURlD !Y
INTERNATIONAL PROJECTOR
CORPORATION
88-96 GOLD STRUT, NIW YORK. N.Y.
DISTRIIUTID IT
NATIONAL THEATRE SUPPLY
COMPANY
■RANCHES IN PRINCIPAL CITIES
1042
BUYING
G U I B E
' F it U 1940
In the following lists will be found the names and addresses
of companies and individuals manufacturing, distributing or
serving producers or services for theaters and studios.
Accounting Systems
Easy Method Ledger System, Seymour. Ind.
Erker Bros. Optical Co.. 610 Olive St.. St.
Louis. Mo.
Preddey. Walter G.. 187 Golden Gate Ave.. San
Francisco. Calif.
Shugart. Harole E.. Co.. 911 Sycamore Ave, Los
Angeles. Calif.
Shure Brothers. 225 W. Huron St.. Chicago. 111.
Slater Co.. The. 300 W. Austin Ave.. Chicago. 111.
U. S. Gypsum Co.. 300 W. Adams St.. Chicago. 111.
Wood Conversion Co.. First National Bids'.. St.
Paul. Minn.
Acoustical Products
and Service
A. A. A. Studio. Box 25. Station 0. Cincinnati. 0.
Acousticon Division of Dictograph Products Co..
Inc.. 580 Fifth Ave.. Xew York. N. Y.
Armstrong Cork Co.. Lancaster. Pa.
Atlas Sound Corp.. 1451 39th St.. Brooklyn. X. T.
Blocksom 4 Co., Michigan City. Ind.
Celotex Corp.. The.. 919 >*. Michigan Ave,
Chicago, m.
Certain-Teed Products Corp.. 100 E. 42nd St..
New York. X. Y.
Colortone Acoustic Devices. Inc.. 322 E. Colfax
Ave.. South Bend. Ind.
Dictograph Sales Corp.. 5S0 Fifth Avenue, New
York, N. Y.
Electrical Research Products. Inc.. 195 Broadway.
New York. N. Y.
Federated Purchaser. Inc.. 25 Park Place. New
York. N. Y.
Fox Sound Equipment Corp.. 3120 Monroe St..
Toledo. O.
General Insulating & Manufacturing Co.. Alex-
andria. Ind.
General Insulating Products Co.. SS21 15th Ave,
Brooklyn. N. Y.
tasulite Co.. 1100 Builders Exchange. Minneapolis.
Minn.
Johns-Manville. 22 E. 40lh St.. New York. N. Y.
Keasbey & Mattison Co.. Ambler. Pa.
Kendell Co. of America. 7 W. 44th St.. New York.
N. Y.
Kennedy. David E.. Inc.. 58 Second Ave.. Brook-
lyn. N. Y.
King Scenic Co.. 1914 Main St.. Dallas. Tex.
Miles Reproducer Co.. Inc.. 812 Broadway. New
York. N. Y.
National Rug Mills. Inc.. 2494 S. Fifth St.. MU-
waukee. Wise.
Picture-Fone Co.. 806 S. Main St.. Lima. O.
Bacon Electric Co.. Inc.. 52 E. 19th St.. New
York. N. Y.
Kockbestos Products Corp.. P. O. Drawer 1102.
New Haven. Conn.
Adapters. Carbon
Best Devices Co.. 10516 Western Ave.. Cleve-
land. O.
Blue Seal Products. Inc.. 264 Wyckoff Ave..
Brooklyn. N. Y.
Capitol Stage Lighting Co.. 527 W. 45lh St..
New York. N. Y.
Carbon Products. Inc.. 324 W. 42nd St.. New
York. N. Y.
Cross Machine Shop. 291S Pennsylvania Ave..
Detroit. Mich.
Fulton. E. E.. Co.. 1018 S. Wabash Ave.. Chi-
cago. HI.
Motion Pictures Accessories Co.. 2200 S. Vermont
Ave.. Los Angeles. Calif.
Olesen. Otto K.. Illuminating Co, Ltd.. 1560 H.
Tine St.. Hollywood. Calif.
Adapters. Incandescent
Projection
Camera Supply Co.. 1515 N. Cahuenga Blvd..
Hollywood. Calif.
Capitol Stage Lighting Co.. 527 W. 45th St..
New York. N. Y.
Carbon Products. Inc.. 324 W. 42nd St, New
York. N. Y.
Cinema Studios Supply Corp, 1010 N. McCadden
Place. Los Angeles. Calif.
General Electric Co, Schenectady. N. Y.
Kliegl Bros. Universal Electric Stage Lighting Co,
Inc. 321 W. 50th St, New York. N. Y.
Kuby Camera Exchange. 729 Seventh Ave, New
York. N. Y.
United Theater Equipment Co, Inc. 121 Golden
Gate Ave, San Francisco. Calif.
Adapters, Lens
Capitol Stage Lighting Co, 527 W. 45th St,
New York. N. Y.
Carbon Products. Inc. 324 W. 42nd St.. New
York. N. Y.
1043
nun
FLAG AND VALANCE COMPANY
71 FIFTH AVENUE
NEW YORK, N. Y.
646 N. Michigan Ave. 8954 Gibson Street
Chicago, Illinois Los Angeles, Calif.
1044
Fulton, E. E., Co., 1018 S. Wabash Ave..
Chicagro, 111.
Goerz, C. P., American Optical Co., 317 E.
34th St., New York, N. Y.
Gundlache Manufacturing1 Co.. Gundlaeh Bid?..
Fairport, N. Y.
Kliegl Bros. Universal Electric Stage Lighting Co.,
Inc.. 321 W. 50th St., New York, N. Y.
Morelite Co., Inc., 600 W. 57th St., New York,
N. Y.
Projection Optics Co., 330 Lyell Ave., Roches-
ter. N. Y.
Ruby Camera Exchange, 729 Seventh Ave., New
York, N. Y.
Air Conditioning
Air Conditioning Engineering, 1523 E. 9th St.,
Los Angeles, Calif.
American Blower Corp., 6000 Russell St., Detroit.
Mich.
Anemostat Corp. of America, 10 E. 39th St., New
York. N. Y.
Autovent Fan & Blower Co., 1807 N. Kostner
Ave., Chicago, 111.
Baker Ice Machine Co., Inc., 1554 Evans St.,
Omaha, Neb.
Ballantyne Co., 222 N. 16th St.. Omaha. Neb.
Blocksom & Co.. Michigan City, Ind.
Buffalo Forgo Co., 448 S. Hill St., Los Angeles,
Calif.
Carbondale Division, Worthington Pump & Ma-
chinery Corp., Harrison, N. J.
Carrier Corp., Syracuse, N. Y.
Crown Motion Picture Supplies Corp., 614 Ninth
Ave., New York, N. Y.
Delco-Frigidaire Conditioning Division, General
Motors Sales Corp., Dayton, O.
Fairbanks, Morse & Co., 600 S. Michigan Ave..
Chicago, 111.
Frick Co.. Waynesboro. Pa.
General Electric Co., Schenectady, N. Y.; Air Con-
ditioning Dept., Bloomfield, N. J.
General Refrigeration Corp., 120 Sheridan Ave.,
Beloit, Wis.
Good-All Electric Manufacturing Co., Ogallala.
Neb.
Icedaire. 252 W. 20th St., New York. N. Y.
Knowles Mushroom Ventilator Co., 41 N. Moore
St., New York, N. Y.
Kroeschell Engineering Co., 215 W. Ontario St.,
Chicago, 111.
Leopold, C. S., 213 S. Broad St., Philadelphia.
Pa.
Master-Builders, The, 218 Hess Ave., Erie, Pa.
Picture-Fone Co., 806 S. Main St., Lima, O.
Reynolds Corp.. 1400 Wabansia Ave., Chicago. 111.
Rockenstein, L. T., Co., 3327 Locust St., St.
Louis, Mo.
Shearer, B. F., Co., 2318 Second Ave., Seattle,
Wash.
Sturdevant, B. F., Co.. Cooling & Air Condi-
tioning Division, 908 Graybar Bide., New
York. N. Y.
Taylor Air Conditioning Co.. Box 986, Madison
Square station, Grand Rapids, Mich.
Trans Co., The, LaCrosse. Wis.
Typhoon Air Conditioning Co., 252 W. 26th St..
New York, N. Y.
U. S. Air Conditioning Corp., Northwestern Ter-
minal, Minneapolis, Minn.
Westirighouse Electric & Manufacturing Co., East
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Wittenmeier Machinery Co., 850 N. Spaulding
Ave.. Chicago, 111.
Worthington Pump & Machinery Corp., Harrison,
N. J.
York Ice Machinery Corp., York, Pa.
Air Purifiers
American Blower Corp.. 6000 Russell St.. De-
troit, Mich.
Ballantyne Co., 222 N. 16th St., Omaha, Neb.
Crown Motion Picture Supplies Corp., 614 Ninth
Ave., New York, N. Y.
Electroaire Corp., 1455 W. Congress St., Chicago,
111.
General Electric Co., Schenectady, N. Y.
BUYMDIG GUIDE FOR 1940
Good-All Electric Manufacturing Co., Ogallala,
Neb.
Independent Air Filter Co., 228 N. LaSalle St..
Chicago. 111.
National Ozone Machine Co., Inc., 721 Fifth Ave.,
Shelbyville, Ind.
Ozone Air Co., 928 Chery St.. S. W., Grand
Rapids, Mich.
Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Co.. East
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Aisle Lights
Adapti Co., 2996 E. 72nd St., Cleveland, O.
Allied Seating Co., Inc., 36 W. 13th St.. New
York, N. Y.
Capitol Stage Lighting Co., 527 W. 45th St.. New
York. N. Y.
Cole, W. C. & Co.. 320 E. 12th St.. Los Angeles.
Calif.
Day-Brite Lighting, Inc., 5401 Dulwer Ave., St.
Louis. Mo.
Display Stage Lighting Co., Inc.. 617 Tenth Ave..
New York, N. Y.
E-J Electric Installation Co., 227 E. 45th St.,
New York, N. Y.
Erikson Electric Co., 6 Power House St., Boston,
Mass.
Erker Bros. Optical Co.. 610 Olive St., St. Louis.
Mo.
Fulton. E. E„ Co., 1018 S. Wabash Ave.. Chi-
cago. 111.
General Seating Co.. 2035 Charleston St., Chicago.
III.
Guth, Edwin F„ Co., 2615 Washington Ave., St.
Louis, Mo.
Hub Electric Corp., 2225 W. Grand Ave., Chicago.
111.
Kausalitc Manufacturing Co., 8131 Rhodes Ave..
Chicago, 111.
Kliegl Bros. Universal Electric Stage Lighting
Co., Inc., 321 W. 50th St., New York, N. Y.
Preddcy. Walter G., 187 Golden Gate Ave., San
Francisco, Calif.
Ross, Charles, Inc., 244 W. 49th St.. New York.
N. Y.
Throckmorton. Cleon, Inc.. 102 W. Third St..
New York, N. Y.
United Theater Equipment Co., Inc., 121 Golden
Gate Ave., San Francisco, Calif.
Amplifiers
Acme Electric Construction Co., 37 W. Van
Buren St., Chicago, 111.
Amplifier Company of America, 17 W. 30th St.,
Now York, N. Y.
Atlas Sound Corp.. 1451 39th St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Ballantyne Co., 222 N. 16th St., Omaha, Neb.
Blue Seal Sound Devices, Inc., 723 Seventh Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
Canady Sound Appliance Co., 19570 S. Sagamore
Road, Rocky River P. O.. Cleveland, O.
Cincinnati Time Recorder Co., 1733 Central Ave.,
Cincinnati, O.
Cinema Sound Equipment Co., 8572 Santa Monica
Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
Cinema Supplies, Inc., 36 Glenwood Ave.. Minne-
apolis, Minn.
Consolidated Theater Supply Corp.. 1600 Broad-
way, New York, N. Y.
DoVry Corp., 1111 Armitage Ave.. Chicago, 111.
Dictograph Sales Corp., 580 Fifth Ave., New
York, N. Y.
Duhem Motion Picture Manufacturing Co., 135
Hayes St., San Francisco, Calif.
Electrical Research Products, Inc., 195 Broadway.
New York, N. Y.
Federated Purchaser, Inc., 25 Park Place, New
York. N. Y.
Fox Sound Equipment Corp., 3120 Monroe St..
Toledo, O.
Gates Radio & Supply Co., Qulncy. 111.
1045
BUYING GUIDE FOR 1940
General Electric Co.. Schenectady. N. T.
General Films, Ltd.. 1924 Rose St.. Retina. Sask..
Canada.
Good-All Electric Manuf acturing Co.. Ogallala.
Neb.
International Theater Accessories Corp.. 636 Elev-
enth Ave.. New York. N. Y.
Kendell Co. of America. 7 W. 44th St.. New York.
N. Y.
Lifetime Corp.. The. 1825 Adams St.. Toledo. O.
Lincrophone Co., Inc.. 1661 Howard Ave.. Utica.
N. Y.
Marr. David. Co.. Warsaw. N. Y.
Mellaphone Corp.. 65 Atlantic Ave.. Rochester.
N. Y.
Miles Reproducer Co.. Inc.. 812 Broadway. New
York. N. Y.
Motiograph. Inc.. 4431 W. Lake St.. Chicago. 111.
Music Specialty Co.. Union Trust Bid?.. Union
City. Ind.
National Theater Supply Co.. 92 Gold St.. New
York. N. Y.
Olesen. Otto K.. Illuminating Co.. Ltd.. 1560 N.
Vine St.. Hollywood. Calif.
Operadio Manufacturing Co.. St. Charles. 111.
Pacent Engineering Corp., 79 Madison Ave.. New
York. N. Y.
Picture-Fone Co.. 806 S. Main St.. Lima. O.
Racon Electric Co.. Inc.. 52 E. 19th St.. New
York. N. Y.
Radio Wire Television. Inc.. 100 Sixth Ave.. New
York. N. Y.
Rauland Corp.. 3341 Belmont Ave.. Chicago. 111-
RCA Manufacturing Co.. Inc.. Camden. N. J.
Royal Zenith Sound Productors. Inc.. 33 W. 60th
St.. New York. N. Y.
Ruhv Camera Exchange. 729 Seventh Ave.. New
York. N. Y.
United Theater Equipment Co.. Inc.. 121 Golden
Gate Ave.. San Francisco. Calif.
Weber Machine Corp.. 59 Rutter St.. Rochester.
N. Y.
Wenzel Co.. 2509 S. State St.. Chicago. 111.
Western Electric Co.. 195 Broadway. New York
N. Y.
Architects
Augustine. Charles O.. 5710 Sixth Ave.. Kenosha.
Wise.
Baleh. Clifford A.. 1584 W. Washington Blvd.. Los
Angeles. Calif.
Beall. Frederick E.. 334 St. Paul St.. Baltimore.
Md.
Bennett & Straight. Dearborn. Michigan
Bishop. Fred A.. Richmond. Va.
Blackhall. Clapp. Whiteemore & Clark. 31 West
St.. Boston. Mass.
Boiler. Carl Henry. 4933 Pasadena Ave., Los An-
geles Calif.
Bort. W. E.. 728 S. 12th St.. Clinton. Ia.
Browne. Ambrose A.. 120 Milk St., Boston. Mass.
Budina. A. O., Richmond. Ya.
Candela. Rosario. 19 East 53rd St.. New York City
Carroll. Armand. 1310 Spruce St.. Philadelphia. Pa.
Corgan & Moore. Dallas Gas Bldg.. Dallas. Texas
Crane. C. Howard & Associates. Inc., 112 Madi-
son St.. Detroit, Mich.
De Angelis. Michael J.. 1404 Temple Bldg..
Rochester, N. Y.
De Rosa, Eugene, 105 West 40th St., New York
City
Eberson. John. 1560 Broadway, New York. N. Y.
Eichberg. S. Milton. 208 S. LaSalle St.. Chicago.
111.
Eichenlaub, George E., 905 Commerce Bldg., Erie.
Pa.
Faris. Frederic. 1117 Chapline St., Wheeling, W.
Va.
Ferguson, W. S.. Co., 3030 Euclid Ave.. Cleveland.
O.
Freer. Herman L.. Orleans. Mass.
Garber. Frederick W. 616 Walnut Street, Cincin-
nati, Ohio
Griffith. Harry C. 401 Canby Bldg.. Dayton. O.
Hance, Wallace E.. Wilmington. Delaware
Harris. David H.. Baltimore. Md.
Henon, Paul. 151 Fox Bldg.. Philadelphia. Pa.
Hodgen9 & Hill. 1420 Chestnut St.. Philadelphia.
Pa.
Hodgson & McClenahan. Eccles Bldg.. Ogden. Utah.
Hohauser. William I.. 1841 Broadway. New York
City
Holbrook, Harry. Co., 246 Wilson Ave.. Colum-
bus, O.
Holman. Joseph W.. Nashville. Tenn.
Hougen. Donn. Wisconsin Rapids. Wisconsin
Hulskin. Peter M.. 214 W. Market St.. Lima, O.
Kaplan & Sprachman, Toronto. Ontario. Canada
Ketcham. George H.. Clinton Square Bldg.. Syra-
cuse. N. Y.
Krokyn & Browne. 120 Milk St.. Boston. Mass.
Lamb. Thomas W.. 36 West 40th Street, New
York City
Lansburgh. G. Albert. 321 Bush St.. San Fran-
cisco. Calif.
Lee. S. Charles. 1648 Wilshire Blvd.. Los Angeles.
California
Lee. William H.. Schaff Bldg.. Philadelphia. Pa.
Lehman. W. E. & D. J.. 972 Broad St.. New
ark. N. J.
Liebenberg & Kaplan. 710 McKnight Bldg.. Minne-
apolis, Minn.
Lippe Construction Corp.. 17 W. 60th St.. New
York. N. Y.
Logemann. Hugo, 2577 N. Downer Ave.. Mil-
waukee. Wise.
Lublin. Alfred M.. Norfolk. Va.
Malvaney. E. L.. Millsaps Bldg.. Jackson. Miss.
Manley & Young. Inc.. Box 1495. Knoxville. Tenn.
Marks. Alfred M.. 541 Wood St.. Pittsburgh. Pa.
Martinie. Trueman E.. 323 Miners Bank Bldg..
Joplln. Mo.
Master-Builders. The. 218 Hess Ave.. Erie. Pa.
Mowell & Rand. 261 Franklin St.. Boston. Mass.
Oppenhamer & Obel. 10 S. Washington St.. Green
Bay. Wis.
Pereira & Pereira. 221 N. La Salle St.. Chicago.
111.
Pettisrrow & Worley. Dallas. Texas
Phillips. J. G.. 681 Fifth Ave.. New York. N. Y.
Rapp. C. W. & George L., Inc.. 230 N. Michigan
Ave.. Chicago. Ill
Rathstone. Irwin D., 140 W. 69th St.. New
York. N Y
Rayfield. W. A.. & Co., 328 St. George St.. S..
Birmingham. Ala.
Rigaumont. Victor A.. 5471 Coral St.. Pittsburgh.
Pa.
Silverman & Levy. Architects Bldg.. Philadelphia.
Pa.
Spann. William T.. 30 Hen'ey Road. Buffalo. N. Y.
Spillman & Spillman. San Antonio. Texas
Stiegemeyer. O. W.. St. Louis. Mo.
Stillwell, Erie G.. Inc.. Hendersonville. N. Carolina
Supowitz. David. 246 South 15th St.. Philadelphia.
Pa.
Thalheimer & Weitz. Architects Bldg., Philadel-
phia. Pa.
Walker & Gillette. 599 Madison Avenue. New
York City
Wetherell & Harrison. Des Moines. Iowa
Wiseman. Harrison G.. 33 W. 42nd St.. New
York. N. Y.
Batteries
Bond Electric Corp.. Division of Western Cartridge
Co.. 146 Munson St.. New Haven. Conn.
Edison. Thomas A., Inc.. Edison Storage Battery
Division. West Orange. N. J.
Electric Storage Battery Co.. 19th & Allegheny
Aves., Philadelphia, Pa.
Lancaster Carbon Co.. P. O. Box 398. Lancas-
ter. O.
Ross. Charles. Inc.. 244 W. 49th St.. New York.
N. Y.
Willard Storage Battery Co.. 246 E. 131st St..
Cleveland. O.
Booths, Projection
Acme Stage Equipment Co., 191 Lafayette St.,
New York, N. Y.
1046
Ashcraft. C. S. Manufacturing Corp.. 47-31 35th
St.. Long Island City. N. Y.
Blue Seal Products. Inc.. 264 Wyckoff Ave.. Brook-
lyn. N. Y.
Clark. Peter. Inc.. 101 Park Ave.. New York.
N. Y.
Fulton, E. E.. Co.. 1018 S. Wabash Ave.. Chi-
cago, 111.
General Insulating Products Co.. 8821 15th Ave..
Brooklyn. N. Y.
Gluckman Bros.. 588 Eleventh Ave.. New York.
N. Y.
Keasbey & Mattison Co., Ambler, Pa.
Rathstone. Irwin D., 140 W. 69th St.. New
York. N. Y.
Xeumade Products Corp., 427 W. 42nd St.. New
York. N. Y.
Booths, Ticket
Apex Sign Co., 426 Fitzwater St., Philadelphia,
Pa.
Artkraft Sign Co., Lima, O.
Flour City Ornamental Iron Co., 2637 27th Ave.,
Minneapolis. Minn.
Froehlich. Jacob, Cabinet Works, 660 Barry St..
New York. N. Y.
Fulton, E. E., Co., 1018 S. Wabash Ave.. Chi-
cago, m.
Libman-Spanjer Corp.. 1600 Broadway. New
York. N. Y.
Markendorff. S.. Sons. Inc.. 159 W. 23rd St..
New York. N. Y.
Menger, Wing & Weinstein. Inc.. 225 Fifth Ave..
New York, N. Y.
Newman Bros., Inc.. 660 W. Fourth St.. Cincin-
nati. O.
Cabinets, Film
Art Metal Construction Co., Jones & Gifford Ave..
Jamestown, N. Y.
Erker Bros. Optical Co.. 610 Olive St., St. Loui6.
Mo.
Fulton, E. E., Co., 1018 S. Wabash Ave.. Chi-
cago. 111.
Gluckmann Bros., 588 Eleventh Ave.. New York.
N. Y.
Guercio & Barthel Co., 1241 S. Wabash Ave..
Chicago, 111.
Hub Electric Corp., 2225 W. Grand Ave.. Chicago,
111.
Moss, J., Equipment Co., Inc., 422 Withers St..
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Motion Picture Accessories Co.. 2200 S. Vermont
Ave., Los Angeles. Calif.
Neumade Products Corp., 427 W. 42nd St.. New
York, N. Y.
Picture-Fone Co., 806 S. Main St., Lima, O.
Ruby Camera Exchange, 729 Seventh Ave.. New
York. N. Y.
Wenzel Co.. 2509 S. State St.. Chicago, 111.
Wolk, Edward H., 1018 S. Wabash Ave.. Chicago.
111.
Cable, Motion Picture
Camera Supply Co.. 1515 N. Cahuenga Blvd., Hol-
lywood, Calif.
Capitol Stage Lighting Co.. 527 W. 45th St.. New
York. N. Y.
Cinema Studios Supply Corp.. 1010 N. McCadden
Place, Los Angeles, Calif.
General Electric Co.. Schenectady, N. Y.
Guercio & Barthel Co.. 1241 S. Wabash Ave..
Chicago, HI.
Holzmueller, C. J.. 1108 Howard St., San Fran-
cisco, Calif.
Kliegl Bros. Universal Electric Stage Lighting Co..
Inc., 321 W. 50th St.. New York, N. Y.
Motiograph, Inc., 4431 W. Lake St., Chicago, El.
Motion Picture Camera Supply, Inc., 723 Seventh
Ave., New York, N. Y.
Olesen. Otto K., Illuminating Co.. Ltd., 1560 N.
Vine St., Hollywood, Calif.
Ruby Camera Exchange, 729 Seventh Ave., New
York, N. Y.
United States Rubber Co.. 1790 Broadway, New
York. N. Y.
BUYING GUIDE FOR 1940
Call Systems
Acme Electric Construction Co.. 37 W. Van Buren
St.. Chicago, 111.
Acousticon Division of Dictograph Products Co..
Inc.. 680 Fifth Ave.. New York, N. Y.
Amplifier Company of America, 17 W. 20th St..
New York, N. Y.
Atlas Sound Corp.. 1461 39th St., Brooklyn.
N. Y.
Cincinnati Time Recorder Co., 1733 Central Ave..
Cincinnati, O.
Couch, S. H.. Co.. Inc., North Quincy, Mass.
Federated Purchaser, Inc.. 25 Park Place. New
York. N. Y.
Fox Sound Equipment Corp., 3120 Monroe St.,
Toledo, 0.
General Electric Co., Schenectady. N. Y.
Hanft. Harry A.. 142 W. 17th St., New York, N. Y.
Hollingsworth Co., 30 S. Bank St., Philadelphia.
Pa.
Lifetime Corp., The, 1825 Adams St.. Toledo. O.
Lincrophone Co., Inc., 1661 Howard Ave., Utiea.
N. Y.
Miles Reproducer Co.. Inc.. 812 Broadway. New
York. N. Y.
Olesen, Otto K.. Illuminating Co.. Ltd.. 1660 N.
Vine St.. Hollywood. Calif.
Operadio Manufacturing Co.. St. Charles. HI.
Pacent Engineering Corp.. 79 Madison Ave.. New
York. N. Y.
Picture-Fone Co., 806 S. Main St.. Lima. O.
Racon Electric Co.. Inc., 52 E. 19th St., New
York. N. Y.
RCA Manufacturing Co.. Inc.. Camden. N. J.
Radio Wire Television, Inc., 100 Sixth Ave., New
York, N. Y.
Royal Zenith Sound Projectors, Inc.. 33 W. 60th
St.. New York, N. Y.
Sonotone Corp., P. O. Box 200. Elmsford, N. Y.
Western Electric Co.. 195 Broadway, New York,
N. Y.
Cameras,
Parts and Supplies
Agfa Ansco Corp., 29 Charles St., Binghamton,
N. Y.
Akeley Camera. Inc., 175 Varick St., New York.
N. Y.
Associated Screen News, Ltd., 5271 Western Ave..
Montreal, Canada.
Bell & Howell Co., 1801 Larchmont Ave., Chi-
cago, HI.
Camera Mart, Inc., The. 70 W. 45th St.. New
York. N. Y.
Camera Supply Co.. 1515 N. Cahuenga Blvd..
Hollywood. Calif.
Debrie. Andre. Inc., 15 W. 45th St.. New York.
N. Y.
DeVry Corp., 1111 Armitage Ave.. Chicago. 111.
Duhem Motion Picture Manufacturing Co., 135
Hayes St., San Francisco. Calif.
Eastman Kodak Co., Rochester. N. Y. (16mm.)
Fearless Camera Co., 8572 Santa Monica Blvd..
Hollywood, Calif.
Fish-Schurman Corp.. 260 E. 43rd St., New York.
N. Y.
General Films, Ltd., 1924 Rose St., Regina, Sask..
Canada.
Gennert, G.. 20 W. 22nd St., New York. N. Y.
Gundlach Manufacturing Co., Gundlach Bldg., Fair-
port, N. Y.
Leitz, E„ Inc., 730 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y.
Mitchell Camera Corp., 665 N. Robertson Blvd..
W. Hollywood. Calif.
Mogull's. Inc.. 68 W. 48th St.. New York. N. Y.
Motion Picture Accessories Co.. 2200 S. Vermont
Ave., Los Angeles. Calif.
Motion Picture Camera Supply. Inc., 723 Sev-
enth Ave., New York. N. Y.
1047
Bl/YfJVG GUIDE FOR 1940
Ruby Camera Exchange, 729 Seventh Ave., New
York, N. Y.
Victor Animatograph Corp., Davenport, la
(16 mm.)
Willoughby's, Inc.. 112 W. 32nd St.. New York.
Carbon Savers
Best Devices Co., 10516 Western Ave., Cleve-
land, O.
Blue Seal Products, Inc., 264 Wyckoff Ave
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Cross Machine Shop, 2918 Pennsylvania Ave..
Detroit, Mich.
Pulton, E. E., Co.. 1018 S. Wabash Ave.. Chi-
cago, 111.
Motion Picture Accessories Co.. 2200 S. Vermont
Ave., Los Angeles, Calif.
Weaver Manufacturing Co.. Ltd.. 1639 E. 102nd
St., Los Angeles. Calif.
Weber Machine Corp.. 59 Rutter St., Rochester
N. Y.
Wenzel Co., 2509 S. State St., Chicago. 111.
Wolk, Edward H., 1018 S. Wabash Ave.. Chi-
cago, 111.
Carbons
Capitol Stage Lighting Co.. 527 W. 45th St
New York, N. Y.
Cinema Studios Supply Corp., 1010 N. McCadden
Place. Los Angeles. Calif.
Erker Bros. Optical Co.. 610 Olive St.. St. Louis
Mo.
Gennert. G.. 20 W. 22nd St., New York. N. Y.
Good-All Electric Manufacturing Co.. Ogallala. Neb.
Guercio & Barthel Co.. 1241 S. Wabash Ave.
Chicago. 111.
Holzmueller. C. J., 1108 Howard St.. San Fran
Cisco. Calif.
Kliegl Bros. Universal Electric Stage Lighting Co..
Inc., 321 W. 50th St.. New York, N. Y.
Lancaster Carbon Co.. P. O. Box 398, Lancas-
ter, O.
Le Carbone Co., Inc., Boonton, N. J.
Mole-Richardson Co., 941 N. Sycamore Ave.,
Hollywood, Calif.
Morelite Co.. Inc., 600 W. 57th St.. New York
N. Y.
National Carbon Co.. Inc., Carbon Sales Division
P. O. Box 6087. Cleveland. O.
Noris Carbon Co.. Inc., 160 Fifth Ave., New
York, N. Y.
Ross, Charles, Inc., 244 W. 49th St., New York
N. Y.
Wholesale Supply Co., 1047 N. Wilcox Ave.. Los
Angeles. Calif.
Carpet Cushions
A. A. A. Studios, Box 25, Station O, Cincinnati. O.
Blocksom & Co., Michigan City, Ind.
Clinton Carpet Co., 222 N. Bank Drive, Chicago.
111.
Continental Theater Accessories, Inc.. 325 W. 44th
St.. New York. N. Y.
Greater New York Carpet House, Inc., 250 W.
49th St., New York. N. Y.
Pick, Albert. Co., Inc.. 2159 Pershing Road.
Chicago. 111.
Slater Co.. The. 300 W. Austin Ave., Chicago.
m.
Smith. Alexander, & Sons, Carpet Co.. Yonkers.
N. Y.
Smith, Alexander, & Sons, Carpet Co., Sales Divi-
sion, 295 Fifth Ave.. New York. N. Y.
Carpets
A. A. A. Studios, Box 25, Station O, Cincinnati, O.
Aetna Carpet Co., 9006 Melrose Ave., Los Angeles.
Calif.
Blgelow Sanford Carpet Co., Inc.. 140 Madison
Ave.. New York, N. Y.
Clinton Carpet Co.. 222 N. Bank Drive. Chicago.
Cochrane. Charles P.. Co.. Kensington Ave &
Butler St.. Philadelphia. Pa.
Continental Theater Accessories. Inc., 325 W 44th
St.. New York, N. Y.
Greater New York Carpet House. Inc.. 250 W
49th St.. New York. N. Y.
Guercio & Barthel Co., 1241 S. Wabash Ave
Chicago. 111.
Harwick & Magee Co.. 650 N. Lehigh Ave.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Hotel & Theater Carpet Co., 427 W. 42nd St
New York, N. Y.
Lack Carpet Co.. Inc.. 303 Fifth Ave., New York
N. Y.
Mohawk Carpet Co., Amsterdam, N. Y.
National Theater Supply Co., 92 Gold St., New
York. N. Y.
Pick. Albert. Co.. Inc.. 2159 Pershing Road,
Chicago. 111.
Rockenstein, L. T.. Co.. 3327 Locust St.. St. Louis,
Mo.
Rosenheim, J., & Co.. 71 W. 45th St.. New
York. N. Y.
Shearer. B. F., Co., 2318 Second Ave.. Seattle
Wash.
Slater Co.. The. 300 W. Austin Ave., Chicago. 111.
Smith. Alexander, & Sons, Carpet Co., Yonkers
N. Y.
Smith, Alexander, & Sons, Carpet Co., Sales Divi-
sion. 295 Fifth Ave.. New York. N. Y.
Cases and Cans, Reel
Continental Can Co.. 100 E. 42nd St.. New York
N. Y.
Erker Bros. Optical Co.. 610 Olive St.. St. Louis.
Mo.
Fulton. E. E., Co., 1018 S. Wabash Ave.. Chi-
cago, HI.
Kin-O-Lux, Inc.. 105 W. 40th St., New York, N. Y.
Moss, J., Equipment Co.. Inc., 422 Withers St..
Brooklyn. N. Y.
Xeumade Products Corp.. 427 W. 42nd St., New
York. N. Y.
Pausin Engineering Co.. 727 Frelinghuysen Ave..
Newark, N. J.
Ruby Camera Exchange. 729 Seventh Ave., New
York, N. Y.
Victor Animatograph Corp.. Davenport, la.
(16 mm.).
Cement, Film
Agfa Ansco Corp.. 29 Charles St., Binghamton,
N. Y.
Associated Screen News. Ltd.. 5271 Western Ave..
Montreal, Canada.
Bell & Howell Co.. 1801 Larchmont Ave.. Chi-
cago. 111.
Blue Seal Products. Inc.. 264 Wyckoff Ave..
Brooklyn. N. Y.
Cellofilm Corp.. Wood-Ridge. N. J.
Consolidated Theater Supply Corp.. 1600 Broad-
way. New York, N. Y.
Eastman Kodak Co., Rochester, N. Y.
Erker Bros. Optical Co.. 610 Olive St., St. Louis
Mo.
Fulton, E. E.. Co., 1018 S. Wabash Ave.. Chicago.
ni.
General Films. Ltd., 1924 Rose St., Regina, Sask.,
Canada.
Good-All Electric Manufacturing Co., Ogallala.
Neb.
Guercio & Barthel Co., 1241 S. Wabash Ave..
Chicago, HI.
Hewes-Gotham Co.. 557 W. 48th St.. New York.
N. Y.
National Theater Supply Co., 92 Gold St.. New
York, N. Y.
Neumade Products Corp., 427 W. 42nd St., New
York. N. Y.
1048
Rosco Laboratories, 367 Hudson Ave., Brook-
lyn. N. Y.
Ruby Camera Exchange, 729 Seventh Ave., New
York. N. Y.
Victor AnimatogTaph Corp., Davenport, la.
Wholesale Supply Co., 1047 N. Wilcox Ave.. Los
Angeles, Calif.
Chandeliers, Crystal
Best Devices Co., 10516 Western Ave., Cleve-
land, O.
Cinema Studios Supply Corp., 1010 N. McCadden
Place, Los Angeles, Calif.
Guth. Edwin F.. Co., 2615 Washington Ave.. St.
Louis. Mo.
Missouri Art Metal Co.. 1408 N. Broadway, St.
Louis. Mo.
Voigt Co., 12th & Montgomery Aves., Philadel-
phia, Pa.
Change Makers
Associated Ticket & Register Co., 614 Ninth Ave..
New York, N. Y.
Brandt Automatic Cashier Co., 515 First St..
Waterton. Wis.
Hoefer Change-Maker Co., 3700 E. 12th St.. Kan
sas City. Mo.
Johnson Fare Box Co.. 4619 Ravenswood Ave..
Chicago. 111.
Universal Stamping & Manufacturing Co.. 2839
N. Western Ave.. Chicago, 111.
Changeable Letter Signs
See: Signs, Changeable Letter
Changeovers
Erker Bros. Optical Co., 610 Olive St., St. Louis.
Mo.
Essannay Electric Manufacturing Co., 1241 S.
Wabash Ave.. Chicago. 111.
Golde Manufacturing Co., 1214 W. Madison St..
Chicago. 111.
Guercio & Barthel Co., 1241 S. Wabash Ave..
Chicago. HI.
Hoffman, Ernest V., 115-58 174th St.. St. Albans.
L. I., N. Y.
Hulette, E. W., Manufacturing Co., 216 N.
Clinton St.. Chicago, III.
Picture-Fone Co., 806 S. Main St., Lima, O.
Weaver Manufacturing Co., Ltd.. 1639 E. 102nd
St.. Los Angeles. Calif.
Wenzel Co.. 2509 S. State St.. Chicago, 111.
Changeovers, Automatic
Consolidated Theater Supply Corp.. 1600 Broad-
way. New York, N. Y.
Dowser Manufacturing Corp., 303 W. 42nd St..
New York. N. Y.
Golde Manufacturing Co.. 1214 W. Madison St..
Chicago. 111.
Preddey, Walter G., 187 Golden Gate Ave., San
Francisco. Calif.
United Theater Equipment Co., Inc., 121 Golden
Gate Ave., San Francisco, Calif.
Weaver Manufacturing Co., Ltd., 1639 E. 102nd
St., Los Angeles. Calif.
Wenzel Co., 2509 S. State St., Chicago. 111.
Chewing Gum Removers
Film Treatizor Corp., 117 W. 63rd St.. New York
N. Y.
Fulton, E. E., Co., 1018 S. Wabash Ave., Chi-
cago. 111.
Guercio & Barthel Co., 1241 S. Wabash Ave.,
Chicago. 111.
BUYING GUIDE FOR 1940
Hewes-Gotham Co., 557 W. 48th St., New York,
N. Y.
National Theater Supply Co., 92 Gold St.. New
York. N. Y.
Rochester Germicide Co., Inc., Rochester, N. Y.
Rosco Laboratories, 367 Hudson Ave.. Brooklyn,
N. Y.
West Disinfecting Co., 42-16 West St., Long-
Island City, N. Y.
Cleaners, Film
Bell & Howell Co., 1801 Larchmont Ave.. Chi-
cago, HI.
Blue Seal Products, Inc., 264 Wyckoff Ave..
Brooklyn. N. Y.
Duhem Motion Picture Manufacturing Co., 135
Hayes St., San Francisco. Calif.
Film Treatizor Corp., 117 W. 63rd St.. New York.
N. Y.
Fulton. E. E., Co., 1018 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago,
111.
General Films, Ltd., 1924 Rose St., Regina, Sask.,
Canada.
Hanish. R. D., Co., 93 E. Longview Ave.. Co-
lumbus. O.
Hewes-Gotham Co.. 557 W. 48th St.. New York.
N. Y.
National Film Renovating & Processing Co., 630
Ninth Ave.. New York, N. Y.
National Theater Supply Co., 92 Gold St., New
York, N. Y.
Neumade Products Corp., 427 W. 42nd St., New
York, N. Y.
Rosco Laboratories, 367 Hudson Ave.. Brooklyn.
N. Y.
Wholesale Supply Co., 1047 N. Wilcox Ave., Los
Angeles, Calif.
Cleaning Systems, Theater
Invincible Vacuum Cleaner Manufacturing Co.,
Dover, O.
Kent Co., Inc.. 103 Canal St.. Rome. N. Y.
National Super Service Co., 1946 N. 13th St..
Toledo. O.
Spencer Turbine Co., Hartford, Conn.
Condensing Lenses
Bache. Semon, & Co., 636 Greenwich St., New
York, N. Y.
Bausch & Lomb Optical Co.. 935 St. Paul St..
Rochester. N. Y.
Camera Supply Co., 1515 N. Cahuenga Blvd.,
Hollywood. Calif.
Capitol Stage Lighting Co., 527 W. 45th St.,
New York. N. Y.
Display Stage Lighting Co.. Inc., 617 Tenth Ave..
New York. N. Y.
Fish-Schurman Corp.. 250 E. 43rd St., New York.
N. Y.
Frese Optical Co., 827 S. Flower St.. Los Angeles.
Calif.
Gennert, G.. 20 W. 22nd St., New York. N. Y.
Golde Manufacturing Co.. 1214 W. Madison St..
Chicago. 111.
Gundlache Manufacturing Co., Gundlach Bldg..
Fairport, N. Y.
Kliegl Bros. Universal Electric Stage Lighting Co..
Inc.. 321 W. 50th St.. New York. N. Y.
Matisse Bros., Inc.. 787 E. 138th St.. New York.
N. Y.
Meyer. Hugo. & Co.. 39 W. 60th St., New York,
N. Y.
Olesen, Otto K., Illuminating Co., Ltd., 1560 N.
Vine St.. Hollywood, Calif.
Ross, Charles, Inc., 244 W. 49th St.. New York.
N. Y.
Ruby Camera Exchange, 729 Seventh Ave.. New
York, N. Y.
1049
Bl VfJVG GUIDE FOR 1940
Selsi Co.. Inc.. 43 W. 23rd St.. New York. N. Y.
Wholesale Supply Co., 1047 N. Wilcox Ave.. Los
Angeles, Calif.
Wolk. Edward H.. 1018 S. Wabash Ave.. Chi-
cago, 111.
Construction, Theater
A. A. A. Studios. Box 25. Station O. Cincinnati. O.
Chanin Construction Co.. 122 E. 42nd St. New
York. N. Y.
Eichenlaub. Georgre E., 905 Commerce Bldg., Erie
Pa.
Formica Insulation Co., Cincinnati. O.
Golder Construction Co.. Inc.. Market St. National
Bank Bid?.. Philadelphia. Pa.
Grange, W. T., Construction Co., Keenam Bldg
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Hew Construction Co., 694 Washington St., Bos-
ton, Mass.
Kliegl Bros. Universal Electric Stage Lighting Co..
Inc., 321 W. 50th St., New York. N. Y.
Lehman. W. E. & D. J., 927 Broad St., Newark.
N. J.
Lippe Construction Corp., 17 W. 60th St.. New
York. N. Y.
Lutz, Albert A.. Co.. Inc.. 300 Madison Ave..
New York. N. Y.
Master-Builders. The. 218 Hess Ave.. Erie. Pa.
Picture-Fone Co.. 806 S. Main St.. Lima. O.
Rathstone. Irwin D.. 140 W. 69th St.. New York.
N. Y.
Rogers Schmitt Wire & Iron Works, 1815 N. 23rd
St., St. Louis. Mo.
Shapiro. M.. & Son Construction Co.. Inc., 755
Seventh Ave., New York, N. Y.
Converters, Electric
Ashcraft. C. S.. Manufacturing- Corp.. 47-31 35th
Ave.. Long' Island City, N. Y.
Automatic Devices Co., 1035 Linden St., Allen-
town, Pa.
Fidelity Electric Co.. Lancaster. Pa.
General Electric Co.. Schenectady. N. Y.
General Films, Ltd.. 1924 Rose St.. Regina. Sask..
Canada.
Hertner Electric Co., 12690 Elmwood Ave.. Cleve-
land. O.
Cooling Systems
Air Conditioning; Engineering;, 1623 E. 9th St..
Los Ang-eles, Calif.
American Blower Corp., 6000 Russell St., Detroit.
Mich.
Ballantyne Co.. 222 N. 16th St.. Omaha. Neb.
Buffalo Forge Co.. 448 S. Hill St.. Los Angeles.
Calif.
Carbondale Division, Worthington Pump & Ma-
chinery Corp., Harrison, N. J.
Carrier Corp., Syracuse, N. Y.
Cooling Tower Co.. Inc.. 15 John St., New York.
N. Y.
Delco-Frigidaire Conditioning Division, General
Motors Sales Corp., Dayton, O.
Fedders Manufacturing Co., 57 Tonawanda St..
Buffalo. N. Y.
Frick Co., Waynesboro, Pa.
General Electric Co.. Schenectady, N. Y.
General Refrigeration Corp., 120 Shirland Ave.,
Beloit, Wis.
Good-All Electric Manufacturing Co.. Ogallala, Neb.
Guth, Edwin F.. Co., 2615 Washington Ave.. St.
Louis, Mo.
Icedaire, 252 W. 26th St., New York, N. Y.
Leopold, C. S., 213 S. Broad St., Philadelphia, Pa.
National Theater Supply Co., 92 Gold St.. New
York, N. Y.
Picture-Fone Co., 806 S. Main St., Lima, O.
Rockenstein, L. T., Co., 3327 Locust St.. St. Louis,
Mo.
Shearer. B. F., Co.. Cooling & Air Conditioning
Division. 908 Graybar Bldg.. New York. N. Y.
Trane Co.. The, LaCrosse. Wis.
Typhoon Air Conditioning Co.. 252 W. 26th St
New York. N. Y.
U. S. Air Conditioning Corp.. Northwestern Ter-
minal, Minneapolis, Minn.
York Ice Machinery Corp., York, Pa.
Costume Fabrics
Blossom Manufacturing Co., 79 Madison Ave.
New York. N. Y.
Dazian's, Inc.. 142 W. 44th St.. New York. N. Y.
Maharan Fabric Corp.. 130 W. 46th St., New
York, N. Y.
Manko Fabric Co.. 105 W. 44th St.. New York.
N. Y.
Oakland Textile Co.. 461 Fourth Ave., New York.
N. Y.
Costumers
Blossom Manufacturing Co., 79 Madison Ave..
New York, N. Y.
Brooks Costume Co., 260 W. 41st St., New York.
N. Y.
Colburns Taxidermy Studio, 4017 Sunset Blvd..
Los Angeles. Calif.
DeMoulin Bros. & Co.. Greenville. 111.
Eaves Costume Co., Inc.. 151 W. 46th St., New
York, N. Y.
Lester. Ltd., 14 W. Lake St.. Chicago. 111.
Mahieu Costumers. Inc.. 242 W. 55th St.. New
York. N. Y.
Nishi. F. J., & Co., 6225 Santa Monica Blvd.,
Hollywood, Calif.
Noel Studios. 707 Seventh Ave., New York, N. Y.
Russell Uniform Co., 1600 Broadway, New York,
N. Y.
Stivanello-Culcasi Theatrical Costume Co.. Inc..
331 W. 51st St.. New York. N. Y.
Tarn's Costume Emporium. 318 W. 46th St.. New
York, N. Y.
Western Costume Co., 5335 Melrose Ave., Holly-
wood, Calif.
Covers, Chair
A. A. A. Studio. Box 25, Station O. Cincinnati, O.
Allied Seating Co., Inc., 36 W. 13th St.. New
York, N. Y.
Blossom Manufacturing Co.. 79 Madison Ave..
New York, N. Y.
Chase. L. C. & Co., 295 Fifth Ave.. New York.
N. Y.
Draperies Unlimited, Inc., 358 W. Flagler St..
Miami, Fla.
General Seating Co., 2035 Charleston St., Chicago.
111.
Liberman Flag & Valence Co., 247 W. 64th St..
New York. N. Y.
Oakland Textile Co., 461 Fourth Ave.. New York
N. Y.
Paramount Decorating Co.. Inc.. 311 N. 13th St..
Philadelphia, Pa.
Current Changers
Atlas Sound Corp.. 1451 39th St.. Brooklyn. N. Y.
Automatic Devices Co., 1035 Linden St., Allen-
town, Pa.
Erker Bros. Optical Co.. 610 Olive St., St. Louis.
Mo.
Garver Electric Co., Union City, Ind.
General Electric Co., Schenectady, N. Y.
Good-All Electric Manufacturing Co., Ogallala.
Neb.
Janette Manufacturing Co., 556 W. Monroe St..
Chicago, 111.
Kato Engineering Co., 530 N. Front St., Mankato.
Minn.
Kneisley Electric Co.. 16 S. St. Clair St., Toledo. O.
1050
Curtain Controls
Bt/YIiVG GUIDE FOR 1940
A. A. A. Studio, Box 25, Station O, Cincinnati, 0.
Acme Scenic Studios, 2921 W. Van Buren St.,
Chicago, 111.
Acme Stage Equipment Co., 191 Lafayette St.,
New York, N. Y.
Automatic Devices Co., 1035 Linden St., Allen-
town, Pa.
Beck Studios, 2001 Highland Ave., Cincinnati, O.
Bruckner Mitchell, Inc., 132 W. 24th St., New
York, N. Y.
Clancy, J. R., Inc., 1010 W. Belden Ave., Syra-
cuse, N. Y.
Clark, Peter, Inc., 101 Park Ave.. New York, N. Y.
Crown Motion Picture Supplies Corp., 614 Ninth
Ave., New York, N. Y.
Draperies Unlimited, Inc., 358 W. Flagler St.,
Miami, Fla.
Great Western Stage Equipment Co., 817 Holmes
St., Kansas City, Mo.
Guercio & Barthel Co., 1241 S. Wabash Ave..
Chicago, 111.
Holzmueller. C. J.. 1108 Howard St., San Fran-
cisco, Calif.
Kansas City Scenic Co., 1002 E. 24th St., Kansas
City, Mo.
Kenney, Charles H., Studios, Inc., 112 W. 44th St.,
New York, N. Y.
King Scenic Co., 1914 Main St., Dallas, Tex.
Lee Lash Studios, 1828 Amsterdam Ave.. New
York, N. Y.
Martin, William T.. Studios, 352 N. Citrus Ave.,
Los Angeles, Calif.
National Theater Supply Co., 92 Gold St., New
York, N. Y.
Novelty Scenic Studios, Inc., 320 W. 48th St..
New York, N. Y.
Nussbaumer, N. C, 842 N. Harvey Ave., Oak
Park, 111.
Ozone Air Co., 928 Cherry St., S. E., Grand
Rapids, Mich.
Power, Robert E„ Studios, 603 S. Mansfield Ave..
Los Angeles, Calif.
Premier Scenery Studios, 340 W. 41st St., New
York, N. Y.
Richard-Wilcox Manufacturing Co., Aurora, 111.
Throckmorton, Cleon, Inc., 102 W. Third St., New
York, N. Y.
Tiffin Scenic Studios, Tiffin, O.
United Theater Equipment Co., Inc., 121 Golden
Gate Ave., San Francisco. Calif.
Vallen, Inc., Akron, O.
Weaver Manufacturing Co., Ltd., 1639 E. 102nd
St.. Los Angeles, Calif.
Curtain Tracks
A. A. A. Studios, Box 25, Station O, Cincinnati, O.
Acme Scenic Studios, 2921 W. Van Buren St..
Chicago, 111.
Acme Stage Equipment Co., 191 Lafayette St.,
New York. N. Y.
Automatic Devices Co., 1035 Linden St., Allen-
town. Pa.
Beck Studios, 2001 Highland Ave., Cincinnati, O.
Bruckner Mitchell, Inc., 132 W. 24th St., New
York, N. Y.
Clancy, J. R.. Inc., 1010 W. Belden Ave., Syra-
cuse, N. Y.
Clark, Peter, Inc., 101 Park Ave., New York, N. Y.
Crown Motion Picture Supplies Corp., 610 Ninth
Ave., New York, N. Y.
Display Stage Lighting Co., Inc., 617 Tenth Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
Draperies Unlimited, Inc., 358 W. Flagler St.,
Miami, Fla.
Fowler Scenic Studios, 134 W. 46th St., New
York. N. Y.
Great Western Stage Equipment Co., 817 Holmes
St., Kansas City, Mo.
Guercio & Barthel Co., 1241 S. Wabash Ave.,
Chicago, 111.
Holzmueller, C. J., 108 Howard St.. San Fran-
cisco. Calif.
Kansas City Scenic Co., 1002 E. 24th St., Kan-
sas City, Mo.
Kenney, Charles H., Studios, Inc., 112 W. 44th
St., New York, N. Y.
King Scenic Co., 1914 Main St.. Dallas. Tex.
Lee Lash Studios, 1828 Amsterdam Ave., New
York, N. Y.
Martin, William T„ Studios, 352 Citrus Ave., Los
Angeles, Calif.
National Theater Supply Co., 92 Gold St., New
York, N. Y.
Novelty Scenic Studios, Inc., 320 W. 48th St..
New York, N. Y.
Nussbaumer, N. C, 842 N. Harvey Ave., Oak
Park, 111.
Power, Robert E., Studios, 603 S. Mansfield Ave.,
Los Angeles, Calif.
Premier Scenery Studios, 340 W. 41st St., New
York, N. Y.
Richards-Wilcox Manufacturing Co., Aurora, 111.
Schell Scenic Studios, 581 High St., Columbus, O.
Throckmorton, Cleon, Inc., 102 W. Third St.,
New York, N. Y.
Tiffin Scenic Studios, Tiffin, O.
Vallen, Inc.. Akron, O.
Volland Studios. Inc., 3737 Cass Ave.. St. Louis.
Mo.
Weaver Manufacturing Co., Ltd., 1639 E. 102nd
St., Los Angeles, Calif.
Curtains and Draperies
A. A. A. Studio, Box 25, Station O, Cincinnati, O.
Acme Scenic Studios. 2921 W. Van Buren St..
Chicago, 111.
Beaumont Studios, 510 Truxton St.. New York,
N. Y. , -
Beck Studios, 2001 Highland Ave.. Cincinnati. O.
Blossom Manufacturing Co., 79 Madison Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
Chase. L. C, & Co., 295 Fifth Ave., New York,
N. Y.
Clancy, J. R., Inc., 1010 W. Belden Ave., Syra-
cuse, N. Y.
Clark, Peter, Inc., 101 Park Ave., New York,
N. Y.
Dazian's, Inc., 142 W. 44th St., New York. N. Y.
Display Stage Lighting Co., Inc., 617 Tenth Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
Draperies Unlimited, Inc., 358 W. Flagler St.,
Miami, Fla.
Fowler Scenic Studios. 134 W. 46th St.. New
York. N. Y.
General Insulating Products Co., 8821 15th Ave..
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Great Western Stage Equipment Co., 817 Holmes
St., Kansas City. Mo.
Kansas City Scenic Co., 1002 E. 24th St.. Kansas
City, Mo.
Kenney. Charles H„ Studios. Inc., 112 W. 44th St.,
New York, N. Y.
King Scenic Co.. 1914 Main St., Dallas. Tex.
Lee Lash Studios. 1828 Amsterdam Ave., New
York, N. Y.
Maharam Fabric Corp., 130 W. 46th St., New
York. N. Y.
Martin. William. Studios, 362 N. Citrus Ave., Los
Angeles, Calif.
Novelty Scenic Studios, Inc., 320 W. 48th St..
New York, N. Y.
Nussbaumer. N. C, 842 N. Harvey Ave., Oak
Park 111.
Oakland Textile Co., 461 Fourth Ave., New
York, N. Y.
Paramount Decorating Co., Inc.. 311 N. 13th St..
Philadelphia. Pa.
Power, Robert E., Studios, 603 S. Mansfield Ave.,
Los Angeles. Calif.
Premier Scenery Studios, 340 W. 41st St.. New
York, N. Y.
Schell Scenic Studios, 681 High St.. Columbus, O.
1051
BUYING GUMDE FOR 1940
Shearer. B. F., Co.. 2318 Second Ave., Seattle
Wash.
Slater Co., The, 300 W. Austin Ave.. Chicago. 111.
Throckmorton, Cleon. Inc., 102 W. Third St. New
York, N. Y.
Tiffin Scenic Studios, Tiffin, O.
Volland Studios, Inc., 3737 Cass Ave., St. Louis
Mo.
Curtains, Fireproof
A. A. A. Studio, Box 25, Station O, Cincinnati. O.
Acme Stage Equipment Co., 191 Lafayette St
New York. N. Y.
Beck Studios, 2001 Highland Ave., Cincinnati, O.
Blossom Manufacturing- Co.. 79 Madison Ave.
New York, N. Y.
Bruckner Mitchell, Inc., 132 W. 24th St. New
York, N. Y.
Clancy, J. R.. Inc.. 1010 W. Belden Ave., Syra-
cuse, N. Y.
Clark. Peter, Inc., 101 Park Ave., New York,
N. Y.
Draperies Unlimited, Inc.. 358 W. Flagler St..
Miami, Fla.
Fowler Scenic Studios, 134 W. 46th St., New York
N. Y.
Guercio & Barthel Co.. 1241 S. Wabash Ave.,
Chicago, 111.
Kansas City Scenic Co., 1002 E. 24th St., Kansas
City, Mo.
Keasbey & Mattison Co., Ambler, Pa.
Martin. William T.. Studios. 352 N. Citrus Ave..
Los Angeles, Calif.
Novelty Scenic Studios, Inc.. 320 W. 48th St., New
York, N. Y.
Nussbaumer, N. C, 842 N. Harvey Ave., Oak
Park, 111.
Oakland Textile Co., 461 Fourth Ave., New
York, N. Y.
Power. Robert E.. Studios. 603 S. Mansfield Ave.,
Los Angeles, Calif.
Premier Scenery Studios, 340 W. 41st St.. New
York, N. Y.
Schell Scenic Studios. 581 High St., Columbus, O.
Slater Co., The, 300 W. Austin Ave., Chicago, 111.
Throckmorton, Cleon, Inc., 102 W. Third St., New
York, N. Y.
Tiffin Scenic Studios, Tiffin. O.
Volland Studios. Inc., 3737 Cass Ave., St. Louis.
Mo.
Decorators, Theater
A. A. A. Studio. Box 25. Station O. Cincinnati, O.
Battisti Studios, 303 W. 42nd St., New York
N. Y.
Draperies Unlimited, Inc., 358 W. Flagler St.,
Miami, Fla.
Fowler Scenic Studios, 134 W. 46th St., New
York, N. Y.
General Insulating Products Co., 8821 15th Ave.,
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Hodgens & Hill, 1420 Chestnut St., Philadel-
phia. Pa.
Jones Decorating Co., Inc., 752 S. San Pedro St..
Los Angeles, Calif.
King Scenic Co., 1914 Main St., Dallas. Tex.
Landers. Bert A., Inc., 823 S. Los Angeles St., Los
Angeles, Calif.
MeCallum Co., 115 Seventh St., Pittsburgh, Pa.
Maharam Fabric Corp., 130 W. 46th St., New
York, N. Y.
Master-Builders. The. 218 Hess Ave., Erie, Pa.
Myers Bros., Steubenville, O.
Novelty Scenic Studios. Inc., 320 W. 48th St..
New York, N. Y.
Oakland Textile Co., 461 Fourth Ave., New
York, N. Y.
Paramount Decorating Co., Inc., 311 N. 13th St..
Philadelphia, Pa.
Power, Robert E.. Studios. 603 S. Mansfield Ave.,
Los Angeles, Calif.
Premier Scenery Studios, 340 W. 41st St New
York, N. Y.
Rainbow Color Co., 1018 S. Wabash Ave.. Chi-
cago, 111.
Rambusch Decorating Co., 2 W. 45th St New
York. N. Y.
Shearer, B. F.. Co., 2318 Second Ave.. Seattle
Wash.
Throckmorton, Cleon, Inc., 102 W. Third St
New York, N. Y.
Tylac Co., Greely & High Sts.. Monticello. 111.
Deodorants
Florozone Co., 6228 Forest Ave.. Brooklyn. N. Y.
Fulton, E. E., Co., 1018 S. Wabash Ave.. Chi-
cago. 111.
Hewes-Gotham Co.. 557 W. 48th St.. New York.
N. Y.
National Theater Supply Co.. 92 Gold St.. New
York, N. Y.
Ozone Air Co.. 928 Cherry St., S. E., Grand
Rapids, Mich.
Rochester Germicide Co., Inc., Rochester, N. Y.
Rosco Laboratories, 867 Hudson Ave.. Brooklyn.
N. Y.
West Disinfecting Co., 42-16 West St.. Long Island
City, N. Y.
Dimmers
Adam, Frank, Electric Co., 3650 Windsor Place.
St. Louis, Mo.
Capitol Stage Lighting Co.. 527 W. 45th St..
New York. N. Y.
Cutler-Hammer, Inc., N. 12th St. & W. St. Paul
Ave., Milwaukee, Wis.
Display Stage Lighting Co., Inc., 617 Tenth Ave..
New York. N. Y.
Erker Bros. Optical Co.. 610 Olive St.. S. Louis.
Mo.
General Electric Co., Schenectady, N. Y.
Guercio & Barthel Co.. 1241 S. Wabash Ave.. Chi-
cago. 111.
Holzmueller. C. J., 1108 Howard St.. San Fran-
cisco, Calif.
Hub Electric Corp., 2225 W. Grand Ave.. Chicago.
III.
Kansas City Scenic Co., 1002 E. 24th St.. Kansas
City, Mo.
Kliegl Bros. Universal Electric Stage Lighting
Co., Inc., 321 W. 60th St.. New York. N. Y.
Metropolitan Electric Manufacturing Co., 22-48
Steinway St., Long Island City. N. Y.
Olesen, Otto K.. Illuminating Co., Ltd., 1500 Broad-
way, New York, N. Y.
Ross, Charles, Inc., 244 W. 49th St.. New York.
N. Y.
Throckmorton. Cleon. Inc., 102 W. Third St..
New York. N. Y.
United Theater Equipment Co.. Inc.. 121 Golden
Gate Ave.. San Francisco, Calif.
Wurdack. William. Electric Co., 4444 Clayton
Ave.. St. Louis, Mo.
Doors, Fireproof
Art Metal Construction Co.. Jones & Gifford Ave..
Jamestown. N. Y.
Barnum, E. T., Iron & Wire Works, 6108 Linwood
Ave., Detroit, Mich.
Best Devices Co.. 10516 Western Ave., Cleve-
land. O.
Clancy. J. R., Inc., 1010 W. Belden Ave.. Syra-
cuse, N. Y.
Lippe Construction Corp., 17 W. 60th St.. New
York. N. Y.
Missouri Fire Door & Cornice Co.. 2621 Cass
Ave., St. Louis, Mo.
Moeschl-Edward Corrugating Co., 812 Russell St..
Covington, Ky.
Mosler Safe Co . Hamilton, O.
Overly Manufacturing Co., Greenburg, Pa.
Richards-Wilcox Manufacturing Co., Aurora. 111.
1052
Drapery Fabrics
BUYING GUIDE FOR 1940
A. A. A. Studio, Box 25, Station O, Cincinnati, 0.
Blossom Manufacturing: Co., 79 Madison Ave.,
New York. N. Y.
Chase, L. C. & Co., 295 Fifth Ave., New York,
N. Y.
Collins & Aikman Corp., 200 Madison Ave., New
York, N. Y.
Draperies Unlimited, Inc., 358 W. Flagler St..
Miami, Fla.
Hoenigsberger, A., 149 N. Wacker Drive, Chi-
cago, 111.
King Scenic Co., 1914 Main St., Dallas. Tex.
Maharam Fabric Corp., 130 W. 46th St., New
York, N. Y.
Manko Fabric Co., 105 W. 44th St., New York.
N. Y.
Martin, William T„ Studios. 352 N. Citrus Ave.,
Los Angeles, Calif.
Novelty Scenic Studios, Inc., 320 W. 48th St.,
New York, N. Y.
Oakland Textile Co., 461 Fourth Ave., New York,
N. Y.
Premier Scenery Studios, 340 W. 41st St., New
York, N. Y.
Schell Scenic Studios, 581 High St., Columbus, O.
Throckmorton, Cleon, Inc., 102 W. Third St..
New York, N. Y.
Tiffin Scenic Studios. Tiffin. O.
Volland Studios, Inc., 3737 Cass Ave., St. Louis,
Mo.
Zimmerman, John, & Sons, Erie & Coster Aves..
Philadelphia, Pa.
Drops
A. A. A. Studio, Box 25, Station O, Cincinnati, O.
Clancy, J. R., Inc., 1010 W. Belden Ave., Syra-
cuse, N. Y.
Draperies Unlimited, Inc., 358 W. Flagler St.,
Miami, Fla.
Kansas City Scenic Co., 1002 E. 24th St., Kansas
City, Mo.
King Scenic Co., 1914 Main St., Dallas, Tex.
Lee Lash Studios, 1828 Amsterdam Ave., New
York, N. Y.
Martin, William T.. Studios, 352 N. Citrus Ave.,
Los Angeles, Calif.
Novelty Scenic Studios, Inc., 320 W. 48th St.,
New York, N. Y.
Premier Scenery Studios, 340 W. 41st St., New
York, N. Y.
Schell Scenic Studios, 581 High St.. Columbus, O.
Throckmorton, Cleon, Inc., 102 W. Third St..
New York, N. Y.
Volland Studios, Inc., 3737 Cass Ave., St. Louis.
Mo.
Editing Machines, Film
Akeley Camera, Inc., 175 Varick St., New York,
N. Y.
Associated Screen News. Ltd., 5271 Western Ave.,
Montreal, Canada.
Bell & Howell Co., 1801 Larehmont Ave., Chi-
cago, HI. (16 & 8 mm.).
Camera Supply Co., 1515 N. Cahuenga Blvd..
Hollywood, Calif.
Duhem Motion Picture Manufacturing Co.. 135
Hayes St., San Francisco, Calif.
General Films, Ltd., 1924 Rose St., Regina, Sask.,
Canada.
Miles Reproducer Co., Inc., 812 Broadway, New
York. N. Y.
Motion Picture Camera Supply, Inc., 723 Seventh
Ave., New York, N. Y.
Moviola Co., 1451 Gordon St., Hollywood, Calif.
Ruby Camera Exchange, 729 Seventh Ave., New
York, N. Y.
Electrical Contractors
Alexander. Harry, Inc., 25 W. 43rd St., New
York. N. Y.
Edwards Electrical Construction Co., 70 E. 45th
St., New York, N. Y.
E-J Electric Installation Co., 227 E. 45th St.,
New York. N. Y.
Hanft. Harry A.. 142 W. 17th St.. New York. N. Y.
Hansen, Boy. Lustrolite Co., 831 W. 4th St.,
Davenport, la.
Hirsch, Gustav, Organization, 209 S. Third St.,
Columbus, O.
Holzmueller. C. J., 1108 Howard St.. San Fran-
cisco, Calif.
Master-Builders, The, 218 Hess Ave.. Erie, Pa.
Newmark, Morris, & Brother, 1814 Ludlow St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
Olesen. Otto K., Illuminating Co.. Ltd.. 1560 N.
Vine St., Hollywood, Calif.
Elevators
Atlantic Elevator Co., Erie Ave. & D St., Phila-
delphia. Pa.
Bruckner Mitchell. Inc.. 132 W. 24th St., New
York, N. Y.
Clancy, J. R.. Inc., 1010 W. Belden Ave.. Syra-
cuse, N. Y.
Clark, Peter, Inc.. 101 Park Ave., New York,
N. Y.
General Electric Co.. Schenectady, N. Y.
Gurney Division of the Atlantic Elevator Co.,
Erie Ave. & D St.. Philadelphia. Pa.
Otis Elevator Co., 26th St. & Eleventh Ave., New
York, N. Y.
Tyler, W. S., Co., 3615 Superior Ave., Cleve-
land, O.
Fans
Air Condition Engineering. 1523 E. 9th St., Los
Angeles, Calif.
Allen Corp., 9760 Erwin St.. Detroit, Mich.
American Blower Corp., 6000 Russell St., Detroit.
Mich.
Autovent Fan & Blower Co., 1807 N. Kostner
Ave., Chicago, 111.
Ballantyne Co., 222 N. 16th St.. Omaha, Neb.
Bayley Blower Co., 1817 S. 66th St., Milwaukee.
Wis.
Bishop & Babcock Manufacturing Co., 4901 Ham-
ilton Ave., N. E., Cleveland, O.
Buffalo Forge Co., 448 S. Hill St., Los Angeles,
Calif.
Carrier Corp., Syracuse, N. Y.
Champion Blower & Forge Co., Harrisburg Ave.,
Lancaster, Pa.
Cinema Studios Supply Corp., 1010 N. McCadden
Place. Los Angeles, Calif.
Clarage Fan Co., 619 Portor St., Kalamazoo, Mich.
Fidelity Electric Co.. Lancaster, Pa.
Garden City Fan Co., 332 S. Michigan Ave..
Chicago. 111.
General Electric Co., Schenectady, N. Y.
Guth, Edwin F., Co., 2615 Washington Ave., St.
Louis, Mo.
Janettc Manufacturing Co., 556 W. Monroe St.,
Chicago, 111.
Missouri Fire Door & Cornice Co., 2621 Cass Ave.,
St. Louis, Mo.
National Theater Supply Co.. 92 Gold St., New
York, N. Y.
Olesen, Otto K.. Illuminating Co., Ltd., 1560 N.
Vine St., Hollywood, Calif.
Reynolds Electric Co., 2692 W. Congress St..
Chicago. 111.
Reynolds Manufacturing Co., 412 Prospect Ave.,
N. E.. Grand Rapids, Mich.
Ross, Charles, Inc.. 244 W. 49th St.. New York,
N. Y.
Standard Transformer Corp., 1500 N. Halsted St..
Chicago, 111.
Trane Co., The, LaCrosse, Wise.
Typhoon Air Conditioning Co., 252 W. 26th St..
New York, N. Y.
1053
BUYING GUIDE FOR 1940
U. S. Air Conditioning Corp.. Northwestern Ter-
minal, Minneapolis. Minn.
Wagrner Electric Corp.. 0400 Plymouth Ave.. St.
Louis, Mo.
Western Engineering & Manufacturing Co., 1726
E. Washington Blvd.. Los Angeles. Calif.
Wolverine Blower Works. 412 Prospect Ave., N. E..
Grand Rapids, Mich.
Fire Extinguishers
Acme Stage Equipment Co., 191 Lafayette St..
New York. N. Y.
Cinema Studios Supply Corp., 1010 N. McCadden
Place, Los Angeles, Calif.
C-O-Two Fire Equipment Co., 10 Empire St.,
New York, N. Y.
Dayton Safety Ladder Co.. 121 W. Third St..
Cincinnati. O.
Film Treatizor Corp.. 117 W. 63rd St., New
York, N. Y.
Srinnell Co., Inc., 277 W. Exchange St., Provi
dence, R. I.
Harker Manufacturing Co.. 131 W. Third St..
Cincinnati. O.
Hewes-Gotham Co., 557 W. 48th St., New York.
N. Y.
Missouri Fire Door & Cornice Co., 2621 Cass Ave..
St. Louis. Mo.
Neumade Products Corp.. 427 W. 42nd St.. New
York. N. Y.
Pyrene Manufacturing Co., 560 Belmont Ave..
Newark. N. J.
Rosco Laboratories. 367 Hudson Ave.. Brook-
lyn, N. Y.
Fire Hose
Acme Stage Equipment Co., 191 Lafayette St..
New York. N. Y.
Cinema Studios Supply Corp., 1010 N. McCadden
Place, Los Angeles, Calif.
United States Rubber Co., 1790 Broadway, New
York, N. Y.
Fixtures
Brass, Bronze, Iron
Barnum, E. T.. Iron & Wire Works, 6108 Lin-
wood Ave.. Detroit. Mich.
Flour City Ornamental Iron Co.. 2637 27th Ave.,
Minneapolis, Minn.
Guth, Edwin F„ Co., 2615 Washington Ave., St.
Louis. Mo.
Illinois Bronze & Iron Works. 917 S. Kildare Ave..
Chicago. 111.
Kliegl Bros. Universal Electric Stage Lighting Co..
Inc., 321 W. 50th St.. New York, N. Y.
Landers. Bert A., Inc., 823 S. Los Angeles St., Los
Angeles, Calif.
Missouri Art Metal Co.. 1408 N. Broadway. St.
Louis. Mo.
Newman Bros.. Inc.. 060 W. Fourth St.. Cincin-
nati. O.
Fixtures, Lighting
Battle, Robert, Inc., 35-28 42nd St.. Long Island
City, N. Y.
Capitol Stage Lighting Co., 527 W. 45th St.. New
York, N. Y.
Cinema Studios Supply Corp.. 1010 N. McCadden
Place. Los Angeles. Calif.
Curtis Lighting, Inc., 1123 W. Jackson Blvd.,
Chicago, 111.
Day-Brite Lighting, Inc., 5401 Bulwer Ave.. St.
Louis. Mo.
Display Stage Lighting Co., Inc., 617 Tenth Ave.,
New York. N. Y.
Erikson Electric Co., 6 Power House St.. Boston.
MasB.
Erker Bros. Optical Co.. 610 Olive St.. St. Louis
Mo.
General Electric Co., Schenectady. N. Y.
Guth, Edwin F., Co., 2615 Washington Ave.. St.
Louis, Mo.
Hollingsworth Co.. 30 S. Bank St.. Philadelphia
Pa.
Holzmueller. C. J., 1108 Howard St.. San Fran
Cisco, Calif.
Hub Electric Corp.. 2225 W. Grand Ave.. Chicago.
m.
King Scenic Co.. 1914 Main St.. Dallas, Tex.
Kliegl Bros., Universal Electric Stage Lighting
Co., Inc., 321 W. 50th St.. New York. N. Y
Missouri Art Metal Co., 1408 N. Broadway, St.
Louis, Mo.
Nation-Wide Manufacturing Corp., 449 W. 42nd
St., New York, N. Y.
Rambusch Decorating Co.. 2 W. 45th St.. New
York, N. Y.
Roman Art Co., Inc., 2700 Locust Blvd.. St. Louis.
Mo.
Ross. Charles, Inc.. 244 W. 49th St.. New York
N. Y.
Sterling Reflector Co., 1431 W. Hubbard St..
Chicago. HI.
Voigt Co., 12th & Montgomery Aves.. Philadel-
phia. Pa.
Wagner-Woodruff Co.. 830 S. Olive St.. Los An
geles, Calif.
Wheeler Reflector Co.. 275 Congress St.. Boston.
Mass.
Fixtures, Plumbing
Standard Sanitary Manufacturing Co.. Bessemer
Bldg.. Pittsburgh. Pa.
West Disinfecting Co., 42-16 West St., Long
Island City, N. Y.
Flags and Banners
Ace Flag Co.. 41 Vesey St.. New York. N. Y.
Acme Stage Equipment Co.. 191 Lafayette St..
New York, N. Y.
Art Flag. Inc., 247 W. 42nd St.. New York. N. Y.
Chicago Flag & Decorating Co., 2611 Indiana
Ave.. Chicago, HI.
DeMoulin Bros. & Co.. Greenville. 111.
Hollywood Advertising Co.. 600 W. 46th St., New
York. N. Y.
Hollywood Advertising Co.. 118 Southwest Blvd..
Kansas City. Mo.
Liberman Flag & Valence Co.. 71 Fifth Ave..
New York. N. Y.
Metro Flag-Banner Co.. 17 W. 28th St.. New
York. N. Y.
Pettibone Bros. Manufacturing Co., 626 Main St..
Cincinnati. O.
Robbins. J. & Son. 203 Market St.. Pittsburgh. Pa
Tipp Novelty Co.. Tipp City. O.
Flashers
Automatic Electric Manufacturing Co.. Mankato.
Minn.
Battle. Reobrt. Inc.. 35-28 52nd St.. Long Island
City. N. Y.
Eagle Signal Corp., Moline, 111.
Hansen, Boy, Lustrolite Co., 831 W. 4th St..
Davenport, la.
Reynolds Electric Co., 2692 W. Congress St..
Chicago, 111.
Ross. Charles. Inc.. 244 W. 49th St.. New York.
N. Y.
Sangamo Electric Co., Springfield. 111.
Sign Animation Corp.. 229 W. 42nd St.. New
York, N. Y.
Floor Coverings
A. A. A. Studio. Box 25. Station O. Cincinnati, O.
American Mat Corp., 1708 Adams St.. Toledo. O.
1054
American Tile & Rubber Co., Perrine Ave., Tren-
ton, N. J.
Armstrong Cork Co., Lancaster. Pa.
Bigelow Sanford Carpet Co., Inc., 140 Madison
Ave., New York, N. Y.
Clinton Carpet Co., 222 N. Bank Drive, Chicago,
111.
Greater New York Carpet House, Inc., 250 W.
49th St., New York, N. Y.
Imperial Floor Co., Inc., 69 Halstead St., Roches-
ter, N. Y.
Jackson. O. W. & Co., Inc., 290 Fifth Ave., New
York, N. Y.
King Scenic Co., 1914 Main St., Dallas, Tex.
Lippe Construction Corp., 17 W. 60th St., New
York, N. Y.
National Theater Supply Co., 92 Gold St., New
York. N. Y.
Pick, Albert. Co., Inc.. 2519 Pershing Road,
Chicago, 111.
Puritan Rubber Manufacturing Co., Perrine Ave..
Trenton, N. J.
Rosenheim, J.. & Co., 71 W. 45th St., New
York, N. Y.
Slater Co.. The, 300 W. Austin Ave., Chicago, 111.
Smith. Alexander, & Sons, Carpet Co., Sales Divi-
sion. 295 Fifth Ave.. New York, N. Y.
Flowers, Artificial
Borgenski, J. S.. Sons. 62 N. 13th St., Phila-
delphia, Pa.
Botanical Decorative Supply Co.. 325 W. Madison
St.. Chicago, 111.
Coast Flower Manufacturing Co., 936 Maple Ave..
Los Angeles, Calif.
Felippelli General Flower & Decorating Co., Inc..
311 W. 50th St.. New York. N. Y.
Ladners. Bert A., Inc., 823 S. Los Angeles St..
Los Angeles, Calif.
Leistner, Oscar, Inc., 321 W. Randolph St., Chi-
cago, 111.
McCallum Co., 115 Seventh St., Pittsburgh, Pa.
Maharam Fabric Corp., 130 W. 46th St., New
York, N. Y.
eehack Artificial Flower Co., 319 W. Van Buren
Ave.. Chicago, 111.
Schneider, L., 6 Second St., New York, N. Y.
Frames, Lobby Display
A. A. A. Studio, Box 25, Station O, Cincinnati, O.
Ames Metal Moulding Co., Inc., 225 E. 144th St.,
New York, N. Y.
Artkraft Sign Co., Lima, O.
Barnum, E. T.. Iron & Wire Works. 6108 Linwood
Ave.. Detroit, Mich.
Chicago Metal Covering Co.. 2833 W. Lake St.,
Chicago. 111.
Flour City Ornamental Iron Co., 2637 27th Ave.,
Minneapolis, Minn.
Friedman, I. M.. Inc., 171 W. Lake St., Chicago.
111.
Fulton. E. E., Co., 1018 S. Wabash Ave., Chi-
cago, 111.
Guercio & Barthel Co.. 1241 S. Wabash Ave.,
Chicago, 111.
Hansen, Boy, Lustrolite Co., 831 W. 4th St..
Davenport, la.
King Scenic Co., 1914 Main St., Dallas, Tex.
Libman-Spanjer Corp., 1600 Broadway, New
York, N. Y.
Markendorff. S., Sons, Inc., 159 W. 23rd St., New
York, N. Y.
Menger, Ring & Weinstein, Inc., 225 Fifth Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
Missouri Fire Door & Cornice Co., 2621 Cass Ave.,
St. Louis, Mo.
National Screen Accessories, Inc., 630 Ninth Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
Newman Bros., Inc., 660 W. Fourth St., Cincin-
nati, O.
Tyler, W. S., Co., 3615 Superior Ave.. Cleve-
land. O.
K( If \G GUIDE FOR 1940
Voigt Co.. 12th & Montgomery Aves., Philadel-
phia, Pa.
Western Poster Co.. 2523 Second Ave.. Seattle.
Wash.
Gelatines
Brigham Sheet Gelatine Co., Randolph, Vt.
Capitol Stage Lighting Co., 527 W. 45th St..
New York. N. Y.
Central Import Co., 341 E. Ohio St., Chicago, 111.
Chicago Stage Lighting Co., Inc.. 115 W. Hub-
bard St., Chicago. 111.
Cinema Studios Supply Corp., 1010 N. McCadden
Place, Los Angeles, Calif.
Curtis Lighting, Inc., 1123 W. Jackson Blvd.,
Chicago, 111.
Erker Bros. Optical Co., 610 Olive St., St. Louis,
Mo.
Golde Manufacturing Co.. 1214 W. Madisoji St..
Chicago, 111.
Holzmueller, C. J.. 1108 Howard St., San Fran-
cisco, Calif.
Kliegl Bros. Universal Electrical Stage Lighting
Co.. Inc., 321 W. 50th St.. New York. N. Y.
Martin. William T., Studios, 352 N. Citrus Ave.,
Los Angeles, Calif.
Morgan Lithograph Corp., E. 17th St. & Payne
Ave.. Cleveland, O.
Olesen. Otto K.. Illuminating Co., Ltd., 1560 N.
Vine St., Hollywood, Calif.
Rainbow Color Co., 1018 S. Wabash Ave., Chi-
cago, 111.
Rosco Laboratories. 367 Hudson Ave., Brook-
lyn. N. Y.
Ross, Charles, Inc., 244 W. 49th St., New York.
N. Y.
Wholesale Supply Co., 1047 N. Wilcox Ave., Los
Angeles, Calif.
Generators
Automatic Devices Co., 1035 Linden St., Allen-
town, Pa.
Ballantyne Co.. 222 N. 16th St., Omaha, Neb.
Century Electric Co., 1806 Pine St., St. Louis,
Mo.
Cincinnati Time Recorder Co., 1733 Central Ave.,
Cincinnati, O.
Cinema Sound Equipment Co., 8572 Santa Monica
Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
Cinema Studios Supply Corp., 1010 N. McCadden
Place, Los Angeles. Calif.
Continental Electric Co., 50 Church St., New
York, N. Y.
Continental Theater Accessories, Inc., 325 W. 44th
St., New York, N. Y.
E-J Electric Installation Co.. 227 E. 45th St., New
York, N. Y.
Federated Purchaser, Inc., 25 Park Place, New
York, N. Y.
Fidelity Electric Co., Lancaster, Pa.
Gardiner, L. J., Co., 934 W. Goodale Blvd..
Columbus, O.
General Electric Co., Schenectady, N. Y.
Hanft, Harry A., 142 W. 17th St., New York,
N. Y.
Hertner Electric Co., 21690 Elmwood Ave.. Cleve-
land, O.
Hollingsworth Co., 30 S. Bank St., Philadelphia,
Pa.
Ideal Electric & Manufacturing Co.. Mansfield. O.
Janette Manufacturing Co., 556 W. Monroe St.,
Chicago, 111.
Morelite Co., Inc., 600 W. 57th St., New York,
N. Y.
National Theater Supply Co., 92 Gold St., New
York, N. Y.
Olesen, Otto K., Illuminating Co., Ltd., 1560 N.
Vine St., Hollywood, Calif.
United Theater Equipment Co., Inc., 121 Golden
Gate Ave., San Francisco, Calif.
1055
BUYMWG GUtDE FOR 1940
Glass, Decorative
Bache. Semon, & Co., 636 Greenwich St., New
York, N. Y.
Guth. Edwin F., Co., 2615 Washington Ave., St.
Louis. Mo.
Lippe Construction Corp., 17 W. 60th St., New
York, N. Y.
Macbeth-Evans Division, Corning- Glass Works,
Charleroi, Pa.
Missouri Art Metal Co., 1408 N. Broadway, St.
Louis, Mo.
Owens-Illinois Glass Co., Ohio Bids.. Toledo. O.
Pacific Glass Co.. 721 E. 61st St., Los Angeles.
Calif.
Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co.. Grant BIdg., Pitts-
burgh, Pa.
Rambusch Decorating Co., 2 W. 45th St., New
York, N. Y.
Rawson & Evans Co., 710 Washington Blvd..
Chicago. 111.
Syracuse Glass Co., 435 Erie Blvd., East Syra-
cuse, N. Y.
Voigt Co., 12th & Montgomery Aves., Philadel-
phia, Pa.
Hard of Hearing Devices
Acousticon Division of Dictograph Products Co..
Inc., 580 Fifth Ave., New York. N. Y.
Amplifier Company of America. 17 W. 20th St.,
New York, N. Y.
Atlas Sound Corp., 1451 39th St., Brooklyn. N. Y.
Ballantyne Co., 222 N. 16th St.. Omaha, Neb.
Dictograph Sales Corp., 580 Fifth Ave., New
York, N. Y.
Electrical Research Products, Inc., 195 Broadway,
New York, N. Y.
Federated Purchaser, Inc., 25 Park Place, New
York, N. Y.
Hearing Devices Co., Times Bldg., New York
N. Y.
Lincrophone Co., Inc.. 1661 Howard Ave., Utiea
N. Y.
Miles Reproducer Co., Inc., 812 Broadway, New
York, N. Y.
Olesen, Otto K., Illuminating Co., Ltd., 1560 N.
Vine St.. Hollywood. Calif.
Operadio Manufacturing Co., St. Charles, 111.
Picture-Fone Co.. 806 S. Main St., Lima. O.
RCA Manufacturing Co., Inc., Camden, N. J.
Trimm Radio Manufacturing Co., 1770 W. Ber-
teau Ave., Chicago, 111.
United Theater Equipment Co., Inc., 121 Golden
Gate Ave., San Francisco, Calif.
Western Electric Co., 195 Broadway, New York.
N. Y.
Hardware, Stage
Acme Stage Equipment Co., 191 Lafayette St..
New York. N. Y.
Automatic Devices Co., 1035 Linden St., Allen-
town, Pa.
Bruckner Mitchell, Inc., 132 W. 24th St., New
York. N. Y.
Clancy, R. R., Inc., 1010 W. Belden Ave., Syra-
cuse. N. Y.
Clark. Peter, Inc., 101 Park Avenue, New York,
N. Y.
Holzmueller. C. J., 1108 Howard St., San Fran-
cisco. Calif.
Kansas City Scenic Co., 1002 E. 24th St., Kansas
City, Mo.
Martin, William T., Studios. 352 N. Citrus Ave.,
Los Angeles, Calif.
Novelty Scenic Studios, Inc., 320 W. 48th St.,
New York, N. Y.
Nussbaumer. N. C, 842 N. Harvey Ave.. Oak
Park, 111.
Russell & Erwin Manufacturing Co., 102 Wash-
ington St., New Britain, Conn.
Schell Scenic Studios, 581 High St.. Columbus. O.
Shearer, B. F.. Co., 2318 Second Ave.. Seattle.
Wash.
Throckmorton. Cleon, Inc., 102 W. Third St.. New
York, N. Y.
Tiffin Scenic Studios, Tiffin, O.
Volland Studios, Inc., 3737 Cass Ave., St. Louis.
Mo.
Heaters, Organ
Hoffman. Ernest V., 115-58 174th St., St. Albans.
L. I., N. Y.
Kausalite Manufacturing Co., 8131 Rhodes Ave.,
Chicago, 111.
Marr. David, Co.. Warsaw, N. Y.
Prometheus Electric Corp., 358 W. 13th St., New
York, N. Y.
Heaters, Ticket Booth
Carrier Corp., Syracuse, N. Y.
Cutler-Hammer, Inc., N. 12th St. & W. St. Paul
Ave.. Milwaukee. Wise.
Hoffman, Ernest V., 115-58 174th St., St. Albans
L. I., N. Y.
Kausalite Manufacturing Co., 8131 Rhodes Ave.,
Chicago, 111.
Prometheus Electric Corp., 358 W. 13th St., New
York, N. Y.
Heating Systems
Air Condition Engineering, 1523 E. 9th St., Los
Angeles, Calif.
American Blower Corp., 6000 Russell St.. Detroit.
Mich.
Autovent Fan & Blower Co., 1807 N. Kostner
Ave., Chicago, 111.
Bayley Blower Co.. 1817 S. 66th St.. Milwaukee.
Wise.
Carrier Corp., Syracuse, N. Y.
Cashin. W. D., Co., 69 A. St., S„ Boston, Mass.
Delco-Frigidaire Conditioning Division, General
Motors Sales Corp., Dayton, O.
Eichenlaub, George E., 905 Commerce Bldg., Erie.
Pa.
General Electric Co.. Schenectady, N. Y.
Grinnell Co., Inc.. 277 W. Exchange St., Provi-
dence, R. I.
Icedaire, 252 W. 26th St., New York, N. Y.
Leopold, C. S., 213 S. Broad St.. Philadelphia.
Pa.
Lieblich. H.. & Co.. 19 W. 44th St.. New York.
N. Y.
M aster-Builders. The. 218 Hess Ave., Erie. Pa.
Preferred Utilities Co., Inc.. 33 W. 60th St.. New
York, N. Y.
Reynolds Corp., 1400 Wabansia Ave., Chicago, 111.
Rockenstein, L. T., Co., 3327 Locust St., St. Louis,
Mo.
Sturtevant. B. F., Co.. Cooling & Air Condition-
ing Division, 908 Graybar Bldg., New York.
N. Y.
Trane Co., The. LaCrosse, Wise.
Typhoon Air Conditioning Co.. 252 W. 26th St..
New York, N. Y.
U. S. Air Conditioning Corp., Northwestern Ter-
minal, Minneapolis, Minn.
York Ice Machinery Corp., York, Pa.
Hoods, Color
Best Devices Co., 10516 Western Ave., Cleve-
land, O.
Kliegl Bros. Universal Electric Stage Lighting
Co.. Inc., 321 W. 50th St.. New York. N. Y.
Reynolds Electric Co., 2692 W. Congress St..
Chicago, 111.
Ross. Charles, Inc., 244 W. 49th St., New York,
N. Y.
Horns and Speakers
Acme Electric Construction Co., 37 W. Van Buren
St.. Chicago, HI.
1056
Atlas Sound Corp., 1451 39th St., Brooklyn. N. Y.
Ballantyne Co., 222 N. 16th St., Omaha, Neb.
Cinaudagraph Corp., Stamford, Conn.
Cincinnati Time Recorder Co.. 1733 Central Ave..
Cincinnati, O.
Cinema Supplies, Inc.. 36 Glenwood Ave., Min-
neapolis, Minn.
Colortone Acoustic Devices, Inc., 322 E. Colfax
Ave., South Bend, Ind.
Consolidated Theater Supply Corp., 1600 Broad-
way, New York. N. Y.
Duhem Motion Picture Manufacturing Co., 135
Hayes St.. San Francisco. Calif.
Federated Purchaser, Inc., 25 Park Place, New
York, N. Y.
Fox Sound Equipment Corp., 3120 Monroe St.,
Toledo. O.
General Films. Ltd.. 1924 Rose St., Regina, Sask.,
Canada.
Good-All Electric Manufacturing' Co., Ogallala,
Neb.
Jensen Radio Manufacturing Co., 6601 S. Laramie
Ave.. Chicago, 111.
Kendall Co., of America, 7 W. 44th St.. New York.
N. Y.
Lincrophone Co., Inc.. 1661 Howard Ave., Utica.
N. Y.
Motiograph. Inc.. 4431 W. Lake St., Chicago. 111.
National Theater Supply Co., 92 Gold St., New
York. N. Y.
Operadio Manufacturing Co., St. Charles, 111.
Picture-Fone Co.. 806 S. Main St., Lima. O.
Racon Electric Co.. Inc., 52 E. 19th St.. New
York, N. Y.
RCA Manufacturing Co., Inc., Camden, N. J.
Royal Zenith Sound Projectors, Inc., 33 W. 60th
St.. New York. N. Y.
Ruby Camera Exchange. 729 Seventh Ave., New
York. N. Y.
Throckmorton, Cleon, Inc., 102 W. Third St.. New
York. N. Y.
United Theater Equipment Co.. Inc., 121 Golden
Gate Ave.. San Francisco, Calif.
Weber Machine Corp.. 59 Rutter St.. Rochester,
N. Y.
Wenzel Co.. 2509 S. State St., Chicago, 111.
Western Electric Co., 195 Broadway. New York,
N. Y.
Indicators, Film Speed
Associated Screen News. Ltd.. 5271 Western Ave.,
Montreal, Canada.
Barbour-Stoekwell, 205 Broadway, Cambridge,
Mass.
Rosco Laboratories, 367 Hudson Ave.. Brooklyn.
N. Y.
Inspection Machines, Film
Akeley Camera, Inc., 175 Varick St., New York.
N. Y.
Associated Screen News, Ltd., 5271 Western Ave.,
Montreal, Canada
Duhem Motion Picture Manufacturing Co., 135
Hayes St., San Francisco, Calif.
General Films. Ltd., 1924 Rose St., Regina, Sask.,
Canada.
Moviola Co., 1451 Gordon St.. Hollywood. Calif.
Ruby Camera Exchange, 729 Seventh Ave., New
York. N. Y.
Inspection Tables
Duhem Motion Picture Manufacturing Co., 135
Hayes St.. San Francisco, Calif.
Fulton, E. E., Co.. 1018 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago.
111.
National Theater Supply Co., 92 Gold St., New
York. N. Y.
Neumade Products Corp., 427 W. 42nd St., New
York, N. Y.
Wolk. Edward H., 1018 S. Wabash Ave.. Chicago.
111.
BUY1WG GUIDE FOR 1940
Iron Work, Architectural
A. A. A. Studio, Box 25. Station O. Cincinnati. O.
Barnum, E. T., Iron & Wire Works. 6108 Linwood
Ave., Detroit, Mich.
Flour City Ornamental Iron Co.. 2637 27th Ave.,
Minneapolis. Minn.
Guth, Edwin F„ Co., 2615 Washington Ave., St.
Louis, Mo.
Illinois Bronze & Iron Works, 917 S. Kildare
Ave., Chicago, 111.
Lippe Construction Corp., 17 W. 60th St., New
York, N. Y.
Missouri Art Metal Co., 1408 N. Broadway, St.
Louis, Mo.
Rambusch Decorating Co.. 2 W. 45th St., New
York, N. Y.
Rogers Sehmitt Wire & Iron Works, 1815 N. 23rd
St., St. Louis, Mo.
Smith, F. P., Wire & Iron Works, 2346 Clybourn
Ave., Chicago, 111.
Tyler, W. S.. Co., 3615 Superior Ave.. Cleveland, O.
Ladders
Acme Stage Equipment Co.. 191 Lafayette St..
New York. N. Y.
Berg-, John, Manufacturing Co., 5319 S. LaSalle
St., Chicago, 111.
Cinema Studios Supply Corp., 1010 N. McCadden
Place, Los Angeles, Calif.
Dayton Safety Ladder Co., 121 W. Third St..
Cincinnati. O.
Harker Manufacturing Co., 131 W. Third St.,
Cincinnati. O.
Patent Scaffolding Co., Inc., 1550 Dayton St.,
Chicago, 111.
Rogers Sehmitt Wire & Iron Works. 1815 N. 23rd
St., St. Louis, Mo.
Lamps, Arc
Ashcraft, C. S., Manufacturing Corp., 47-31 35th
St., Long Island City, N. Y.
Ballantyne Co.. 222 N. 16th St., Omaha, Neb.
Brenkert Light Projection Co.. 7348 St. Aubin
Ave.. Detroit, Mich.
Capitol Stage Lighting Co., 527 W. 45th St., New
York. N. Y.
Chicago Cinema Products Co., 1750 N. Spring-
field Ave.. Chicago, III.
Cinema Studios Supply Corp., 1010 N. McCadden
Place. Los Angeles, Calif.
Consolidated Theater Supply Corp., 1600 Broad-
way, New York. N. Y.
Duhem Motion Picture Manufacturing Co., 135
Hayes St., San Francisco. Calif.
Gardiner, L. J., Co.. 935 W. Goodale Blvd., Co-
lumbus. O.
General Electric Co., Schenectady, N. Y.
Good-All Electric Manufacturing Co., Ogallala.
Neb.
Guercio & Barthel Co., 1241 S. Wabash Ave., Chi-
cago, 111.
Holzmueller, C. J.. 1108 Howard St., San Fran-
cisco, Calif.
Kliegl Bros. Universal Electric Stage Lighting Co.,
Inc., 321 W. 50th St.. New York. N. Y.
McAuley, J. E., Manufacturing Co., 552 W. Adams
St.. Chicago, HI.
Mole-Richardson Co., 941 N. Sycamore Ave., Hol-
lywood, Calif.
Morelite Co., Inc., 600 W. 57th St.. New York.
N. Y.
Motiograph, Inc., 4431 W. Lake St., Chicago. 111.
Motion Picture Accessories Co., 2200 S. Vermont
Ave., Los Angeles, Calif.
National Theater Supply Co., 92 Gold St., New
York, N. Y.
1057
BUYING GUIDE FOR 1940
Olesen, Otto K.. Illuminating Co., Ltd.. 1560 N.
Vine St., Hollywood, Calif.
Picture Fone Co.. 806 S. Main St.. Lima. O.
Preddey. Walter G., 187 Golden Gate Ave.. San
Francisco, Calif.
Ross. Charles. Inc., 244 W. 49th St., New York,
N. Y.
Strong Electric Co., 2501 LaGrange St., Toledo, 0.
Wenzel Co.. 2509 S. State St., Chicago, 111.
Lamps, Incandescent
Capitol Stage Lighting Co.. 527 W. 45th St., New
York. N. Y.
Chicago Cinema Products Co., 1750 N. Spring-
field Ave.. Chicago. HI.
Cinema Studios Supply Corp., 1010 N. McCadden
Place. Los Angeles, Calif.
Climax Reflector, Inc., 315 Reynolds Place, S. W.,
Canton, O.
Consolidated Theater Supply Corp., 1600 Broad-
way, New York. N. Y.
Continental Theater Accessories, Inc., 325 W. 44th
St.. New York, N. Y.
Display Stage Lighting Co., Inc., 617 Tenth Ave.,
New York. N. Y.
Fluorescent Tube Lights. Inc., 1007 Atlantic Ave..
Brooklyn, N. Y.
General Electric Co.. Schenectady, N. Y.
Good-All Electric Manufacturing Co., Ogallala.
Neb.
Guth, Edwin F., Co., 2615 Washington Ave.. St.
Louis, Mo.
Hirsch. Gustav, Organization. 209 S. Third St..
Columbus. O.
Hollingworth Co., 30 S. Bank St., Philadelphia, Pa.
Holzmueller. C. J., 1108 Howard St., San Fran-
cisco, Calif.
Incandescent Lamp Dept., General Electric Co..
570 Lexington Ave.. New York, N. Y.
Kliegl Bros. Universal Electric Stage Lighting Co..
Inc., 321 W. 50th St.. New York. N. Y.
Lamp Dept., General Electric Co., Nela Park.
Cleveland. O.
Mole-Richardson Co., 941 N. Sycamore Ave..
Hollywood, Calif.
Olesen, Otto K.. Hluminating Co.. Ltd., 1560 N.
Vine St., Hollywood, Calif.
Radiant Lamp Corp., 268 Sherman Ave., New-
ark, N. J.
Ross. Charles, Inc., 244 W. 49th St.. New York.
N. Y.
Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Co., West-
inghouse Lamp Division, 150 Broadway, New
York, N. Y.
Lamps, Projection
Ashcraft, C. S., Manufacturing Corp., 47-31 85th
St.. Long Island City. N. Y.
Associated Screen News, Ltd., 5271 Western Ave.,
Montreal, Canada.
Ballantyne Co., 222 N. 16th St.. Omaha. Neb.
Brenkert Light Projection Co., 7348 St. Aubin
Ave., Detroit, Mich.
Consolidated Theater Supply Corp., 1600 Broad-
way, New York, N. Y.
Continental Theater Accessories. Inc.. 325 W. 44th
St.. New York. N. Y.
Crown Motion Picture Supplies Corp., 614 Ninth
Ave., New York, N. Y.
DeVry Corp., 1111 Armitage Ave., Chicago, HI.
Display Stage Lighting Co., Inc.. 617 Tenth Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
Erker Bros. Optical Co.. 610 Olive St.. St. Louis.
Mo.
Forest Manufacturing Corp., 200 Mt. Pleasant
Ave., Newark. N. J.
Gardiner. L. J., Co.. 936 W. Goodale Blvd..
Columbus, O.
General Electrio Co.. Schenectady, N. Y.
General Films, Ltd., 1924 Rose St.. Regina, Sask..
Canada.
Guercio & Barthel Co., 1241 S. Wabash Ave.. Chi-
cago, 111.
Kliegl Bros. Universal Electric Stage Lighting Co..
Inc.. 321 W. 50th St.. New York. N. Y.
Lamp Dept.. General Electric Co.. Nela Park.
Cleveland, O.
McAuley, J. E. Manufacturing Co.. 552 W. Adams
St., Chicago. 111.
Morelite Co., Inc., 600 W. 57th St.. New York.
N. Y.
Motion Picture Accessories Co., 2200 S. Vermont
Ave.. Los Angeles, Calif.
Moving Works Projection Advertising, 4505
N. Kedzie Ave.. Chicago, M.
National Theater Supply Co., 92 Gold St.. New
York, N. Y.
Picture-Fone Co., 806 S. Main St., Lima. O.
Preddey, Walter G., 187 Golden Gate Ave.. San
Francisco. Calif.
Radiant Lamp Corp.. 268 Sherman Ave., Newark.
N. J.
Ruby Camera Exchange. 729 Seventh Ave.. New
York, N. Y.
Shearer, B. F., Co., 2318 Second Ave., Seattle.
Wash.
Strong Electric Co., 2501 LaGrange St., Toledo. O.
United Theater Equipment Co., Inc., 121 Golden
Gate Ave., San Francisco, Calif.
Westinghouse Electrio & Manufacturing Co., West-
inghouse Lamp Division, 150 Broadway, New
York. N. Y.
Wholesale Supply Co.. 1047 N. Wilcox Ave.. Los
Angeles, Calif.
Lamps, Reflector
Ashcraft, C. S., Manufacturing Corp., 47-31 35th
St., Long Island City, N. Y.
Brenkert Light Projection Co.. 7348 St. Aubin
Ave.. Detroit. Mich.
Carbon Products. Inc.. 324 W. 42nd St.. New
York, N. Y.
Climax Reflector. Inc.. 315 Reynolds Place, S.
W.. Canton, O.
Cole. C. W., & Co.. 320 E. 12th St., Los Angeles.
Calif.
Curtis Lighting, Inc., 123 W. Jackson Blvd..
Chicago. HI.
Display Stage Lighting Co., Inc., 617 Tenth Ave..
New York, N. Y.
Gardiner. L. J., Co., 935 W. Goodale Blvd..
Columbus. O.
General Electric Co., Schenectady. N. Y.
Golde Manufacturing Co.. 1214 W. Madison St..
Chicago, HI.
Guercio & Barthel Co., 1241 S. Wabash Ave.. Chi-
cago. HI.
Guth. Edwin F., Co., 2615 Washington Ave., St.
Louis, Mo.
Kliegl Bros. Universal Electric Etage Lighting
Co., Inc.. 321 W. 50th St.. New York. N. Y.
Lamp Dept., General Electric Co., Nela Park.
Cleveland, O.
McAuley. J. E. Manufacturing Co.. 552 W. Adams
St., Chicago, ni.
Matisse Bros., Inc.. 787 E. 138th St.. New York.
N. Y.
Morelite Co.. Inc., 600 W. 57th St.. New York,
N. Y.
Preddey, Walter G.. 187 Golden Gate Ave., San
Francisco, Calif.
Radiant Lamp Corp., 268 Sherman Ave.. Newark.
N. J.
Robbins. J. & Son, 203 Market St., Pittsburgh, Pa
Strong Electric Co.. 2501 LaGrange St.. Toledo. O.
Wenzel Co., 2509 S. State St., Chicago. HI.
Lenses, Motion Picture
Camera
Akeley Camera. Inc.. 175 Varick St.. New York.
N. Y.
Associated Screen News. Ltd.. 6271 Western Ave..
Montreal. Canada.
1058
Bache, Semon, & Co., 636 Greenwich St., New
York, N. Y.
Bausch & Lomb Optical Co.. 936 St. Paul St..
Rochester. N. Y.
Bell & Howell Co., 1801 Larchmont Ave., Chicago.
HI.
Camera Mart. Inc.. The, 70 W. 45th St., New
York, N. Y.
Camera Supply Co., 1515 N. Cahuenga Blvd.,
Hollywood, Calif.
Canady Sound Appliance Co.. 19570 S. Sagamore
Road, Rocky River P. O., Cleveland, O.
Debrie. Andre. Inc., 115 W. 45th St.. New York.
N. Y.
DeVry Corp., 1111 Armitagre Ave., Chicago, 111.
Duhem Motion Picture Manufacturing Co., 135
Hayes St., San Francisco. Calif.
Eastman Kodak Co., Rochester. N. Y. (16 mm.)
General Films, Ltd., 1924 Rose St., Regina, Sask.,
Canada.
Gennert, G., 20 W. 22nd St., New York, N. Y.
Goerz, C. P.. American Optical Co., 317 E. 34th
St.. New York, N. Y.
Gundlach Manufacturing Co., Gundlach Bldg., Fair-
port, N. Y.
International Theater Accessories Corp., 636 Elev-
enth Ave., New York, N. Y.
Lumotron Vacuum Productions Division, General
Scientific Corp., 4829 S. Kedzie Ave., Chicago,
111.
Meyer. Hugo. & Co., 39 W. 60th St., New York,
N. Y.
Motion Picture Camera Supply, Inc., 723 Seventh
Ave.. New York, N. Y.
Ruby Camera Exchange, 729 Eeventh Ave., New
York. N. Y.
Mitchell Camera Corp., 665 N. Robertson Blvd..
W. Hollywood. Calif.
Lenses, Projection
Bache. Semon. & Co., 636 Greenwich, St., New
York. N. Y.
Bausch & Lomb Optical Co.. 935 St. Paul St..
Rochester. N. Y.
Bell & Howell Co.. 1801 Larchmont Ave., Chicago.
m.
Camera Mart, Inc., The, 70 W. 45th St., New
York. N. Y.
Consolidated Theater Supply Corp., 1600 Broad-
way. New York, N. Y.
DeVry Corp., 1111 Armitage Ave., Chicago, 111.
Duhem Motion Picture Manufacturing Co., 135
Hayes St.. San Francisco. Calif.
Eastman Kodak Co., Rochester. N. Y. (16 mm.)
Erker Bros. Optical Co., 610 Olive St., St. Louis,
Mo.
Fish-Sehurman Corp., 250 E. 43rd St., New York,
N. Y.
Frese Optical Co.. 827 S. Flower St.. Los Angeles,
Calif.
General Scientific Corp., 4829 S. Kedzie Ave.,
Chicago, HI.
Guercio & Barthel Co., 1241 8. Wabash Ave., Chi-
cago, 111.
Gundlach Manufacturing Co., Gundlach Bldg., Fair-
port, N. Y.
Ilex Optical Co., 690 Portland Ave., Rochester,
N. Y.
International Theater Accessories Corp., 636 Elev-
enth Ave., New York, N. Y.
Kliegl Bros. Universal Electric Stage Lighting Co..
Inc., 321 W. 50th St., New York, N. Y.
Kollmorgen Optical Corp.. 767 Wythe Ave.,
Brooklyn. N. Y.
Lumotron Vacuum Products Division. General
Scientific Corp., 4829 S. Kedzie Ave., Chicago.
111.
Matisse Bros., Inc., 787 E. 138th St.. New York,
N. Y.
Mellaphone Corp., 65 Atlantic Ave., Rochester.
N. Y.
Meyer, Hugo, & Co., 39 W. 60th St.. New York,
N. Y.
Morelite Co., Inc., 600 W. 57th St., New York,
N. Y.
BUYING GUIDE FOR 1940
Picture-Fone Co., 806 S. Main St., Lima, O.
Projection Optics Co.. 330 Lyell Ave., Rochester,
N. Y.
Ruby Camera Exchange. 729 Seventh Ave., New
York, N. Y.
S.O.S. Corp., 636 Eleventh Ave., New York, N. Y.
Selsi Co., Inc., 43 W. 23rd St.. New York, N. Y.
Lighting
Battle, Robert, Inc., 35-28 42nd St., Long Island
City, N. Y.
Capitol Stage Lighting Co., 527 W. 45th St..
New York. N. Y.
Century Lighting, Inc., 419 W. 65th St.. New
York, N. Y.
Cinema Studios Supply Corp., 1010 N. McCadden
Place. Loa Angeles, Calif.
Claude Neon Southern Corp., 268 Ivy St., N. E.,
Atlanta, Ga.
Climax Reflector, Inc., 315 Reynolds Place, S. W..
Canton, O.
Cole. W. C, & Co., 320 E. 12th St., Los Angeles,
Calif.
Curtis Lighting, Inc., 1123 W. Jackson Blvd..
Chicago, 111.
Day-Brite Lighting, Inc., 5401 Bulwer Ave., St.
Louis, Mo.
Display Stage Lighting Co., Inc., 617 Tenth Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
Duhem Motion Picture Manufacturing Co.. 135
Hayes St., San Francisco, Calif.
E-J Electric Installation Co.. 227 E. 45th St
New York, N. Y.
Erikson Electric Co.. 6 Power House St., Boston,
Mass.
Flexlume Corp.. 1100 Military Road. Buffalo. N. Y.
General Electric Co., Schenectady, N. Y.
Golde Manufacturing Co.. 1214 W. Madison St.,
Chicago, 111.
Guth, Edwin F., Co., 2615 Washington Ave., St.
Louis, Mo.
Hanft, Harry A., 142 W. 17th St.. New York,
N. Y.
Hirsch, Gustav, Organization, 209 S. Third St..
Columbus, O.
Hub Electric Corp., 2225 W. Grand Ave.. Chicago.
111.
Kliegl Bros. Universal Electric Stage Lighting Co..
Inc., 321 W. 50th St., New York, N. Y.
Olesen, Otto K., Illuminating Co., Ltd.. 1660 N.
Vine St., Hollywood. Calif.
Rambusch Decorating Co., 2 W. 45th St.. New
York. N. Y.
Sterling Reflector Co., 1431 W. Hubbard St., Chi-
cago, 111.
Throckmorton, Cleon, Inc., 102 W. Third St., New
York, N. Y.
Voigt Co., 12th & Montgomery Aves., Philadelphia,
Pa.
Weinstein, Charles J., & Co., Inc., 2 W. 47th St.,
New York. N. Y.
Wheeler Reflector Co.. 275 Congress St., Boston,
Mass.
Lighting Equipment, Stage
Best Devices Co., 10516 Western Ave., Cleveland,
O.
Capitol Stage Lighting Co., 527 W. 45th St., New
York. N. Y.
Century Lighting, Inc., 419 W. 55th St.. New
York, N. Y.
Chicago Cinema Products Co., 1750 N. Springfield
Ave., Chicago, 111.
Chicago Stage Lighting Co., Inc., 116 W. Hubbard
St., Chicago, 111.
Cole, C. W., & Co., 320 E. 12th St.. Los Angeles.
Calif.
Columbia Stage Lighting Co., 341 W. 47th St.,
New York, N. Y.
1059
BUYMNG GUIDE FOR 1940
Day-Brite Lighting, Inc., 5401 Bulwer Ave., St.
Louis, Mo.
Display Stagre Lighting: Co., Inc., 617 Tenth Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
Duhem Motion Picture Manufacturing' Co., 135
Hayes St., San Francisco, Calif.
Duwico, 315 W. 47th St.. New York, N. Y.
E-J Electric Installation Co., 227 E. 47th St..
New York. N. Y.
Erikson Electric Co., 6 Power House St., Boston,
Mass.
Erker Bros. Optical Co.. 610 Olive St.. St. Louis.
Mo.
Fowler Scenic Studios, 134 W. 46th St., New
York, N. Y.
General Electric Co., Schenectady, N. Y.
Golde Manufacturing- Co., 1214 W. Madison St..
Chicago, 111.
Great Western Stage Equipment Co., 817 Holmes
St., Kansas City, Mo.
Guth, Edwin F., Co., 2615 Washing-ton Ave., St.
Louis, Mo.
Holzmueller, C. J., 1108 Howard St., San Fran-
cisco, Calif.
Hub Electric Corp., 2225 W. Grand Ave., Chicagro,
111.
Kansas City Scenic Co., 1002 E. 24th St., Kan-
sas City, Mo.
King- Scenic Co., 1914 Main St.. Dallas, Tex.
Klieg-1 Bros. Universal Eleetrio Stage Lighting Co..
Inc., 321 W. 50th St.. New York. N. Y.
Martin, William T., Studios, 352 N. Citrus Ave.,
Los Angeles, Calif.
Metropolitan Electric Manufacturing Co., 22-48
Steinway St., Long Island City, N. Y.
Olesen, Otto K.. Illuminating Co., Ltd.. 1560 N.
Vine St.. Hollywood. Calif.
Ross. Charles, Inc., 244 W. 49th St.. New York.
N. Y.
Throckmorton, Cleon, Inc., 102 W. Third St..
New York, N. Y.
Trumbull Electric Manufacturing Co., Woodford
Ave., Plainville, Conn.
United Theater Equipment Co., Inc., 121 Golden
Gate Ave., San Francisco, Calif.
Wheeler Reflector Co., 275 Congress St., Boston,
Mass.
Lighting Equipment, Studio
Camera Mart, Inc., The, 70 W. 45th St., New
York, N. Y.
Camera Supply Co., 1515 N. Cahuenga Blvd..
Hollywood, Calif.
Capitol Stage Lighting Co., 527 W. 45th St., New
York. N. Y.
Cinema Studios Supply Corp., 1010 N. McCadden
Place, Los Angeles, Calif.
Day-Brite Lighting, Inc., 5401 Bulwer Ave., St.
Louis, Mo.
E-J Electric Installation Co., 227 E. 45th St.,
New York, N. Y.
Erikson Electric Co., 6 Power House St.. Boston.
Mass.
General Electric Co., Schenectady, N. Y.
Golde Manufacturing Co., 1214 W. Madison St..
Chicago, 111.
Hewes-Gotham Co.. 667 W. 48th St., New York.
N. Y.
Holzmueller. C. J., 1108 Howard St.. San Fran-
cisco. Calif.
Kliegl Bros. Universal Electric Stage Lighting Co..
Inc.. 321 W. 50th St.. New York, N. Y.
Metropolitan Electric Manufacturing Co., 22-48
Steinway St., Long Island City. N. Y.
Mole-Richardson Co.. 941 N. Sycamore Ave.,
Hollywood, Calif.
Motion Picture Camera Supply, Inc., 723 Seventh
Ave., New York, N. Y.
Olesen, Otto K„ Illuminating Co.. Ltd., 1660 N.
Vine St., Hollywood, Calif.
Roman Art Co., Inc., 2700 Locust Blvd., St.
Louis, Mo.
Ross, Charles, Inc., 244 W. 49th St., New York.
N. Y.
Wheeler Reflector Co., 275 Congress St.. Boston.
Mass.
Wohl Lamp Co.. 65 E. 11th St.. New York, N. Y.
Lighting Systems, Emergency
Automatic Electric Manufacturing Co.. Mankato.
Minn.
Electric Storage Battery Co.. 19th & Allegheny
Aves.. Philadelphia, Pa.
E-J Electric Installation Co., 227 E. 45th St..
New York, N. Y.
General Electric Co., Schenectady, N. Y.
Hirsch, Gustav, Organization, 209 S. Third St..
Columbus, O.
Hollmgsworth Co., 30 S. Bank St., Philadelphia.
Pa.
Janette Manufacturing Co., 556 W. Monroe St.,
Chicago, 111.
Kato Engineering Co., 530 N. Front St., Nankato.
Minn.
Metropolitan Electric Manufacturing Co., 22-4S
Steinway St., Long Island City, N. Y.
Olesen, Otto K.. Illuminating Co., Ltd.. 1560 N.
Vine St.. Hollywood, Calif.
Ross. Charles, Inc.. 244 W. 49th St., New York.
N. Y.
United Theater Equipment Co.. Inc.. 121 Golden
Gate Ave., San Francisco, Calif.
Lights, Flood
Associated Screen News. Ltd.. 5271 Western Ave..
Montreal. Canada
Battle. Robert, Inc., 10516 Western Ave.. Cleve-
land. O.
Camera Mart. Inc.. The. 70 W. 45th St.. New
York. N. Y.
Camera Supply Co., 1515 N. Cahuenga Blvd..
Hollywood. Calif.
Capitol Stage Lighting Co., 527 W. 45th St.. New
York. N. Y.
Century Lighting. Inc., 419 W. 65th St., New
York. N. Y.
Chicago Cinema Products Co.. 1750 N. Springfield
Ave., Chicago. 111.
Cinema Studios Supply Corp., 1010 N. McCadden
Place, Los Angeles, Calif.
Cole, C. W.. & Co., 320 E. 12th St.. Los Angeles.
Calif.
Curtis Lighting. Inc., 1123 W. Jackson Blvd..
Chicago, 111.
Display Stage Lighting Co., Inc., 617 Tenth Ave..
New York, N. Y.
Duhem Motion Picture Manufacturing Co., 135
Hayes St., San Francisco. Calif.
Erker Bros. Optical Co.. 610 Olive St., St. Louis.
Mo.
General Electric Co.. Schenectady. N. Y.
General Films, Ltd.. 1924 Rose St.. Regina, Sask.,
Canada.
Golde Manufacturing Co., 1214 W. Madison St..
Chicago. 111.
Great Western Stage Equipment Co., 817 Holmes
St., Kansas City, Mo.
Guth, Edwin F., Co.. 2615 Washington Ave., St.
Louis, Mo.
Hewes-Gotham Co., 557 W. 48th St.. New York.
N. Y.
Hollingsworth Co., 30 S. Bank St., Philadelphia.
Pa.
Holzmueller. C. J., 1108 Howard St., San Fran-
cisco, Calif.
Hub Electric Corp., 2225 W. Grand Ave., Chicago.
111.
Kansas City Scenic Co.. 1002 E. 24th St.. Kansas
City, Mo.
Kliegl Bros. Universal Electric Stage Lighting Co..
Inc., 321 W. 50th St.. New York. N. Y.
Martin, William T.. Studios, 352 N. Citrus Ave.,
Los Angeles, Calif.
1060
McAuley, J. E. Manufacturing Co., 562 W. Adams
St., Chicago, 111.
McCallum Co.. 115 Seventh St.. Pittsburgh. Pa.
Neumade Products Corp.. 427 W. 42nd St., New
York, N. T.
Olesen. Otto K., Illuminating- Co., Ltd.. 1660 N.
Vine St., Hollywood, Calif.
Radiant Lamp Corp.. 268 Sherman Ave.. Newark.
N. J.
Ross. Charles, Inc.. 244 W. 49th St.. New York.
N. Y.
Shearer, B. F.. Co., 2318 Second Ave.. Seattle.
Wash.
Sterling Reflector Co., 1431 W. Hubbard St.,
Chicago. III.
Throckmorton. Cleon. Inc.. 102 W. Third St..
New York, N. Y.
Wheeler Reflector Co., 275 Congress St.. Boston.
Mass.
Wohl Lamp Co.. 55 E. 11th St.. New York. N. Y.
Lights, Spot
Associated Screen News. Ltd.. 5271 Western Ave.,
Montreal. Canada.
Best Devices Co.. 10516 Western Ave.. Cleveland.
O.
Camera Mart. Inc.. The. 70 W. 45th St.. New York.
N. Y.
Capitol Stage Lighting Co.. 527 W. 45th St.. New
York, N. Y.
Century Lighting, Inc., 419 W. 55th St.. New
York, N. Y.
Chicago Cinema Products Co.. 1750 N. Springfield
Ave., Chicago, 111.
Chicago Stage Lighting Co.. Inc.. 115 W. Hubbard
St.. Chicago, 111.
Cinema Studios Supply Corp., 1010 N. McCadden
Place, Los Angeles, Calif.
Climax Reflector. Inc., 315 Reynolds Place. S. W..
Canton, O.
Cole. C. W.. & Co., 320 E. 12th St., Los Angeles,
Calif.
Curtis Lighting, Inc., 1123 W. Jackson Blvd..
Chicago, HI.
Display Stage Lighting Co., Inc., 617 Tenth Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
Erker Bros. Optical Co., 610 Olive St., St. Louis,
Mo.
General Electric Co.. Schenectady, N. Y.
General Films, Ltd., 1924 Rose St., Regina, Sask..
Canada.
Golde Manufacturing Co.. 1214 W. Madison St..
Chicago. 111.
Great Western Stage Equipment Co., 817 Holmes
St., Kansas City, Mo.
Guth, Edwin F.. Co.. 2615 Washington Ave., St.
Louis. Mo.
Hewes-Gotham Co., 557 W. 48th St.. New York.
N. Y.
Hollingsworth Co., 30 S. Bank St., Philadelphia.
Pa.
Holzmueller. C. J. 1108 Howard St.. San Fran-
cisco. Calif.
Hub Electric Corp., 2225 W. Grand Ave., Chicago.
111.
Kansas City Scenic Co., 1002 E. 24th St., Kansas
City. Mo.
Kliegl Bros. Universal Electric Stage Lighting Co..
Inc.. 321 W. 60th St.. New York. N. Y.
Martin, William T.. Studios, 362 N. Citrus Ave..
Los Angeles, Calif.
McAuley. J. E. Manufacturing Co., 552 W. Adams
St.. Chicago. 111.
Motion Picture Accessories Co., 2200 S. Vermont
Ave., Los Angeles. Calif.
Neumade Products Corp., 427 W. 42nd St., New
York, N. Y.
Olesen, Otto K., Illuminating Co., Ltd., 1560 N.
Vine St.. Hollywood. Calif.
Preddey, Walter G., 187 Golden Gate Ave., Saei
Francisco, Calif.
R;idiant Lamp Corp.. 268 Sherman Ave.. Newark.
N. J.
Ross, Charles, Inc.. 244 W. 49th St.. New York,
N. Y.
If I MM, GUIDE FOR 1940
Shearer. B. F.. Co.. 2318 Second Ave.. Seattle.
Wash.
Throckmorton. Cleon. Inc.. 102 W. Third St..
New York, N. Y.
United Theater Equipment Co.. Inc., 121 Golden
Gate Ave.. San Francisco, Calif.
Weaver Manufacturing Co.. Ltd.. 1639 E. 102nd
St., Los Angeles. Calif.
Wohl Lamp Co.. 55 E. 11th St., New York. N. Y.
Lobby Displays
A. A. A. Studio, Box 25. Station O. Cincinnati. O
Ames Metal Moulding Co.. Inc., 225 E. 144th St..
New York, N. Y.
Chicago Metal Covering Co., 2833 W. Lake St..
Chicago. 111.
Continental Lithograph Corp., 1501 Broadway.
New York, N. Y.
Craftsmen Photo Co.. Inc., 245 W. 56th St.. New
York. N. Y.
Formica Insulation Co., Cincinnati, O.
Friedman. I. M., Inc.. 171 W. Lake St., Chicago.
ni.
Fuller Studios, 1481 W. 22nd St.. Loa Angelas.
Calif.
Fulton. E. E., Co.. 1018 S. Wabash Ave.. Chi-
cago. 111.
Hansen. Boy, Lustrolite Co., 831 W. 4th St..
Davenport. Ia.
Hollywood Advertising Co.. 600 W. 46th St..
New York. N. Y.
Kees. F. D.. Manufacturing Co., Beatrice, Neb.
Leigh Sign & Advertising Co., 16% W. Peachtree
Place, Atlanta. Ga.
Libman-Spanjer Corp.. 1600 Broadway, New York.
N. Y.
Maharam Fabric Corp., 130 W. 46th St.. New
York, N. Y.
Manko Fabric Co., 105 W. 44th St., New York,
N. Y.
Markendorff, S„ Sons. Inc.. 169 W. 23rd St..
New York, N. Y.
Martin, William T., Studios. 325 N. Citrus Are..
Los Angeles, Calif.
Menger, Ring & Weinstein. Inc., 225 Fifth Ave..
New York. N. Y.
Morgan Lithograph Corp., E. 17th St. & Payne
Ave., Cleveland. O.
National Screen Accessories. Inc.. 630 Ninth Ave..
New York. N. Y.
Oakland Textile Co.. 461 Fourth Ave.. New York.
N. Y.
Robbins, J. & Son, 203 Market St, Pittsburgh.
Pa.
Trisign Co., 710 N. W. 5th St.. Richmond. Ind.
Lobby Photographs
Continental Lithograph Corp., 1601 Broadway,
New York. N. Y.
Craftsmen Photo Co., Inc.. 245 W. 66th St., New
York, N. Y.
Friedman. I. M., Inc., 171 W. Lake St.. Chicago.
111.
Morgan Lithograph Corp.. E. 17th St. & Payne
Ave., Cleveland. O.
National Screen Accessories. Inc., 630 Ninth Ave..
New York. N. Y.
Stern Photo Co.. Inc.. 318 W. 46th St.. New York.
N. Y.
Marquees
A. A. A. Studio. Box 25. Station O. Cincinnati. O.
Adler. Ben, Signs, Inc.. 2909 S. Indiana Ave..
Chicago, 111.
Apex Sign Co., 426 Fitzwater St.. Philadelphia, Pa.
Artkraft Sign Co., Lima. O.
Barnum. E. T.. Iron & Wire Works. 6108 Linwood
Ave.. Detroit, Mich.
1061
BUYING GLIDE FOR 194©
Battle, Robert, Inc., 35-28 42nd St.. Long Island
City, N. T.
Clark. Peter, Inc., 101 Park Ave.. New York.
N. T.
Claude Neon Southern Corp., 268 Ivy St.. N. E.,
Atlanta, Ga.
Crystalite Products Co.. 1708 Standard Ave.,
Glendale. Calif.
Flexlume Corp., 1100 Military Road, Buffalo,
N. T.
Flour City Ornamental Iron Co., 2637 27th Ave..
Minneapolis. Minn.
Good-All Electric Manufacturer Co.. Ogallala.
Neb.
Hirsch. Gustav, Organization. 209 S. Third St..
Columbus. O.
Lippe Construction Corp., 17 W. 60th St.. New
York, N. Y.
Milcor Steel Co., S. 41st & Burham Sts., Mil-
waukee, Wise.
Missouri Fire Door & Cornice Co.. 2621 Cass Ave.,
St. Louis. Mo.
Newman Bros.. Inc., 60 W. Fourth St., Cincin-
nati. O.
Overly Manufacturing Co.. Greenburg. Pa.
Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co., Grant Bldg.. Pitts-
burgh, Pa.
Rogers Schmitt Wire & Iron Works, 1815 N. 23rd
St.. St. Louis. Mo.
Superior Sign System, Inc.. Elizabethtown. Pa.
Trisign Co.. 710 N. W. 15th St., Richmond. Ind.
Tyler. W. S., Co.. 3615 Superior Ave., Cleveland.
O.
Microphones
Acousticon Division of Dictograph Products Co..
Inc.. 580 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y.
Ampente Co.. 561 Broadway. New York. N. Y.
Atlas Sound Corp., 1451 39th St.. Brooklyn. N. Y.
Brush Development Co., 3311 Perkins Ave., Cleve-
land, O.
Canady Sound Appliance Co., 19570 S. Sagamore
Road. Rocky River P. O.. Cleveland. O.
Colortone Acoustic Devices. Inc., 322 E. Colfax
Ave., South Bend, Ind.
Consolidated Theater Supply Corp., 1600 Broad-
way, New York. N. Y.
DeVry Corp., 1111 Armitage Ave., Chicago. HI.
Electrical Research Products, Inc., 195 Broadway,
New York, N. Y.
Federated Purchaser, Inc., 25 Park Place, New
York. N. Y.
Fox Sound Equipment Corp., 3120 Monroe St..
Toledo, O.
General Films, Ltd., 1924 Rose St., Regina, Sask.,
Canada.
Kendall Co. of America, 7 W. 44th St., New York,
N. Y.
Lifetime Corp., The, 1825 Adams St., Toledo. O.
Lincrophone Co., Inc., 1661 Howard Ave., Dtica.
N. Y.
Miles Reproducer Co., Inc., 812 Broadway, New
York, N. Y.
Music Specialty Co., Union Trust Bldg., Union
City, Ind.
Olesen. Otto K.. Illuminating Co., Ltd., 1560 N.
Vine St., Hollywood. Calif.
Operadio Manufacturing Co., St. Charles, HI.
Picture-Fone Co.. 806 S. Main SULlma. O.
Racon Electric Co.. Inc.. 52 E. 19th St., New
York. N. Y.
RCA Manufacturing Co., Inc.. Camden, N. J.
Radio Wire Television. Inc.. 100 Sixth Ave.. New
York. N. Y.
Shure Brothers. 225 W. Huron St., Chicago. 111.
Western Electric Co.. 195 Broadway. New York.
N. Y.
Mirrors
Ashcraft. C. S., Manufacturing Corp., 47-31 36th
St., Long Island City. N. Y.
Bache. Semon. & Co., 636 Greenwich St.. Mew
York, N. Y.
Fish-Schurman Corp.. 250 E. 43rd St.. New York.
N. Y.
Markendorff. S.. Sons, Inc.. 159 W. 23rd St.. New
York, N. Y.
Menger, Ring & Weinstein, Inc.. 225 Fifth Ave..
New York, N. Y.
Metropolitan Electric Manufacturing Co.. 22-48
Steinway St.. Long Island City, N. Y.
Morelite Co., Inc., 600 W. 57th St., New York.
N. Y.
Newcombe. F. J., Manufacturing Co., 42 W. 13th
St.. New York. N. Y.
Pacific Glass Co.. 721 E. 61st St., Los Angeles.
Calif.
Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co.. Grant Bldg., Pitts-
burgh. Pa.
Rawson & Evans Co.. 710 Washington Blvd.. Chi-
cago, 111.
Ross. Charles. Inc.. 244 W. 49th St.. New York.
N. Y.
Syracuse Glass Co., 435 Erie Blvd.. East Syracuse.
N. Y.
Wenzel Co.. 2509 S. State St.. Chicago, HI.
Music Stands
Capitol Stage Lighting Co.. 527 W. 45th St., New
York. N. Y.
Chicago Cinema Products Co.. 1750 N. Springfield
Ave.. Chicago. HI.
Conn, C. G., Ltd., 11 W. 48th St.. New York.
N. Y.
Golde Manufacturing Co., 1214 W. Madison St..
Chicago. HI.
Holzmueller. C. J.. 1108 Howard St., San Fran-
cisco. Calif.
Lyon & Healy, 243 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago, 111.
Musical Instruments
Conn, C. G., Ltd., 11 W. 48th St.. New York.
N. Y.
Deagan, J. C. Inc.. 1770 Berteau Ave.. Chicago.
El.
Hammond Instrument Co., 2915 North Western
Ave.. Chicago. HI.
Lyon & Healy, 243 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago. HI.
Needles
Lowell Needle Co.. Inc.. Putnam. Conn.
Lyon & Healy, 243 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago. 111.
Miles Reproducer Co., Inc.. 812 Broadway, New
York. N. Y.
Phonograph Needle Manufacturing Co., Inc., 42
Dudley St.. Providence. R. I.
Wall-Kane Needle Manufacturing Co., Inc.. 869
Broadway, New York, N. Y.
Novelties
Advertising and Exploitation
Astorloid Manufacturing Co., 21-29 Hopkins St..
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Bagshaw, W. H.. Co., Lowell, Mass.
Blossom Manufacturing Co.. 79 Madison Ave..
New York. N. Y.
Brazel Novelty Co.. 4176 Apple St.. Cincinnati. O.
Cornelius, Victor. Eastland. Tex.
Dennison Manufacturing Co.. Framingham. Mass.
Economy Novelty & Printing Co.. 225 W. 39th
St.. New York. N. Y.
Hollywood Advertising Co.. 600 W. 45th St.. New
York, N. Y.
Hollywood Advertising Co.. 118 Southwest Blvd..
Kansas City, Mo.
International Mutoscope Reel Co., Inc., 44-01
11th St., Long Island City. N. Y.
Kaufman. Oscar. & Brother. Inc.. 630 Ninth Ave..
New York. N. Y.
Liberman Flag & Valance Co.. 247 W. 46th St..
New York. N. Y.
1062
Pacific States Rubber Co.. 3570 W. First St.. Los
Angeles. Calif.
Parker-Bouldin Co.. BOO Robert St.. St. Paul,
Minn.
Philadelphia Badge Co.. 942 Market St., Phila-
delphia, Pa.
Pioneer Rubber Co., Willard, O.
Plottle, Edward I., Co.. Scranton, Pa.
Rainbow Color Co., 1018 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago,
111.
Robbins, J. & Son, 203 Market St., Pittsburgh, Pa.
Tipp Novelty Co., Tipp City, O.
Toycraft Rubber Co., Ashland, O.
Traveling Billboard, The. 225 W. 34th St., New
York. N. Y.
Organ Blowers
Gottfried, A., Co.. Erie, Pa.
Kinetic Engineering Co., Lansdowne, Pa.
Marr. David, Co., Warsaw, N. Y.
Spencer Turbine Co., Hartford, Conn.
Wurlitzer. Rudolph, Co., North Tonawanda, N. Y.
Zephyr Electric Organ Blower Co., Orrville, O.
Organs
Austin Organs, Inc., 156 Woodland St., Hartford,
Conn.
Estey Organ Co.. Birge St.. Brattleboro, Vt.
Gottfried. A.. Co., Erie. Pa.
Hammond Instrument Co., 2915 North Western
Ave., Chicago, 111.
Hilgreen, Lane & Co., Alliance, O.
Kramer Organ Co., 336 W. 44th St., New York.
N. Y.
Lyon & Healy. 243 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago, HI.
Marr, David, Co.. Warsaw, N. Y.
Schantz, A. J., Sons & Co., Orrville, O.
Wurlitzer, Rudolph, Co., North Tonawanda, N. Y.
Ornaments, Plaster
Lippe Construction Corp., 17 W. 60th St., New
York, N. Y.
Voigt Co., 12th & Montgomery Ave., Philadelphia,
Pa.
Paint-Plaster, Decorative
A. A. A. Studio, Box 25, Station O, Cincinnati, O.
American Polytect Corp., 84 University Place. New
York, N. Y.
General Insulating Products Co., 8821 15th Ave.,
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Hewes-Gotham Co., 557 W. 48th St., New York,
N. Y.
Paramount Decorating Co., Inc., 311 N. 13th St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co., Grant Bldg., Pitts-
burgh, Pa.
Rainbow Color Co., 1018 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago,
m.
U. S. Gypsum Co., 300 W. Adams St., Chicago,
111.
Panel Boards
Adam, Frank, Electric Co., 3650 Windsor Place,
St. Louis, Mo.
Bull Dog Electric Products Co., 7610 Joseph
Campau St., Detroit, Mich.
Cleveland Switchboard Co.. 2925 E. 79th St..
Cleveland. O.
Cutler-Hammer, Inc., N. 12th St. & W. St. Paul
Ave.. Milwaukee, Wise.
E-J Electric Installation Co., 227 E. 45th St.,
New York, N. Y.
General Electric Co., Schenectady, N. Y.
Hollingsworth Co., 30 S. Bank St.. Philadelphia.
Pa.
Hub Electric Corp.. 2225 W. Grand Ave.. Chicago,
m.
Keasbey & Mattison Co., Ambler, Pa.
BUYING GUIDE FOR 1940
Menger, Ring & Weinstein, Inc., 225 Fifth Ave.,
New York. N. Y.
Metropolitan Electric Manufacturing Co., 22-48
Steinway St., Long Island City, N. Y.
Olesen, Otto K.. Illuminating Co., Ltd., 1560 N.
Vine St., Hollywood, Calif.
Ross, Charles, Inc., 244 W. 49th St., New York.
N. Y.
Trumbull Electric Manufacturing Co., Woodford
Ave., Plainville. Conn.
U. S. Gypsum Co.. 300 W. Adams St., Chicago,
HI.
Wurdack, William, Electric Co., 4444 Clayton Ave..
St. Louis, Mo.
Perforators, Film
Bell & Howell Co.. 1801 Larchmont Ave., Chicago,
111.
Debrie. Andre, Inc., 15 W. 45th St., New York,
N. Y.
Miles Reproducer Co., Inc., 812 Broadway, New
York, N. Y.
Photoelectric Cells
Amperes Electronic Products, Inc., 79 Washing-
ton St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Bellaphone Corp., 65 Atlantic Ave., Rochester,
N. Y.
Consolidated Theater Supply Corp., 1600 Broad-
way, New York, N. Y.
Continental Electric Co.. Geneva, HI.
DeVry Corp., 1111 Armitage Ave.. Chicago. 111.
Duhem Motion Picture Manufacturing Co.. 135
Hayes St., San Francisco, Calif.
Electrical Research Products, Inc., 195 Broadway,
New York, N. Y.
Erker Bros. Optical Co., 610 Olive St., St. Louis,
Mo.
Federated Purchaser, Inc., 25 Park Place. New
York, N. Y.
G-M Laboratories, Inc., 1731 Belmont Ave., Chi-
cago, 111.
Gates Radio & Supply Co., Quincy, 111.
General Electric Co., Schenectady, N. Y.
Good-All Electric Manufacturing Co., Ogallala.
Neb.
Lumotron Vacuum Products Division, General
Scientific Corp., 4829 S. Kedzie Ave., Chicago,
111.
Pacent Engineering Corp., 79 Madison Ave., New
York, N. Y.
Picture-Fone Co.. 806 S. Main St., Lima. O.
RCA Manufacturing Co., Inc., Camden, N. J.
Sonolux Co., E. Newark. N. J.
Wenzel Co., 2509 S. State St., Chicago, 111.
Western Electric Co., 195 Broadway, New York,
N. Y.
Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Co.. West-
inghouse Lamp Division. 150 Broadway, New
York, N. Y.
Pick-Ups
Brush Development Co., 3311 Perkins Ave., Cleve-
land, O.
Duhem Motion Picture Manufacturing Co.. 135
Hayes St.. San Francisco. Calif.
Federated Purchaser, Inc., 26 Park Place, New
York, N. Y.
Gates Radio & Supply Co., Quincy, 111.
General Films, Ltd., 1924 Rose St., Regina, Sask.,
Canada.
Good-All Electric Manufacturing Co., Ogallala.
Neb.
Lifetime Corp.. The. 1825 Adams St., Toledo, O.
Miles Reproducer Co., Inc., 812 Broadway, New
York, N. Y.
1063
BUYING GUIDE FOR 1940
Olesen, Otto K.. Illuminating Co., Ltd., 1500 N
Vint! St., Hollywood, Calif.
Operadio Manufacturing Co., St. Charles, 111.
Paeerit Engineering Corp., 79 Madison Ave., New
York, N. Y.
RCA Manufacturing Co., Inc., Camden, N. J.
Radio Wire Television, Inc.. 100 Sixth Ave New
York. N. Y.
Robbins, J. & Son, 203 Market St., Pittsburgh. Pa.
Shure Brothers. 225 W. Huron St., Chicago, 111.
United Theater Equipment Co., Inc., 121 Golden
Gate Ave., San Francisco, Calif.
Plastering, Architectural
Certain-Teed Products Corp., 100 E. 42nd St
New York, N. Y.
Holdsworth Bros., Inc., 250 W. 57th St. New
York, N. Y.
Lippe Construction Corp., 17 W. 00th St., New
York, N. Y.
H. S. Gypsum Co., .'!00 W. Adams St., Chicago, 111.
Voigt Co., 12th & Montgomery Aves.. Philadel-
phia. Pa.
Posters
Vmerican Poster & Printing Co., 1012 Pacific Ave
Dallas, Tex.
Berkshire Poster Co., Inc., 460 W. 34th St., New
York, N. Y.
Continental Lithograph Corp., 1501 Broadwav
New York, N. Y.
Friedman, I. M., Inc., 171 W. Lake St., Chicago
111.
General Outdoor Advertising Co., 585 Gerard Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
Globe Poster Corp.. 11.3 S. Hanover St.. Baltimore
Md.
Leigh Sign & Advertising Co., 16% W. Peachtree
Place, Atlanta, Ga.
Morgan Lithograph Corp.. E. 17th St. & Payne
Ave., Cleveland, O.
National Screen Accessories, Inc., 630 Ninth Ave.
New York, N. Y.
Triangle Poster & Printing Co., 163 Walton St.,
Atlanta. Ga.
Warner, E. J.. Poster Co., 653 Eleventh Ave.
New York, N. Y.
Western Poster Co., 2523 Second Ave., Seattle,
Wash.
Printing Machines
Associated Screen News, Ltd., 5271 Western Ave..
Montreal, Canada.
Bell & Howell Co., 1801 Larehmont Ave., Chicago
111.
Debrie. Andre, Inc., 115 W. 45th St., New York
N. Y.
Depue, Oscar B.. 7512 N. Ashland Ave.. Chicago
111.
Duhem Motion Picture Manufacturing Co., 135
Hayes St., San Francisco, Calif.
Hausmann, Ward B., Rising Sun Ave., Philadel-
phia, Pa.
Motion Picture Camera Supply, Inc., 723 Seventh
Ave., New York, N. Y.
Processes, Film
American Recono, Inc., 245 W. 55th St., New
York. N. Y.
Associated Screen News, Ltd., 5271 Western Ave..
Montreal, Canada.
Cinaudagraph Corp., Stamford, Conn.
Duhem Motion Picture Manufacturing Co., 135
Hayes St., San Francisco, Calif.
Film Treatizor Corp., 117 W. 63rd St., New York,
N. Y.
General Films, Ltd., 1924 Rose St., Regina. Sank
Canada.
Hanish, R. D., Co., 93 E. Longview Ave., Colum-
bus, O.
National Film Renovating & Processing Co.. 630
Ninth Ave.. New York, N. Y.
Peerless Film Processing Corp.. 130 W. 46th St
New York. N. Y.
Projectors, Advertising
Advertising Projectors, Inc., 10 W. 33rd St New
York, N. Y.
Advitagraph Corp.. 305 W. Broadwav. Louisville
Ky.
Akeley Camera. Inc., 175 Varick St., New York
N. Y.
Associated Screen News. Ltd., 5271 Western Ave..
Montreal. Canada.
Automotion Pictures, Inc., 10 W. 33rd St. New
York, N. Y.
Best Devices Co., 10516 Western Ave.. Cleveland
O.
Gardiner, L. J., Co., 935 W. Goodale Blvd..
Columbus, O.
General Films, Ltd., 1924 Rose St.. Regina. Sask.,
Canada.
Golde Manufacturing Co., 1214 W. Madison St..
Chicago. 111.
Herkitt Engineering Co., 130 W. 46th St., New
York, N. Y.
International Mutoscope Reel Co.. Inc., 44-01
11th St., Long Island City. N. Y.
Miles Reproducer Co., Inc., 812 Broadway New
York. N. Y.
Moving Words Projection Advertising. 4505
N. Kedzie Ave., Chicago. 111.
Quality Slide Co., 6 E. Lake St.. Chicago. 111.
Royal Zenith Sound Projectors, Inc.. 33 W. 60th
St., New York, N. Y.
Trans-Lux Corp., 1270 Sixth Ave., New York
N. Y.
Victor Animatograph Corp., Davenport, la.
Weber Machine Corp.. 59 Rutter St.. Rochester
N. Y.
Projectors, Effect
Best Devices Co., 10516 Western Ave., Cleveland
O.
Capitol Stage Lighting Co.. 527 W. 45th St.. New
York, N. Y.
Colortone Acoustic Devices. Inc., 322 E. Colfax
Ave., South Bend, Ind.
Display Stage Lighting Co., Inc., 617 Tenth Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
Golde Manufacturing Co., 1214 W. Madison St..
Chicago, 111.
Hub Electric Corp.. 2225 W. Grand Ave., Chicago.
111.
Kliegl Bros. Universal Electric Stage Lighting Co..
Inc.. 321 W. 50th St.. New York. N. Y.
Motion Picture Accessories Co., 2200 S. Vermont
Ave., Los Angeles. Calif.
Olesen, Otto K.. Illuminating Co.. Ltd., 1560 N.
Vine St.. Hollywood. Calif.
United Theater Equipment Co.. Inc.. 121 Golden
Gate Ave., San Francisco, Calif.
Projectors, Portable
Akeley Camera, Inc.. 175 Varick St., New York.
N. Y.
Ampro Corp., The, 2839 N. Western Ave.. Chi-
cago. 111. (8 and 16 mm. I
Associated Screen News, Ltd., 6271 Western Ave..
Montreal. Canada.
Bell & Howell Co., 1801 Larehmont Ave., Chicago.
111. (16 mm.).
Best Devices Co., 10516 Western Ave., Cleveland,
O.
Camera Mart, Inc., The, 70 W. 45th St., New
York, N. Y.
1064
Consolidated Theater Supply Corp., 1600 Broad-
way, New York. N. Y.
DeVry Corp.. 1111 Armitage Ave., Chicago. 111.
(35 and 16 mm.)
Duhera Motion Picture Manufacturing' Co., 135
Hayes St.. San Francisco, Calif.
Eastman Kodak Co., Rochester. N. Y. (16 mm.).
Erkcr Bros. Optical Co.. 610 Olive St.. St. Louis.
Mo.
General Films. Ltd.. 1924 Rose St.. Regina. Sask..
Canada.
Good-All Electric Manufacturing' Co., Ogallala,
Neb.
Herkitt Engineering Co., 130 W. 46th St., New
York, N. Y.
Holmes Projector Co., 1815 Orchard St.. Chicago,
111.
International Projector Corp.. 88 Gold St., New
York, N. Y.
International Theater Accessories Corp., 636 Elev-
enth Ave., New York, N. Y.
Miles Reproducer Co., Inc.. 812 Broadway, New
York, N. Y.
Moviola Co.. 1451 Gordon St.. Hollywood, Calif.
Music Specialty Co., Union Trust Bldg., Union
City, Ind.
National Theater Supply Co.. 92 Gold St., New
York. N. Y.
Picture Fone Co.. 806 S. Main St.. Lima. O.
Royal Zenith Sound Projectors, Inc., 33 W. 60th
St., New York, N. Y.
Trans-Lux Corp., 1270 Sixth Ave., New York,
N. Y.
Victor Animatograph Corp., Davenport, la. (16
mm. ) .
Webre Machine Corp., 59 Rutter St.. Rochester.
N. Y.
Wenzel Co.. 2509 S. State St.. Chicago. 111.
Projectors, Theater
Ballantyne Co.. 222 N. 16th St.. Omaha. Neb.
Consolidated Theater Supply Corp., 1600 Broad-
way. New York, N. Y.
Coxsackie Manufacturing Corp., Coxsackie, N. Y.
Crown Motion Picture Supplies Corp., 614 Ninth
Ave.. New York, N. Y.
DeVry Corp.. 1111 Armitage Ave., Chicago, 111.
Erker Bros. Optical Co., 610 Olive St., St. Louis,
Mo.
Fulton, E. E„ Co., 1018 S. Wabash Ave.. Chicago.
m.
Gardiner. L. J.. Co.. 935 W. Goodale Blvd.. Colum-
bus. O.
Guercio & Barthel Co., 1241 S. Wabash Ave..
Chicago, 111.
Holmes Projector Co., 1815 Orchard St.. Chicago.
111.
International Projector Corp., 88 Gold St.. New
York. N. Y.
International Theater Accessories Corp., 636 Elev-
enth Ave., New York, N. Y.
Kaplan. Sam. Manufacturing & Supply Co., Inc..
729 Seventh Ave., New York, N. Y.
McArthur Theater Equipment Co., 2501 Cass Ave.,
Detroit, Mich.
Mellaphone Corp.. 65 Atlantic Ave.. Rochester.
N. Y.
Motiograph. Inc.. 4431 W. Lake St.. Chicago. 111.
Music Specialty Co., Union Trust Bldg.. Union
City, Ind.
National Theater Supply Co., 92 Gold St., New
York, N. Y.
Pieture-Fone Co.. 806 S. Main St.. Lima. O.
Racon Electric Co.. Inc., 52 E. 19th St., New
York, N. Y.
S.O.S. Corp.. 636 Eleventh Ave.. New York. N. Y.
Shearer, B. F., Co., 2318 Second Ave., Seattle.
Wash.
Weber Machine Corp.. 59 Rutter St.. Rochester.
N. Y.
Wenzel Co.. 2509 S. State St., Chicago, 111.
Properties, Studio
Cinema Props Co., 6161 Santa Monica Blvd..
Hollywood, Calif.
MM\<. GUIDE FOR 1940
Ellis Mercantile Co., 5756 Sunset Blvd., Holly-
wood, Calif.
Martin, William T.. Studios, 352 N. Citrus Ave.,
Los Angeles, Calif.
Nishi. F. J. & Co.. 6225 Santa Monica Blvd..
Hollywood. Calif.
Recorders, Disc
Associated Screen News, Ltd.. 5271 Western Ave.,
Montreal. Canada.
Cinema Sound Equipment Co.. 8572 Santa Monica
Blvd.. Hollywood. Calif.
Columbia Transcription Service (Division of Amer-
ican Record Corp.), 1776 Broadway. New York.
N. Y.
Electrical Research Products, Inc.. 195 Broadwav.
New York. N. Y.
Federated Purchaser, Inc., 25 Park Place, New
York, N. Y.
General Films. Ltd.. 1924 Rose St.. Regina, Sask.,
Canada.
Herkitt Engineering Co., 130 W. 46th St.. New
York. N. Y.
Miles Reproducer Co., Inc.. 812 Broadway, New
York, N. Y.
Olesen. Otto K., Illuminating Co., Ltd., 1560 N.
Vine St.. Hollywood, Calif.
RCA Manufacturing Co.. Inc., Camden, N. J.
Radio Wire Television, Inc., 100 Sixth Ave.. New
York. N. Y.
Western Electric Co., 195 Broadwav, New York.
N. Y.
Recorders, Film
Akeley Camera, Inc., 175 Varick St., New York.
N. Y.
Associated Screen News, Ltd.. 5271 Western Ave..
Montreal, Canada.
Blue Seal Sound Devices. Inc., 723 Seventh Ave..
New York, N. Y.
Oanady Sound Applienee Co.. 19570 S. Sagamore
Road, Rocky River P. O.. Cleveland. O.
Cinema Sound Equipment Co., 8572 Santa Monica
Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
Duhem Motion Picture Manufacturing Co., 135
Hayes St., San Francisco, Calif.
Electrical Research Products. Inc., 195 Broadway,
New York, N. Y.
Miles Reproducer Co., Inc., 812 Broadway. New
York, N. Y.
Mitchell Camera Corp., 665 N. Robertson Blvd..
W. Hollywood. Calif.
RCA Manufacturing Co.. Inc.. Camden, N. J.
Western Electric Co., 195 Broadway. New York
IN. Y.
Rectifiers, A. C.
Acme Electric Construction Co., 37 W. Van
Buren St.. Chicago, 111.
American Transformer Co.. 178 Emmet St., New-
ark, N. J.
Amplifier Company of America. 17 W. 20th St..
New York. N. Y.
Ashcraft. S. C Manufacturing Corp., 47-31 35th
St.. Long Island City. N. Y.
Baldor Electric Co., 4351 Duncan Ave., St. Louis,
Mo.
Crown Motion Picture Supplies Corp.. 614 Ninth
Ave., New York, N. Y.
DeVry Corp., 1111 Armitage Ave., Chicago, 111.
Federated Purchaser, Inc., 25 Park Place, New
York, N. Y.
Forest Manufacturing Corp., 200 Mt. Pleasant
Ave.. Newark, N. J.
Gardiner, L. J., Co.. 935 W. Goodale Blvd., Colum-
bus, 0.
Garver Electric Co.. Union City, Ind.
Gates Radio & Supply Co., Quincy, 111.
1065
BUYiNG GUIDE FOR 1940
General Electric Co.. Schenectady, N. Y.: Appli-
ance and Merchandise Dept., Bridgeport, Conn.
Good-All Electric Manufacturing: Co., Ogallala,
Neb.
Hoffman, Ernest V., 115-58 174th St., St. Albans,
L. I., N. Y.
Hollingsworth Co., 30 S. Bank St., Philadelphia. Pa.
Kneisley Electric Co., 16 S. St. Clair St., Toledo, O.
Mellaphone Corp., 65 Atlantic Ave., Rochester,
N. Y.
Morelite Co., Inc., 600 W. 57th St.. New York,
N. Y.
Music Specialty Co., Union Trust Bids.. Union City,
Ind.
Picture-Fone Co., 806 S. Main St., Lima, O.
Raeon Electric Co., Inc., 52 E. 19th St.. New
York. N. Y.
Raytheon Manufacturing: Co., 190 Willow St., Wal-
tham, Mass.
Standard Transformer Corp., 1500 N. Halsted St.,
Chicago, 111.
Strong: Electric Co., 2501 LaGrange St., Toledo, O.
United Theater Equipment Co., Inc., 121 Golden
Gate Ave., San Francisco. Calif.
Wenzel Co., 2509 S. State St., Chicago, 111.
Westing-house Electric & Manufacturing- Co.. West-
inghouse Lamp Division, 150 Broadway, New
York, N. Y.
Reels, Film
Associated Screen News, Ltd.. 5271 Western Ave..
Montreal, Canada.
Consolidated Theater Supply Corp., 1600 Broad-
way. New York, N. Y.
DeVry Corp., 1111 Armitage Ave., Chicago. 111.
Duhem Motion Picture Manufacturing- Co., 135
Hayes St., San Francisco, Calif.
Eastman Kodak Co.. Rochester, N. Y. (16 mm.)
Erker Bros. Optical Co., 610 Olive St.. St. Louis.
Mo.
Fulton, E. E., Co., 1018 S. Wabash Ave., Chicag-o.
111.
General Films, Ltd., 1924 Rose St., Reg-ina, Sask.,
Canada.
Goldberg: Bros., 3500 Walnut St.. Denver, Colo.
Kin-O-Lux, Inc.. 105 W. 40th St., New York, N. Y.
Moss, J., Equipment Co., Inc., 422 Withers St.,
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Motion Picture Accessories Co., 2200 S. Vermont
Ave., Los Angeles, Calif.
Neumade Products Corp., 427 W. 42nd St., New
York, N. Y.
Pausin Engineering Co., 727 Frelinghuysen Ave.,
Newark, N. J.
Preddey, Walter G.. 187 Golden Gate Ave., San
Francisco, Calif.
Ruby Camera Exchange, 729 Seventh Ave., New
York, N. Y.
Taylor-Shantz, Inc., 2 Commercial St., Rochester.
N. Y.
United Theater Equipment Co.. Inc., 121 Golden
Gate Ave.. San Francisco, Calif.
Reflectors
Artkraft Sign Co., Lima, O.
Ashcraft, C. S., Manufacturing Corp.. 47-31 35th
St.. Long Island City, N. Y.
Battle. Robert, Inc., 35-28 42nd St., Long Island
City, N. Y.
Bausch & Lomb Optical Co., 935 St. Paul St..
Rochester, N. Y.
Capitol Stage Lighting Co.. 527 W. 45th St.. New
York, N. Y.
Carbon Products, Inc., 324 W. 45th St.. New York,
N. Y.
Climax Reflector, Inc.. 316 Reynolds Place. S. W..
Canton, O.
Cole. C. W.. & Co., 320 E. 12th St.. Los Angeles.
Calif.
Curtis Lighting, Inc., 1123 W. Jackson Blvd., Chi-
cago, 111.
Day-Brite Lighting, Inc., 5401 Bulwer Ave., St.
Louis. Mo.
Erikson Electric Co.. 6 Power House St.. Boston.
Mass.
Fish-Schurman Corp.. 250 E. 43rd St., New York,
N. Y.
General Electric Co., Schenectady, N. Y.
Guth, Edwin F., Co., 2615 Washington Are.. St.
Louis. Mo.
Heyer-Shultz, Inc., Montclair, N. J.
Hollingsworth Co.. 30 S. Bank St.. Philadelphia.
Pa.
Hub Electric Corp., 2225 W. Grand Ave.. Chicago.
111.
Kliegl Bros. Universal Electric Stage Lighting Co..
Inc., 321 W. 50th St., New York. N. Y.
Matisse Bros.. Inc., 787 E. 138th St.. New York.
N. Y.
McAuley, J. E. Manufacturing Co., 652 W. Adams
St., Chicago, 111.
Mellaphone Corp., 65 Atlantic Ave., Rochester.
N. Y.
Morelite Co.. Inc., 600 W. 67th St., New York,
N. Y.
Motiograph, Inc., 4431 W. Lake St.. Chicago, HI.
Picture-Fone Co.. 806 S. Main St., Lima, O.
Ross, Charles, Inc., 244 W. 49th St., New York,
N. Y.
Sterling Reflector Co., 1431 W. Hubbard St., Chi-
cago, 111.
Strong Electric Co.. 2501 LaGrange St.. Toledo, O.
Wenzel Co., 2509 S. State St., Chicago, HI.
Wheeler Reflector Co., 275 Congress St., Boston.
Mass.
Wholesale Supply Co., 1047 N. Wilcox Ave..
Los Angeles. Calif.
Wolk, Edward H., 1018 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago.
111.
Renovating, Film
American Recono, Inc., 245 W. 65th St.. New
York, N. Y.
General Films, Ltd., 1924 Rose St., Regina, Sask..
Canada.
Hanish, R. D., Co.. 93 E. Longview Ave.. Colum-
bus, O.
Hewes-Gotham Co., 557 W. 48th St.. New York.
N. Y.
Magic Film Protector Co.. 1435 E. Main St..
Muncie, Ind.
Renovating Machines
Hanish, R. D., Co., 92 E. Longview Ave.. Colum-
bus, O.
Neumade Products Corp.. 427 W. 42nd St.. New
York, N. Y.
Rewinders
Associated Screen News. Ltd., 6271 Western Ave.,
Montreal, Canada.
Bell & Howell Co., 1801 Larchmont Ave., Chicago.
HI.
Camera Mart. Inc., The, 70 W. 45th St.. New
York, N. Y.
Chicago Cinema Products Co.. 1750 N. Springfield
Ave., Chicago. HI.
Consolidated Theater Supply Corp., 1600 Broad-
way. New York, N. Y.
Erker Bros. Optical Co.. 610 Olive St.. St. Louis.
Mo.
Fulton, E. E., Co., 1018 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago.
HI.
Gardiner, L. J.. Co., 935 W. Goodale Blvd., Colum-
bus, O.
General Films, Ltd., 1924 Rose St.. Regina. Sask..
Canada.
1066
Goldberg Bros., 3500 Walnut St., Denver, Colo.
Golde Manufacturing Co., 1214 W. Madison St.,
Chicago, HI.
Good-All Electric Manufacturing Co., Ogallala,
Neb.
Kin-O-Lux, Inc.. 105 W. 40th St.. New York, N. Y.
Motion Picture Accessories Co.. 2200 S. Vermont
Ave., Los Angeles, Calif.
Motion Picture Camera Supply, Inc., 723 Seventh
Ave., New York, N. Y.
Moviola Co.. 1451 Gordon St., Hollywood, Calif.
National Theater Supply Co.. 92 Gold St., New
York. N. Y.
Neumade Products Corp., 427 W. 42nd St.. New
York, N. Y.
Picture-Fone Co.. 806 S. Main St.. Lima. O.
Ruby Camera Exchange, 729 Seventh Ave., New
York, N. Y.
United Theater Equipment Co.. Inc.. 121 Golden
Gate Ave., San Francisco. Calif.
Wenzel Co., 2509 So. State St., Chicago. 111.
Rheostats
Brenkert Light Projection Co., 7348 St. Aubin
Ave., Detroit, Mich.
Capitol Stage Lighting Co.. 527 W. 45th St., New
York, N. Y.
Cutler-Hammer, Inc., N. 12th St. & W. St. Paul
Ave., Milwaukee, Wise.
Erker Bros. Optical Co., 610 Olive St., St. Louis,
Mo.
Federated Purchaser, Inc., 25 Park Place, New
York, N. Y.
Gardiner, L. J., Co., 935 W. Goodale Blvd., Colum-
bus, O.
General Electric Co., Schenectady, N. Y.
Hertner Electric Co., 21690 Elmwood Ave., Cleve-
land. O.
Hoffman, Ernest V.. 115-58 174th St., St. Albans.
L. I., N. Y.
Holzmueller, C. J.. 1108 Howard St., San Fran-
cisco, Calif.
Kliegl Bros. Universal Electric Stage Lighting Co.,
Inc., 321 W. 50th St., New York, N. Y.
McAuley, J. E., Manufacturing Co., 552 W. Adams
St.. Chicago. 111.
Morelite Co., Inc., 600 W. 57th St., New York.
N. Y.
Picture-Fone Co.. 806 S. Main St., Lima. O.
Preddey, Walter G., 187 Golden Gate Ave., San
Francisco, Calif.
Ross. Charles, Inc.. 244 W. 49th St.. New York,
N. Y.
Strong Electric Co., 2501 LaGrange St., Toledo, O.
United Theater Equipment Co., Inc., 121 Golden
Gate Ave.. San Francisco. Calif.
Rigging, Stage
Acme Scenic Studios, 2921 W. Van Buren St..
Chicago, 111.
Acme Stage Equipment Co., 191 Lafayette St..
New York, N. Y.
Automatic Devices, Co., 1035 Linden St., Allen
town. Pa.
Beck Studios, 2001 Highland Ave., Cincinnati, O.
Bruckner Mitchell, Inc., 132 W. 24th St., New
York, N. Y.
Channon, J. H., Corp., 1445 W. Hubbard St..
Chicago, 111.
Clancy, J. R., Inc., 1010 W. Belden Ave., Syra-
cuse, N. Y.
Clark. Peter, Inc., 101 Park Ave., New York,
N. Y.
Display Stage Lighting Co.. Inc., 617 Tenth Ave.,
New York. N. Y.
Holzmueller, C. J.. 1108 Howard St., San Fran-
cisco, Calif.
Kansas City Scenic Co.. 1002 E. 24th St., Kansas
City, Mo.
King Scenic Co.. 1914 Main St., Dallas, Tex.
Lee Lash Studios, 1828 Amsterdam Ave.. New
York. N. Y.
BUYING GUIDE FOR 1940
Martin, William T., Studios, 352 N. Citrus Ave..
Los Angeles, Calif.
Master-Builders. The. 218 Hess Ave., Erie. Pa.
Novelty Scenic Studios, Inc., 320 W. 48th St.,
New York, N. Y.
Nussbaumer, N. C. 842 N. Harvey Ave.. Oak
Park, HI.
Power, Robert E.. Studios. 603 S. Mansfield Ave..
Los Angeles, Calif.
Premier Scenery Studios. 340 W. 41st St., New
York, N. Y.
Throckmorton, Cleon, Inc., 102 W. Third St..
New York. N. Y.
Tiffin Scenic Studios, Tiffin. O.
Volland Studios. Inc., 3737 Cass Ave., St. Louis.
Mo.
Safes, Film
Fulton, E. E., Co., 1018 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago
111.
Gluckmann Bros., 588 Eleventh Ave.. New York
N. Y.
Neumade Products Corp., 427 W. 42nd St., New
York. N. Y.
Safes, Theater
Mosler Safe Co., Hamilton, O.
York Safe & Lock Co.. York, Pa.
Safety Devices, Projector
Film Treatizor Corp., 117 W. 63rd St., New York
N. Y.
N. A. N. Automatic Light Control Co., Johnstown.
Pa.
Scenery, Stage
A. A. A. Studio. Box 25. Station O, Cincinnati, O.
Acme Scenic Studios, 2921 W. Van Buren St.,
Chicago, 111.
Beaumont Studios, 510 Truxton St., New York.
N. Y.
Beck Studios, 2001 Highland Ave., Cincinnati, O.
Clancy, J. R., Inc., 1010 W. Belden Ave., Syra-
cuse, N. Y.
Fowler Scenic Studios. 134 W. 46th St., New
York. N. Y.
Grain. Amelia. Washington Square. Philadelphia.
Pa.
Kansas City Scenic Co., 1002 E. 24th St., Kansas
City. Mo.
King Scenic Co.. 1914 Main St.. Dallas. Tex.
Lee Lash Studios. 1828 Amsterdam Ave.. New
York, N. Y.
Leigh Sign & Advertising Co.. 16% W. Peachtree
Place. Atlanta, Ga.
Martin, William T.. Studios, 352 N. Citrus Ave..
Los Angeles. Calif.
Novelty Scenic Studios. Inc., 320 W. 48th St.
New York, N. Y.
Nussbaumer, N. C. 842 N. Harvey Ave., Oak
Park. 111.
Oakland Textile Co., 461 Fourth Ave.. New York.
N. Y.
Premier Scenery Studios, 340 W. 41st St., New
York. N. Y.
Schell Scenic Studios, 581 High St., Columbus. O.
Stivanello-Culcasi Theatrical Costume Co., Inc..
331 W. 51st St., New York, N. Y.
Throckmorton, Cleon, Inc., 102 W. Third St.,
New York, N. Y.
Volland Studios. Inc., 3737 Cass Ave., St. Louis,
Mo.
Scrap Film Ruyers
Cellofilm Corp., Wood Ridge, N. J.
Eastman Kodak Co.. Rochester, N. Y.
Hewes-Gotham Co.. 557 W. 49th St., New York.
N. Y.
1067
BUYMNG GUIDE FOR 1940
Screens
A. A. A. Studio. Box 25, Station O, Cincinnati, 0.
Associated Screen News, Ltd., 5271 Western Ave..
Montreal, Canada.
Camera Mart. Inc., The, 70 W. 45th St., New
York, N. Y.
Consolidated Theater Supply Corp., 1600 Broad
way. New York. N. Y.
Da-Lite Screen Co., Inc., 2723 N. Crawford Ave..
Chicago. 111.
DeVry Corp., 1111 Armitage Ave., Chicago, 111.
Duhem Motion Picture Manufacturing: Co., 135
Hayes St.. San Francisco. Calif.
Erker Bros. Optical Co., 610 Olive St., St. Louis,
Mo.
Forest Manufacturing- Corp.. 200 Mt. Pleasant
Ave., Newark. N. J.
Gardiner, L. J.. Co.. 035 W. Goodale Blvd.. Colum-
bus, O.
General Films, Ltd., 1024 Rose St., Reg-ina, Sask..
Canada.
Gennert, G.. 20 W. 22nd St.. New York. N. Y.
Good-All Electric Manufacturing- Co.. Og-allala,
Neb.
Guereio & Barthel Co., 1241 S. Wabash Ave.,
Chicag-o. 111.
Hurley Screen Co.. Inc., 24-15 43rd Ave.. Long
Island City. N. Y.
Mercury Light Sound Screen Co., 1236 Daisy Ave..
Long Beach, Calif.
National Theater Supply Co., 02 Gold St., New
York, N. Y.
Raven Screen Corp.. 314 E. 35th St.. New York.
N. Y.
Rubv Camera Exchange. 720 Seventh Ave.. New
York, N. Y.
Shearer, B. F., Co., 2318 Second Ave.. Seattle.
Wash.
Theater Screen Corp.. Roosevelt. N. Y.
Trans-Lux Corp.. 1270 Sixth Ave.. New York.
N. Y.
Walker American Corp.. 800 Beaumont St., St.
Louis. Mo.
Williams Screen Co., 1620 Summit Lake Blvd..
Akron. O.
Seat Anchor Bolts
Allied Seating Co.. Inc., 36 W. 13th St.. New
York, N. Y.
Chicago Expansion Bolt Co., 126 S. Clinton St..
Chicago, 111.
Hollingsworth Co., 30 S. Bank St., Philadelphia,
Pa.
Independent Seating Co., 636 Eleventh Ave.. New
York. N. Y.
Paine Co., 2051 Carroll Ave.. Chicago, 111.
Star Expansion Bolt Co., 147 Cedar St., New York.
N. Y.
U. S. Expansion Bolt Co., State St.. York, Pa.
Seat Indicators
Allied Seating Co., Inc., 36 W. 13th St.. New York.
N. Y.
Seats, Theater
Air-Loc Seat Industries, Inc., 33 Holden St..
Minneapolis, Minn.
Allied Seating Co., Inc., 36 W. 13th St., New York,
N. Y.
American Seating Co., Grand Rapids, Mich.
Andrews, A. H., Co., 1114 W. Cermak Road, Chi-
cago, 111.
Arlington Seating Co.. Arlington Heights. 111.
Consolidated Theater Supply Corp.. 1600 Broad-
way, New York, N. Y.
Continental Theater Accessories, Inc., 325 W. 44th
St., New York, N. Y.
Eastern Seating Co., Inc.. 276 W. 43rd St.. New
York. N. Y.
General Seating Co., 2035 Charleston St., Chicago.
111.
Guereio & Barthel Co., 1241 S. Wabash Ave..
Chicago, 111.
Heywood-Wakefield, Gardner. Mass.
Ideal Seating Co.. Grand Rapids, Mich.
Independent Seating Co., 638 Eleventh Ave.. New
York, N. Y.
International Seat Corp.. Union City. Ind.
Irwin Seating Co.. Grand Rapids, Mich.
Kroehler Manufacturing Co.. 666 Lake Shore
Drive. Chicago, 111.
Loyal Metal Products Corp.. 05 Lorimer St..
Brooklyn. N. Y.
National Seating Co.. Inc., 49-18 Metropolitan
Ave.. Brooklyn, N. Y.
National Seating Co.. 2404 S. Fifth St., Milwau-
kee, Wise.
National Theater Supply Co.. 92 Gold St.. New
York. N. Y.
Peabodv Seating Co.. N. Manchester. Ind.
Rockenstein, L. T., Co.. 3237 Locust St.. St. Louis.
Mo.
Shearer. B. F.. Co., 2318 Second Ave.. Seattle.
Wash.
Universal Seating Co.. 1618 N. Grove St.. Wichita.
Kans.
Wisconsin Chair Co.. Port Washington. W19C
Signs, Changeable Letter
Adler. Ben. Signs. Inc., 2009 S. Indiana Ave..
Chicago. 111.
Adler Sign Letter Co.. 2909 S. Indiana Ave..
Chicago. 111.
Apex Sign Co., 426 Fitzwater St.. Philadelphia.
Pa.
Artkraft Sign Co.. Lima. O.
Claude Neon Lights, Inc., 41 E. 42nd St.. New
York. N. Y.
Claude Neon Southern Corp., 258 Ivy St.. N. E..
Atlanta, Ga.
Falk Glass Products Co.. 115 W. 23rd St.. New
York. N. Y.
Flexlume Corp.. 1100 Military Road. Buffalo.
N. Y.
Fluorescent Tube Lights, Inc., 1007 Atlantic Ave..
Brooklyn. N. Y.
Friedley-Voshart Co.. Inc., 763 Lexington St..
Chicago. 111.
Good-All Electric Manufacturing Co., Ogallala.
Neb.
Hansen. Boy. Lustrolite Co., 831 W. 4th St..
Davenport, la.
Neon Electric Signs. Inc.. 44 E. Hall St.. Battle
Creek, Mich.
Newman Bros.. Inc.. 660 W. Fourth St.. Cincin-
nati, O.
Progressive Letter Co.. 1900 Third Ave., New
York. N. Y.
Rawson & Evans Co.. 710 Washington Blvd., Chi-
cago, 111.
Superior Sign System. Inc., Elizabethtown, Pa.
Trisign Co.. 710 N. W. 5th St.. Richmond. Ind.
Wagner Sign Service. Inc.. 123 W. 64th St.. New
York. N. Y.
Signs, Directional
Artkraft Sign Co., Lima. O.
Battle. Robert. Inc., 35-28 42nd St.. Long Island
City. N. Y.
Capitol Stage Lighting Co.. 527 W. 45th St., New
York, N. Y.
Cincinnati Advertising Products Co.. 3274 Beek-
man St.. Cincinnati, O.
Claude Neon Lights. Inc., 41 E. 42nd St., New
York, N. Y.
Claude Neon Southern Corp., 258 Ivy St.. N. K..
Atlanta, Ga.
Cole, W. C. & Co., 320 E. 12th St.. Los Angeles.
Calif.
Erikson Electric Co.. 6 Power House St., Boston.
Mass.
1068
Plexlume Corp., 1100 Military Road, Buffalo,
N. Y.
Guth, Edwin F., Co., 2615 Washington Ave., St.
Louis, Mo.
Hansen, Boy, Lustrolite Co.. 831 W. 4th St..
Davenport, la.
Holzmueller. C. J., 1108 Howard St., San Fran-
cisco. Calif.
Hub Electric Corp., 2225 W. Grand Ave., Chicago,
111.
Kliegl Bros. Universal Electric Stage Lighting Co.,
Inc., 321 W. 50th St., New York, N. T.
Leigh Sign & Advertising Co., 16% W. Peachtree
Place, Atlanta, Ga.
Missouri Art Metal Co., 1408 N. Broadway, St.
Louis, Mo.
National Theater Supply Co., 92 Gold St., New
York, N. Y.
Nation-Wide Manufacturing Corp.. 449 W. 42nd
St.. New York, N. Y.
Neon Electric Signs, Inc., 44 E. Hall St., Battle
Creek, Mich.
Neumade Products Corp., 427 W. 42nd St., New
York, N. Y.
Newman Bros., Inc., 660 W. Fourth St., Cincin-
nati. O.
Rawson & Evans Co., 710 Washington Blvd.,
Chicago, III.
Shank. E. A.. Co.. 52 W. 21st St., New York. N. Y.
United Theater Equipment Co., Inc., 121 Golden
Gate Ave., San Francisco, Calif.
Voigt Co., 12th & Montgomery Aves., Philadelphia,
Pa.
Willey Sign Co., 2843 E. Grand Blvd.. Detroit.
Mich.
Wolk, Edward H., 1018 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago.
111.
Signs, Electric
Adler, Ben, Signs, Inc., 2909 S. Indiana Ave..
Chicago. 111.
Artkraft Sign Co.. Lima, O.
Apex Sign Co., 426 Fitzwater St.. Philadelphia.
Pa.
Battle. Robert, Inc., 35-28 42nd St., Long Island
City. N. Y.
Capitol Stage Lighting Co.. 527 W. 45th St.. New
York. N. Y.
Cincinnati Advertising Products Co., 3274 Beek-
man St., Cincinnati, O.
Claude Neon Lights, Inc.. 41 E. 42nd St., New
York. N. Y.
Claude Neon Southern Corp.. 258 Ivy St.. N. E..
Atlanta. Ga.
Climax Reflector, Inc., 315 Reynolds Place, S. W.,
Canton, O.
Edwards Manufacturing Co., 447 Eggleston Ave.,
Cincinnati. O.
Erikson Electric Co.. 6 Power House St.. Boston,
Mass.
Falk Glass Products Co.. 115 W. 23rd St., New
York, N. Y.
Flexlume Corp.. 1100 Military Road. Buffalo. N. Y.
Fluorescent Tube Lights, Inc., 1007 Atlantic Ave..
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Guth, Edwin F., Co., 2615 Washington Ave., St.
Louis, Mo.
Hansen, Boy, Lustrolite Co., 831 W. 4th St..
Davenport. Ia.
Hirsch, Gustav, Organization, 209 S. Third St.,
Columbus, O.
Hub Electric Corp., 2225 W. Grand Ave., Chicago.
111.
Kliegl Bros. Universal Electric Stage Lighting Co..
Inc., 321 W. 50th St., New York, N. Y.
Leigh Sign & Advertising Co., 16% W. Peachtree
Place. Atlanta, Ga.
Missouri Art Metal Co., 1408 N. Broadway, St.
Louis, Mo.
Neon Electric Signs, Inc., 44 E. Hall St.. Battle
Creek, Mich.
Rawson & Evans Co., 710 Washington Blvd.,
Chicago, 111.
Reynolds Electric Co., 2692 W. Congress St., Chi-
cago, 111.
Superior Sign System, Inc., Elizabethtown, Pa.
Shank, E. A.. Co., 62 W. 21st St., New York. N. Y.
Sign Animation Corp.. 229 W. 42nd St.. New York,
N. Y.
HIM Mi GLIDE FOR 1940
Trisign Co., 710 N. W. 5th St., Richmond, Ind.
Wagner Sign Service, Inc., 123 W. 64th St., New
York. N. Y.
Wheeler Reflector Co., 275 Congress St., Boston.
Mass.
Signs, Luminous Tube
Artkraft Sign Co., Lima, O.
Battle. Robert, Inc., 35-28 42nd St., Long Island
City, N. Y.
Claude Neon Lights, Inc.. 41 E. 42nd St., New
York, N. Y.
Claude Neon Southern Corp., 258 Ivy St., N. E..
Atlanta, Ga.
Electrical Products Corp., 1128 Venice Blvd.. Los
Angeles. Calif.
Flexlume Corp., 1100 Military Road, Buffalo, N. Y.
Fluorescent Tube Lights, Inc., 1007 Atlantic Ave..
Brooklyn. N. Y.
General Outdoor Advertising Co., 585 Gerard Ave..
New York. N. Y.
Good-All Electric Manufacturing Co., Ogallala,
Neb.
Hansen, Boy, Lustrolite Co., 831 W. 4th St.,
Davenport. Ia.
Hirsch, Gustav, Organization, 209 S. Third St.,
Columbus, O.
Kolux Corp., 1064 S. Union St., Kokomo. Ind.
Neon City Signs Division. Good-All Electric Manu
facturing Co.. Ogallala. Neb.
Neon Electric Signs. Inc., 44 E. Hall St.. Battle
Creek, Mich.
Reynolds Electric Co.. 2692 W. Congress St.. Chi-
cago, 111.
Superior Signs System, Inc., Elizabethtown, Pa.
Trisign Co.. 710 N. W. 16th St., Richmond. Ind.
Wolk. Edward H.. 1018 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago,
111.
Slides
Associated Screen News, Ltd., 6271 Western Ave.,
Montreal. Canada.
Craftsmen Photo Co., Inc., 245 W. 56th St., New
York, N. Y.
Display Stage Lighting Co., . Inc., 617 Tenth Ave..
New York, N. Y.
Duhem Motion Picture Manufacturing Co., 135
Hayes St.. San Francisco, Calif.
Kansas City Slide Co.. 1719 Wyandotte St.. Kan-
sas City, Mo.
Kliegl Bros. Universal Electric Stage Lighting Co..
Inc., 321 W. 50th St.. New York, N. Y.
Quality Slide Co., 6 E. Lake St., Chicago, 111.
Radio-Mat Slide Co., Inc., 1819 Broadway, New
York, N. Y.
Ransley Studios, Rock Haven, Ky.
Stern Photo Co., Inc.. 318 W. 46th St., New
York, N. Y.
U. S. Slide Co., 3112% Troost Ave., Kansas City,
Mo.
Victor Animatograph Corp., Davenport, Ia.
Sound Devices
Atlas Sound Corp., 1451 39th St.. Brooklyn, N. Y.
Ballantyne Co., 222 N. 16th St., Omaha, Neb.
Blue Seal Sound Devices, Inc., 723 Seventh Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
Brush Development Co.. 3311 Perkins Ave., Cleve-
land, O.
Cincinnati Time Recorder Co., 1733 Central Ave.,
Cincinnati, O.
Cinema Sound Equipment Co., 8572 Santa Monica
Blvd., Hollywood, Calif.
Colortone Acoustic Devices, Inc., 322 E. Colfax
Ave., South Bend, Ind.
Consolidated Theater Supply Corp., 1600 Broad-
way, New York, N. Y.
DeVry Corp., 1111 Armitage Ave., Chicago, 111.
Dictograph Sales Corp.. 580 Fifth Ave., New
York, N. Y.
Electrical Research Products, Inc., 196 Broadway,
New York, N. Y.
1069
BUYING GUIDE FOR 1940
Federated Purchaser, Inc., 25 Park Place, New
York, N. Y.
Fox Sound Equipment Corp., 3120 Monroe St..
Toledo, O.
Gates Radio & Supply Co., Quincy, 111.
Holmes Projector Co.. 1815 Orchard St., Chicago.
111.
Jensen Radio Manufacturing Co.. 6601 S. Laramie
Ave.. Chicago, 111.
Kendell Co. of America, 7 W. 44th St., New
York. N. Y.
LeRoy Sound Equipment Corp.. 2 Commercial St..
Rochester. N. Y.
Lifetime Corp.. 1825 Adams St.. Toledo. 0.
Lincrophone Co., Inc., 1661 Howard Ave.. Utlca.
N. Y.
Mellaphone Corp., 65 Atlantic Ave., Rochester,
N. Y.
Miles Reproducer Co.. Inc., 812 Broadway. New
York. N. Y.
Motiograph. Inc.. 4431 W. Lake St.. Chicago. 111.
Motion Picture Accessories Co., 2200 S. Vermont
Ave., Los Angeles, Calif.
Music Specialty Co.. Union Trust Bldg., Union
City. Ind.
National Theater Supply Co.. 92 Gold St., New
York, N. Y.
Olesen. Otto K.. Illuminating Co., Ltd., 1560 N.
Vine St.. Hollywood. Calif.
Dperadio Manufacturing Co.. St. Charles. HI.
Pacent Engineering Corp.. 79 Madison Ave.. New
York. N. Y.
Picture-Fone Co.. 806 S. Main St.. Lima. O.
Preddey. Walter G.. 187 Golden Gate Ave.. San
Francisco. Calif.
RCA Manufacturing Co.. Inc., Camden. N. J.
Racon Electric Co.. Inc.. 52 E. 19th St.. New York.
N. Y.
Rubv Camera Exchange. 729 Seventh Ave., New
York, N. Y-
United Theatei Equipment Co.. Inc., 121 Golden
Gate Ave., San Francisco. Calif.
Victor Animatograph Corp.. Davenport. Ia. (16
mm.) .
Weber Machine Corp., 59 Rutter St., Rochester.
N. Y.
Wenzel Co.. 2509 S. State St., Chicago, HI.
Splicing Machines
Akelev Camera. Inc.. 175 Varick St., New York,
N. Y.
Associated Screen News, Ltd., 5271 Western Ave..
Montreal, Canada.
Bell & Howell Co., 1801 Larchmont Ave., Chicago.
El.
Camera Supply Co., 1515 N. Cahuenga Blvd..
Hollywood, Calif.
Debrie. Andre. Inc.. 115 W. 45th St., New York.
N. Y.
Duhem Motion Picture Manufacturing Co., 136
Haves St.. San Francisco. Calif.
Fulton. E. E. Co.. 1018 S. Wabash Ave., Chi-
cago. 111.
General Films, Ltd., 1924 Rose St.. Regina, Sask.,
Canada.
General Machine Co.. Inc., 820 E. 140th St.. New
York. N. Y.
Griswold Machine Works, Port Jefferson, N. Y.
Guercio & Barthel Co., 1241 S. Wabash Ave.,
Chicago, 111.
Neumade Products Corp.. 427 W. 42nd St.. New
York. N. Y.
Rosco Laboratories, 367 Hudson Ave.. Brooklyn.
N. Y.
Sprinklers, Automatic
Grinnell Co.. Inc.. 277 W. Exchange St., Provi-
dence, R. I.
Nacey. P.. Co.. 927 S. State St., Chicago. 111.
Sprinkler Maintenance Co., Inc., 80 John St., New
York. N. Y.
Stage Equipment
Acme Scenic Studios, 2921 W. Van Buren St..
Chicago. HI.
Automatic Devices Co., 1035 Linden St.. Allen-
town. Pa.
Beck Studios. 2001 Highland Ave., Cincinnati, O.
Bruckner Mitchell. Inc., 132 W. 24th St.. New
York, N. Y.
Capitol Stage Lighting Co.. 527 W. 45th St., New
York, N. Y.
Channon. J. H.. Corp.. 1445 W. Hubbard St..
Chicago, HI.
Cincinnati Time Recorder Co., 1733 Central Ave..
Cincinnati. O.
Clancy, J. R., Inc., 1010 W. Belden Ave., Syra-
cuse, N. Y.
Clark. Peter. Inc.. 101 Park Ave.. New York.
N. Y.
Display Stage Lighting Co.. Inc., 617 Tenth Ave..
New York, N. Y.
Fish-Schurman Corp.. 250 E. 43rd St.. New York.
N. Y.
Great Western Stage Equipment Co., 817 Holmes
St.. Kansas City. Mo.
Holzmueller. C. J.. 1108 Howard St.. San Fran-
cisco. Calif.
Kansas City Scenic Co., 1002 E. 24th St., Kansas
City, Mo.
King Scenic Co.. 1914 W. Main St., Dallas, Tex.
Kliegl Bros. Universal Electric Stage Lighting Co..
Inc.. 321 W. 50th St., New York. N. Y.
Lee Lash Studios, 1828 Amsterdam Ave.. New
York. N. Y.
Martin. William T.. Studios. 352 N. Citrus Ave..
Los Angeles, Calif.
Novelty Scenic Studios, Inc.. 320 W. 48th St..
New York. N. Y.
Olesen. Otto K.. Illuminating Co., Ltd., 1560 N.
Vine St.. Hollywood. Calif.
Otis Elevator Co.. 26th St. & Eleventh Ave., New
York. N. Y.
Power, Robert E.. Studios, 603 S. Mansfield Ave..
Los Angeles, Calif.
Premier Scenery Studios, 340 W. 41st St.. New
York. N. Y.
Schell Scenic Studios. 581 High St.. Columbus. O.
Shearer, B. F.. Co., 2318 Second Ave., Seattle.
Wash.
Throckmorton. Cleon, Inc.. 102 W. Third St., New
York, N. Y.
Tiffin Scenic Studios. Tiffin. O.
Volland Studios. Inc.. 3737 Cass Ave.. St. Louis.
Mo.
Statuary
Botanical Decorative Supply Co., 325 W. Madison
St.. Chicago. 111.
Caproni Galleries, Inc., 1914 Washington St..
Boston. Mass.
Flour City Ornamental Iron Co.. 2637 27th Ave..
Minneapolis, Minn.
Newman Bros., Inc., 660 W. Fourth St.. Cin-
cinnati. O.
Stills
Associated Screen News. Ltd.. 5271 Western Ave..
Montreal. Canada.
Craftsmen Photo Co.. Inc.. 245 W. 65th St.. New
York, N. Y.
General Films. Ltd., 1924 Rose St.. Regina, Sask..
Canada.
Stern Photo Co., Inc.. 318 W. 46th St.. New York.
N. Y.
Switchboards
Adam. Frank. Electric Co., 3650 Windsor Place,
St. Louis. Mo.
Bull Dog Electric Products Co.. 7610 Joseph
Campau St.. Detroit. Mich.
Capitol Stage Lighting Co.. 527 W. 45th St.. New
York. N. Y.
Century Lighting. Inc.. 419 W. 55th St.. New
York. N. Y. „ „ ^
Cinema Studios Supply Corp.. 1010 N. McCadden
Place. Los Angeles, Calif.
Cleveland Switchboard Co., 2925 E. 79th St..
Cleveland. O.
1070
Cutler-Hammer, Inc., N. 12th St. & W. St. Paul
Ave., Milwaukee, Wis.
Display Stage Lighting Co., Inc., 617 Tenth Ave..
New York, N. Y.
E-J Electric Installation Co., 227 E. 45th St..
New York, N. Y.
General Electric Co., Schenectady, N. Y.
Hoffman, Ernest V.. 115-58 174th St., St. Albans.
L. I., N. Y.
Hollingsworth Co.. 30 S. Bank St., Philadelphia.
Pa.
Hub Electric Corp., 2225 W. Grand Ave., Chicago.
111.
Ideal Electric & Manufacturing Co., Mansfield, O.
Kliegl Bros. Universal Electric Stage Lighting Co.,
Inc., 321 W. 50th St.. New York. N. Y.
Metropolitan Electric Manufacturing Co., 22-48
Steinway St., Long Island City, N. Y.
Miles Reproducer Co., Inc., 812 Broadway, New
York, N. Y.
Olesen, Otto K., Illuminating Co., Ltd., 1560 N.
Vine St.. Hollywood. Calif.
Ross, Charles, Inc., 244 W. 49th St., New York,
N. Y.
Trumbull Electric Manufacturing Co., Woodford
Ave., Plainville, Conn.
Wurdack, William, Electric Co., 4444 Clayton
Ave.. New York. N. Y.
Ticket Boxes and Choppers
Associated Ticket & Register Co., 614 Ninth Ave..
New York, N. Y.
Erker Bros. Optical Co.. 610 Olive St., St. Louis.
Mo.
Fulton. E. E.. Co.. 1018 S. Wabash Ave.. Chicago.
111.
Globe Ticket Co., 112 N. 12th St., Philadelphia-
Pa.
Goldberg Bros., 3500 Walnut St.. Denver. Colo.
Golde Manufacturing Co., 1214 W. Madison St.,
Chicago, 111.
Hansen, Boy, Lustrolite Co., 831 W. 4th St..
Davenport, la.
International Ticket Co., 50 Grafton Ave., New-
ark. N. J.
Libman-Spanjer Corp., 1600 Broadway, New York,
N. Y.
Markendorff, S., Sons, Inc., 159 W. 23rd St., New
York. N. Y.
Menger, Ring & Weinstein, Inc., 225 Fifth Ave.,
New York, N. Y.
Neumade Products Corp., 427 W. 42nd St., New
York. N. Y.
Newman Bros., Inc., 660 W. Fourth St., Cincin-
nati, O.
Wolk, Edward H., 1018 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago.
111.
Ticket Registers
Associated Ticket & Register Co., 614 Ninth Ave..
New York. N. Y.
Continental Theater Accessories, Inc., 325 W. 44th
St.. New York, N. Y.
Elliott Ticket Co., 409 Lafayette St., New York.
N. Y.
General Register Corp., 1540 Broadway, New
York, N. Y.
Globe Ticket Co., 112 N. 12th St., Philadelphia,
Pa.
International Theater Accessories Corp., 636 Elev-
enth Ave., New York, N. Y.
International Ticket Co., 50 Grafton Ave., New-
ark, N. J.
Nation-Wide Manufacturing Corp., 449 W. 42nd
St., New York, N. Y.
Standard Ticket Register Corp., 1600 Broadway.
New York. N. Y.
Ticket Issuing Machine Co. (Timco), Inc., 135
Pearl St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Wenzel Co.. 2509 S. State St.. Chicago, 111.
Tickets, Admission
American Ticket Corp., 360 E. Grand Ave.. Chi-
cago, 111.
Ansell-Simplex Ticket Co., Inc., 2844 W. Chicago
Ave.. Chicago, 111.
Associated Ticket & Register Co.. 614 Ninth Ave..
New York, N. Y.
Bl/YIJVG GUIDE FOR 1940
Columbia Printing Co.. 1632 N. Halstead St.,
Chicago. 111.
Continental Ticket Co., New London, O.
Elliott Ticket Co., 409 Lafayette St., New York,
N. Y.
Erker Bros. Optical Co., 610 Olive St., St. Louis.
Mo.
General Films, Ltd., 1924 Rose St., Regina, Sask.,
Canada.
Globe Ticket Co., 112 N. 12th St., Philadelphia,
Pa.
Guercio & Barthel Co., 1241 S. Wabash Ave.,
Chicago. 111.
Hancock Bros., 25 Jessie St., San Francisco, Calif.
International Theater Accessories Corp., 636 Elev-
enth Ave., New York, N. Y.
International Ticket Co., 50 Grafton Ave., New-
ark, N. J.
Keller-Ansell Ticket Co., Inc., 723 Seventh Ave..
New York, N. Y.
Keystone Ticket Co., Shamokin, Pa.
National Ticket Co., Shamokin, Pa.
Premier Southern Ticket Co., 230 Findlay St.,
Cincinnati, O.
Rees Ticket Co., Harney & 10th Sts., Omaha, Neb.
Robbins, J., & Son, 203 Market St., Pittsburgh.
Pa.
Shearer. B. F., Co., 2318 Second Ave., Seattle.
Wash.
Tile Flooring
American-Franklin-Olean Tiles, Inc., 101 Park
Ave., New York. N. Y.
American Tile & Rubber Co., Perrine Ave., Tren-
ton, N. J.
Armstrong Cork Co.. Lancaster, Pa.
Johns-Manville. 22 E. 40th St., New York, N. Y.
Kennedy, David E., Inc.. 68 Second Ave., Brook-
lyn, N. Y.
Lippe Construction Corp., 17 W. 60th St.. New
York. N. Y.
Towers, Horn
Atlas Sound Corp., 1461 39th St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Bruckner Mitchell, Inc., 132 W. 24th St., New
York, N. Y.
Fox Sound Equipment Corp., 3120 Monroe St..
Toledo. O.
Pitcure-Fone Co., 806 S. Main St., Lima, O.
Transformers, A. C.
American Transformer Co.. 178 Emmet St., New-
ark, N. J.
Amplifier Company of America, 17 W. 20th St..
New York, N. Y.
Atlas Sound Corp., 1451 39th St.. Brooklyn, N. Y.
Battle, Robert, Inc., 35-28 42nd St., Long Island
City. N. Y.
Forest Manufacturing Corp., 200 Mt. Pleasant
Ave., Newark. N. J.
Garver Electric Co., Union City, Ind.
Gates Radio & Supply Co.. Quincy, 111.
General Electric Co., Schenectady. N. Y.
Good-All Electric Manufacturing Co.. Ogallala,
Neb.
Jeffries Transformer Co., 6706 Long Beach Ave..
Los Angeles, Calif.
Miles Reproducer Co.. Inc., 812 Broadway, New
York, N. Y.
Motiograph, Inc., 4431 W. Lake St., Chicago, 111.
RCA Manufacturing Co., Inc., Camden, N. J.
Radio Wire Television, Inc., 100 Sixth Ave., New
York, N. Y.
Reynolds Electric Co., 2692 W. Congress St., Chi-
cago, 111.
Standard Transformer Corp., 1500 N. Halsted St.,
Chicago, HI.
Wagner Electric Corp., 6400 Plymouth Ave., St.
Louis, Mo.
Tubes, Amplifier
Amperex Electronic Products, Inc.. 79 Washington
St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
1071
BUYiMG GUIDE FOR 1940
Cincinnati Time Recorder Co.. 1733 Central Ave..
Cincinnati. O.
Consolidated Theater Supply Corp.. 1600 Broad-
way. New York. N. Y.
Dictograph Sales Corp., 580 Fifth Ave.. New
York. N. Y.
Electrical Research Products, Inc., 195 Broadway.
New York, N. Y.
Gates Radio & Supply Co.. Quincy, 111.
Good-All Electric Manufacturing' Co., Ogallala.
Neb.
Hygrade Sylvania Corp., 500 Fifth Ave., New
York. N. Y.
Lafayette Radio Manufacturing- Co.. 100 Sixth
Ave.. New York. N. Y.
Miles Reproducer Co.. Inc.. 812 Broadway, New
York. N. Y.
Motiograph. Inc., 4431 W. Lake St.. Chicagro. 111.
Olesen, Otto K.. Illuminating- Co., Ltd., 1560 N.
Vine St.. Hollywood. Calif.
Picture-Fone Co.. 806 S. Main St.. Lima. O.
RCA Manufacturing Co., Inc., Camden, N. J.
United Theater Equipment Co.. Inc., 121 Golden
Gate Ave.. San Francisco, Calif.
Wenzel Co., 2509 S. State St., Chicago, 111.
Western Electric Co.. 195 Broadway, New York.
N. Y.
Tubes, Rectifier
Amperex Electronic Products, Inc., 79 Washington
St., Brooklyn. N. Y.
Baldor Electric Co., 4351 Duncan Ave.. St. Louis,
Mo.
Consolidated Theater Supply Corp., 1600 Broad-
way, New York. N. Y.
Continental Electric Co.. Geneva, 111.
DeVry Corp., 1111 Armitage Ave.. Chicago. 111.
Forest Manufacturing Corp., 200 Mt. Pleasant
Ave.. Newark, N. J.
Gates Radio & Supply Co.. Quincy. 111.
General Electric Co.. Schenectady, N. Y.
Good-All Electric Manufacturing- Co.. Og-allala,
Neb.
Hygrade Sylvania Corp., 500 Fifth Ave., New
York. N. Y.
Kneisley Electric Co.. 16 S. St. Clair St.. Toledo. O.
Miles Reproducer Co., Inc., 812 Broadway, New
York. N. Y.
MotiogTaph, Inc.. 4431 W. Lake St.. Chicago. 111.
Picture-Fone Co.. 806 S. Main St., Lima. O.
RCA Manufacturing- Co.. Inc., Camden, N. J.
Sonolux Co.. E. Newark. N. J.
Tele-Radio Corp., 86 Shipman St., Newark. N. J.
United Theater Equipment Co., Inc., 121 Golden
Gate Ave., San Francisco. Calif.
Wenzel Co.. 2509 S. State St.. Chicago. 111.
Western Electric Co., 195 Broadway. New York.
N. Y.
Wholesale Radio Service Co., Inc., 100 Sixth Ave..
New York, N. Y.
Uniforms
Appel. S., & Co.. Inc., 14 Fulton St.. New York.
N. Y.
Brooks Uniform Co.. 1140 Sixth Ave., New York,
N. Y.
Chicago Uniform & Cap Co., 208 W. Monroe St..
Chicago. 111.
DeMoulin Bros & Co.. Greenville. 111.
Heckel, Henry J.. Inc.. 136 W. 21st St.. New York.
N. Y.
Hoover Manufacturing & Sales Co.. Inc., 261 W.
19th St., New York. N. Y.
Lester. Ltd.. 14 W. Lake St., Chicago. 111.
Mahieu Costumers, Inc., 242 W. 55th St., New
York, N. Y.
Maier-Lavatay Co.. 2141 Lincoln Ave.. Chicago.
111.
Meier. A. G. & Co., 205 W. Monroe St.. Chicago.
111.
National Uniform Co.. 41 E. 28th St., New York.
N. Y.
Pettibone Bros. Manufacturing Co.. 626 Main St..
Cincinnati, O.
Russell Uniform Co.. 1600 Broadway. New York.
N. Y.
Upholstery
Chase. L. C. & Co.. 295 Fifth Ave., New York.
N. Y.
United States Rubber Co.. 1790 Broadway, New
York. N. Y.
Units
Racon Electric Co.. Inc.. 52 E. 19th St.. New York.
N. Y.
Vending Machines
Berlo Vending Co.. 1518 N. Broad St.. Philadel-
phia, Pa.
Burch Manufacturing Co.. 1906 Wyandotte St..
Kansas City, Mo.
Columbus Vending Co.. 2005 E. Main St.. Co-
lumbus. O.
Cretors. C. & Co.. 620 Cermak Road. Chicago. 111.
Hotelier. Bob. Candy Co., 12 S. Clinton St.. Chi-
cago, 111.
Holeomb & Holke Manufacturing Co.. 1446 Van
Buren St.. Indianapolis, Ind.
International Mutoscope Reel Co., Inc., 44-01
11th St.. Long Island City. N. Y.
Midwest Popcorn Co.. 3088 W. 106th St., Cleve-
land. O.
Robinson Popcorn Co.. Inc.. 4538 W. 130th St..
Cleveland. O.
West Disinfecting Co., 41-16 West St.. Long Island
City, N. Y.
Ventilating Systems
Allen Corp.. 9760 Erwin St.. Detroit. Mich.
American Blower Corp.. 6000 Russell St.. Detroit.
Mich.
Anemostat Corp. of America. 10 E. 39th St.. New
York. N. Y.
Autovent Fan & Blower Co.. 1807 N. Kostner Ave..
Chicago. 111.
Bayley Blower Co.. 1817 S. 66th St.. Milwaukee.
Wise.
Bishop & Babcock Manufacturing Co.. 4901 Ham-
ilton Ave.. N. E.. Cleveland. O.
Buffalo Forge Co.. 448 S. Hill St.. Los Angeles.
Calif.
Carrie] Corp.. Syracuse. N. Y.
Champion Blower & Forge Co.. Harri9burg Ave..
Lancaster, Pa.
Delco-Frigidaire Conditioning Division. General
Motors Sales Corp.. Dayton. O.
Eichenlaub. George C. 905 Commerce Bldg.. Erie.
Pa.
Garden City Fan Co.. 332 S. Michigan Ave.. Chi-
cago. III.
General Electric Co.. Schenectady, N. Y.
Gilbert, Walter B.. & Co.. York. Pa.
Knowles Mushroom Ventilator Co., 41 N. Moore
St., New York. N. Y.
Leopold. C. S.. 213 S. Broad St.. Philadelphia. Pa.
Master-Builders. The. 218 Hess Ave.. Erie. Pa.
Ozone Air Co.. 928 Cherry St.. S. W.. Grand
Rapids, Mich.
Picture-Fone Co.. 806 S. Main St.. Lima, O.
Reynolds Corp., 1400 Wabansia Ave.. Chicago. 111.
Rockenstein. L. T.. Co.. 3327 Locust St.. St. Louis.
Mo.
Shearer. B. F.. Co.. 2318 Second Ave.. Seattle.
Wash.
Sturtevant. B. F.. Co.. Cooling & Air Conditioning
Division. 908 Graybar Bldg.. New York. N. Y.
Trane Co.. The. LaCrosse. Wise.
Typhoon Air Conditioning Co.. 252 W. 26th St..
New York, N. Y.
U. S. Air Conditioning Corp.. Northwestern Ter-
minal. Minneapolis, Minn.
Western Engineering & Manufacturing Co.. 1726
E. Washington Blvd.. Los Angeles. Calif.
York Ice Machinery Corp., York, Pa.
Weatherstripping
A. A. A. Studio. Box 25. Station O. Cincinnati. O.
Athey Co.. 6035 W. 65th St.. Chicago, 111.
Lippe Construction Corp., 17 W. 60th St.. New
York. N. Y.
1072
1073
25 YEARS FAITHFUL SERVICE
FEATURES
SHORTS
PRUUULIIUMiJnc.
1600 BROADWAY - NEW YORK
DISTRIBUTORS DOMESTIC b IMPORTED FILMS
16 M.M. SOUND FILMS
EXCLUSIVE U. S. DISTRIBUTORS FOR
Ente Nazionale Industrie Cinematografiche
and
Istituto Nazionale Luce Newsreels
Season
1940-1941
SCIPIO AFRICANUS
Isa Miranda, Annibale Ninchi
THE LIFE OF GIUSEPPE VERDI
Gaby Morlay, Beniamino Gigli,
Fosco Giachetti
LOVE IN OLD NAPLES
Emma Gramatica, ViHorio De Sica
THE MIRACLE OF MONTEVERGINE
Amedeo Nazzari, Elsa De Giorgi
And 30 Other Outstanding Films
ESPERIA FILM DISTRIBUTING CO.
Cable Address ESPERFILM
1650 BROADWAY Telephone Circle 6-3169
NEW YORK
1074
IMPORTERS & EXPORTERS
And Their iVett? York Addresses
WORLD RIGHTS
American Trading Association
723 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-4312
Arnocinema Exports Co.
35 W. 45th St MEdalion 3-1462
Auten, Harold
1540 Broadway BRyant 9-9883
Barnstyn, Jack
1270 Sixth Ave Circle 7-4697
Blumenthal, Benjamin
608 Fifth Ave BRyant 9-6227
British & Continental Trading Co.
1270 Sixth Ave Circle 7-4697
Columbia Pictures
729 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-7900
Exhibitors Film Exchange
630 Ninth Ave Circle 6-0888
Export & Import Film Co., Inc.
608 Fifth Ave BRyant 9-5227
French Film Exchange
546 Fifth Ave VAnderbilt 5178
French Motion Picture Corp.
126 W. 46th St BRyant 9-0866
Garrison Film Distributors, Inc.
1600 Broadway Circle 6-4868
GUARANTEED PICTURES CO.
729 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-4369
(See Page 1078)
HOFFBERG PRODUCTIONS, INC.
729 Seventh Ave MEdalion 3-3813
(See Page 1074)
Imperial Pictures, Inc.
729 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-8669
Kassler, Frank
1600 Broadway Circle 6-6953
Lenauer International Films, Inc.
202 W. 58th St Circle 7-6591
Loew's, Inc.
1540 Broadway BRyant 9-7800
LUP0RINI & VARIETY FILM CORP.
33 W. 42nd St LOngacre 5-0790
Metropolis Pictures Corp.
45 John St BEekman 3-8298
Modern Film Corp.
729 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-9635
National Pictures Corp.
1501 Broadway LAckawanna 4-3544
New Star Films, Inc.
1560 Broadway BRyant 9-7281
Paramount Pictures, Inc.
1501 Broadway CHickering 4-7050
Post Pictures Corp.
723 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-5496
RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.
1270 Sixth Ave COlumbus 5-6600
Reliable Film Export Co.
1560 Broadway MEdalion 3-0436
Republic Pictures Corp.
1776 Broadway COlumbus 5-2501
Trans-Oceanic Film Export Co.
723 Seventh Ave MEdalion 3-5377
Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.
444 W. 56th St COlumbus 6-3321
United Artists Corp.
729 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-7300
Warner Bros.
321 W. 44th St Circle 6-1010
White, Peter H., Co.
729 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-5206
World Pictures Corp.
729 Seventh Ave MEdalion 3-2943
CONTINENTAL EUROPE
France
Barnstyn, Jack
1270 Sixth Ave Circle 7-4697
FRENCH CINEMA CENTER, INC.
35 W. 45th St.
(See Page 1076)
French Motion Picture Corp.
126 W. 46th St BRyant 9-0866
GUARANTEED PICTURES CO.
729 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-4369
(See Page 1078)
Metropolis Pictures
45 John St BEekman 3-8298
Modern Film Corp.
729 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-9635
Reliable Film Export Co.
1660 Broadway MEdalion 3-0436
Tri-National Films, Inc.
250 W. 57th St Circle 7-1548
Germany
Modern Film Corp.
729 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-9635
Reliable Film Export Co.
1560 Broadway MEdalion 3-0436
UFA FILMS, INC.
729 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-7890
(See Page 1078)
Holland
Barnstyn, Jack
1270 Sixth Ave Circle 7-4697
British & Continental Trading Co.
1270 Sixth Ave Circle 7-4697
Modern Film Corp.
729 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-9635
Reliable Film Export Co.
1560 Broadway MEdalion 3-0436
Italy
ESPERIA FILM DISTRIBUTING CO.
1560 Broadway Circle 6-3196
(See Page 1074)
Luporini & Variety Film Corp.
33 W. 42nd St LOngacre 5-0790
Russia
Amkino Corp.
723 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-7680
Reliable Film Export Co.
1560 Broadway MEdalion 3-0436
1075
LUPORINI & VARIETY
FILM CORPORATION
DISTRIBUTING MOTION PICTURES
OF QUALITY THROUGHOUT THE WORLD
Highly Specialized Distribution to
LATIN AMERICA
of American and Foreign Features and Shorts
LUPORINI & VARIETY FILM CORPORATION
CABLE ADDRESS: "VARILUP" NEW YORK
CODE USED: ABC, 6th EDITION, and BENTLY
Telephone: LOngacre 5-0790
33 West 42nd Street New York City
For 1940
"SCHPOUNTZ"
(Marcel Pagnol)
"HERITAGE"
(Marcel Gras)
Also
HEROES OF THE
MARNE"
(Raimu)
/J MaAcei Patf+tal PlocLucticut
RELEASED EXCLUSIVELY
FRENCH CINEMACENTER, INC.
35 WEST 45th STREET NEW YORK CITY
1076
SCANDINAVIA
Mattsson, Ernest Reliable Film Export Co.
220 W. 42nd St Wisconsin 7-2162 1560 Broadway MEdalion 3-0436
I NITED ftf Af.fHHf
Alliance Films Corp.
1270 Sixth Ave Circle 7-3945
Auten, Harold
1540 Broadway BRyant 9-9883
Barnstyn, Jack
1270 Sixth Ave Circle 7-4697
British & Continental Trading Co.
1270 Sixth Ave Circle 7-4697
GUARANTEED PICTURES CO.
729 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-4396
(See Page 1078)
Modern Film Corp.
729 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-9635
Reliable Film Export Co.
1560 Broadway MEdalion 3-0436
Trans-Oceanic Film Export Co.
723 Seventh Ave MEdalion 3-5377
Tri-National Films, Inc.
250 W. 57th St Circle 7-1548
LATIN AMERICA
American Trading Association
723 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-4312
Amkino Corp.
723 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-7680
Auten, Harold
1540 Broadway BRyant 9-9883
French Film Exchange
545 Fifth Ave VAnderbilt 5178
French Motion Picture Corp.
126 W. 46th St BRyant 9-0866
GUARANTEED PICTURES CO.
729 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-4369
(See Page 1078)
HOFFBERG PRODUCTIONS, INC.
729 Seventh Ave MEdalion 3-3813
(See Page 1074)
LUPORINI & VARIETY FILM CORP.
33 W. 42nd St LOngacre 5-0790
(See Page 1076)
Modern Film Corp.
729 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-9635
Reliable Film Export Co.
1560 Broadway MEdalion 3-0436
Trans-Oceanic Film Export Co.
723 Seventh Ave MEdalion 3-5377
World Pictures Corp.
729 Seventh Ave MEdalion 3-2943
CENTRAL AMERICA
Mexico
Amkino Corp.
723 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-7680
French Film Exchange
545 Fifth Ave VAnderbilt 5178
French Motion Picture Corp.
126 W. 46th St BRyant 9-0866
GUARANTEED PICTURES CO.
729 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-4369
(See Page 1078)
HOFFBERG PRODUCTIONS, INC.
729 Seventh Ave MEdalion 3-3813
(See Page 10T J)
Modern Film Corp.
729 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-9635
Reliable Film Export Co.
1560 Broadway MEdalion 3-0436
SOUTH AFRICA
GUARANTEED PICTURES CO. Modern Film Corp.
729 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-4369 729 Seventh Ave BRyant 9-9635
(See Page 1078)
International Variety & Theatrical Agency, Inc. Reliable Film Export Co.
220 W. 42nd St Wisconsin 7-8626 1560 Broadway MEdalion 3-0436
FILM FORWARDERS
Cofod, A. F., & Co., Inc. Massae & Co., Inc.
24 State St BOwling Green 9-3377 723 Seventh Ave LOngacre 5-2325
1077
The Insignia of Quality
Pictures
of
International
Merit
UFA FILMS, INC.
RKO BUILDING
1270 SIXTH AVE.
NEW YORK, N. Y.
U^TIONAL DISTRIBUTORS
ZltW** °f Outottwiding
Ifl' FOREIGN Sc DOMESTIC
PR ODUCTIONS
Over 20 Years of Satisfactory Representation to
Producers and Buyers All Over the World
•
/I ctiort Pictured. - MuUcali - We&tesinl
£ ^cpLcutatian Special*
Also Large Variety
SERIALS— MISCELLANEOUS MELODRAMAS AND
MUSICAL SHORTS
•
IMPORTERS AND DISTRIBUTORS OF SELECTED
EUROPEAN FILMS FOR NORTH AND SOUTH AMERICA
GUARANTEED PICTURES CO.,inc.
729 7* AVENUE, NEW YORK, NY.
PHONE: BRYANT 9-4369 CABLE: 6APICTCO
1078
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
PROMOTES EXPORTS OF MOTION PICTURE PRODUCTS
By
NATHAN D. GOLDEN
Chief, Motion Picture Division
THE chief function of the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce of the
Department of Commerce, is "to promote and develop the foreign and
domestic commerce of the United States." The organization of the Motion Pic-
ture Division and its method of operation, will be outlined herein, and it is hoped
that the reader will be enabled to visualize the working of this branch of the
Government which is now generally recognized as contributing much toward
expanding sales of American manufactured products in all parts of the world.
Major Sections of the Bureau
The Bureau oi Foreign and Domestic Com-
merce should be considered in its four major
sections:
1. The Washington headquarters may be
regarded as the central switchboard of Amer-
ican business. It respons to the vital need
for information on commercial conditions at
home and abroad. From here the Director
(who reports to the Secretary of Commerce)
and his assistants control the operations of
the bureau staff in both the foreign and do-
mestic fields. Here is to be found a com-
pletely coordinated group of service divisions,
both commodity and technical, working un-
der the direction of men of practical experi-
ence and intimate acquaintance with the in-
dustry or specialized branch which they
serve.
2. SERVICES OF THE FOREIGN OFFICES:
Since the Foreign Offices form a vital element
in the Bureau's service, it seems desirable
here to summarize their functions concisely.
They constantly provide data on all the sig-
nificant economic, commercial, and financial
developments of the various countries. They
interpret the decrees, laws, and regulations
that are promulgated with great frequency
under modern conditions. They report on the
general business situation in a specific for-
eign market — the completion between Ameri-
can goods and the products of other coun-
tries— the import duties and restrictions that
may be imposed — sales methods and credit
terms — and the foreign-exchange situation,
when pertinent. They conduct surveys cov-
ering specific commodities in definite foreign
markets, and provide a variety of other cur-
rent ■pedal data.
These Foreign Offices call the attention of
American business to specific "Trade Oppor-
tunities" abroad where such opportunities call
for the actual purchase of American products.
The publication of such an "Opportunity" in
Commerce Reports, the Bureau's weekly mag-
azine, means that a market actually exists
or is capable of development, that the pros-
pective buyer is qualified to distribute suc-
cessfully, and that no trade obstacles exist to
a degree serious enough to preclude business.
3. INDUSTRIAL DIVISIONS: To keep abreast
of the changes taking place in individual in-
dustries, and to correlate the endless supply
of facts and figures and the specialized prob-
lems relating to them, the Bureau maintains
12 Industrial Divisions, staffed by experts
conversant with the details of a given in-
dustry.
These divisions bring the Bureau into direct
and vital touch with producers and dealers,
making possible the establishment of mu-
tually helpful relationships. For each in-
dustry there is provided a highly specialized
service, satisfying some of its peculiar and
characteristic needs for statistical and other
information. Necessary and valuable data
are gathered under competent supervision,
and material is disseminated to the many
trades in the most efficient ways that can be
devised. Most of the material is provided
by representatives of the Department of Com-
merce and State stationed in foreign coun-
tries; the information covers a wide field of
industrial and trade activities and is released
to business in periodical and special bulletins.
4. ECONOMIC AND TECHNICAL DIVI-
1079
SIONS: While the Industrial Divisions render
specialized services to specific groups, there
are in the Bureau 10 divisions devoting in-
tensive study to various distinctive phases of
economic effort. In response to inquiries from
industry, they can supply information not
otherwise obtainable on some of the highly
specialized aspects of the economic system.
Brief Description of Functions of the Motion Picture Division
The Motion Picture Division advises the
motion picture industry on all phases of film
conditions abroad including markets for edu-
cational and industrial films and for motion
picture equipment. The Division collects, ana-
lyzes, coordinates and distributes informa-
tion received from the foreign offices of the
Department of Commerce, and from the Con-
suls of the State Department. Special statis-
tical data covering exports and imports, and
foreign production of films, is given to the
trade each month, as well as reports of for-
eign censorship boards. Bi-weekly a Foreign
Market Bulletin, covering a wide variety of
motion picture subjects on the foreign mar-
ket, is published; a weekly press service of
interesting items goes each week to Ex-
port Managers, trade association magazines,
trade papers and newspapers.
An important function of the Division is
its service in furnishing each month in bul-
letin form the latest production and distribu-
tion of non-theatrical films to home users, col-
leges and schools. Equipment manufacturers,
exporters and associations are currently ad-
vised on the foreign market potentialities for
all types of motion picture and sound repro-
ducing equipment through press releases and
Foreign Market Bulletins, close relationship
is maintained between the Division and the
appropriate associations in the industry and
trade press.
The Division also endeavors, in so for as
it is possible, to provide data on the domestic
market; but until such time as sources of
information are more detailed, its efforts in
this direction are to a great degree limited.
The difficulty confronting film exporters
abroad is a paramount need for as much
frequent data as the Motion Picture Division
can furnish, particularly from those foreign
territories where quotas and contingent bar-
riers exist. This need is filled through annual
surveys and are supplanted by frequent
pamphlets dealing with recent conditions in
individual markets. Statistical data embody-
ing information relating to competition, num-
ber of films distributed by countries over
given periods, number of theaters in differ-
ent foreign territories, and the like are con-
stantly being published and are in great
demand.
The Division acts as consultant advisor to
other Government agencies on matters having
to do with the motion picture industry, and
commodity trade groups within its juris-
diction, and directs the foreign representa-
tion of our Government in submitting reports
that will be of interest and value to American
trade and economic interests in its field.
Publications
MOTION PICTURES ABROAD: Twice a
month the Division releases a foreign market
bulletin covering some important phase of
the motion picture situation abroad. This
bulletin may cover one foreign market or a
number of foreign markets, and is based on
reports received in the Division from foreign
offices of the Department. The subscription
price is SI. 00 per year.
CURRENT RELEASES OF NON-THEATRICAL
FILMS AND FILM NOTES: This service started
in December 1932. As its name implies, it
consists of the merging of a former bulletin
entitled "Non-Theatrical Film Notes," contain-
ing news notes covering non-theatrical film
developments in all countries, with a list of
industrial and educational films (together with
supplementary data on these) released by
film producers during the preceding month.
This bulletin is issued once a month, and is
extremely valuable to all users of non-the-
atrical films. The yearly subscription rate
for this service is $1.00.
WORLD WIDE MOTION PICTURE DEVEL-
OPMENTS: Each Saturday the Division re-
leases a series of news items relating to mo-
tion picture developments abroad. This serv-
ice is free, but is confined almost exclusively
to the trade and lay press, which repub-
lishes the items.
STATISTICAL SERVICE: The Division's sta-
tistical service consists of a single statement.
No. 4700. This statement shows exports to
all countries of motion picture films, sensi-
tized, not exposed; negatives; positivies; other
sensitized films, not exposed; motion picture
cameras (standard and sub-standard), pro-
jectors (standard and sub-standard); motion
picture sound equipment, projection arc
lamps. These statements are issued each
month, and the price is S1.00 per year.
REVIEW OF FOREIGN FILM MARKETS:
This is an annual survey covering some 80
important film markets of the world. Detailed
data covering the highlights of the market
are given. Price 10 cents per copy.
CANADA AND
NEWFOUNDLAND
TXTAR broke into the moving picture lives of Canada and Newfoundland early
~ ™ in September, last year, and twisted the year's record. Business had not
been praiseworthy in the last quarter of 1938, but it proceeded calmly to better
things during the first eight months of 1939. Then came the jolt. Down went
the indices during September, with a rather quick recovery in the three final
months.
In his December review of the general busi- compared with nearly $7.00 per head in the
ness trend, a leading banker said: "never in U. S. A. The record for the past ten years is
any comparable period had such a sharp rise as follows: 1930 — $3.77; 1931 — $3.28; 1932 —
in general business as had occurred since last $2.73; 1933 — $2.33; 1934 — $2.36; 1935 — $2.50;
spring," which means that "general business" 1936 — $2.70; 1937 — $2.93; 1938 — $3.02.
DURING 1939
has done even better than theater business.
Canada's foreign trade grew by leaps and
bounds in the latter part of the year, because
of the bumper grain crop and because of the
increased demand for metals of which Canada
has a fair supply. In gold, nickel and copper
Canada is a world factor. The Dominion Gov-
ernment reports show 349,590,136 bushels of
wheat in storage week ending December 8,
1939, as compared with 170.927,818 same date
last year. At $1.00 per bushel this shows
Canada $179,000,000 ahead of last year in
this commodity only.
Total theater receipts for the three latest
years for which statistics are available are:
1936— $29,110,000; 1937— $32,500,000; 1938—
$33,635,000.
Average value per admission is 24.4 cents.
Naturally attendance figures show a similar
improvement: 1936—127,441,000; 1937—134,-
374,000; 1938—137,976,000.
The film rentals for the three years as fur-
nished by the Dominion Statistician were as
follows: 1936— $8,358,900; 1937— $9,471, 100;
1938— $10,218,700.
It must not be forgotten that Canada's in-
dustrial production and overseas trade were
abnormally high during the war years 1916-
17-18. The activity during the last four months
in 1939 indicates that the same rapid expan-
sion may occur in 1940 as occurred in 1916.
Naturally Great Britain will buy freely from
Canada, because credit may be secured here
where cash would be demanded elsewhere.
If history repeats itself in this respect, then the
Canadian theaters will make new records
next year — presuming this war continues.
The number of wired houses reported in
December, 1939, is less than those given a
year ago. The present figure as reported by
the Canadian Film Boards is 1,284, of which
46 were closed. The number reported two
years ago was 1,205. The net increase in
two years is therefore 79. During this period
a number of small towns showing 35 mm. once
a week, are now showing 16 mm.
The figures given by the Bureau of Statistics
showed 1,133 theaters on Jan. 1. 1939, with a
seating capacity of 670,000. The Film Board
figures would seem to be more accurate, but
both show considerable improvement in two
Canada is not a motion picture country in
the sense that the United States is. The av-
erage spending per head is only $3.00 as
years.
J081
Canada' s Leading Motion Picture Magazine
Established in 1915
THE CANADIAN
MOVING PICTURE DIGEST
Covering every theater-oivner in the Dominion of
Canada, and all producer-distributors in the film trade.
Are you looking for a Film Market?
Read THE DIGEST!
Are you looking for Pictures?
Read THE DIGEST!
Every exhibitor in Canada who is a Showman
Reads THE DIGEST!
Twenty-five years of consecutive publication has made
The Digest CANADA'S FILM MAGAZINE.
You cannot buy good-will, but you can capitalize on its value.
The Digest International Press Film Service covers 500 leading
newspapers.
PUBLICATION WEEKLY
Subscription S5.00 Canadian Office: Advertising rates
covering 52 copies 2 59 Spadina Avenue, Toronto on application
Telephone: Waverly 4929 Cable Address: "Raydigest"
Editor and Publisher, Ray Lewis
1082
There have been no changes in the general
distribution situation. The purely Canadian
companies — Regal Films, Ltd.; Empire-Uni-
versal Films, Ltd., and Columbia Pictures, Ltd.
— remain the same. The major distributors —
20th Century-Fox, Paramount, Warners, RKO
and United Artists, have their own branch of-
fices, while M-G-M is distributed by Regal and
Universal by Empire. The distribution of
French films is almost exclusively in the hands
of France-Film, Ltd., of Montreal. In Toronto,
where all head offices are, there are several
smaller exchanges. These include Superior
Films (Harry Price); Peerless Films (J. Roher);
Colonial Pictures (B. W. Silver) and Grand
National (H. Allen).
There was little change in the Canadian
License Agreement, which is revised once a
year, usually about April. There is no can-
cellation clause, as there is in Australia and
New Zealand and in most of the existing
United States contracts. An arbitration clause
has always existed, but in recent years has
been more or less voluntary; nevertheless
arbitration flourishes in all provinces.
In the year 1938. 238 claims were filed with
the six arbitration boards. The value of these
claims was $92,159. Some were settled before
arbitration, but 121 awards were rendered
involving $42,941. In the first six months of
1939. there were 108 claims filed and 61
awards rendered.
In addition to a uniform contract and gen-
eral arbitration of disputes arising under it,
there is also a tendency toward the establish-
ment of "Conciliation Boards." One has been
operating in Ontario for some time and an-
other was established in Nova Scotia during
the past year. The latter was necessitated by
a piece of threatened legislation in that prov-
ince. Nevertheless, it has worked well and
it seems to be the opinion of all exhibitors
there that they prefer voluntary conciliation
to Government regulation. Distributors, cir-
cuits and independents are represented on
these conciliation boards. Theater owners ap-
pear personally and state their grievances.
There seems to be little difficulty in arriving
at unanimous decision.
The Canada-United States trade treaty came
into force on Jan. 1, 1939, and provided for a
reduction in duty on positive film from 3 cents
per lineal foot to 2lA cents. In April the
general excise tax was repealed. These
changes caused a slight reduction in the cost
of Canadian prints. The general effect is that
print cost in Canada is the lowest it has ever
been. Ninety-five per cent of the prints used
in Canada are made from imported negatives,
but no colored prints are made. The reduction
in duty and abolition of excise created quite a
substantial saving on these color importations.
This saving is estimated at one cent per foot.
For some years there has been an argument
with the Canadian government as to whether
remittances abroad should be treated as "roy-
alties" or as payments for merchandise. If
the former, the tax on the non-resident would
be 12'/2 per cent. If treated as "copyrights"
the tax would be 5 per cent. In April 1939,
this matter was settled by enacting that an
income tax of 5 per cent should be imposed
on non-residents (foreign producers) in respect
of all remittances received from Canada
covering:
"Any rights in and to the use of any work
whether copyrighted or not, but frequently
produced or reproduced in Canada, by
way of the spoken word, print, or me-
chanical sound on or from paper, composi-
tion, films or mechanical devices of any
description."
Canadian distributors must deduct this 5 per
cent from all remittances and pay the tax to
the Federal authorities. The above amend-
ment settles the point under discussion for
ten years that film payments are "copyrights"
not "royalties." The total remittances on which
this tax will be collected in 1939 would prob-
ably total $6,000,000.
Amusement taxes in Canada are levied by
the provinces and not by the Federal Govern-
ment. In 1937 amusement taxes were entirely
abolished in Ontario which represents 40 per
cent of Canadian theater business. Saskatche-
wan and Prince Edward Island have no
amusement taxes.
Censor Board fees remain high in Canada,
and Newfoundland increased its import tax
from 65 per cent on a value of $2.50 per
thousand feet to 65 per cent on a value of
$4.00 per thousand feet in lieu of censorship
fees. Ontario has the highest fee, charging
$6.00 per reel on U. S. films and $3.00 per
reel on British films. Second copies pay the
same rate as first copies.
The number of feature pictures imported
into Canada in 1938 shows a slight increase
from all countries except Great Britain. French
language films numbered 104. British dropped
to 17, which includes American films made in
England. There were none after war was
declared. The number of purely United States
feature pictures was approximately 508, in-
cluding 60 Westerns, which is slightly higher
than in 1937.
CANADIAN
EXCHANGE TERRITORIES
Toronto Territory
Toronto, in addition to having head offices
for all Canadian distributors, also has Toronto
branches to supply the Province of Ontario.
This Province has 389 theaters, which is an
increase of 22 over 1938. Of these. Ill thea-
ters are situated in Toronto. About 40 per
cent of Canadian film rentals are derived from
this Province. The leading cities, other than
Toronto, are Hamilton, Ottawa, Windsor,
Kitchener, St. Catharines, Oshawa, London
and Brantford. There is a Provincial Censor
Board of four members, and censorship is the
highest in Canada, viz., $6.00 per reel for
"foreign" sound films and $3.00 per reel for
British pictures. Even trailers are charged
$3.00 per reel for censorship, and there is also
a charge for censoring advertising "per sub-
ject." News Reels were reduced to one dollar
each in June 1939. Ontario amusement tax
was abolished in 1937. The 35 mm. exchange
license is $100.00 a year, and 16 mm. ex-
changes pay $50.00 a year. The censorship
fee for 16 mm. is $2.00 per reel of 400 feet.
Montreal Territory
Quebec Province is the second territory in
Canada as regards rentals. The number of
theaters in December, 1939, is 219. Approxi-
mately 20 theaters showed French pictures
exclusively and about one-third of the balance
used both French and English dialogue pic-
tures. A newly constructed Censorship Board
was operating in 1938 and some pictures used
in all other provinces were refused a license in
Quebec because of their strict ideals in social
matters, such as divorce. This strict censor-
ship has also been applied to French-dialogue
pictures. Children under sixteen years of age
are prohibited from attending picture shows.
The exchange fee is $200.00 a year and the
censorship fee $3.00. There are no regula-
tions with regard to 16 mm. The principal
centres of population are Montreal, Quebec,
Three Rivers, Sherbrooke, Hull and Verdun.
Saint John Territory
St. John territory includes New Brunswick,
Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, and New-
foundland. The number of theaters operating
at the end of 1939 was 128. The largest of
these were located in such cities as St. John,
N. B.; Halifax, N. S.; Moncton, N. B.; Sidney,
N. S.; Glace Bay, N. S„ and St. John's, New-
foundland. Nova Scotia charges a censorship
fee of $3.00 per reel for 35 mm. and $1.50 per
reel for 16 mm. New Brunswick fees are $2.50
per reel for 35 mm. and $1.00 per reel for 16
mm. Exchange licenses are $250.00 in both
New Brunswick and Nova Scotia. There are
neither exchange licenses nor censorship fees
in Prince Edward Island and Newfoundland.
However, film entering Newfoundland pays an
import duty of 65 per cent on a valuation of
$4.00 per reel, which is double what it was
in previous years.
Winnipeg Territory
The Winnipeg territory includes the eastern
half of Saskatchewan, the Province of Mani-
toba, and a portion of Western Ontario. The
total number of theaters in this territory is 241,
which is practically the same as the year
before. Of these, 107 are open one or two
days a week and 33 are open only in the
summer. Winnipeg. Regina and Saskatoon
are the three largest cities in this territory. The
Manitoba and Saskatchewan Censor Boards
sit in Winnipeg, where the exchanges have
their offices. The Manitoba censorship fee is
$2.00 per reel for 35 mm. and the same fee
for 16 mm. Saskatchewan charges $2.00 for
35 mm. and $1.50 for 16 mm. (750 feet). The
exchange license fee in each Province is
$250.00.
Calgary Territory
Exchange offices in Calgary supply Western
Saskatchewan, the Province of Alberta, and
seven towns in British Columbia. The number
of theaters operating at the end of 1939 was
213. Of these, about 28 are open in summer
only and 130 operate only one or two days
a week. The Alberta censorship charge is
$4.00 per reel for 35 mm. and $2.00 per reel
for 16 mm. Exchange license fee in Alberta
is $250.00.
Vancouver Territory
Vancouver territory is the smallest in Can-
ada and is confined to the Province of British
Columbia. The total number of theaters is
104. Vancouver and Victoria are the largest
cities. The exchange license fee is $300.00
and the censorship fee is $3.00 per reel for
35 mm. and $1.50 per reel for 16 mm. All
distributors have their offices in Vancouver,
where there is a special film building for
housing exchanges, as there is in all other
Provinces.
1084
WHO CAN PROPHESY?
A SURVEY OF ENGLAND AFTER FOUR MONTHS OF WAR
By
I ERNEST W. FREDMAN
Managing Editor of The Daily Film Renter
OBEDIENT to the request of Jack Alicoate, I am writing this article for the
Year Book — but in the full knowledge that, even before it is published, it
may be completely out of date.
How to prophesy what is going to happen
in England in 1940. when this country is in
the throes of a gigantic struggle, is something
that is not easily undertaken, and he would
indeed be a brave man who could venture
to delve into events even three months ahead.
So I don't propose to attempt the task, but
will prefer to deal with matters as they
stand at the end of this year of grace, 1939,
merely hoping that in the succeeding year
they will be no worse.
Curiously enough, this country, from the
film industry point of view, has not suffered
quite as much as had been anticipated.
When war broke out at the beginning of Sep-
tember, and there was an immediate shut-
down of kinemas all over the United Kingdom,
it was feared the dislocation of business would
continue for a long time. Air-raids on a large
and terrifying scale had been freely expected,
and, very naturally, the authorities wished to
take every precaution to see the public were
protected, and, under those circumstances,
felt that to allow large numbers of people to
congregate under one roof would not be a
desirable thing. But, as the feared air attacks
did not materialize, there was a lightening
of restrictions, gradually resulting in a revision
to almost normal conditions.
Exhibitors first had their daily playing time
restricted; then that rule was removed — and
it is now ancient history how the kinemas
situated at the hub of West End life were
finally permitted to remain open till practically
their normal closing hour, with the consequent
result that business at the box-office took an
upward trend. If figures are as yet not up
to 100 per cent of pre-war takings, this much
can be said — that the fall-off has only been
in the neighborhood of some 10 per cent,
which, I think you will agree, is an amaz-
ingly good state of affairs.
In other directions, though, the industry
has suffered, notably as regards production of
British films. At the outbreak of hostilities
many studios were commandeered for wot
purposes; artistes and technicians were in
some cases called to the colors, and a state
of complete bewilderment existed. There was
tremendous uncertainty as to whether the
Quota Act would remain in force, and pro-
ducers spent three long months anxiously
pleading to be told what the Government's
intentions were in respect of the Films Act,
their fears only being allayed almost at the
end of November last. As a result, plans for
the making of films were held up, techni-
cians disbanded, and a general state of chaos
in the British film industry ensued. Even as
I write, late in December, that feeling of
uncertainty is still unfortunately very much
to the fore.
The Quota Act is officially announced to
continue till March 31, but the President of
the Board of Trade intends some alternative
scheme to take its place after that, and so
all sorts of propositions are being produced
for Government consideration. The one most
favored is some form of Credit Bank, from
which reputable producers with approved rec-
ords, could draw money for film purposes
at a reasonable rate of interest, but at the
moment is as nebulous as all the other
schemes, and nothing official has been arrived
at. The Government, however, are known to
be anxious that the British film industry shall
continue and not fall into the dreadful state
of suspension that occurred in 1914, and which
put back British production for so many years.
Exhibitors are also now taking a hand in
the creation of British pictures, and are busy
discussing with producers a scheme whereby
the latter can get credit facilities upon con-
tracts which exhibitors will pledge themselves
to give for a certain number of films to be
made in one year.
So you will see how difficult it is for me,
writing as I am in the middle of December,
to forecast what is likely to happen to British
film production, because the situation changes
with bewildering rapidity. Then again, the
film industry is animated anxiously over a
1085
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NEWSPAPER IN THE UNITED
KINGDOM . .
In WAR
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MOVING PICTURE NEWS
EDITED BY
ERNEST W. FREDMAN
REACHES EVERY PRODUCER, DISTRIBUTOR
AND EXHIBITOR IN THE UNITED KINGDOM
100 PER CENT CIRCULATION
SUBSCRIPTION $15.00 A YEAR
PUBLISHING OFFICES
127-133 WARDOUR ST.
LONDON, W.I., ENGLAND
possible shortage of American product. Films
imported into this country average about 400
a year, but, with the American companies
only allowed to take out SO per cent oi their
normal money, leaving the remainder to be
frozen, it is felt this restriction may handicap
Hollywood to the extent that they will not
be able to embark upon such ambitious pro-
grams as in the past, while some diminution
of quality is also feared. At the moment the
latter result is not so greatly envisaged, in
consequence of reports received here from
Hollywood to the effect that the majors have
agreed to make as many pictures as for-
merly, but it is nevertheless a possibility that
has to be taken into account. It is easy,
therefore, to imagine the exhibitors' anxiety
and their desire to see a flourishing produc-
tion industry.
Naturally, with the country at war, there
are restrictions, and many emergency regu-
lations which make the lot of the exhibitor
no easier. He has, for instance, to make do
with the very minimum of lighting, because,
with the fear of air-raids, the black-out system
is necessary, and patrons are lothe to stir
from their houses to embark on the hazardous
peril of the streets. Fortunately, the lure of
motion pictures has become such a habit
that the public are rolling up to the box-
office almost as much as in pre-war days.
The relations between the various associa-
tions, such as the Cinematograph Exhibitors'
Association and the Kinematograph Renters
Society, in particular with Government bodies,
have been very cordial and most helpful.
There has been no desire on the part of
officialdom to make things difficult, with the
consequence that sympathetic Government
heads have paved the way on many occa-
sions for much easier working of the various
restrictions that have been brought into force.
The trade also work in extremely well with
the Film Section of the Ministry of Information,
whose chief. Sir Joseph Ball, has gratefully
acknowledged what they have done in the
way of making his job easy.
Very little actual propaganda footage has
been made; the most notable subject was,
"The Lion Has Wings," which had so much
entertainment appeal that it could hardly be
called a propaganda picture. It was a remark-
able success in all halls, depicting as it did
the breathless daring of the Royal Air Force.
Outside of that, there has been hardly any-
thing of a flag-wagging nature.
British films, prior to the outbreak of war,
were making strong headway, and, it is
hoped, will continue to do so immediately
schemes which are now being mulled over
come into actual operation. There is plenty
of studio accommodation available to take
care of whatever number of pictures is em-
barked upon.
American units, such as Metro-Goldwyn-
Mayer, who made three outstanding films
which have all been great box-office suc-
cesses, have packed up, and it is doubtful
whether they will restart their activities for
some little while, at any rate until the situa-
tion becomes clearer. Warner Bros., though,
have restarted their Teddington Studios, and,
even as I write, David Rose, British head of
Paramount, is in consultation with his chief
concerning the making of pictures for the
company's quota in this country. Other plans
are being formulated by the various American
concerns for the continuance of their obligatory
footage.
One of the main features of the year from
the exhibiting point of view has been the
incorporation of seven of the big Paramount
theaters into the Odeon circuit, a deal which
has run into many millions of dollars. The
halls in question will form a very useful
adjunct to the Odeon chain.
The other major circuits have done well
during 1939. John Maxwell, with his vast
circuit of 500 theaters, is, of course, the leader
in this direction, earnings attaining a record,
while Gaumont-British and Odeon have both
done exceptionally well from the profit making
point of view.
New kinemas still continue to be built,
although naturally there hasn't been much
done in this direction since war started, but
the total of 4,500 theaters in this country now
includes some of the finest specimens of archi-
tecture to be seen in the world.
So, summing up, we face 1940 with hope
and a good deal of confidence. I don't think
we shall make anything like the number of
pictures that we did in pre-war days. You
must remember that in 1937-1938 British studios
made no less than 228 films, but in the six
months from April to October in 1938-1939 only
78 were registered, and it is impossible to
envisage more than another 20 before the end
of MaTch, which means we shall be very con-
siderably down on our average. Still, who
can tell? If the fates are kind — and we are
hoping they will be — the industry will prosper.
From the American point of view, beyond
the fact that 50 per cent of their remittances
are frozen, the distributors have nothing to
fear. Good American pictures still retain their
popularity, and the top-flight stars are just
as popular as ever. The public here are very
faithful to their old favorites, and year in and
year out they seem to continue in favor.
In closing this article. I would like to
express the profound hope that 1940 will see
peace and a healthier understanding between
nations — that the end of aggression will be
in sight, and that the peoples of this earth
will be able to live in harmony and without
continual fear of war. Only in that way will
industry go ahead, and in that respect the
British film industry is in no different position
from any other.
BRITISH COMPANIES
AND THEIR PERSONNEL
Associated British Picture
Corp., Ltd.
Film House, Wardour St., London, W. 1.
Chairman and Managing Director. . .John Maxwell
Secretary George H. Gaunt
DIRECTORS
Sir Clement Kinloch-Cooke. Bart, K. B. E.. Je-
rome Denny Bright. Maurice Arthur Dent. William
Douglas Scrimgeour, C. A.. Robert Gordon Simp-
son. M. C. C. A.
Associated British Film
Distributors, Ltd.
A.T.P. House, 169-171, Oxford St., London, W. 1.
Chairman S. L. Courtauld. M. C.
Managing: Director Reginald P. Baker. F.C.A.
Secretary Gordon W. G. Rayner
General Manager N. Henry
Press Representative M. Danisehewsky
DIRECTORS
Major J. S. Courtauld, M.C.M.P., B. Henry.
Anglo-American Film
Corporation, Ltd.
123 Wardour Street, London, W. 1.
Chairman Louis Jackson
Managing Director Gerald Freeman
Director S. Sharpe, F.C.A.
Baird Television, Ltd.
Worsley Bridge Road, London, S. E., 26.
Chairman Sir Harry Greer
President John Dogie Baird
Managing Director H. Clayton
British Instructional Films,
Ltd.
(Sub-standard Alms and equipment)
103-11 Wardour St., London, W. 1.
Secretary H. G. Howell
DIRECTORS
John Maxwell. Chairman: William Douglas
Scrimgeour, William J. Gell.
Columbia Pictures
Corporation, Ltd.
139 Wardour Street, London, W. 1.
DIRECTORS
Jos. Friedman. Harry Cohn. Jack Cohn. H. Syd-
ney Wright, A. Schneider. M. Thorpe, G. R. Webb.
Columbia (British) Produc-
tions, Ltd.
139 Wardour St., London, W. 1.
Registered Office. .18 Bloomsbury Square, London,
W. C. 1
Production Office. .139 Wardour St.. London. W. 1.
Managing Director Joseph Friedman
Secretary and Prod. Contact. . .George J. Maidment
General Sales Manager M. Thorpe
Publicity H. F. Kessler-Howes
Gaumont-British Distribu-
tors, Ltd.
Film House, 142-50 Wardour St., London, W. 1.
Chairman Isidore Ostrer
Managing Director Mark Ostrer
Secretary W. B. Robinson
DIRECTORS
Maurice Ostrer, Leon Gaumont, David Ostrer.
British Lion Film Corp., Ltd.
76-78 Wardour St., London, W. 1.
Chairman and Managing Director .... S. W. Smith
Secretary L. C. Sennitt, A. C. A.
General Manager S. A. Myers
DIRECTORS
N. L. Nathanson. I. Charles Flower.
British National Films, Ltd.
15 Hanover Square, London, W. 1.
Associate Producer Roland Gillett
Production Manager Anthony Nelson Keys
Publicity Director Jimmy Hutchinson
Scenarists Capt. A. R. Rawlinson.
Miss Bridget Boland
Secretary C. P. Rickman
DIRECTORS
Lady Yule. John Corfield, G. W. Parish.
General Film Distributors,
Ltd.
127-133 Wardour St., London, W. 1.
Chairman J. Arthur Rank. D. L„ J. P.
Managing Director C. M. Wool!
General Sales Manager John Woolf
Publicity Manager J. Specterman
Secretary H. Rogers
DIRECTORS
P. Lindenberg. L. W. Farrow, Maurice Woolf.
S. F. Ditcham.
GAS Films, Ltd.
127-133 Wardour St., London, W.
Secretary
H. Rogers
DIRECTORS
J. Arthur Rank, D. L., J. P., Chairman: C. M.
Woolf. Barrington C. Gain, S. F. Ditcham, Capt.
the Hon. Richard Norton.
1088
Grand \ational Pictures, Ltd.
Wallace House, 113/117 Wardour St.,
London, W. 1.
Chairman Maurice J. Wilson
Secretary W. S. Denton-Clarke. F.C.A.
General Sales Manager Jules Simmons
DIRECTORS
Maurice J. Wilson, Jeffrey Bernerd, G. S. Ogg,
J. A. Carter, E. Russell.
RCA Photophone, Ltd.
Electra House, Victoria Embankment
London, W. C. 2.
Managing: Director Bernhard Gardner
Secretary P. A. Tumor
DIRECTORS
J. Moxon Broad, F. R. Deakins, B. E. G. Mit-
tell, R. H. Oxley, H. L. Sommerer.
Alexander Korda Film Pro-
ductions, Ltd.
Denham, ITxbridge, Middlesex.
Chairman and Managing Director . Alexander Korda
Secretary Basil Bleck
Production Manager David Cunynghame
Supervising Film Editor William Hornbeck
Art Director Vincent Korda
Film Director Zoltan Korda
DIRECTORS
Hugh Quennell, H. G. Boxall, Zoltan Korda.
London Film Productions,
Limited
Denham, Uxbridge, Middlesex.
Chairman and Managing Director . Alexander Korda
DIRECTORS
Alexander Korda, John Richard Sutro, E. H.
George, J. C. Jackson, W. Mortimer.
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pic-
tures, Ltd.
19 Tower Street, London, W. C. 2.
Managing Director S. Eckman, Jr.
Secretary M. Raymond
DIRECTORS
A. M. Loew, J. R. Rubin, James C. Squier.
Paramount British Produc-
tions, Ltd.
162/170 Wardour St., London, W. 1.
Managing Director David Rose
Paramount Film Service, Ltd.
162/170 Wardour St., London, W. 1.
Secretary P. D. Cornwall
DIRECTORS
David Rose (Chairman), E. Ayres, C. F. Karuth.
Pascal Film Productions, Ltd.
10 Bolton St., W. 1.
Telephone: Mayfair 1919 and 0605
Cables: Pascalfi, London
Managing Director. Producer-Director,
Gabriel Pascal
Production Manager Phil C. Samuel
Pathe Pictures, Ltd.
103-11 Wardour St., London, W. 1.
Chairman John Maxwell
Managing Director W. J. Gell
Director William Douglas Scrimgeour
Secretary H. G. Howell
Pathe Equipment, Ltd.
173 Wardour St., London, W. 1.
Chairman W. J. Gell
Secretary H. G. Howell
DIRECTORS
W. D. Bowden. E. Lightfoot, R. A. E. Luard.
RKO-Radio Pictures, Ltd.
2/4 Dean St., London, W. 1.
Secretary G. W. Dawson
DIRECTORS
Ralph Hanbury (Chairman and Managing Di-
rector), G. J. Schaefer, Alfred Clark, Randle F.
Holme. G. W. Dawson.
Twentieth Century-Fox Film
Co., Ltd.
31/32 Soho Square, London, W. 1.
Secretary K. N. Hargreaves
DIRECTORS
Francis L. Harley (Managing Director), Sidney
R. Kent, W. J. Hutchinson, W. C. Michel, R.
Sutton Dawes.
Twentieth Century Produc-
tions, Ltd.
31/32 Soho Square, London, W 1.
Publicity Director Hugh Findlay
DIRECTORS
Robert T. Kane (Managing Director), Leslie
F. Baker, R. Sutton-Dawes, K. N. Hargreaves.
United Artists Corp., Ltd.
Film House, Wardour St., London, W. 1.
DIRECTORATE
M. Silverstone, Chairman; E. T. Carr, George
Archibald, J. P.. Joint Managing Directors; Mary
Pickford, Charles Chaplin, Samuel Goldwyn, Alex-
ander Korda, Oscar Deutsch.
I nivorsal Pictures, Ltd.
127-133 Wardour St., London, W. 1.
Chairman J. Arthur Rank, D. L., J. P.
Managing Director S F. Ditcham
Secretary H. Rogers
DIRECTORS
J. Arthur Rank, D. L., J. P., C. M. Woolf,
Maurice Woolf, H. Rogers
Warner Bros. Pictures., Ltd.
Warner House, Wardour Street, London, W 1.
Chairman Max Milder
Secretary W. Turner
DIRECTORS
J. Walton Brown, D. E. Griffiths, Dr. E. G. M.
Fletcher.
Western Electric Co., Ltd.
Bush House, Aldewych, London, W. C. 2.
Managing Director P. L. Palmerton
Secretary J. H. Somake
DIRECTORS
E. M. Hall, H. L. Marsterson, F. C. Leach, J.
H. Somake, T. K. Stevenson.
10S9
BRITISH STUDIOS
AND THEIR PERSONNEL
Associated British Picture
Corp., Ltd.
Elstree Studios
I'.hiHi. mi Wood, Hertfordshire
Chairman and Managing Director. . .John Maxwell
Secretary George H. Gaunt
Director of Production W. C. Mycroft
Studio Manager Joe Grossman
Chief Film Editor A. C. Hammond
Laboratory Business Manager C. Parfrey
Laboratory Technical Manager G. Anderson
Musical Director Harry Acres
Cameramen :
Claude Friese-Greene, Walter James Harvey
Ealing Studios, Ltd.
Ealing W. 5., London
Chairman Stephen L. Courtauld. M. C.
Managing Director. . . .Reginald P. Baker. F. C. A.
Director of Production Michael Balcon
Chief Production Executive S. C. Balcon
Secretary G. W. G. Rayner
Studio Manager Ernest Marlow
Chief Engineer S. G. Double
Set Constructionist Ernest Mallow
Chief Cameraman R. Neame
Chief Sound Engineer Eric Williams
Press Representative M. Danischewsky
Music Director Ernest Irving
Chief Scenario Editor Major Meade
Cutting Room Manager E. A. Aldridge
DIRECTORS
Major E. S. Courtauld, M. C M. P., Michael
Balcon, Gordon W. G. Rayner.
Associated Talking Pictures,
Ltd.
Ealing Studios, Ealing, London, W. 5.
Chairman Stephen L. Courtauld. M. C.
Managing Director. . . .Reginald P. Baker, F. C. A.
Secretary Gordon W. G. Rayner
Press Representative M. Danischewsky
DIRECTORS
Major J. S. Courtauld. M. C. M. P., Basil Dean,
Michael Balcon, Roger Ould, Gordon W. G. Ray-
ner.
British Lion Film Corp., Ltd.
Lion Studio, Beaeonsfleld, Bucks.
Managing Director S. W. Smith
Studio Manager A. W. Osborne
Production Supervisor H. Smith
Sound Engineer H. V. King
Publicity Manager K. Green
D. & P. Studios, Limited
Denham Studios,
Denhain, Uxbridge. Middlesex.
Secretary R. H. Harrison
DIRECTORS
E. Ronald Crammond. E. H. George (Managing
Director), Sir Connop Guthrie, Bart.. K. B. E..
E. H. Lever, Capt. The Hon. Richard Norton.
J. Arthur Rank, D. L„ J. P., Spencer M. Reis.
Gainsborough Pictures
(1928), Ltd.
Film House, 142-50 Wardour St., London, W. 1.
Chairman Mark Ostrer
Director Maurice Ostrer
Secretary W. B. Robinson
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
British Studios, Ltd.
Denham Uxbridge, Middlesex.
Producer Victor Saville
Production Manager Harold G. Boxall
Casting Manager Harold Huth
Publicity Manager Geoffrey Carter
DIRECTORS
H. Sydney Wright. G. R. Webb. Robert Ritchie.
Edwin Day.
Dtettlefold Studios
Hurst Grove, Walton-on-Thames, Surrey
General Manager M. C. Nicholson
Sound Recorder Harold Fuller
Art Director R. Holmes Paul
Chief Electrician G. Luker
Chief Cameraman Geoffrey Faithful
Floor Manager C. J. Brand
Went bleu Film Studio, Ltd.
Wembley Park, Middlesex.
Managing Director:
Francis L. Harley, K. N. Hargreaves
Warner Bros., Teddington
Studios
Teddington, Middlesex, England.
Producer A. M. Salomon
Secretary F. V. Royce, F. C. A.
Production Manager H. S. Richmond
Scenario Editor H. Brock Williams
Publicity Gayne Dexter
Cameraman Basil Emmott
Recording Engineer E. A. Royls
Film Editor Leslie Norman
Art Director N. Arnold
DIRECTORS
Max Milder. Mr. E. G. M. Fletcher, F. V. Royce.
Weltvyn Studios, Ltd.
Welwyn Garden City, Herts.
General Manager W. Ward
Chief Engineer P. Abbott
Master Carpenter E. Eldred
Sound Engineer H. Benson
Recordist F. McNally
DIRECTORS
J. Norman Parker, W. Ward, J. H. McDonald.
1090
BRITISH CIRCUITS
AND THEIR PERSONNEL
Associated British Cinemas,
Ltd.
(Controlled by Associated British Picture Corp.,
Ltd.)
30-31 Golden Square, London, W. 1.
Chairman and Managing' Director. . .John Maxwell
General Manager Arthur S. Moss
Secretary Eric Lightf oot
DIRECTORS
Sir Clement Konloeh-Cooke, Bart, K. B. E., Je-
rome Denny Bright, William Douglas Scrimgeour.
Robert Gordon Simpson.
Denman Picture Houses, Ltd.
Film House, 142-50 Wardour St., London, W. 1.
President Isidore Ostrer
Chairman Mark Ostrer
Secretary W. B. Robinson
DIRECTORS
Col. H. A. Micklem, C. B., M. C. M. G., D. S. O.,
R. H. Gillespie, Maurice Ostrer.
Gaumont-British Picture
Corp., Ltd.
Film House, 143-50 Wardour St., London, W. 1.
Chairman Isidore Ostrer
Managing Director Mark Ostrer
Secretary W. B. Robinson
DIRECTORS
Maurice Ostrer. Col. H. A. Micklen. C. B., C. M.
G., D. S. 0., S. R. Kent, Dixon Boardman, A.
E. Messer, R. T. Kane, 0. H. C. Balfour, C. M.
G., C. H. Dade.
The Granaila Theaters,
Limited
36 Golden Square, London, W. 1.
Chairman Sidney L. Bernstein
DIRECTORS
Cecil G. Bernstein, Maurice King, Richard J.
Winder.
EXECUTIVES
H. C. Fontaine Film Booking Director
Ewart Hodgson . Advertising and Publicity Director
J. W. Barber Commercial Department
Joseph Warton Company Secretary
Edward Porter Personnel Director
Tony Lowry Variety and Musical Director
W. M. Pope Chief Engineer
Moss Empires, Ltd.
Cranborn Mansions, London, W. C. 2.
Secretary David Simpson. S. S. C.
DIRECTORS
James John Gillespie, Chairman: Richard Henry
Gillespie. George Black.
MANAGING DIRECTORS
John Thompson, Walter Payne. Alfred Claude
Bromhead. Reginald Charles Bromhead. Mark Os-
trer.
Odeon Theaters, Limited
49 Park Lane, London, W. 1.
Chairman Oscar Deutsch
Secretary J. Davis
DIRECTORS
F. Stanley Bates, The Hon. Peter R. Aitken,
S. A. Bennett, J. A. Rank, W. G. Elcock, F. C.
A., George Archibald. J. P., L. W. Farrow.
Gaumont Super Cinemas, Ltd.
Film House, 142-50 Wardour St., London, W. 1.
Chairman Mark Ostrer
Secretary W. B. Robinson
DIRECTORS
Maurice Ostrer, Arthur W. Jarrat, Phillip Hyams,
Sid Hyams, Major A. J. Gale.
General Theater Corp., Ltd.
Film House, 142-50 Wardour St., London, W. 1.
President Isidore Ostrer
Managing Director Mark Ostrer
Secretary W. B. Robinson
DIRECTORS
Maurice Ostrer, George Black.
Provincial Cinematograph
Theaters, Ltd.
New Gallery House,
123 Regent St., London, W. 1.
Secretary E. A. Crisp
DIRECTORS
Mark Ostrer, Chairman and Managing Director:
Sir William F. Jury, Maurice Ostrer, Col. H. A.
Micklem, C. B., C. M. G„ D. S. O., A. W. Jarratt,
A. E. Messer, C. B. E.
United Picture Theaters, Ltd.
New Gallery House,
123 Regent St., London, W. 1.
Secretary E. A. Crisp
DIRECTORS
Mark Ostrer, Chairman and Managing Director:
A. W. Jarratt, A. E. de B. Jennings.
1091
OWING TO WAR-TIME (
INDISPENSABLE TO T H It
Since 1907
Over thirty-one years "Kinematograph Weekly" has
been the leading Journal of the British Film Trade.
Indispensable alike to Exhibitor and Technician,
every issue contains a considered and accurate sum-
mary of all the important trade activities of the week.
If you want reliable information regarding future
developments; independent and unbiased news from
the studios; details of new films long before the trade
shows, then you must read
KINEMATOGRAPH
WEEKLY I
IDEAL KINEMA
Is the monthly supplement to "Kinematograph Weekly" and
is a complete guide to the latest activities in Kinema design,
decoration and equipment.
1092
CHANGES, MORE THAN EVER
AMERICAN FILM EXECUTIVE
THE "RED GUIDE"
"KINEMATOGRAPH YEAR BOOK" — the famous
"Red Guide" to the Kinema Industry — should be on
the desk of every executive in the business.
In its pages are presented the salient facts and
figures about the British Trade — exhaustive informa-
tion from every angle.
KINEMATOGRAPH YEAR BOOK— 1940
KINEMATOGRAPH
I WEEKLY
Registered at the G.P.O. as a Newspaper First in 1907.
. . . First ever since. Subscription Rate . . . $12 per
annum. ,
85, LONG ACRE. LONDON, W. C. 2.
1093
In pursuit of Foreign Business it is
essential for you to know two things:-
1. What American traders are
doing in France and elsewhere.
2. What French and Continental
traders are doing.
RAPHIE
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ments.
1094
AN INTERNATIONAL SURVEY OF
MOTION PICTURE
MARKETS
The following survey of the World's film markets was compiled
from data supplied by the Motion Picture Division of the Bureau
of Foreign and Domestic Commerce. Lists of importers, distribu
tors, etc. were obtained in a FILM DAILY world-wide survey.
Algeria
LEGISLATION — Algeria is a French possession
and regulations affecting- the importation of films
into France are applicable.
CENSORSHIP — A military censorship has been
in effect since the outbreak of the war.
COMPETITION — French films predominate, fol-
lowed by U. S. product.
Argentina
LEGISLATION — No quota of contingent laws
applying to films.
CENSORSHIP — No national board; each munci-
pality censors own films. An agreement with
Chile provides that films may be barred on pro-
test by either country.
COMPETITION — American. 66 per cent; Ar-
gentina, 12 per cent: French, 10.5 per cent; Brit-
ish, four per cent: German, two per cent.
COPYRIGHT RELATIONS — Inter-American
Copyright Convention of Buenos Aires, 1910, ap-
plies.
PRODUCTION — Estimated 55 to 60 features
produced during 1939.
TAXATION — Distributors' income tax is five
per cent on profits; sales tax on accessories is 1.25
per cent; royalty tax is five per cent on remit-
tances to parent companies. Exposed film duty is
15 gold pesos per kilogram. Unexposed film duty
is 42 per cent advalorem on an arbitrary valuation
of 4.80 gold pesos per kilogram.
THEATERS — There are 1,208 theaters, most of
which are wired for sound.
Distributors
BUENOS AIRES
Argentina Sono Film, Ayacucho 364.
Argos Cinematografica Argentina, Lavalle 1924.
Ariston Internacional Films, Tucuman 1946.
Artistas Unidos South American Corporation, La-
valle 1747 (Importers).
Bonomo Film, Viamonte 1851.
Buenos Aires Film, Lavalle 2015.
C. I. F. E. S. A., Rio Bamba 423.
Cinematografia Julio Joly, Lavalle 1932 (Im-
porters) .
Cinematografia Valle, Gavilan 1079.
Cinematografica Continental, Sarmiento 1983.
Cinematografica Star, Viamonte 1837.
Cinematografica Terra, Ayacucho 551.
Columbia Pictures, Lavalle 2086 (Importers).
Compania Cinematografica Almar, Lavalle 2037.
Cine Argentino, Corrientes 576.
Condon Film S. A., Ayacucho 440.
Corona Film, Lavalle 2072.
Distribuidora General de Films, Ayacucho 480.
Distribuidora Hispano Mexieana, Ayacucho 537.
Ernemann Film, Sarmiento 2580.
Fenix Film, Castelli 292.
Filmreich, Rivadavia 1635.
Filmofono Argentina, Lavalle 2102.
Fox Film de la Argentina, Lavalle 1872 (Im-
porters) .
Horizonte Film, Ayacucho 385.
Imperial Film, Andonacgui 2845.
Ital Film, Lavalle 2057.
Kron Film. Lavalle 2057.
La Sud Americana, Rio Bamba 333.
Lumiton. Cangallo 1856.
Mayo Film, B. Mitre 1956.
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer de la Argentina, Sarmiento
2566 (Importers).
Metropolis Films, Junin 387.
Monitor Pictures C°. Lavalle 2013 (Importers).
Monogram Film, Ayacucho 385 (Importers).
New York Film Exchange S. A., Corrientes 2042
(Importers) .
Nueva Cinegrafica Hispano-Americana, Lavalle
1974.
Oriente Film. Sarmiento 2578.
P. A. F., Lavalle 1688.
Pampa Film. Ayacucho 352.
Paramount Films S. A., Ayacucho 518 (Import-
ers) .
Piesco Nicolas. Pichincha 1382.
R. K. O. Radio Pictures, Sarmiento 1755 (Im-
porters) .
Radiolux S. A.. Sarmiento 1853.
Radium Film Corporation. Ayacucho 528.
Rayo Film, Viamonte 1851.
Risso Cinegrafica Argentina. Tucuman 2040.
Royal Film, Tucuman 1969.
S. I. D. E., Ayacucho 444.
S. I. F. A., Diag. R. Saenz Pcna 825.
Sud America Film. Corrientes 1915.
Ufa Film de la Argentina, Ayacucho 551 (Im-
porters) .
Universal Films Argentina S. A., Lavalle 1860
(Importers) .
Vaccari Film. Laprida 1966.
Vanguardia. Uruguay 466.
Warner Bros. First National S. Films, Tucuman
1938 (Importers).
Producers
BUENOS AIRES
Argentina Pictures, Diag R. Saenx Pena 760.
Atlantida Films, Corrientes 922.
Atlas, Jorge Nembery 1660.
Baires Film. Av de Mayo 1333.
Cifesa Argentina, Rio Bamba 423.
Cinematografica Argentina S. A., Ayacucho 364.
Cinematografica Julio Joly, Lavalle 1932.
Cinematografica Valle, Gavilan 1079.
1095
0 m liJiiiua
MOTION PICTURE I ^^k^T
^ 1 AUTHORITY | ^
Incorporating "EVERYONES," Australian Variety and Show World
The only trade medium, published weekly, which com-
pletely covers the markets of
AUSTRALIA and
NEW ZEALAND
Now incorporating "Everyones" and providing a live-wire
news service to exhibitors and distributors, impartially
viewing the activities of each. "The Film Weekly" enjoys
the full confidence of the entire Australasian trade.
Features: — Real news, presented by journalists possessing
expert knowledge of every angle of the entertainment
business; Candid criticisms of pictures, from the box-office
angle; Regular sections on theatre and technical develop-
ments; Showmanship section; Production news and an
up-to-the-minute treatment of overseas developments, by
special correspondents in New York, Hollywood and
London.
TRULY THE DOORWAY TO THE ANTIPODEAN
FILM MARKET
AND "The Film Weekly's" influence sweeps, too, into
Japan, China, Dutch East Indies, India, the Malay States.
Wherever film men travel in the Far East they find their
news this medium.
Founded by
MARTIN C.
BRENNAN
Managing Editor
ERIC SOLOMON
Published every
Thursday at the of-
fices, Second Floor,
Derwent House, 136
Liverpool Street (op-
posite Mark Foy's),
Sydney, Australia,
P. O. Box 2608 EE.
Cables "Film Week-
ly," Sydney. Sub-
scription 20/- per
year; overseas. U.S.A.
$10; Great Britain
30/-; Foreign 40 /-
per year. 'Phone MA
12J8. Advertising
rates on application.
Cheques, Money Or-
ders, etc., to The
Film Weekly Pty. Ltd.
1096
Cenit Film, 25 de Mayo 168.
Circulo Azul S. A. Cinematografica. Rawson 359.
Compania Argentina de Films "Rio de la Plata,"
Uruguay 158.
Condor Films S. A., Cinematogrrafiea, Ayacucho
440.
Continental Film, Malabia 2545.
Corporation Cinematogrrafiea Argentina, Rio
Bamba 333.
Corporacion Cinematografica La Plata X Film,
Calle 43-581. La Plata.
Corporacion Francis Mariscal, Diag. R. Saenz Pena
615.
E. F. A., Lima 1261.
Estudios San Miguel, Diag. R. Saenz Pena 832.
Fenix Film, Castelli 292.
Filmofono Argentina, Lavalle 2102.
Lumiton, Corrientes y B. Mitre, Munro.
Metropolis Film. Junin 387.
Monti Films. Lavalle 1974.
Neofon, Delgado 769.
Ona Film. Mattaeu 1620.
P. A. F., Lavalle 1688.
Pampa Film, Ayacucho 352.
Panamericana Internacional Film, Diag. R. Saenz
Pena 1119.
S. I. D. E., Campichuelo 553.
S I. F. A., Diag. R. Saenz Pena 825.
Sur Art Film Argentina. Florida 229.
Vanguardia, Uruguay 466.
Patria Film, Cerrito 466.
Shorts Producers
C. A. A. F., Esmeralda 155.
Cine Argentino, Corrientes 676.
Cinematografia Valle, Gavilan 1079.
Estudios Cristiani, J. E. Uriburu 460.
Empresa Filmadora Cordobesa, Corrientes 392,
Cordoba.
Filmoton. Cangallo 2315.
Organizacion Harma, 25 de Mayo 11.
Rog Film, Corrientes 222.
Sierras de Cordoba. Montevideo 76, Cordoba.
Tecno Film, Cervino 4431.
Australia
LEGISLATION — No Commonwealth quota laws
but two states. New South Wales and Victoria,
have quota restriction. In New South Wales,
distributors are required to distribute (when
available) Australian films equal to 3 per cent
of the total distributed; exhibitors must show
(when available) 2 Y2 per cent Australian films
and 15 per cent British films. In Victoria, re-
quirements are the same, except that the 16 per
cent British screen time is not required.
CENSORSHIP — The Commonwealth Film Cen-
sorship reviews all films, both 35 and 16 mm.
COMPETITION — United States. 86.3 per cent:
United Kingdom. 13 per cent; other countries, .7
per cent.
PRODUCTION — During 1939, six theaters were
produced.
TAXATION — Distributors' branches pay the
usual Australian business taxes, and, in addition,
are held respsonsible for income tax ton the
profits made in Australia by their producers.
THEATERS — There are about 1.400 theaters,
plus a number of touring shows, in Australia. All
are wired for sound. Seats total about 1,100,000.
Distributors and Importers
SYDNEY
Associated Distributors-British Empire Films. 251a
Pitt Street (Republic, Monogram, Cinesound,
Associated Talking Pictures, Capad Productions).
Atlas Films, 300 Pitt Street (Grand National,
Educational) .
Columbia Pictures Pty. Ltd., 251a Pitt Street
(Columbia) .
Fox Film Corporation (Australia) Pty. Ltd., 97-99
Goulburn Street (20th Century-Fox).
Gaumont British Dominions Film Distributors Pty.
Ltd., 97-99 Goulburn Street ( Gaumont-British,
Gainsborough, British and Dominions, British
Lion ) .
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pty. Ltd., 20-28 Chalmers
Street (Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer).
Metropolitan Films. 12 A Ocean House, Martin
Place (English and Continental Films).
FOREIGN MARKETS
National Films of N. S. W., 198-200 Pitt Street
(Independent productions from all countries).
Paramount Film Service Pty. Limited, 66-72 Res-
ervoir Street (Paramount Pictures).
RKO Radio Pictures (Australasia) Pty. Ltd.. 300
Pitt Street (RKO-Radio Pictures and subsid-
iaries) .
Scott Films, 200 Pitt Street (Independent pro-
ductions from all countries).
United Artists (Australasia) Pty. Ltd., 221 Eliza-
beth Street (Samuel Goldwyn, Charles Chaplin.
London, Selznick International, Mary Pickford,
Douglas Fairbanks, Sr., Walter Wanger, Hal
Roach, Edward Small, World Windows).
Universal Pictures Pty. Ltd., 499-501 Kent Street
(Universal, Expeditionary, Associated British,
O. B. Pictures, Famous Feature Films, Enter-
prise Productions).
Warner Brothers-First National Pictures Pty. Ltd.,
221 Elizabeth Street (Warner Bros., First Na-
tional, Warner and First National British, Vita-
phone Shorts).
Bahamas
LEGISLATION — None.
CENSORSHIP — Mild.
COMPETITION — American, about 80 per cent.
COPYRIGHT RELATIONS — Same as United
Kingdom.
PRODUCTION — None .
TAXATION — Customs duty. 1% per cent ad
valorem, provided bond be given for the re-expor-
tation of the films within 90 days.
THEATERS — Three, all wired for sound.
Barbados
LEGISLATION — None affecting motion pictures.
COMPETITION — American. 85 per cent, bal-
ance British.
THEATERS — Three theaters are wired for
sound.
Belgium
LEGISLATION — None affecting motion pictures.
CENSORSHIP — Only films to be shown to
minors must be censored.
COMPETITION — American films. 60 per cent:
French, 40 per cent.
PRODUCTION — Three features and a few shorts
produced in 1939.
TAXATION — Import duty is 0.52 francs a
meter. Transaction tax on imports is 2.75 per
cent ad valorem.
THEATERS — There are approximately 1,100
theaters, of which about 1,000 are wired for
sound.
Distributors and Importers
BRUSSELS
A. B.C.. Rue Royale, 296.
Adac Film. Rue Linnee, 56.
Adler Jacques Film, 21 Rue de la Prairie.
Agence Centrale Cinematographique — -Rue du Pont
Neuf, 19.
Alliance Cinematographique Europeenne, S.A.,
Place de L'YSer, 10.
Alliance — Cine, Rue de la Regence. " (Liege).
Alro Films, S.A.. 74, Place des Martyrs.
Artistes Associes, S.A.. Bd. du Jardin Botanique,
33.
Artes Films. Rue Dupont, 27.
Artistic-Films. Rue des Plantes. 118.
Atos Films, Boulevard du Jardin Botanique, 29.
Atlas Films, Quai au Foin, 33.
A. V.C. Films. Rue des Plantes, 121.
Belga Films. Rue de Namur, 18.
Belgo Luxenbourgeois Films, Rue des Plantes, 118.
Bodard Films. Rue des Plantes, 95.
B. I.F.O., Rue des Plantes, 75.
Bruxelles Films, Rue de Namur, 5.
C. C.B., Boulevard du Jardin Botanique, 32.
C.D.L., Rue Linnee, 56.
Central Film, Rue Linnee, 99.
Centrale Catholique du Film, Rue Traversiere, 6.
Centrale Socialiste du Cinema, Rue des Plantes, 71.
1097
Statistics as the following one:
MOTION PICTURES EXPLOITATION'S REVENUE
Product
Copies and
Shorts
Expenses
Publicity
Remnant
Number
Pictures
Average per
Picture
North Americans
12.000.000
2.000.000
«%
4.000.000
6.000.000
320
18.750
Argentines
6.000.000
30%
1 .800.000
(with copies)
4.200.000
45
93.333.33
European and
Independents
2.000.000
30%
600.000
(with copies)
1.400.000
150
(approxim. )
9.333.33
. . and all the activities of the South American Motion Pictures Industry are published in
DEL CINE MATO GRAF IS TA m
independent weekly film journal, with correspondents in all America, which offers to its
subscribers of North America an exact and reserved information.
SUBSCRIBE — send $20 for one year.
m DEL CINE AAA TO GRAF 1ST A 5
Chas. de Cruz
Editor
CORRIENTES 1309 BUENOS AIRES ARGENTINA
1098
Cine Radio, Place des Martyrs, 13.
Commercial Films, Rue Dupont, 58.
Continental Films, Places des Martyrs, 18.
Concordia Film, Rue Dupont.
Cobelcine, S.A., Rue Dupont, 10.
Darco Films, Rue Dupont. 30.
Delta Films, Quai du Commerce, 38.
Dinstributeurs Reunis (Les), Rue Dupont, 56.
Eraka Films. S.A., Rue des Plantes, 86.
Erka Films, S. A., Rues des Plantes, 86.
Eureka Films, Rue Frere-Orban, 27.
Europa Films, Rue Verte, 60.
Equitable-Films, Rue des Roses, 2.
Excelsior Films, Rue Verte, 215.
Exploitants Reums, Rue des Plantes, 29.
Fama-Film, Rue Verte, 76.
Filmavox, Rue Dupont, 26.
Films Brogmiez, Rue des Plantes. 67.
Forrester-Parant Productions, Boulevard Adolphe
Max, 98.
Fox Europa Productions, S.A.F., Place des Mar-
tyrs, 16.
Films, S.I.C.A., Rue St. Lazare, 84.
Films Zenith, Rue des Oeillets, 3.
Frank-Films, S.A.. Rue du Marais, 100.
Flandria Film. 39, Maria Doolegherstraat, Dix-
muide.
Filmeac, Rue des Plantes, 63.
Filmco, S.A., Rue des Roses, 2.
Grande Exclusivites Europeannes Gexe Films. Rue
des Plantes, 36.
Grandes Productions Artistiques, Rue des Plantes,
118.
Hendrickx Films, 67 Rue des Plantes.
Ideal Films, Rue St. Lazare, 86.
Imperator-Cine-Dostributors, Rue du Pont, 56.
I.M.P.A., Rue Linee. 134.
King-Films, Rue de Namur, 5.
Les Films Artistiques. Rue des Chartreux, 58.
Luna Films, Rue Verte, 58.
Lux-Films, Rue Locquengrhien, 34.
Lootens Films, Rue du Pont Neuf, 14.
Mayfair Film. Rue Linnee, 48.
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, S.A., Rue des Plantes, 4.
Meynckens Films, 115, Rue des Plantes.
Minerva Films, 130, Rue Linnee.
Mercure Film, Rue des Plantes, 89.
Mondal Films, 18, Place des Martyrs.
Monopol Film, 2 Rue des Oeillets.
N.Y.F.A., Rue des Plantes, 69.
Olympia Films, Rue des Plantes, 95.
Osso Films, S.A.B., Rue des Augustins, 23.
Paramount Films, 31, Chausee de Haecht.
Pathe Consortium Cinema, Rue Dupont, 12.
Pax Films, 62 Rue des Plantes.
P.D.C., Place des Martyrs, 19.
Phonora Films, 119, Rue des Plantes.
R.A.I., Rue Linnee, 28.
R.K.O. Films, Rue St. Lazare, 62.
Red Star Films, Rue Dupont, 27.
Real Film, Rue des Plantes, 60.
Royal Films, Rue des Hirondelles.
Succes Films, Due Dupont, 56.
Select Films. Rue des Hirondelles, 5.
Sedif Films, 112, Rue des Plantes.
Sidef S.R.I. , 32, Rue d'Argent.
Sica Films, Rue St. Lazare, 84.
Sobeci, 21, Rue des Prairies.
Stevens Films, Rue Dupont, 64.
Synimex. 116, Rue des Plantes.
Sphinx Films, Rue Linnee, 134.
Thalia Films, Rue du Poincon, 26.
Triumph Films, 116, Rue des Plantes.
U.F.I. , Rue St. Lazare. 7.
Universite Cinegraphique Beige, Rue Verte, 157.
Universal Film, 20, Place des Martyrs.
Union Films, Rue des Plantes, 46.
Vang-oitsenhoven L.S.A., Rue de Laeken, 97.
Warner Bros.-First National Films, Boulevard
Botanique.
Belot Film, Rue du Poincon, 26.
Demafilms, Rue St. Lazare, 58.
Filmsonor S.A. Beige Co. Industrielle Francaise
Cinematographique, Rue Dupont, 18.
Les Studios S.A.C.A.L. BRITISH. Rue des Champs
12 a 16.
S.A.B. Columbia Films, 69, Rue Dupont a Brux-
elles.
FOREIGN MARKETS
Bermuda
LEGISLATION — None detrimental to American
films.
CENSORSHIP — No films censored in 1939. Only
one film censored and rejected in the history of
the Colony.
COMPETITION — Approximately 360 films
shown in 1939, of which 337 were American, 10
British and three Portug-uese.
COPYRIGHT RELATIONS — Producers fully pro-
tected under the copyright laws.
PRODUCTION — None, except for occasional
advertising' reels.
TAXATION — Films, excluding- undeveloped
films, if of British origin pay three pence per
100 feet import duty. Films, other than British,
pay nine pence per 100 feet, plus a surtax of
25 per cent. Educational films enter duty free.
THEATERS — There are 11 houses with a total
of 3,116 seats. All are wired for sound.
Protectorate Bohemia and
Moravia
Distributors and Importers
PRAGUE
A-B. Prague II., Vodickova 44.
Aktualita, Prague II., Vaclavske nam. 49.
Bernas Josef, Prague-Nusle, Proti Vozovne 1302.
Bohemia Film, Pragrue II., Vaclavske nam. 7.
Camara Film, Prag-ue III., Misenska 3.
Continentalfilm, Prag-ue II., Vaclavske nam. 30.
Cvaneara Ferd., Prag-ue XL, Dvorakova 64.
Data Film, Prag-ue II., U pujcovny 4.
Elekta Film, Prague II., Narodni tr. 26.
Europa Flm, Pragrue II.. Melantrichova 1.
Favorit Film, Prague VII.. Veletrzni tr. 200.
Fox Film, Prague II., Vaclavske nam. 60.
Globusfilm, Prag-ue II., U pujcovny 4.
Koza a Brychta. Pragrue II., Vodickova 34.
Kramesova Marie, Prag-ue II.. U pujcovny 4.
Lepka Film, Prag-ue II., Vaclavske nam. 1.
Lloyd Film, Prague II., Vodickova ul. 6.
Lucerna Film, Prague II., Stepanska ul. 57.
Merkur Film, Prague II., Vodickova 34.
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Prague I., Prikopy 35.
Metzgerova Helena, Prague II., Vaclavske nam
30.
Moldavia Film, Prague II.. Vaclavske nam. 49.
Nationalfilm, Prague II., Vaclavske nam. 51.
Paramount Film, Prague II., Stepanska ul. 35.
P.D.C. Film, Prague II., Havlickovo nam. 24.
Praha Film. Prague II., Vaclavske nam. 49.
Primus Film, Prague I., Narodni tr. 25.
Projektor Film, Prague XVI., Zborovska 66.
Radio Film-R.K.O., Prague II., Vaclavske nam. 51.
Reiter Film, Prague II., Vaclavske nam. 30.
Slavia Film, Prague II., Narodni tr. 26.
Sochanova VI., Prague I.. Rytirska ul. 32.
Suchy Karel, Prague V., Dusni ul. 14.
Sun Film, Prague II., Stepanska ul. 57.
Svojan Film. Prague II., Lutzowova ul. 8.
Tobis, Prague XII , Hooverova ul. 2a.
La Tricolore, Prague II., Vaclavske nam. 51.
Ufa Film, Prague II., Vaclavske nam. 49.
United Artists, Praha II.. Vaclavske nam. 49.
Universal Film. Prague II., Vodickova ul. 20.
Vesmir Film, Prague III.. Vsehrdova 450.
Vesna Film, Prague II., Narodni tr. 26.
Zdar Film, Prague II., Vaclavske nam. 23
BRUNN
Excelsior Film, Brunn. Janska ul. 7.
Futurum Film, Brunn. Svehlova ul. 5.
Legia Film, Brunn, Dornych 35.
Scala Film. Brunn, U skladiste 5
Standard Film, Brunn, Bratislavska ul. 21.
Terra Film. Brunn, Na Hradbach 8.
OLMUTZ
Kasino Film, Olmutz, Trebizskeho 1.
Producers
PRAGUE
A-B, Prague, Barrandov.
Bohemia Film, Prague II., Vaclavske nam. 7.
1099
REVISTA DEL EXHIBIDOR
OF
BUENOS AIRES— ARGENTINE REPUBLIC
Published by the
ROSARA EDITORIAL
Is the commercial cinematographical publication
most widely circulated and well reputed
in South America
★
American Producers and Distributors:
REVISTA DEL EXHIBIDOR
has the pleasure to offer its pages to you all for
the better sale of your production in the
South American Market
★
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Published by the Rosara Editorial
LAVALLE 1688— BUENOS AIRES— ARGENTINE REPUBLIC
1100
Continentalfilm, Prague II., Vaclavske nam. 30.
Dafa Film, Prague II., U pujcovny 4.
Elekta Film, Prague II., Narodni tr. 26.
Europa Film, Prague II., Melantrichova 1.
Favorit Film, Prague VII., Veletrzni tr. 200.
Lepka Film, Prague II., Vaclavske nam. 1.
Lloyd Film, Prague II., Vodickova ul. 6.
Lucerna Film, Prague II., Stepanska ul. 57.
Moldavia Film, Prague II.. Vaclavske nam. 49.
Nationalfilm, Prague II., Havlickovo nam. 24.
Praha Film, Prague II., Vaclavske nam. 49.
Projektor Film, Prague XVI., Zborovska 66.
Reiterfilm, Prague II., Vaclavske nam. 30.
Slavia Film, Prague II., Narodni tr. 26.
Sun Film, Prague II., Stepanska ul. 57.
La Tricolore, Prague II., Vaclavske nam. 51.
Ufa Film, Prague II., Vaclavske nam. 49.
Zdar Film, Prague II., Vaclavske nam. 23.
BRUNN
Excelsior Film, Brunn, Janska ul. 7.
Legia Film, Brunn, Dornych 35.
Terra Film, Brunn, Na Hradbach 8.
Bolivia
LEGISLATION — None concerning films.
CENSORSHIP — Films are shipped from, and
censored by Lima, Peru.
COMPETITION — American. 80 per cent. Fol-
lowing are Mexico and Argentina.
PRODUCTION — Several silent scenics produced
in 1939.
TAXATION — Imported films are assessed at
the rate of five per cent advalorem, calculated
on the basis of the value of the boliviano at
par ($0,365).
THEATERS — About 39 theaters, nearly all
wired for sound.
Brazil
LEGISLATION — Laws passed in 1939 make it
necessary for importers of newsreel and short
subjects to buy similar local films for exporta-
tion in the proportion of 10 per cent of the
footage they import annually. With every pro-
gram exceeding 1,000 meters of film, theaters
are required to run a minimum of 100 meters
of Brazil films. At least once a year, theaters
are obliged to show a Brazilian feature.
COMPETITION — U. S. distributors in 1939
supplied 1,496 films (shorts and features) of a
total of 2,619 censored. Following were Brazilian
films with 789: France. 150; and Germany, 92.
PRODUCTION — Six features were produced in
1939, plus a number of short subjects.
TAXATION — Customs duties are collected on
the basis of the American-Brazilian Trade Agree-
ment (bound rates). Distributors pay an educa-
tion tax of 400 reis per meter on each print of
foreign made films censored. Tax does not apply
if prints are made in Brazil.
THEATERS — About 90 per cent of the 1,300
theaters are wired for sound.
Distributors and Importers
RIO DE JANEIRO
Allianca Cinematographica Ltda., Praca Getulio
Vargas No. 2. Edif. Odeon-Salas 414/5.
Art Films, Praca Getulio Vargas No. 2. Edif.
Odeon-30 andar.
Assoc. Cinem. de Produetores Brasileiros, Rua
Mexico No. 21.
Brasil Europa Films, Rua Senador Dantas No. 40-
2o andar.
Broadway Programma-Ponce & Irmao, Praca Ge-
tulio Vargas No. 2. Edif. Odeon-Salas 308-11.
Cia. Brasil Cinematographica (Prog. Serrador).
Rua Senador Dantas No. lo — lo andar.
Empreza Cineac, Ltd. do Brasil, Av. R. Branch
191.
Fox Films do Brasil S.A., Rua do Passeio No. 62,
Edif. Metro — 4o andar.
Internaeional Films S. A., Praca Getulio Vargas
No. 2. Edif. Odeon — Sala 913.
Metro Goldwyn Mayer do Brasil, Rua do Passeio
No. 62. Edif. Metro — 5o andar.
Paramount Films S.A., Avenida Rio Branco No.
247.
Programma Art, Praca Getulio Vargas No. 2.
Edif. Odeon — 3o andar.
FOREIGN MARKETS
Pragramma Argus. Praca Getulio Vargas No. 2.
Edif. Odeon — Salas 407/8.
R.K.O. Radio Pictures do Brasil S.A., Avenida
Presidente Wilson No. 115.
Soceba S.A., Rua das Marrecas No. 43.
Ugo Sorrentino & Cia, Ltda., Praca Getulio Var-
gas No. 2. Edif. Odeon — 3o andar.
United Artists of Brasil, Inc., Rua Alvaro Alvim
No. 52 — 2oandar.
Universal Pictures do Brasil S.A., Rua Senador
Dantas No. 39.
Warner Bros. First National South Films, Inc.,
Rua Senador Dantas No. 19-A. Edif. Cinelandia
9o e lOo andar.
Producers, Laboratories and Studios
RIO DE JANEIRO
Argentina Sonofilms (Cinesul), Av. Graca Aranha
43, sala 409.
Aurora Film, Rua Sylvio Romero No. 59.
Benedetti Film, Rua Tavares Bastos No. 153 c/3.
A. Botelho Film, Rua Jorge Rudge No. 37.
Brasil Vita Filme S.A., Rua Conde Bomfim No.
1331.
Cinedia S.A., Rua Vieira Bueno No. 3o.
Distribuidora de Films Brasileiros Ltda.. Rua
Mexico No. 21.
Laboratorio Veritas Ltda., A. Ferreira, Avenida
Augusto Severo No. 58.
Pinheiro Jayme de Andrade, Rua de Lapa No. 95.
Sonofilms S.A.. Praca Getulio Vargas No. 2.
Edif. Odeon — Sala 723.
Yara Filme, Rua General Dionisio No. 57.
British East Africa
LEGISLATION — None affecting motion pictures.
CENSORSHIP — No films rejected during 1938-
1939, but a few scenes were ordered eliminated.
COMPETITION — American, 80 per cent; British
20 per cent.
PRODUCTION — None.
TAXATION — Import duty is two shillings for
500 linear feet.
THEATERS — All 16 theaters are wired for
sound.
British Honduras
LEGISLATION — None affecting films.
CENSORSHIP — One film (British) rejected dur-
ing 1939.
COMPETITION — American, 95 per cent; British,
five per cent.
COPYRIGHT RELATIONS — British Copyright
Act of 1911 applies.
PRODUCTION — None.
TAXATION — British films admitted free; others
pay 15c per 100 feet.
THEATERS — Three, all wired for sound.
British Malaya
LEGISLATION — None affecting motion pictures.
CENSORSHIP — Official Censor of Cinematograph
Films views all films.
COMPETITION — U. S. films, 55 per cenf
Chinese, 22 per cent; Indian, 13 per cent; British,
nine per cent.
PRODUCTION — None.
THEATERS — Of 123 theaters in the Straits
Settlements, Federated Malay States, Un-Federated
Malay States, Sarawak, and Borneo, 110 are
wired for sound.
Bulgaria
LEGISLATION — None affecting films.
CENSORSHIP — All films must be reviewed by
the Ministry of Education censor board.
COMPETITION — American, 41 per cent: Ger-
man, 34 per cent; French, 12 per cent.
COPYRIGHT RELATIONS — Member of the
Bern Convention.
PRODUCTION— None.
1101
EL IMCADOR
Maciotta's Year Book of Motion Pictures
and the Theater Containing Everything
of Interest in Motion Pictures in the
Republic of Argentina
ADDRESS: 2976 CONSTITUCION
TELEPHONE: U.T. 45 LORIA 2620
BUENOS AIRES
REPUBLIC OF ARGENTINA
1102
TAXATION — Censorship tax: 0.50 lev per
meter; Distributor tax: two per cent of gTOss
turnover; Import Duty: 10 gold leva per kilo-
gram.
THEATERS — All 144 theaters are wired for
sound.
Burma
LEGISLATION — No quota or contingent laws
in effect.
CENSORSHIP — Board of Censors reviews all
pictures.
COMPETITION — Sound pictures: 78 per cent
American; 20 per cent British; balance. French.
German, and Italian. Indian and Burmese films
do not compete with U. S. product as they are
shown to different population classes.
COPYRIGHT RELATIONS — No protecting laws.
Distributors protect with clauses in contracts
with exhibitors.
PRODUCTION — In the first 11 months of 1938,
58 films were produced.
TAXATION — Most films are imported from or
through India and are duty free. Films imported
from other countries pay 37% per cent.
THEATERS — Of 136 theaters, 47 are wired
for sound.
Canary Islands
LEGISLATION — None affecting motion pictures,
although it is reported that legislation is contem-
plated with a view to increasing local production
and to require exhibition of a percentage of do-
mestic films on each program.
COMPETITION — American. 50 per cent; Ger-
man, 15 per cent: Italian, 15 per cent; British,
10 per cent; Spanish, 10 per cent.
PRODUCTION — None.
TAXATION — Distributors pay a basic national
tax of 744 pesetas per annum, plus municipal
and provincial taxes amounting to 79 per cent
of the national tax. Import duty is 20 pesetas
per 1.000 kilograms.
THEATERS — All 33 theaters are wired for
sound.
Canary Islands, East
LEGISLATION — The East Canary Islands
(Grand Canary, Lanzarote. Fuerteventura, and
six adjacent islets) form a province of Spain and
have no legislation or censorship of their own
affecting motion pictures. Films are imported
from continental Spain.
THEATERS — All 19 theaters are wired for
sound.
Ceylon
LEGISLATION — None affecting motion pictures.
CENSORSHIP — Vested in the Municipal Com-
missioner, assisted by the police. Films come from
India and those banned by British or Bombay
censor boards are not imported.
COMPETITION — Country requires about 200
English language films and 150 Indian pictures.
PRODUCTION — None as yet. although a local
company plans films in the Sinhalese language.
TAXATION — Import duty is 2/3 of a cent
on British Empire films and one cent on others.
THEATERS — All 18 theaters are wired for
sound. Seats total 11,771.
Chile
LEGISLATION — None affecting films.
CENSORSHIP — All films viewed by Board of
Motion Picture Censors.
COMPETITION — American, 60 per cent; Mexi-
can and Argentine, 16 per cent: French, 12 per
cent: others, 12 per cent.
COPYRIGHT RELATIONS — Decree Law of 1925
is still in effect.
PRODUCTION — Two features produced in 1939.
TAXATION — Distributors: 2.5 per cent on sales:
7 per cent on income; graduated stamp tax on
receipts. Imports: five per cent on landed invoice
value in addition to 3% per cent of the c. i. f.
value: $4.00 per legal kilogram.
THEATERS— 263 theaters, of which 205 are
wired for 60und-
FOREIGN MARKETS
China
LEGISLATION — No quota or contingent laws
in effect in the areas controlled by the Chinese
National Government at Chungking. In Shanghai,
a Sino- Japanese enterprise is endeavoring to as-
sume control of all non-Japanese films which
might be moved into occupied areas of the Yang-
tsze Valley (Nanking, Hangchow, Soochow, Han-
kow). According to reports, pictures not covered
by their so-called permit, a document which may
be priced as high as 50 per cent of receipts, are
not afforded transportation facilities. As a result.
American films have not been sent into these oc-
cupied areas as the Film Board of Trade (China),
representing the eight major U. S. companies, has
refused to submit to the procedure.
The Manchurian Motion Picture Association,
a state company, maintains its monopoly through-
out Manchuria.
CENSORSHIP — These Chinese National Govern-
ment's Central Film Censorship Board ceased func-
tioning in Shanghai on Aug. 1, 1938. The Film
Board of Trade (China) has been submitting pic-
tures to the Shanghai Municipal Council censor
authorities.
COMPETITION — American, 93 per cent.
COPYRIGHT RELATIONS — Some legal authori-
ties believe the Copyright law affords little or no
protection.
PRODUCTION ■ — Shanghai companies produced
44 featured during 1939. Features from Chung-
king, mostly featuring national resistance, totaled
about 14, plus about 10 newsreels and 15 car-
toons.
TAXATION — Revised customs tariff of June 1.
1938, applicable to all areas under Japanese
occupation (including Shanghai) is 20 per cent
ad valorem with surcharges amounting to 14
per cent of the duty assessed. Customs duty for
areas under control of the Chinese National Gov-
ernment is 25 per cent ad valorem, plus 14 per
cent surcharge.
THEATERS — Prior to hostilities there were
slightly over 300 theaters, most of which are
wired for sound pictures.
Distributors and Importers
SHANGHAI
Paramount Films of China, Inc., 142 Museum
Road.
20th Century Fox. Fed., Inc., U. S. A.. 142 Mu-
seum Road.
United Artists, Inc., 142 Museum Road.
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer of China. 138-41 Embank-
ment Building.
Universal Pictures Corp. of China, 136 Embank-
ment Building.
R.K.O. Radio Pictures. Inc., 404 Embankment
Building.
Warner Brothers, 1st National Pictures (China).
Inc., 142- Museum Road.
Columbia Pictures, 142 Museum Road.
Producers (Chinese)
SHANGHAI
United China Motion Picture Corporation, Distrib-
utors for: Hsin Hwa, Hwa Hsin and Hwa Cheng
Motion Pictures. Distribution Office: 9, Quai
de France, Suite No. 42.
Yi Hwa Motion Picture Company, Ltd. Business
Department & Studio: 1109 Connaught Road.
Kow Hwa Motion Picture Company, 780 Peking
Road.
Unique Film Production Company, 111 Route G.
Kahn.
United Motion Picture Company, Rue Montauban.
Hwa An Motion Picture Company, Rue Montau-
ban.
Dah Hwa Motion Picture Company.
Ming Hwa Motion Picture Company.
Chosen (Korea)
LEGISLATION — A law, similar to the Japanese
film law of Oct. 1, 1939, is expected to be promul-
gated early in 1.940. Not less than 50 per cent of
1103
FOREIGN MARKETS
the total length of film shown each month by each
theater must be produced in Japan or Chosen.
CENSORSHIP — No films rejected in 1939, but
scenes were cut from a number of pictures.
COMPETITION — American 35 to 40 per cent,
based on total audiences and rentals.
PRODUCTION — Six firms produced approxi-
mately 25,000 meters of feature films during
1938-1939.
TAXATION — Distributors pay 7/1000 of the
amount received in rentals, and about the same
amount to the prefecture. Agents pay a national
business tax of 10/1000 of the amount of their
commissions, plus a similar amount to the pre-
fecture.
THEATERS — There are 50 regular theaters,
although films are occasionally shown in about
70 other halls. All are wired for sound.
Colombia
LEGISLATION — No quota or contingent laws
affecting films.
CENSORSHIP — Under control of larger munici-
palities.
COMPETITION — American films, 75 per cent:
balance from France. Argentina and Mexico.
COPYRIGHT RELATIONS — Covered by Buenos
Aires Convention. A pending bill would provide
copyright protection for registered motion pictures
for ten years with privilege of renewal for an-
other ten years.
PRODUCTION — Limited to occasional news-
reels, advertising films and educational shorts.
TAXATION — Import duty is 60 centavos per
gross kilogram for films from the U. S.; Educa-
tional subjects pay 25 centavos per kilogram.
THEATERS — About 204 theaters are wired for
sound, plus about 20 silent houses, and 40 to 60
portable sound equipments.
Distributors and Importers
BOGOTA
Jaime Puig Arosemena (Universal and Columbia).
Metro Goldwyn Mayer.
Paramount Films S. A.
20th Century Fox.
United Artists Corporation.
Cine Colombia.
Compania Distribuidora Films.
Filmca (Nicolas Capsso e hijos) (French Pict.)
Distribuidora Hispano Mejicana
Argentina Sono Film.
N. Allaiz (French Pictures).
Cueto Films (French Pictures).
Preuss Films (French and German Pictures).
Andres Jeannett (French Pictures).
Costa Rica
LEGISLATION — -No quota or contingent laws
in effect.
CENSORSHIP — In the first six months of 1939.
381 films were passed by the censors without cuts.
COMPETITION — American. 80 per cent: Argen-
tina 9 per cent: Mexico, 6 per cent. French.
British, German, others, 5 per cent.
PRODUCTION — None.
COPYRIGHT RELATIONS — Existing legislation
found to be ineffective against film piracy.
TAXATION — Duties are 1.50 colones per gross
kilo plus surcharges of 4 per cent of the basic
duty and 0.025 colones per gross kilo.
THEATERS — All 42 theaters are wired for
sound.
Cuba
LEGISLATION — An anti block-booking bill sim-
ilar to the Neely measure has been introduced in
the House of Representatives, but has not been
enacted.
CENSORSHIP — Only a few scenes were elim-
inated from films during 1939 by the Censorship
Commission. No pictures were banned.
FILMMUVESZETI EVKONYV
JAHRBUCH DER FILMKUNST
the one and only complete Hungarian Film Year-Book
edited by:
ANDOR LAJTA, BUDAPEST XIV, Thok8ly-ut 75
contains all data referring to movies and film enter-
prises in Hungary.
The one and only Year-Book containing the ad-
dresses of Hungarian actors.
Price of one volume: postage included S 2. —
Price of advertising: 1/1 page — S 20. —
Price of advertising: 1/2 page — S 15. —
Published in November of each year.
1104
COMPETITION — American, 68 per cent; Argen-
tine and Mexican, 20 per cent: French, 6.7 per
cent; British, 1.4 per cent: Italian, 1.2 per cent:
balance German and Russian.
COPYRIGHT RELATIONS — Governed by the
Copyright Act of 1909. with special protection to
Alms in the Patent and Trade-Mark Law of 1936.
PRODUCTION — During- 1939, 10 to 12 features
were produced.
TAXATION — Distributors pay about 15 Vi Per
cent of gross revenues to the government. Import
duty on U. S. films is $4.50 per net kilo, 20 per
cent less than the lowest duty on films from
other countries. In addition there is a surcharge
of 10 per cent of the duty and a consular invoice
fee of two per cent of the f. o. b. value, port of
exportation.
THEATERS — About 75,000 seats are included
in the 376 theaters. All are wired for sound.
Distributors and Importers
HABANA
Agencia Films Argentinos, Trocadero 109.
Cia. Industrial Film Espanol S.A., (Cifesa) Con-
sulado 156.
Cia. Distribuidora de Peliculas "La Universal"
S.A. Consulado 216.
Commercial Films Co., Consulado 207.
Continental Films, Consulado 155.
Cosmos Films, Trocadero 153.
Exclusivas Berndes. Consulado 167.
Fox Film de Cuba S.A., Consulado 209.
International Films de Cuba, Consulado 157.
Ibero American Films, Consulado 164.
Latino Films, Colon 154.
Metro Goldwyn Mayer de Cuba S.A., Consulado
254.
Paramount Films of Cuba, Inc., Industria 312.
Republic Pictures of Cuba S.A., Consulado 216.
Seleeciones Capitolio, Trocadero 161.
Miro Raul. Consulado 252.
Select Pictures, Trocadero 113.
Tomas Portoles, Consulado 205.
Tropical Films de Cuba S.A., Trocadero 111.
United Artists Corp., Consulado 111.
Warner Bros., First National, Consulado 107.
Studios
Chic Comp, Barnet.
B.P.P. Pictures, Calle 9 entre 5 y 6, Rpto Mira-
mar, (Marianao).
Royal Advertising News, Trocadero 156.
Peliculas Cubanas, S.A., Curva de Cantarrana.
Producciones Actesa, Consulado 190.
Cuban Pictures. Calle P y 23, Vedado.
Laboratories
Abelardo Domingo, Patrocinio 508, Rpto Mendoza,
( Vibora) .
Laboratories Liberty, Animas 305.
Laboratorios Peneyro, Trocadero 257.
Valdes Juan, Aguila 306.
Royal Advertising News, Trocadero 156.
Peliculas Cubanas. S.A., Curva de Cantarrana.
Cuban Pictures, Calle P y 23, Vedado.
Enrique Ortiz, Ensanche de la Habana.
Denmark
Distributors and Importers
COPENHAGEN
Aero Film A/S, Vesterport Nr. 327, Trommesalen
2.
Columbia Film A/S, Hammerichsgade 14.
Constantin Film A/S. Smallegade 2B.
Dana-Film, Vimmelskaftet 42B.
Dansk Film Co. A/S, V. Boulevard 27.
Dansk Film Import, Vester Sogade 54.
Dansk-Svensk Film I/S, Nygade 3.
Europa-Film, Kvaesthusgade 1.
A/S Film-Centralen Palladium, V. Boulevard 27.
Finlandia-Film, Havnegade 63.
Fotorama A/S, Nygade 3.
Fox Film A/S, Raadhusplads 16.
Gefion Film, Vesterport 20.
Gloria Film A/S, Frederiksberggade 16.
Viggo Hansen, Classensgade 24.
Ifi Film, Nrd. Fasanvej 52.
Lafontaine-Film, Finsensvej 33.
Kosmofilm A/S, Vesterbrogade 19.
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer A/S, Hammerichsgade 14.
FOREIGN MARKETS
Minerva-Film A/S, Toldbodgade 18.
Nordisk Films Kompagni A/S, Frederiksberggade
25.
Panther-Film, Lavendelstraede 17.
Filmaktieselskabet Paramount, V. Boulevard 29.
Haagen Fritz Petersen, Frederiksberggade 25.
Sankt Peder Filmen, Faelledvei 25.
Skandinavisk Film, Dahlerupsgade 1.
Teatrenes Films-Kontor, Frederiksberg Alle 41.
United Artists A/, Hammerichsgade 14.
Universal Film A/S, V. Boulevard 27.
Warner Bros. -First National Film A/S, Raadhus-
plads 16.
Producers
COPENHAGEN
Asa. Film, Lyngby.
Cimbria Film, Nygade 3.
Dana-Film, Vimmelskaftet 42B.
Dansk Film Co. A/S, V. Boulevard 27.
Gefion Film, Vesterport 20.
Nordisk Films Kompagni A/S, Frederiksberggade
25.
Palladium A/S, Axelborg.
Dominican Republic
LEGISLATION — None affecting films.
CENSORSHIP — Five films rejected in 1939.
COMPETITION — American, 90 per cent (10 per
cent of which are British and Mexican films re-
leased by American companies). Balance comes
from Mexico, Argentine, France and Britain.
COPYRIGHT RELATIONS— No copyright laws
protecting films.
PRODUCTION — None .
TAXATION — Import duties are 15 per cent ad
valorem, and there is also a 15 per cent ad valorem
internal revenue tax. Films are tax free if re-
exported within four months.
THEATERS — All 28 theaters are wired for
sound.
Egypt
LEGISLATION — No quota regulations or laws
prejudicial to U. S. films.
CENSORSHIP — Ministry of Interior, Cairo, cen-
sors all films.
COMPETITION — Consensus of local trade
opinion is that the U. S. will supply about 75
per cent of films shown in 1940 due to reduc-
tions in the French programs.
PRODUCTION — Some 15 to 16 features and
a number of newsreels were produced in 1939.
TAXATION — Import duty is L. E. 2.5 per kilo
net, plus 10 per cent representing custom due/
and auxiliary charges.
THEATERS — All 125 theaters and 20 British
military unit theaters are wired for sound.
Distributors and Importers
CAIRO
C. Lifshitz & M. Joseph, 75, Malaka Nazli Av.
Films Paramount S.A., 21, Tewfik Street.
Warner Bros. First National Pictures Inc., Ill,
Malaka Nazli Av.
Prosperi Films Consortium. 15 a, Avenue du Roi.
Koubbeh Gardens.
Josy Films S.A.E., 11, Antikhana Street.
A. Aptekman Films (Osso Films), 25, Tewfik St.
United Films Service, 9, Borsa Street.
Ideal Motion Pictures, (exclusive distributors of
"United Artists") 4, Malaka Farida St.
Talhami Bros., 20, Adly Pacha St.
R.K.O. Radio Pictures, 25, Tewfik St.
Les Selections Behna Films, 49. Rue Neuve.
Columbia Pictures, 25 Tewfik St.
S.E.F.O. (Ste pour l'Exploitation des Films en
Orient), Elfi Bey St.
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Metro-House, Soliman Pa-
cha St.
ALEXANDRIA
Politi Freres, 7, Hosr St.
20th-century Fox, 10, Fouad St.
1105
FOREIGN MARKETS
New-Universal Pictures Corporation, 32. Fouad
St.
Egyptian Crown Films (S. Mamatis), 4, Tewilk
St.
Republic Pictures. 33. Fouad 1st St.
Producers
ALEXANDRIA
Nahas Sphynx Films, 1 Dagla St. (Saad Zaghloul
Square) .
Togo Mizrahi, Bacos-Ramleh.
Armenag- Arabian, 14, Sherif St.
CAIRO
Ste Misr Pour le Theatre et le Cinema, Rue des
Pyramides.
Ramses Films. Ramses Ville, Zamalek.
Triomphe Films. 25, Tewflk St.
Mena House Films. Malaka Farida St.
Kahira Films, Malaka Farida St., 19.
Prosperi Films Consortium, Avenue du Roi (Koub-
beh Gardens).
Egyptian Talking Heliopolis, Rue du Caire, Helio-
polis.
National Films. 19. Adly Pacha St.
Phare Films, 136. Emad el Dine St.
Lotus Films, 1, Kenissa el Guedida St.
Condor Films, 14, Chakour Pacha St.. Koubbeh
Gardens.
Ecuador
LEGISLATION — None affecting films.
CENSORSHIP- — Films reviewed in Guayaquil or
Quito need not be re-censored elsewhere in the
country.
COMPETITION — American, 80 per cent.
COPYRIGHT RELATIONS — No laws protecting
films.
PRODUCTION — None.
TAXATION— Import duties are 3 sucres a kilo-
gram of gross weight which includes the imme-
diate container but not the shipping case. Consular
invoice fees are 6% per cent ad valorem and a
surcharge of 5 per cent ad valorem.
THEATERS — All 37 theaters are wired for
sound.
El Salvador
LEGISLATION — None affecting films.
CENSORSHIP — About eight pictures were re-
jected but all were later censored and shown in
1939.
COMPETITION — American, 85 per cent; Mexi-
can, 8 per cent.
COPYRIGHT RELATIONS — Films protected un-
der supervision of the Department of Public
Works.
PRODUCTION — None.
TAXATION — Customs duties are $1.50 per kilo-
gram.
THEATERS — All 41 theaters are wired for
sound.
Estonia
LEGISLATION — Film imports are fixed by
quota. American distributors may import 30 fea-
tures in the year ending July 1, 1940.
PRODUCTION — Some 40 shorts were produced
in 1938-39.
TAXATION — Distributor taxes include: Import
duty of Ekr. 3 per kilogram. Censorship tax is
one senti per meter at the time of the first im-
portation for scientific or art films and five senti
for other films. Turnover tax is two per cent.
Trade license tax is Ekr. 475 per annum.
THEATERS — All 64 houses are wired for sound.
Finland
LEGISLATION — None affecting motion pictures.
By an administrative decree of Sept. 16. 1939,
a permit from the License Board is required for
ill imports, including films. Measure was taken
to control foreign trade during: the European war.
(Note: This report was written before the hos-
tilities between Finland and Russia).
CENSORSHIP — During the first half of 1939.
the Censorship Bureau reviewed 166 features, of
which five were banned, including- four American
and one French film.
COMPETITION — During the first six months
of 1939: American. 54 per cent: French, 19 per
cent: German, 13 per cent, with the balance in-
cluding five Finnish and 18 other foreign films.
COPYRIGHT RELATIONS — Member of the
Berne Copyright Convention.
PRODUCTION — About 25 features and 200
shorts planned for 1939.
TAXATION — Distributors pay the usual income
and property tax. Import duties are 34 marks
($0.68) per kilogram.
THEATERS — Including those under construc-
tion, total is 410, all with sound equipment.
France
Producers
Pierre Braunberger, 95, Avenue des Champs Ely-
sees, 95.
B.U.P. Francaise, 3, Rue du Colisee. 3.
Burg-us Films, 76. Rue Lauriston, 76.
Capitole Films, 92, Avenue des Champs Elysees,
92.
Cine Alliance. 150. Bid. Haussmann, 150.
Compaernie Continentale Cinematographique, 25,
Rue d'Astorg. 25.
Compagnie Industrielle et Commerciale Cinemato-
graphique, 7, Place Ampere a Lyon.
Compagrnie Internationale de Productions Artis-
tiques, 7 bis Rue de Teheran, 7 bis.
Films B.A.P., 19, Bid. Malesherbes, 19.
Films Felix Gandera. 10. Rue Lesueur, 10.
Films Marcel Pagnol, 13. Rue Fortuny. 13.
Films Marcel Vandal, 1. Rue de Berri. 1.
Flag Films, 120. Avenue des Champs Elysees, 120.
General Productions, 26, Rue Marboeuf, 26.
Gray Films, 27, Rue Dumont d'Urville, 27.
Heraut Film, 1, Rue de. Berri. 1.
Maurice Lehmann, 57. Rue du, Docteur Blanche.
57.
Lutece Films. 49. Avenue Montaigne, 49.
Mega Film, 44, Avenue des Champs Elysees, 44.
Metropa Films, 29, Avenue Georges V. 29.
Pan Cine, 68, Quai des Orfevres, 68.
Productions Andre Daven, 21, Rue de Berri. 21.
Production Henri Garat, 55, Avenue George V, 55.
Productions J. N. Ermolieff, 3. Rue Merimee, 3.
Productions Sigma. 14 bis. Avenue Rachel. 14 bis.
Soeiete des Films Albatros. 7. Avenue Vion Whit-
comb, 7.
Soeiete des Films Vega. 40. Rue Francois ler, 40.
Soeiete Francaise de Production de Films "Orange"
79, Avenue des Champs Elysees, 79.
Soeiete Francaise de Production et D'Edition. 99.
Avenue des Champs Elysees.
Soeiete des Productions Cinematographiques F.C.L.
21, Rue de Berri, 21.
Soeiete des Productions J. Bercholz, 99. Avenue
des Champs Elysees, 99.
Soeiete des Productions U.D.I.F., 99. Avenue des
Champs Elysees, 99.
Solar Film, 78, Avenue des Champs Elvsees, 78.
Speva Films. 12, Bid. de la Madeleine, 12.
Symphonie Films, 25. Avenue Victor Emmanuel
III, 25.
Transcontinental Films. 36, Avenue Hoche, 36.
Productions Francaises, 26 bis. Rue Francois ler.
26 bis.
Soeiete des Films Osso, 7 bis. Rue de Teheran.
7 bis.
S.E.D.I.F.. 12. Rue de Lubeck. 12.
Productions Charles Bauche, 14, Rue Lincoln, 14.
Gladiator Film, 16, Avenue Hoche, 16.
Productions Calamy. 49, Avenue Bosquet, 49.
Cine Reportages, 79. Avenue des Champs Elysees.
79.
Films J. C. Bernard, 16, Bid. Gouvion St. Cyr, 16.
Films Jean Tedeseo, 42, Rue du Bac. 42.
Films Etienne Lallier, 79, Avenue des Champs Ely-
sees, 79.
Distributors
Films Dis-Pa, 1 bis. Rue Gounod. 1 bis.
Films Leo Cohen, 37, Avenue des Champs Ely-
sees, 37.
1106
Filmsonor, 44, Avenue des Champs Elysees. 44.
Films Vog, 14 bis. Avenue Rachel, 14 bis.
Flora Film, 95, Avenue des Champs Elysees, 95.
Forrester Parant, 150, Avenue des Champs Ely-
sees. 150.
Fox Europa, 63, Avenue des Champs Elysees, 63.
Franco London Film, 146, Bid. Haussmann, 146.
Gallia Cinei, 24, Place Malesherbes, 24.
Gallic Film, 27, Rue de Marigman, 27.
Films G.E.C.E., 76, Rue de Prony, 76.
Grands Spectacles Cinematographiques, 5. Rue du
Cardinal Mercier, 5.
Gray Films, 5. Rue d'Aumale, 5.
Films Hakim, 79, Avenue des Champs Elysees, 79.
Haussmann Film, 146, Bid. Haussmann, 146.
Films Lauzin, 61, Rue de Chabrol, 61.
Lux, 26, Rue de la Bienfaisance, 26.
Metro Goldwyn Mayer, 37, Rue Condorcet, 37.
Nord Film, 5, Rue Jean Mermoz, 6.
O.C.I. , 6 Rond-Point des Champs Elysees, 6.
Alliance Cinematographique Europeenne, 56, Rue
Bassano, 56.
Artistes Associes, 25. Rue d'Astorg, 25.
Astra Paris Films, 3, Rue Troyon, 3.
Atlantic Film, 36, Avenue Hoche, 36.
Films Champion, 16. Rue de Monceau, 16.
Cine Selection, 27, Rue de Turin, 27.
Columbia, 20, Rue Troyon, 20.
C.C.F.C., 97. Avenue des Champs Elysees, 97.
C.F.C., 40, Rue Francois ler, 40.
Compagnie Independante de Distribution, 8, Rue
Alfred de Vigny, 8.
Compagrnie Parisienne de Location de Films, 49,
Avenue de Villiers, 49.
Compagrnie Universelle Cinematographique, 40,
Rue Vignon, 40.
Films Cristal, 63, Avenue des Champs Elysees, 63.
Films Derby, 11, Rue Lincoln, 11.
Distributeurs Associes, 104, Avenue des Champs
Elysees, 104.
Distributeurs Francais. 122. Avenue des Champs
Elysees, 122.
Discina, 12, Place de la Madeleine, 12.
Information Film, 23, Avenue de Messine, 23.
Distribution Universelle Cinematographique, 26,
Rue Bassano, 26.
Distribution Parisienne de Films, 65, Rue Galilee,
65.
Eclair Journal, 9, Rue Lincoln, 9.
Films Osso, 7 bis. Rue de Teheran, 7 bis.
Films Pagnol, 13, Rue Fortuny, 13.
Paramount, 1, Rue Meyerbeer, 1.
Paris Cinema Location, 15, Avenue Victor Em-
manuel III, 15.
Pathe Consortium Cinema, 6, Rue Francoeur, 6.
Pellegrin Cinema, 4, Rue de Puteaux, 4.
Realisation d'Art Cinematographique, 49, Rue
Galilee, 49.
Radio Cinema, 79, Bid. Haussmann, 79.
R.K.O., 52, Avenue des Champs Elysees, 52.
Selections Cinegraphiques Maurice Rouhier, 70,
Rue de Ponthieu, 70.
S.E.D.I.F., 12, Rue de Lubeck, 12.
Films Sefert, 31, Bid. Bonne Nouvelle, 31.
Societe d'Edition et de Location de Films, 33,
Rue du General Foy, 33.
Spardice, 40, Rue du Colisee, 40.
Universal Films, 33, Avenue des Champs Elysees,
33.
Vicres Film, 5, Rue Lincoln, 5.
Warner Bros.. 5, Avenue Velasquez, 5.
Films Fernand Weill, 104, Avenue des Champs Ely-
sees, 104.
Exporters
Acropolis Film, 78, Avenue des Champs Elysees,
78.
Paris Londres Film, 25, Avenue Victor Emmanuel
III, 25.
Pietro Bazzarello, 32, Bid. Exelmans, 32.
Mosze Brandriss, 15 bis, Rue Georges Bizet, 15
bis.
Pierre Braunberger. 95, Avenue des Champs Ely-
sees, 95.
J. B. Chassaing, 2, Rue Gervex, 2.
Compagnie Generale Cinematographique, 1, Rue de
Berri, 1.
Davis Film, 33, Avenue des Champs Elysees, 33.
Films Agiman. 1, Rue de Berri, 1.
Films Andre Daven, 21, Rue de Berri, 21.
FOREIGN MARKETS
Films Leo Cohen, 37, Avenue des Champs Elysees.
37.
Film Trust Co., 36, Avenue Hoche, 36.
Francinex, 44, Avenue des Champs Elysees, 44.
Paul Hainsselin, 36, Rue du Colisee, 36.
Folke Holmberg, 38, Rue des Mathurins, 38.
Intercontinental Films, 61, Avenue Emmanuel III.
61.
Intermonde Films, 4, Avenue Emmanuel III, 4.
Iris Paris, 78, Avenue des Champs Elysees, 78.
Rebekka Jones, 11, Rue du General Cordonnier a
Neuilly-s/Seine.
Georges Kagansky, 26, Rue Marbeuf, 26.
Majestic Film, 36, Avenue Hoche, 36.
Vladimir Martinoff, 44, Avenue des Champs Ely-
sees, 44.
A. Naar & J. Levitan, 63, Avenue des Champs
Elysees, 63.
Oceanic Film, 92, Avenue des Champs Elysees, 92.
Optima Films, 92, Avenue des Champs Elysees, 92.
Georges Pappee. 67, Avenue des Champs Elysees, 67.
Paris Omnia Films, 61, Avenue Victor Emanuel
III, 61.
Paris Selections Films, 6, Rue Lamennais, 6.
Andre Rouffiae, 1, Rue de Berri, 1.
David Sarda. 7, Rue Frederic Bastiat, 7.
Sequana Films, 15, Rue Washington, 15.
Egon Sobelmann, 58, Rue du Theatre, 58.
Societe D'Exportation de Films Francais, 9, Bid.
de la Tour Maubourg, 9.
Targa, 36. Ru du Colisee, 36.
Transat Film, 29, Run de Marignan, 29.
Ernest Wettstein, llObis, Avenue des Champs
Elysees, 116bis.
Fred Wingardh, 8, Rue Emile Allez, 8.
Carlo Vasseur, 72, Avenue des Champs Elysees, 72.
Mme. Vieyra, 3, Rue du General Langlois. 3.
French Indochina
LEGISLATION — No quota or contingent laws
in effect.
CENSORSHIP — Three films were rejected during
1939. Censorship has become severe since the
outbreak of the war.
COMPETITION — French, 60 per cent: Ameri-
can, 40 per cent: plus a few English films and
about 100 Chinese and Hindu films shown for
the Chinese and Hindu populations in small
theaters.
COPYRIGHT RELATIONS — French laws apply.
PRODUCTION — None.
TAXATION — American films pay custom duties
of 20 per cent ad valorem, plus a local consump-
tion tax of 8.25 per cent ad valorem.
THEATERS — All of the about 90 theaters are
wired for sound.
French Oceania
LEGISLATION — None affecting motion pictures.
An agreement between the industry and the Gov-
ernment calls for 60 per cent of films shown to
be imported from France, but, due to irregular
shipping connections, only 50 per cent have been
of French origin since Jan. 1, 1939.
CENSORSHIP — None rejected or cut.
COMPETITION — Divided between American
and French films.
PRODUCTION — None.
TAXATION — Import duty on American films
amounts to 36% per cent ad valorem, and on
French films 24 per cent ad valorem.
THEATERS — Three theaters are wired for
sound, plus two not wired.
Germany
LEGISLATION — Film industry is still under
Government domination, represented by the Reich-
afilmkammer (Reich Film Chamber), a division
of the Ministry of Propaganda. Because of ex-
change regulations and other factors, few Ameri-
can films are shown here. For the 1939-40 season.
Difee Syndicate is expected to distribute between
20 and 30 U. S. films.
1107
F © R E I G 1% MARKETS
Gibraltar
LEGISLATION — None restricting films.
CENSORSHIP — Theater licensing authority may
forbid showings of a picture.
COMPETITION — About 75 per cent American.
25 per cent British.
PRODUCTION — None.
TAXATION — Films are duty free.
THEATERS — Three, all wired for sound, with
■2.300 seats.
Greece
LEGISLATION — Quota systems set up the latter
part of 1039, call for 370 features to be imported
in the year between July 1 and June 30. Pictures
intended for exhibition in first-run houses are
limited to 250 with the remaining- 120 films to
be shown in lower-priced seat houses. Quota
books have been issued to importers for each of
the two categrories. Thirty-five per cent of the
250 first-run quota and 30 per cent of the second
classification were allotted to theater operators:
balance was allotted to importers in proportion
to the numbers of films imported during- the period
from July 1, 1937, to June 30, 1939. Maximum
royalties have been fixed at $750 per feature for
the first-run classification and $200 per feature
for the second class, both plus cost of print, value
of advertising material and forwarding charges.
Importers are required to release all imported fea-
tures with 12 months from the date of their clear-
ance through customs. The Athens Invoice Con-
trol Commission certifies all motion picture film
invoices regardless of destination. Importers may
use the exhibitors quota in some cases.
CENSORSHIP — Controlled by the Domestic
Press Bureau of the Ministry of Press and Tour-
ism.
COMPETITION — American. 67 per cent: Ger-
man, 10 per cent: French, 22.7 per cent
COPYRIGHT RELATIONS — Protected under
reciprocal copyright protection agreement between
Greece and the U. S.
PRODUCTION— Confined to a few news and ad-
vertising reels.
TAXATION — Import duty amounts to 126
drachmas per kilogram, plus a 3 per cent exicise
tax calculated on the basis of landed cost plus
the amount of import duty.
THEATERS — All 175 'theaters are wired for
sound.
Guatemala
LEGISLATION — No quota laws enacted or be-
lieved contemplated.
CENSORSHIP — Chief of Police Service in Guate-
mala City has jurisdiction. During the first nine
months of 1939, four films rejected, including one
French and three American.
COMPETITION — During 1939. 75 per cent of
films shown were American, 12 per cent Mexican.
5 per cent French and 4 per cent Argentine, with
the remainder from England. Germany, and other
countries.
COPYRIGHT RELATIONS — Covered by Inter-
American Copyright Convention.
PRODUCTION — None.
TAXATION — Special taxes for film distributors
repealed in December. 1938. Distributors now
pay same profits tax as other commercial entities.
Late in 1938 customs duties were reduced to $1.00
per gross kilogram, plus four per cent ad valorem
consular invoice fees.
THEATERS — There are 38 theaters, with 33
wired for sound.
Distributors and Importers
GUATEMALA CITY
Paramount Films of Guatemala, Inc., 13 C. P.
No. 2.
M. Anker & Co.. Metro agent. Teatro Lux.
A. Samayoa, Warner and U. A. agent. 2a. A. S.
No. 46.
E. Seidner, Columbia agent, 13 C. P. No. 9b.
B. Canas, Fox and Universal agent 6a. A. 9
No. 68.
R. Samayoa. French productions and RKO agent
Teatro Capitol.
M. Stahl & Co., Argentine productions. Teatro
Capitol.
Distel & Hastedt & Co.. Ufa Productions. 11 C. P
No. 3.
Adolfo Rios, French and Argentine productions. 13
C. P. No. 3a.
Alfonso Alvarado. Mexican and Argentine produc-
tions. 9a. A. S. No. 66.
B. Anker. Republic productions. 9 C. O. No. 9.
Haiti
LEGISLATION — None affecting motion pictures.
CENSORSHIP — Department of the Interior em-
powered to censor, but none reviewed during 1939
COMPETITION — French 52 per cent, American
48 per cent.
PRODUCTION — None.
TAXATION — Import duty is $0.20 per net kilo-
gram, plus a surtax of 20 per cent of the assessed
duties.
THEATERS — All seven theaters are wired for
sound.
Honduras
LEGISLATION — There are no restrictions or
contingent laws in effect.
CENSORSHIP — During 1938 and the first eight
months of 1939 there were 472 features censored
of which only three Mexican films were rejected.
COMPETITION — About 75 per cent of imports
are American. Balance comes from Mexico.
France, Germany and England.
PRODUCTION — None.
TAXATION — Customs tariff on film is Lempira
0.05 per gross kilogram. Additionally Spanish
films pay Lempiras 15.00 per subject and others
pay Lempiras 25.00 per subject.
THEATERS — There are 23 theaters: all are
wired for sound.
Hong Kong
LEGISLATION — Non deterimental to American
films.
CENSORSHIP — Two American films of 225 re-
viewed rejected in 1939.
COMPETITION — American about 75 per cent,
balance principally Chinese.
COPYRIGHT RELATIONS — Films protected by
law.
PRODUCTION — About 100 features produced in
1939. almost double the 1938 figure.
TAXATION — No import duties, but distributors
pay censorship costs.
THEATERS — All 28 houses are wired for sound.
Seats total about 29.000.
Hungary
Producers
BUDAPEST
Arany-Filmducco. VIII. Dankou 22.
Delibab-Film, Malna-utca 5.
Diatyp-Laboratorium. VII. Rottenbiller-utea 19.
Erdelyi-Filmprod. Erzsebet-korut 8.
Filmatyp Lab.. XIV. Szentes-utca 60.
Hajdu-Filmprod.. XIV. Gyarmat-utca 39.
Hamza-Filmprod.. XIV. Gyarmat-utca 39.
Hunnia-Filmfabrik. XIV. Gyarmat-utca 39.
Kovacs & Faludi Lab.. XIV. Gyarmat-utca 35.
Krupa-Filmlab.. XIV. Bacskai-utka 29/b.
Magyar Film Iroda Studio. IX. Konyves Kalman-
korut 15.
Magyar Irok Film Prod.. XIV. Gyarmat-utca 39.
Mester-Film Prod.. XIV. Thokoly-Ut 116.
Nepfilm Prod.. IV. Apponyi-ter 4.
Pictura-Film Prod.. Gyarmat-utca 39.
Prizma-Film Prod., VI. Andrassy-ut 68.
SeidI & Veress Lab., XIV. Thokoly-ut 61.
Takacs-Film Prod.. XIV. Thokoly-ut 116.
Distributors
BUDAPEST
Alfa-Film, VII. Erzsebet-korut 8.
Atelier-Film, VII. Erzsebet-korut 8.
1108
Cinema-Film, VII. Erzsebet-korut 8.
Continental-Film, VII. Rakoczi-ut 12.
Csepreghy-Film, VII. Erzsebet-korut 9/11.
Deak-Film, VII. Erzsebet-korut 8.
Eco-Film, VII. Rakoczi-ut 12.
Fox-Film, Rakoczi-ut 9.
Harmonia-Film, VII. Akacfa-utca 7.
Maria Hausz-Film, VII. Erzsebet-korut 9/11.
Helikon-Film, VIII. Rokk Szilard-utca 24.
Hirsch & Tsuk-Film, VII. Dohany-utca 42.
Hunnia-Film. VII. Erzsebet-korut 9/11.
Ibusz-Film, VII. Erzsebet-korut 9/11.
Kino-Film, VIII. Rokk Szilard-utca 20.
Kormos-Film, VII. Erzsebet-korut 9/11.
Kovacs Emil & Co., Vll. Erzsebet-korut 8.
Magyar Film Iroda distr., VII. Erzsebet-korut 45.
Matador-Film, VIII. Sandor-ter 2.
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer distr. VIII. Sandor-ter 3.
Mozgokepuzemi r. t., VII. Akacfa-utca 4.
Muveszfllm, VII. Rakoczi-ut 40.
Objektiv-Film, VII. Erzsebet-korut 8.
Palatinus-Film, VII. Erzsebet-korut 9/11.
Pallo-Film, VII. Rakoczi-ut 12.
Pap Belane & Co. .-Film. VII. Erzsebet-korut 9/11.
Paramount-Film, VIII. Rakoczi ut 59.
Patria-Film, VII. Erzsebet-korut 8.
Pegazus-Film, VII. Erzsebet-korut 7.
Dr. Pflumm Tibor-Film, VII. Erzsebet-korut 9/11.
Photophon-Film, VII. Erzsebet-korut 8.
Reflektor-Film, VIII. Sandor-ter 4.
Slagerfilm, VII. Erzsebet-korut 8.
Standard-Film, VII. Erzsebet-korut 8.
Tobis-Film, VII. Erzsebet-korut 16.
Turul-Film, VIII. Jozsef-korut 35.
Ufa-Film, IV. Kossuth Lajos-utca 13.
Universal-Film, VIII. Nepszinhaz-utca 21.
Dr. Bela Wamoscher-Film, VII. Erzsebet-korut 8.
Warner Bros. -First National, VIII. Jozsef-korut 30.
Importers
BUDAPEST
Philipp Engel, V. Sas-utca 7.
Endre Feher, VII. Erzsebet-korut 9/11.
Andor Lajta, XIV. Thokoly-ut 75.
Karl Oberlander, VIII. Rakoczi ut 57/b.
India
LEGISLATION — No quota law in effect, but it
is believed that it is only a matter of time before
the domestic industry is helped, either with a
quota or with higher import duties.
CENSORSHIP — Permanent censorship boards
exist in Bombay and Calcutta, but any one of the
11 governors' provinces may re-censor a film.
COMPETITION — American films, 45 per cent:
balance mostly Indian.
PRODUCTION — During the first eight months
of 1939, 171 features were produced.
TAXATION — Import duties are 37 per cent ad
valorem on exposed films and 20 per cent on un-
exposed film, value of the film being based on
seven annas per foot. Distributors also pay the
following taxes: Trades-and-Professions, income,
fire-brigade, storage license, octroi of local cus-
toms in certain provinces.
THEATERS — Most of the 1,030 theaters and
200 portable theaters are wired for sound.
Iran
LEGISLATION — For year ending June 21,
1940, quota for motion picture films, cameras, etc..
has been fixed at Rials 3,000.000 (about $67,000).
Normal imports scarcely exceed half this amount.
CENSORSHIP — Three films were rejected in
1939, two American and one British.
COMPETITION — American. 60 per cent: Ger-
man, 20 per cent: French, 10 per cent.
COPYRIGHT RELATIONS — No copyright law.
PRODUCTION — None.
TAXATION — Import duty is 100 rials per kilo-
gram net weight.
THEATERS — all 35 theaters are wired for
sound.
Iraq
LEGISLATION — None affecting motion pictures.
CENSORSHIP — Three films were rejected during
1939.
FOREIGN MARKETS
COMPETITION — American, 75 per cent; Arabic,
15 per cent; Indian, 7 per cent; British, 1 per
cent; French and Turkish, 1 per cent.
PRODUCTION — None, except 5,000 feet of
films prepared for the New York World's Fair.
TAXATION— Films certified to be useful for
purposes of education or health, 250 Fils per
kilo net; others, 500 Fils per kilo net.
THEATERS — All 25 theaters are wired for
sound.
Italy
LEGISLATION — Ente Nazionale Italiano Cine-
matografico (ENIC) has the monopoly for the
purchase, importation, and distribution of films in
Italy, its Possessions, and Colonies. Theaters must
show one Italian picture for every two foreign-
made. American companies do not export films
to Italy, except those with contracts to be filled.
PRODUCTION — From 90 to 100 features were
produced in 1939.
THEATERS — Estimates of the number of wired
theaters vary from 2,600 to 3,800. Latest figures
for total theaters are: Total: 4,013; divided as
follows: private industry, 2,700; Fascist After-
Work Recreation organizations, 660; religious
bodies, 546; others, 107.
Jamaica
LEGISLATION — None affecting films.
CENSORSHIP — About 1,000 films, including
shorts, censored in 1939, of which 13 were banned.
COMPETITION — American, 85 per cent: balance
British.
COPYRIGHT RELATIONS — ■ Same as Great
Britain.
PRODUCTION — None.
TAXATION — No import duties. Films are ad-
mitted under a deposit arrangement and are re-
shipped within three months.
THEATERS — All 17 theaters are wired for
sound.
Japan
LEGISLATION — Prime objectives of the Mo-
tion Picture Law of April 5, 1939 are the rigid
control over production, distribution and exhibi-
tion for purposes of cultural advancement and
regimentation along nationalistic lines. Domestic
producers will be forced to turn out films, the
scenarios of which must be approved prior to
screening. The showing of educational films
will be compulsory and every effort made to use
the industry for propagation of national ideals
and thought. The distribution and exhibition
of foreign films will be greatly restricted, no
theater being allowed to show more than 50
new foreign features a year as of Jan. 1, 1940.
The 1938 agreement between the Government
and U. S. film distributors, calling for permits
to import films to the value of $30,000 during
1938 and 1939 has not worked out due to the
Government's reluctanuce to issue import per-
mits. During the two years films allowed to be
imported amounted to 65.8 per cent of the $30.-
000 originally agreed upon.
Another section of the agreement called for
the deposit for funds frozen in Japan with the
San Francisco branch of the Yokohama Specie
Bank, converted into dollars and held without
interest for a period of three years from date
of deposit. However, no exchange permits for
remittance of royalties have been issued Ameri-
can distributors since the closing months of 1938.
Funds accumulated and frozen in Japan at the
end of 1939 totaled about $1,173,500.
PRODUCTION — About 437 features were pro-
duced in 1939, compared with 554 in 1938 and
583 in 1937.
THEATERS — At the end of 1938 there were
1,875 theaters of which 1.701 were wired for
sound.
1109
FOREIGN MARKETS
Distributors and Importers
TOKYO
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Company, Ltd., Osaka
Building, Uehisaiwaieho. Kojimaehi-ku.
Paramount Films, Ltd., Osaka Building-, Uchisai-
wai-cho, Kojimachi-ku.
Warner Bros. -First National Pictures (Japan),
Inc., Tatemono Building', Gofukubashi 3-chome,
Nihonbashi-ku.
United Artists Corporation, Osaka Building, Uchi-
saiwai-cho, Kojimachi-ku.
20th Century-Fox Far East, Inc., Izumo Building.
Ginza 8-chome. Kojimachi-ku.
Universal Pictures (Japan). Ltd., Takachieho
Bldg.. Uchisaiwai-cho. Kojimachi-ku.
Towa Shoji K. K. Kaijo Building, Marunouchi.
Kojimachi-ku.
Columbia Pictures, Osaka Building. Uchisaiwai-
cho, Kojimachi-ku.
Sanyei-sha, Oda Building, Minami Kayabacho, Ni-
honbashi-ku.
R. K. O. Radio Pictures Corp. Japan, Ltd., Sei-
shokan Building, Ginza 4-chome, Kyobashi-ku.
Mitsuba Boeki Shokai, Nisshin Building, Ote-
machi, Kojimachi-ku.
Toho Eiga K. K., No. 1, 7 ehome, Ginza, Kyo-
bashi-ku.
Empire Shoji Eiga-bu. Osaka Building, Uchisaiwai-
cho, Kojimachi-ku.
Obei Eiga Kaisha, Daido Seimei Building, Tori
2-chome. Nihonbashi-ku.
Cocco Eiga K. K., No. 3, 2-chome, Ginza Nishi,
Kyobashi-ku.
Sanwa Shoji Eiga-bu, Shoko Bldg., Uchisaiwai-cho.
1-chome, Kojimachi-ku.
Nippon Eiga Boeki K. K., Totaku Bldg., Uchisai-
wai-cho, Kojimachi-ku.
Producers
Daito Eiga Production Sugamo Studio, 445 Kosh-
inzuka. Sugamo. Tokyo.
Nihon Katsudo Shashin K. K., Uzumasa Studio.
Uzumasa. Kyoto.
Shochiku Ofuna Studio, Ofuna. Kanagawa-ken.
Shochiku Kyoto Studio, 127 Miyazkicho. Shimo-
gamo. Kyoto.
Shinko Kinema K. K., Uzumasa Studio, Uzumasa,
Kyoto.
Nihon Katsudo Shasin K. K.. Tamagawa Studio.
Nunota, Chofu, Kita-tamagori, Tokyo-fu.
Yokohama Cinema Shokai 22 Kuritadani, Kana-
kawa-ku. Yokohama.
Akazawa Kinema Shokai, Koizumi Building. Ueno,
Shitaya-ku Tokyo.
Toho Kyoto Studio, Uzumasa. Kyoto.
Toho Tokyo Studio, Seijo. Setagaya-ku, Tokyo.
Shinko Kinema K. K. Tokyo Studio, Ohizumi-
achi, Itabashi-ku, Tokyo.
Java
LEGISLATION — Draft of a new film ordinance
has been submitted to the People's Council. Main
points of the new legislation are the extension of
censorship to 8 and 1(3 mm. films and the dividing
of "children permitted" films into two categories,
those 13 years old and younger and those 14 to 17
years old.
CENSORSHIP — Comissie voor de Keuring van
Films, at Batavia, reviews all films.
COMPETITION — American films 75 per cent.
Chinese ar nearest competitors, with Germany
third.
COPYRIGHT RELATIONS — Berne Convention
applies.
PRODUCTION — Seven features have been pro-
duced since 1938.
TAXATION — Distributors pay regular corpo-
ration net-profits tax of 20 per cent. Import duty
is F. 15.00 per 100 meters.
THEATERS — About 330, all wired for sound,
of which 90 per cent are operating.
Latvia
LEGISLATION — No quota or contingent laws
in effect or contemplated.
CENSORSHIP — During the first six months of
1939, 332 films were censored including 142
features. Fifteen subjects were rejected, includ-
ing five American, five Soviet, three German and
one Latvian.
COMPETITION — During the first half of 1939.
38.2 per cent of films were American, 28 per cent
German, 13. G per cent Latvian (all shorts). 7.2
per cent French, 4.8 per cent Russian. 4.2 per
cent British, 0.6 per cent Italian and 3.3 per cent
unspecified.
COPYRIGHT RELATIONS — Films portected bv
the Latvian Copyright Law of May 15, 1937, ad-
hering to the Berne Convention.
PRODUCTION — Two features and 45 shorts
produced in the first six months of 1939.
TAXATION — Import license tax ranges from
five per cent (maximum) down to 2 per cent and
less, is fixed in proportion to the value of im-
ports during the preceding year, and paid in
advance.
THEATERS — All of the 95 theaters are wired
for sound.
Lithuania
LEGISLATION — No quota or contingent laws
in effect.
CENSORSHIP — Strict, especially with regard
to films dealing with criminal, revolutionary, and
immoral subjects.
COMPETITION — American, 60 per cent: Polish.
15 per cent; German, 10 per cent; Soviet, 5 per
cent.
COPYRIGHT RELATIONS — Former Imperial
Russian Copyright law is still in effect.
PRODUCTION — No feature production. One
company produces local newsreels.
TAXATION — Importers pay lits 350 per an-
num for a license to import films having a value
of up to Lits 10.000 during the calendar year.
For each additional Lits 10,000 or fraction, Lits
150 must be paid.
THEATERS — All 76 theaters are wired for
sound.
Luxemburg
LEGISLATION — None affecting motion pictures.
CENSORSHIP — None.
COMPETITION — U. S. films. 40 per cent: Ger-
man. 30 per cent: French, 28 per cent.
PRODUCTION — None.
THEATERS — All 30 theaters are wired for
sound.
Malta
LEGISLATION — -No quota or contingent laws
in effect.
CENSORSHIP — Films are viewed by the Board
of Film Censors.
COMPETITION — U. S. Films. 80 to 90 per cent:
balance, British.
THEATERS — All 125 theaters are wired for
sound.
Manchuria
LEGISLATION — Manchukuo Motion Picture
Law of Oct. 7. 1937. provides that no one may
produce, import, export or distribute motion pic-
tures unless designated to do so by the Prime
Minister. Manchuria Motion Picture Association.
Ltd., owned by the Government and the Japanese-
owned South Manchuria Railway Co., has been
designated for these purposes. American film
companies have declined to do business wifh
this monopoly so U. S. films have been excluded.
THEATERS — Most of the 120 theaters are
wired for sound.
Mexico
LEGISLATION — No quota or contingent laws
are in effect.
CENSORSHIP — Films are viewed by the Cen-
tral Censorship Bureau. Mexico City.
1110
COMPETITION — In order, U. S., French. Ger-
man films.
PRODUCTION — During 1939. 35 Mexican pro-
duced features were released. Of these 19 were
produced during- the year and 16 in 1938. Some
30 pictures have been produced and are await-
ing release.
TAXATION — Distributors pay five per cent of
the gross rentals charged for film which they
distribute. Tax is covered by stamps attached
by the distributor to receipts for payments. In
addition, distributors pay a tax on the capitaliza-
tion, plus stamp taxes for Government stamps
attached to contracts and receipts.
THEATERS — There are 443 theaters wired for
sound pictures, and 386 not wired.
Distributors
(American Films)
MEXICO CITY
Artistas Unidos, S.A.. Bolivar No. 44.
Columbia Pictures, Donato Guerra 5.
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer de Mexico, Reforma No. 51.
Paramount Films. S. A.. Ayuntaniiento 46.
R.K.O. Radio Pictures de Mexico, Ave. Morelos 59.
Universal Pictures Corp.. Reforma 132.
Warner Bros.-First National Pictures. Donato
Guerra 24.
20th Century-Fox. Donato Guerra 24.
Luis Lezama-Republic Pictures, Ejido 19.
Independents Distributors
(English, French, German, Spanish, Argentine and
Italian Pictures)
A.C.M.E., Ave. Juarez 56.
Alianza Films, Av. del Ejido 19-34.
CIEFSA, Esq. Artes e I. Ramirez.
Cia. Importadora de Peliculas, S.A., Ejido 19-6.
Distribucion "California," Paseo de la Reforma 97.
Felipe Mier y Hno.. Paseo Reforma 72.
Films Fancaise Mexique, Paseo Reforma 60.
G. Camus y Cia.. Belisario Dominguez 10.
Independiente Films. Av. Ejido 19-21.
Jorge M. Dada. San Juan Letran 49.
Latin-Art Cinema. Eliseo No. 8.
Victoria Films, Rosales 23.
Producers and Distributors
(Mexican Films)
Members of Mexican Association of Film Producers
Ave. Ejido No. 19
Buenos, Jose Luis, Artes 17.
Cinematografica Latino-Americana, S.A., Calz.
Tlalpam Km. 13.
Cia. Filogrfica Mexicana. Reforma 27.
Cia. Mexicana de Peliculas. S.R.L., Balderas 36.
Cinematografica Internacional, S.A., Paseo Re-
forma 72.
Cabrera, Francisco de P. A. en P., Av. Juarez 60.
Grovas & Cia.. Artes No. 17.
Iracheta & Elvira. S.R.L., Dolores No. 1.
Pereda Films, Av. Ejido 27.
Produccionies Amanecer, Av. Ejido 19.
Producciones A.R.B.. Reforma 27.
Producciones Cinematograficas Exito, Gante 21.
Producciones C.I.F.E.S.A., Artes 17.
Producciones R. de A., Av. Ejido 19.
Producciones Roberto A. Morales, Donato Guerra
22.
Producciones Raphael J. Sevilla. Reforma 35.
Producciones Juan Pezet, Av. Ejido 19.
Producciones Max Urban, Dr. Mora 9-20.
Producciones Hnos. Soria, Pasaje Teatro Alameda.
Producciones Varela. Av. Ejido 19.
Producciones Zacarias, Colima 179.
Vicente Saiso Piquer, Artes 17.
Producciones Acme. S.A., Av. Juarez 62.
Fernando de Fuentes, Reforma 36.
Non-Member Producers
Producciones Sanchez Tello, Reforma 36.
Producciones A. J. Fink, Reforma 36.
Producciones D. O. S. A.. Reforma 27.
Producciones Carlos Amador, Donato Guerra 22.
Films Mundiales, Artes 17.
Mexinema. S. A.. Reforma 35.
Studios
Estudios Aztla, Pachuca 90.
Estudios C.I.S.A., Francisco Montes de Oca 117,
Colonia Condesa.
FOREIGN MARKETS
Estudios C.L.A.S.A.. Calzada de TIalpan. Kilo-
metro 13, Parada Coapa, D. F.
Universidad Nacional. Reforma 525.
Estudios "Mexico Films." Fco. Montes de Oca 117.
Estudios Garcia Moreno, S.A., Nino Perdido y Av.
Coyoacan, Granja Concepcion. Coyoacan, D. F.
Estudio Mexinema (Under construction).
Laboratories
Laboratorios Sthal, Pachuca 90 y F. Montes de
Oca 117.
Laboratorios C. L. A. S. A., Calz. TIalpan, Parada
Coapa, D. F.
Eduardo Martorell. Ayuntamiento No. 158.
Laboratorio Chavira. Donato Guerra 22.
Laboratorios LaMadrid, Chihuahua No. 46.
Laboratorios Alfonso Manrique. Bucareli 171
Mascota 1).
Morocco
(French Protectorate)
LEGISLATION — -No quotas or preferential tar-
iffs. All non-French films are dubbed in and
exported from France.
CENSORSHIP — Over 99 per cent of imports
come from France, where they have already been
censored.
COMPETITION — American films, 70 per cent:
balance French.
COPYRIGHT RELATIONS — French laws apply.
PRODUCTION — None.
TAXATION — Import duties are 12 y2 per cent
ad valorem. Importers and distributors pay cus-
tomer business taxes.
THEATERS — All 62 theaters are wired for
sound.
Netherlands
Producers and Exporters
Loet C. Barnstijn's Filmproductie N. V., Film-
stad. Benoordenhoutsche weg 2, The Hasrue.
N. V. Marconi, Nederlandsche Geluidsfilmstudio's
Cinetone, Duivendrechtschekade 83-85, Amster-
dam.
Sound News Producers
Filmfabriek Polygoon N. V.. Koudenhorn 8,
Haarlem.
Profilti Filmfabriek N. V.. Boschlaan 3. The
Hague.
Distributors
Bergfilm N. V., Hemonylaan 21, Amsterdam.
Columbia Film Booking Office N. V.; Universal
Film Booking Office N. V., Nieuwe Doelenstraat
8, Amsterdam.
Filmex N. V., Keizersgracht 794. Amsterdam.
Filmverhuurkantoor "Ncdcrland." Dam 2a, Am-
sterdam.
Nova Film N. V.. Dam 2a. Amsterdam.
Filmtrust N. V., Heerengracht 298, Amsterdam.
Internationale Film Agentuur, Westermarkt 21,
Amsterdam.
Luminafilm, Nes 23. Amsterdam.
Meteor Film N. V.. Keizersgracht 794. Amster-
dam.
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Film Maatschappij N. V.,
Damrak 48. Amsterdam.
Munt Film. Hemonylaan 27, Amsterdam.
Netherlands Fox Film Corp. N. V., Rokin 38.
Amsterdam.
Paramount Films Holland N. V., Keizersgracht
399, Amsterdam.
R.K.O. Radio Films N. V., Keizersgracht 698,
Amsterdam.
Succes Toonfilm N. V., Heerengracht 242, Amster-
dam.
Internationale Tobis Cinema N. V., Jan Luyken-
straat 2, Amsterdam.
UFA Maatschappij voor Film-en Bioscoop medrijf
N. V.. Heerengracht 590. Amsterdam.
Universal Film Agency N. V., Damrak 53, Amster-
dam.
Victoria Film, Tintorettistraat 15. Amsterdam.
Warner Bros. First National Pictures N. V., Kei-
zersgracht 778, Amsterdam.
1111
FOREIGN MARKETS
The Express Film, Heenraadschalpslaan 13, Am-
stelveen.
Filmverhuurkantoor C'entralfilm, Nieume Haven
33, Dordrecht.
Loet C. Barnstijn's Standaardfilms N. V.; Loet
C. Barnstijn's Filmdistributie N. V., Filmstad.
Benoordenhoutsehe weg 2, The Hague.
City Film N. V.; Europa Film N. V., Nieuwstraat
24, The Hague.
Filmverhuurkantoor Odeon N. V., Laan van Meer-
dervoort 7, The Hague.
Melior Films, Weissenbruchstraat 310, The Hague.
Splendid Film, Daendelstraat 4, The Hague.
Filmverhuurkantoor Amftlmin, Muiderslotweg 153,
Haarlem.
Actueel Film N. V., Duvenvoordestraat 94, Haar-
lem.
D.L.S. Film Holland-Menopole Filmverhuur N.V.,
Coolsingel 51, Rotterdam.
Fan Film, Hugo de Grootstraat 9, Zandvoort.
Exporters and Importers
Filmimportzaak R. Minden, Haarlemmerdijk 82
Amsterdam.
Please not that most of the film distributors
are importers as well.
New Zealand
LEGISLATION — Cinematograph Films Act of
1928 has been extended to 1944 by the Statutes
Amendment Act. Under the provisions, 20 per
cent of screen time must be given to British prod-
uct; and 20 per cent of quota films each year
must be British quota films. Distributors are re-
lieved of the necessity of complying with the
quota when such action does not hinder any ex-
hibitor from complying with his quota.
During 1939, the Film Industry Board, consist-
ing of four representatives of distributors, four
of exhibitors, a chairman appointed by the Gov-
ernment, and two non-voting observers appointed
by the Government, was formed. Functions are
to act in the settlement of industry disputes and
to act in an advisory capacity to the Government
on industry questions.
CENSORSHIP — All films must be approved by
the censor before showings. Pictures, sound track
and advertising material are subject to censor-
ship. , . .
COMPETITION — American, 86 per cent; United
Kingdom 13 per cent; Australia, 1 per cent.
COPYRIGHT RELATIONS — Adequate laws exist.
PRODUCTION — One documentary film produced
in 1939, plus a few shorts.
TAXATION — Film hire tax based on net rent-
als are calculated from gross receipts by de-
ducting 12% per cent and the overhead distribu-
tion costs. Tax amounts to 25 per cent of neM,
rentals received from non-British films and 10
per cent on British films.
Income and social security tax is 12 Ya of
gross film rentals. Distributors' license fee is
two pounds to five pounds per annum.
THEATERS — All 426 theaters are wired for
sound.
Distributors and Importers
WELLINGTON
Action Pictures Ltd., O'Neill's Buildings, Cour-
tenay Place.
Australia & New Zealand Pictures Ltd., De Luxe
Buildings. Courtenay Place.
British Empire Films (N.Z.) Limited (Distributors
of Republic Pictures), 15 Courtenay Place.
Columbia Pictures Pty. Ltd.. Taranaki Street.
Gaumont British Dominions Film Distributors Pty.
Ltd., Kent Terrace.
Metropolitan Films, A.P.A. Building, Grey Street.
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (N.Z.) Ltd., Dixon Street.
New Film Distributors Limited, Colonial Mutual
Building, Customhouse Quay.
Paramount Film Service (N.Z.) Limited, Cr. Cuba
& Dixon Sts.
RKO-Radio Pictures (A/sia) Limited, Willis
street.
Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation (N.Z.)
Limited, Kent Terrace.
United Artists (A/sia) Pty. Limited, 55 Courtenay
Place.
Universal Pictures Pty. Limited, Willia Street.
Warner Brothers Pictures (N.Z.) Limited, Wake-
field Street.
AUCKLAND
World Film Productions Limited. Customs Street
East.
Nicaragua
LEGISLATION — None affecting motion pictures.
CENSORSHIP — No films rejected or revised dur-
ing the first 11 months of 1939.
COMPETITION — First 11 months of 1939:
American films, 330; German. 50: French, 20;
English, 15:and Mexican, 25.
PRODUCTION — None.
TAXATION — Import duty is $1.00 per thou-
sand feet of films, plus a surcharge of 37% per
cent of the duty. Stamp taxes on films are $0.30
per thousand feet, plus a registration tax of one
per cent of the declared value. Consular tax is
5 per cent of the commercial value of the film.
Customs declaration pay a tax of $0.60 when
films arrive by air express and $0.30 when they
arrived by parcelpost.
THEATERS — All 27 theaters are wired for
sound.
Norway
LEGISLATION — No quota or contingent laws
in effect.
CENSORSHIP — During the first nine months
of 1939, 660 films were reviewed of which 13.
including 11 American, were rejected.
COMPETITION — American, 62 per cent; Ger-
man, 12 per cent, followed by Swedish and
French films.
COPYRIGHT RELATIONS — Royal Decree of
July 1. 1905, protects films.
PRODUCTION — During 1939, five features were
produced, compared with four in 1938.
TAXATION — American branches are considered
as earning 10 per cent of their total film rentals
and taxes are based on that amount.
THEATERS — Of 270 theaters, 107 are munici-
pally owned, 95 are owned by associations, and
68 privately owned. All houses are wired for
sound.
Distributors and Importers
OSLO
Film-Aktieselskapet Paramount, Stortingsgt 12.
A/S Merkur-Film, Fridtjof Nansens Plass 6.
Odin-Film, Stortingsgaten 30.
Norena-Film, Fridtjof Nansens Plass 4.
Capitol Film A/S, Stortingsgaten 20.
Apollo-Film, Fridtjof Nansens Plass 6.
Norsk Filmindustri, Nedre Vaskegang 2.
Bergfilm, Oscarsgt 86.
Syncron-Film, Klingenberggt 5.
Atlas Film, Klingenberggt 2.
Triangelfilm A/S, Klingenberggt 2.
Bio Film Compani, Karl Johansgt 1.
Europafilm, Odd Fellow-bygningen.
A/S Filmhuset, Strandgaten 6. Bergen.
Filmformidling A/S, Nytorvet 2. Opg. A.
A/S Fotorama, Stortingsgaten 16.
Fox Film A/S, Odd Fellow-bygningen.
Kamera Film. Odd Fellow-bygningen.
Kinografens Filmbureau A/S, Stortingsgt 16.
Kommunenes Filmcentral A/S, Tollbodgaten 35.
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer A/S, Horngarden.
Norsk Skolefilm, Tollbodgaten 35.
United Artists A/S (Kommunenes Filmcentral
A/S).
Universal Pictures of Norway A/S, Stortingsgt 22.
Warner Bros. First National Vitaphone Pictures
A/S, Stortingsgaten 30.
Producers
OSLO
A/S Merkur-Film, Fridtjof Nansens Plass 6.
Breistein, Birkelund, Smestad Baerum.
A/S Norsk Film, Stortingsgaten 16.
1112
Palestine
F © R E f G N MARKETS
LEGISLATION — Prior to the war, there were
no laws affecting' films, but various emergency
measures have been enacted, and preparations
are being made for control of all imports by a
licensing system.
CENSORSHIP — Central Censorship Board is
considered strict due to a desire to prevent offense,
on religious grounds, to Christians, Jews or Mos-
lems.
COMPETITION — July 1, 1938, to June 30,
1939: American, 160 films; French, 33; German,
9; Russian, 4: Polish. 4: Egyptian, 3; English, 2;
Chechoslovakian, 2: Italian, 1.
COPYRIGHT RELATIONS — U. S. Great Britain
agreement applies.
PRODUCTION — Confined to newsreels and ad-
vertising films.
THEATERS — All 45 theaters are wired for
sound.
Panama
LEGISLATION — None affecting motion pictures.
COMPETITION — U. S. films, 80 per cent: bal-
ance from Mexico, Argentina, Great Britain.
France and Cuba.
THEATERS — There are 26 theaters in the
Republic of Panama and 28 in the Canal Zone;
all are wired for sound.
Distributors and Importers
(Located in Panama and the Canal Zone)
Columbia Pictures Dist. Co., Inc., P. O. Box 5073,
Cristobal.
British Gaumont and Grand National (agent),
Lynn Yost, P. O. Box 5006, Cristobal.
Fox Films. S. A.. P. O. Box 5023, Cristobal.
Metro Goldwyn Mayer de Panama, S. A., P. O.
Box "T," Ancon.
Monogram Pictures (agent), Lynn Yost, P. O.
Box 5006. Cristobal.
Mexican Pictures (agent), Luis Hernandez, P. O.
Box 219, Panama.
Paramount Films, S.A., P. O. "A," Ancon, C. Z.
Radio Pictures of Panama, Inc., P. O. Box 2015,
Ancon.
Republic Pictures of C. A., P. O. Box "E,"
Cristobal.
Spanish Pictures (agent), Luis Hernandez, P. O.
Box 219, Panama.
U. F. A. Pictures (agent), H. W. Bosenberg, P. O.
Box 1586, Ancon.
United Artists Corporation, P. O. Box 5044, Cris-
tobal.
Universal Films, S.A.. Drawer "I," Ancon.
Warner Bros. -First National, P. O. Box 5013,
Ancon. South Films, Inc.
Paraguay
LEGISLATION — No quota or contingent laws
in force or contemplated.
CENSORSHIP — No films censored in 1939; one
film, American, was rejected by the Government.
COMPETITION — American films, 90 per cent;
Argentine and French, each 3 per cent; British
and German, each 2 per cent.
PRODUCTION — None.
TAXATION — No import duties except nominal
chargeof400 pesos for each package of films, paid
at Encarnacion, port of entry.
THEATERS — Eight, with seven wired for sound.
Peru
LEGISLATION — No quota laws in effect.
CENSORSHIP — From Jan. 1 to Nov. 15, 1939,
967 films were reviewed, of which five features
(three American), were rejected.
COMPETITION — Principal competitor of Ameri-
can films are those from Argentina.
COPYRIGHT RELATIONS — Inter-American
Copyright Convention, Buenos Aires, 1910, applies
PRODUCTION — During the first 11 months
of 1939, 21 films, including seven features, were
produced.
THEATERS — All 215 theaters are wired for
sound.
Philippine Islands
LEGISLATION — None affecting motion pictures.
CENSORSHIP — Philippine Board of Censorship
views all films.
COMPETITION — U. S. films. 90 per cent;
Chinese, four per cent, and Filipino, two per
cent. Filipino films are becoming more popular.
PRODUCTION — Features produced in 1939
totaled about 60.
TAXATION — Internal revenue tax is three to
five centavos per linear meter.
THEATERS — Of 350 theaters, 320 are wired
for sound.
Distributors and Producers
Acme Films, Inc., 2215 Azcarraga, Manila.
Administraeion Tecnica Industrial Cinematograf-
iea. Inc.. 239 Gral. Solano, Manila.
Affiliated Films, 428 Desmarinas, Manila.
Agno Films, Inc., c/o Theatres Supply Corp., Fer-
nandez Bldg., 124 T. Pinpin, Manila.
Aurora Pictures, 257 Constancia, Manila.
Cervantina-Filipina. Inc., 51 Escolta, Manila.
Columbia Pictures of Phil.. Inc., State Bldg. Annex,
Manila.
Del Monte Pictures, Inc., San Francisco del Monte,
Rizal.
Diwata Films Co., Inc., 447 Evangelista, Manila.
Excelsior Pictures, Calvo Bldg., Escolta, Manila.
Filippine Films, Inc., 179 Invernes, Sta. Ana,
Manila.
Four Star Film Co.. 415 Ronquillo. Manila.
Liwayway Pictures, 418 Misericord in, Manila.
Lvn Motion Pictures, Inc., 306 Plaza Miranda.
Manila.
Mabuhay Pictures Co., Inc., 521 Ongpin. Manila.
Majestic Pictures, Inc., c/o Theaters Supply Corp.,
Fernandez Bldg., 124 T. Pinpin. Manila.
Manila Films, San Francisco del Monte, Rizal.
Mayon Films, 2219 Azcarraga, Manila.
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Manila, Inc., Ideal Thea-
ter Bldg., Manila.
Minerva Pictures. Inc., 22 Azcarraga, Manila.
Monogram Film Exchange, Inc., 334 Misericordia,
Manila.
Nepatone Pictures Corp.. 604 Evangelista, Manila.
Oriental Films Corporation, Inc., Padilla Bldg.,
Rizal Ave., Manila.
Pan Oriental Films. State Bldg. Annex, Manila.
Paramount Films of Philippines. Inc., Cu Unjieng
Bldg., Escolta & T. Pinpin, Manila.
Parlatone Hispano Filipino, Inc., 2219 Azcarraga,
Manila.
Parla Hispana Films, 2219 Azcarraga, Manila.
Philippine National Pictures, Inc., 159 J. Barlin.
Manila.
Prismatone Filipinas, 2219 Azcarraga, Manila.
RKO Radio Pictures (Phil.), Inc., State Bldg.
Annex, Manila.
Salumbides Film Co., Ltd., Del Monte & Fajardo,
San Francisco del Monte, Rizal.
Salvacion Films, Padilla Bldg., Rizal Ave., Manila.
Sampaguita Pictures, Inc., 140 Solana, Manila.
Silangan Movietone, Inc., 31 Plaza Sta. Cruz,
Manila.
Sinukuan Pictures, Inc.. 904 O'Donnell, Manila.
Twentieth Century-Fox Import Co., Inc., 518 Reina
Regente, Manila.
United Artists Corporation, 507 Cu Unjieng Bldg.,
Manila.
Universal Pictures Corp. of the Far East, 2262
Azcarraga, Manila.
Warner Brothers-First National Pictures (P. I.),
Inc., Cu Unjieng Bldg., Manila.
X-otic Films, 2219 Azcarraga, Manila.
Portugal
LEGISLATION — None affecting films, except a
decree ordering 100 meters of Portugese produced
film to be shown on each program.
CENSORSHIP — Inspeccao dos Espectaculos cen-
sors all films.
1113
FOREIGN MARKETS
COMPETITION — Some 80 to 85 per cent of
films shown are imported from the U. S.
PRODUCTION — Two features and 30 100-meter
films were produced in 1939.
THEATERS — Of 210 theaters, 185 are wired
for sound.
Distributors
LISBON
Paramount Films S.A., Rua Braancamp, 10, lo
Dto.
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Rua Braancamp, 10, lo
Esq.
Fox Films Ltda., Rua Braancamp. 10. r/ehao Dto.
Continental Films Ltda., Praca Marques de Pom-
bal, 6, lo Dto.
Films Castelo Lopes, Praca Marques de Pombal.
6 lo Dto.
Ageneia H. De Costa Ltda. Avenida da Liberdade
245 r/ehao.
Films Luiz Machado Ltda. Avenida da Liberdade,
161.
Sociedade Universal Super-Films, Avenida da Lib-
erdade 73-lo.
Sociedad Raul Lopes Freire, Praca dos Restau-
radores 35, lo Dto.
Sonoro Filme Ltda. Praca da Alegria 11.
Sociedade Importadora De Films, Largo de S. Do-
mingos 11.
Radio Films Ltda. Avenida Duque de Louie 95-lo.
Ca Cinematografica De Portugal, Rua Eugenio dos
Santos 110, 2o.
Alianca Films Ltda. Rua Passos Manuel, Porto.
Producers and Exporters
LISBON
Lisboa Filme Ltda. Alameda das Linhas de Tores.
Ulissea Filme, Ltda. Praca dos Restauradores 35.
lo.
Anibal Contreiras. Praca Marques de Pombal 6.
2o Dto.
Aquilino Mendes. Praca Marques de Pombal 6-lo.
Portuguese East Africa
LEGISLATION — No quota or contingent laws
in effect.
CENSORSHIP — All films reviewed by a board
of censorship.
COMPETITION — U. S. films totaled 390 of
509 shown.
THEATERS — All eight theaters are wired for
sound.
Puerto Rico
Distributors and Importers
SAN JUAN
Paramount Films, Inc., Cobian Film Center, Pta.
de Tierra.
Fox Film Corp.. Cobian Film Center, Pta. de
Tierra.
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Bobian Film Center, Pta.
de Tierra.
United Artists Corp., Cobian Film Center, Pta. de
Tierra.
Medal Film Exchange, Cobian Film Center, Pta.
de Tierra.
Universal Pictures. Cobian Film Center, Pta. de
Tierra.
Cifesa, Cobian Film Center. Pta. de Tierra.
Independent Films. Cobian Film Center. Pta. de
Tierra.
Fernando Cortes, Cobian Film Center, Pta. de
Tierra.
Warner Bros., Independent Film Center, Santurce.
Rafael G. Marti, Independent Film Center, San-
turce.
Rumania
Distributors and Importers
BUCAREST
Atlanta Film, Str. Nicolae Filipescu 29.
Avia Film, Bui. Biatianu 9.
Arta Film, Str. Isvor 2.
Astoria Film, Str. Baratiei 2.
B. D. C. Film, Str. loan Ghica 11.
Criterion Film, Str. Isvor 2.
Centuria Film, Bui. Regele Alexandru I No. 3.
Dacia Film, Bui. I. C. Bratianu 37-39.
I. Davidescu, Bui. Elisabeta 34.
Lux Film, Bui. Elisabeta 15.
Mercur Film. Str. Sfintilor 13.
Nero Film, Str. Bursei 3.
Oer Film, Str. C. A. Rosetti 4.
Pathe Nathan, Cal. Victoriei 88.
Paramount Film. Str. Nicolae Filipescu 29.
Rex Film, Str. Spiru Haret 4.
Trianon Film. Bui. Elisabeta 3.
Warner Bros. -First National, Str. Brezoianu 4.
San Marino
LEGISLATION — San Marino follows the Italian
restrictions regarding distribution and selection.
THEATERS — One theater, wired for sound.
Spain
LEGISLATION — First of what is expected to
be a series of regulations to control practically
all phases of the picture industry was the ruling
issued by the Commerce Ministry in June. 1939.
providing that importers must produce and export
one Spanish picture for each 10 pictures imported.
Ruling has not been published but was communi-
cated confidentially to the trade. Su-Comision
Reguladora de la Industria de la Cinematografia
was created on Oct. 20, 1939, and the regula-
tions will not be published until it is approved.
CENSORSHIP — Films are reviewed by the
Ministry of the Interior at Madrid.
COMPETITION — In order. American. German.
Spnaish, Italian and English films lead the mar-
ket
PRODUCTION — During 1938 and 1939 12 "Span-
ish" features were produced, mainly as war propa-
ganda, in Germany and Italy, by Spanish con-
cerns. Companies were sent abroad when the
studios in Madrid and Barcelona were not available.
TAXATION — -Import duty is 25 gold pasetas
per kilo, plus surtaxes.
THEATERS — All of the 2.852 houses are wired
for sound.
Producers, Importers
Exporters and Distributors
Region de Cataluda
BARCELONA
Alianza Cinematografica Espanola. Provenza. 273.
Atlantic Films. Valencia. 233.
Balet y Blay, Paseo de Gracia. 83.
British Films Distributors, S. E. Ltda., Aragon.
271.
Buigas y Vinas. Paseo de Gracia. 73.
C. I.F.E.S.A. (Compania Industrila Film Espanol
S.A.). Valencia, 233.
Cinnamond Films. Balmes. 51 Pral.
Columbia Films. S.A., Av. del Generalisimo Franco.
484.
Ediciones y Distribueiones Cinematograficas (E.
D.I.C.I.), Rambla Cataluna. 118.
Exclusivas Diana. Aragon. 219.
Exclusivas E. Huet. Paseo de Gracia. 66.
Exclusivas Ignacio Simo. Aragon. 249.
Exclusivas Galia. Consejo de Ciento, 296.
Filmofono. S.A.. Rosellon, 238.
Federico Trian, S. en C. Valencia. 234.
Hispania Tobis, Provenza. 207.
Hispano American Films, S.A. (Universal Films).
Mallorca, 220.
Hispano Fox Films. S.E.. Valencia. 280-282.
Huguet (S.) S.A. (Selecciones Capit olio) , Provenza.
292.
Hispano Italo Aleman Films. Consejo de Ciento.
292.
Internacional Films, Valencia, 213.
Juan Arajol, Aragon, 225.
Jose Balart, Valencia, 227.
Los Artistas Asociados, Rambla Cataluna, 62.
Metro Goldwyn Mayer Iberica, S.A., Mallorca, 201-
203.
Paramount Films, S.A.. Paseo de Gracia, 91.
Producciones Cinematograficas Espanolas (P.C.E.)
Paseo de Gracia, 73.
1114
Radio Films, S.A.E., Paseo de Gracia, 76.
Roman Sola, Provenza, 256.
Super Films, Valencia, 230.
Select Orbis, Aragon, 231.
Ufilms-Ulargui Films, Balmes, 79.
Warner Bross-First National Films, S.A.E., Paseo
de Gracia, 77.
LEKIDA
Emilio Miralles, Plaza de Cataluna, 11.
Pedro Granados, M. de Villa Antonia, 4.
Region de Aragon
ZARAGOZA
Agencia Espanola de Informacion de Prensa. Gas-
con, 68.
Jose Martin Campos, Manifestacion, 22.
Region de Islas Baleares
PALMA DE MALLORCA
Compania Cinematografica, F.R.E. Sda. Ltda.,
Tamorer. 1-bajos.
Garcia y Segura, Santo Domingo, 32.
Juan Reynes, Prevision, 21.
Miguel Alomar, Prevision, 21.
Ramon Balet "Palma Postal." General Goded, 16.
MAHON
Jaime Catchot, Hannover, 2.
Region del Centro y Extremadura
MADRID
Alianza Cinematografica Espanola, M. Romanos,
2.
Antonio Rey Sortis, Mayor, 4.
Artistica Films, Cuesta Santo Domingo, 20.
Atlantic Films, Concepcion Arenal, 6.
Centro Espanol Cinematografico 8 Valenzuela, 6.
Columbia Films, Eduardo Dato, 8.
Cinematografia Munoz, Los Madrazo, 32.
Ediciones y Distribuciones Cinematograficas
(E.D.I. C.I.) , Paseo de Recoletos. 31.
Ernesto Gonzalez, Jose Antonio, 71.
Exclusivas Dianas, Principe, 18.
Filmofono, S.A., Jose Antonio, 67.
Francisco Puigvert, Arenal, 27.
Gran Empresa Sagarra, Jose Antonio, 67.
Hercules Films, Jose Antonio, 74.
Hispania Tobis, Barquillo, 10.
Hispano Italo Aleman Films, Pi Maragall, 20.
Hispano American Films (Universal Films), Jose
Antonio, 16.
Hispano Fox Films, Plaza del Callao, 4.
Iberia Films, Plaza Cortes. 3.
Imperial Films, Peligros, 14.
Jose Marino, Barcelo, 5.
Juan Soler, Cuesta de Santo Domingo, 4.
Los Artistas Asociados, Jose Antonio, 67.
Metro Goldwyn Mayer, Silva, 15.
Manuel Castillo, Jose Antonio, 49.
Manuel Villarreal, Guzman el Bueno, 3.
Paramount Films, S.A., Av. de Jose Antonio, 21
(Edificio Carrion)
Producciones Cinematograficas Espanolas (P.C.E.),
Alcala, 37.
Radio Films, S.A.E., Pi Maragall, 22.
Renacimiento Films, Av. Eduardo Dato, 7.
Rex Films, Av. Eduardo Dato, 7.
Riesgo Films, Plaza del Callao, 4.
Sociedad Anonima de Espectaculos Publicos. Plaza
Independencia, 4.
Sociedad Espanola de Cinema Educativo, Av.
Eduardo Dato, 4.
Selecciones Capitolio. Los Madrazo, 32.
Ufilms-Ulargui Falms, Antonio, Maura, 16.
Vicente Vinals, Jose Antonio, 67.
Warner Bross First National Films, S.A.E., Plaza
del Callao, 4.
C.I.F.E.S.A. (Compania Indistrial Film Espanol,
S.A.), Av. Jose Antonio, 1
Region del Norte
BILBAO
Artistas Asociados, S.A., ELCANO, 25.
Atlantic Films, S.A.. Alameda da Udquijo, 20.
Central Cinematografica, Berastegui, 4.
C.F.E.S.A. (Compania Industrial Film Espanol.
S.A.), Alameda de Urquijo, 12.
Columbia Films, S.A., Alameda de Urquijo, 20.
Exclusivas Diana, Alameda de Urquijo, 43.
Filmofono, S.A., Bertendona, 4.
Francisco Onate, Colon de Larreategui, 30.
Hispano Fox Films, Elcano, 23.
Hispano American Films, S.A. (Universal Films).
Plaza San Vicente, 1.
FOREIGN MARKETS
Hispania Tobis, S.A., Elcano, 16.
Huguet (S.), S.A. (Selecciones Capitolio), Gar-
doqui, 6.
Imperial Films, Buenos Aires, 6.
Metro Goldwyn Mayer Iberica, S.A., Alameda de
Urquijo, 18.
Miguel Mezquiriz, Ibanez de Bilbao, 9.
Radio Films, S.A.E., Colon de Larreategui, 55.
Ufilms-Ulargui Films. Colon de Larreategui, 17.
Warner Bross-First National Films, S.A.E., Ercilla,
16.
Selecciones Modernas, (Jaime Lameyer), Ber-
tendona. 4.
SANTANDER
Jucar Films, General Espartero, 17.
VITORIA
Arte Films, Teatro Principe.
Region de Galicia
LA CORUNA
C.I.F.E.S.A. (Compania Industrial Film Espanol
S.A.) San Bias, 1. 4o.
Hispano Fox Films, San Andres, 169.
Jose Miguel Montero, San Bias, l-3o.
Luis Lopez de la Oso, Plaza Maria Pita, 8.
Metro Goldwyn Mayer Iberica, S.E., San Andres.
165.
Rodrigo Vara. Santiago, 3.
Ufilms Ulargui Films, Canton Pequeno, 15, 16 y
17.
VIGO
Joaquin Montroy, Montero Rios, 38.
Region de Levante
VALENCIA
Artistica Films, Gran Via Germanias, 37.
Artistas Asociados, Gran Via Germanias, 26.
Columbia Films, Cotanda, 4.
C.I.F.E.S.A. (Compana Industrial Film Espanol,
S.A.), Mar, 60.
Antonio Cardil, Colon, 17.
Exclusivas Diana, Gran Via Germanias. 43.
Filmofono, S.A., Gran Via Germanias, 28.
Films, Raza, S.L., Garrigues, 5.
Hispano Fox Films, Av. Calvo Sotelo. 1.
Hispano American Films, S.A., Rivera, 18.
Hispania Tobis, S.A.. Marques de Sotelo, 11.
Julio Selles, Gran Via Germanias, 34.
Jose Porta Talamantes, Felix Pizcueta, 26.
Jose Marco (Arte Films), Salva, 11.
Metro Goldwyn Mayer Iberica, Gran Via Germanias.
36.
Paramount Films, S.A., Sorni, 14.
Produccion Cinematografica Espanola (P.C.E.).
Jorge Juan, 15.
Radio Films, S.A.E., Barcelonia. 2.
Ruano y Valcarcal, Gonzalo Julian, 15.
Rogelio Bertrau, G. Via Marques Turis, 27.
Ufilms-Ulargui Films. Cotanda, 4.
Warner Bross-First National Films, S.A., Cirilo
Amoros, 29.
ALICANTE
Juan Bernabeu Rico, Gerona, 12.
Luis Martinez Sanchez, Paseo Mendez Nunez, 5.
Moises Lopez Ruiz. Sagasta, 66.
MURCIA
Fernando Flores Rueda (Universal Films).
Metro Goldwyn Mayer Iberica, S.A.
Paramount Films, S.A., Saaverdra Fajardo, 18.
Selecciones Films. Saaverdra Fajardo, 22.
ALBACETE
Hija de Enrique Tebar, Gimenez de Cordoba, 21.
Region de Andalucia
Africa y Canarias
SEVILLA
Artistas Asociados, S.A.. Sierpa, 33.
Atlantic Films, S.A., San Eloy, 9.
C.I.F.E.S.A. (Compania Industrial Film Espanol
S.A., Alfonso XII, 11.
Columbia Films. S.A.. Jesus, 21.
Exclusivas Sanchez Ramade, Maese Rodrigo, 4.
Balet y Blay, Cuna, 13.
Filmofono. S.A., O'donnell, 13.
1115
FOREIGN MARKETS
Hispano Fox Films, S.A.E., Santa Maria de
Gracia, 6.
Hispano American Films. S.A. (Universal Films).
San Pablo. 41.
Hispania Tobis. S.A.. Alemanes, 11.
Ignacio Ariol, Martinez Montanes, 20.
Jose L. Chiclana, Fernan Caballero, 11.
Manuel Mitjanas, San Roque. 13.
Metro Goldwyn Mayer Iberica. S.A., Fernan
Caballero, 18.
Paramount Films, S.A.. San Pablo, 41.
Producciones Cinematograficas Espanolas (P.C.E.),
Trajano, 11.
Radio Films, S.A.E., Av. Jose Antonio Primo de
Ribera, 14.
L'films-Ulargi Films. Tetuan, 25.
Uca, Alfonso XII, 64.
(U.F.A.) J. M. Ortiz. Julio Cesar, 3.
Warner Bross First National Films. S.A.E.. Bailen
23.
MALAGA
Jose Silva Alba. Pasillo de la Careel, 6-Pral.
Jose Camacho Albert. Carreteria. 74.
CORDOBA
Antonio Cabrera Diaz. San Hipolito. 10.
LAS P ALMAS (Islas Canarias)
Agustin Rodriguez, Domingo Deniz, 7.
Fernando O'shanahan. Viera y Clavijo, 32.
C.I.F.E.S.A. (Compania Industrial Films Espanol,
S.A.). Triana, 97.
Juan del Rio Amor. Perez Galdos, 16
Jaime Mola Millet. Triana, 40.
Luis Ley Good, Triana, 43.
Manuel de la Torre, Viera y Clavijo, 44.
Manuel Bello Valle, Mesa de Leon. 15.
Nareiso Cabrera, Triana. 26.
Viuda de Rafael Ave. Herrerias, 1.
SANTA CRUZ DE TENERIFE (Islas Canarias)
Alvaro Ara. Jesus Maria. 31.
Jose Dona Sanchez, La Rosa, 44.
Luis Zamorano, Sal on Victoria.
Metro Goldwyn Mayer Iberica. S.A.. Santa Rosalia,
8.
Ramon Baudet, Cline Parque Recreativo.
Straits Settlements
Producers, Distributors, Exporters
and Importers
SINGAPORE
(except when noted)
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Oriental, Inc., 144-B Rob-
inson Road.
Paramount Film Service Ltd., 51 Robinson Road.
Fox Film Corporation (East) Ltd., 12 Trafalgar
Street.
Columbia Films of Malaya Ltd., 76 Orchard Road.
United Artists Corporation, 80 Orchard Road.
Warner Bros. -First National Pictures. 267 Orchard
Road.
Universal Pictures (Singapore) Ltd.. 287 Orchard
Road.
Pavilion Ltd.. 269 Orchard Road.
Anglo Oriental Trading Co.. 26 Nunes Building.
Malacca Street.
Alsagoff Limited. 20 Malacca Street.
Chinese National Film Co., 31 Phee Choon Road.
Penang.
London Film Exchange, 217 Selegie Road.
Malaya Film Service. 742 North Bridge Road.
M. A. Namazie, 19 Malacca Street.
Penang Biograph Co., 102 Prinsep Street.
Shaw Bros. Ltd.. (Hai Hsin Film Co. Ltd.), 116
Robinson Road.
Sree Kanabiran & Co., 18B Robinson Road.
Sri Krishna Vilas, 227-229 Selegie Road.
Tong Ah Film Co., 175 Tank Road, Singapore:
42 Campbell Road, Kuala Lumpur.
Sweden
LEGISLATION — No import quotas or exchange
restriction. On Oct. 9. 1939. a Royal Procla-
mation prohibiting the importation of newsreels
of current events equipped with Swedish subtitles
or sound, was issued.
CENSORSHIP — The State Motion Picture
Board reviews all pictures.
COMPETITION — American. 60.1 per cent:
French. 16 per cent: Swedish, 8.2 per cent: Ger-
man-Austrian, 7.6 per cent: British. 3.6 per
cent: Russian. 2.4 per cent: Czechoslovakian, 1.5
per cent: Norwegian. 0.3 per cent: Finnish. 0.3
per cent.
COPYRIGHT RELATIONS — Films protected by
Royal Decree of May 30, 1919, amended by De-
cree of April 24, 1931.
PRODUCTION — About 28 features in 1939.
TAXATION — Import duty is 1,580 crowns per
100 kilograms actual net weight.
THEATERS — All 2.134 theaters are wired for
sound.
Distributors and Importers
STOCKHOLM
Andersons Filmbyra. Albin, Vasagatan 9.
Anglo-Film, AB.. Regeringsgatan 109.
Columbia Film. AB.. Kungsgatan 48.
Europa Film, AB., Kungsgatan 24.
Filmdepoten, Drottninggatan 10.
Fox Film, AB., Kungsgatan 37.
Fribergs Filmbyra. AB., Malmskillnadsgatan 39.
Internationalfllm. Kungsgatan 33.
Irefilm Distributionsbyra. AB.. Kungsgatan 65.
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, AB.. Kungsgatan 16-18.
Nordisk Tonefllm, Svenska AB., Apelbersgatan 58.
Paramount, Film AB.. Hamngatan 22.
RKO Radio Films, AB.. Vasagatan 16.
Rosenbergs Filmbyra, Oscar. Kungsgatan 44.
Sandrew-Baumanfilm. AB.. Kungsgatan 65.
Skandinavien. Film AB., Kungsgatan 16-18.
Sonora Film. Kungsgatan 29.
Stockholm Film, AB.. Kungsgatan 16.
Svea Film. AB., Kungsgatan 29.
Svensk Filmindustri. AB.. Kungsgatan 36.
Svensk Talfilms Distributionsbyra. AB.. Wrott-
ninggatan 47.
Terrafilm. AB., Kungsgatan 65.
Thor. Film AB.. Kungsgatan 44.
Ufafilm, AB.. Kungsgatan 44.
United Artists, AB.. Kungsgatan 13.
Universal Film Aktiebolag. Kungsgatan 7.
Warner Bros. -First National, Film AB., Kungs-
gatan 44.
W'ivefllm. AB., Kungsgatan 16-18.
Producers
STOCKHOLM
Europa Film, AB., Kungsgatan 24.
Fribergs Filmbyra, AB.. Malmsbillnadsgatan 39.
Nordisk Tonefilm. Svenska AB., Apelbergsgatan
58.
Sandrew-Baumanfilm. AB.. Kungsgatan 65.
Svensk Filmindustri. AB., Kungsgatan 36.
Svensk Talfilms Distributionsbyra, AB., Drottning-
gatan 47.
Terrafilm, AB., Kungsgatan 65.
Wivefilm. AB.. Kungsgatan 16-18.
Switzerland
LEGISLATION — By Federal Decree, dated July
7, 1939, retroactive to June 1, 1939, imports of
feature films are subject to contingents, allotted
to individual importers on the basis of their im-
ports during the four-year period from January 1,
1935, to December 31. 1938. Provisions of the
decree are applicable to feature films of standard
width with a minimum length of 1,100 meters, or
16 mm. films with a minimum length of 460
meters. Contingents are based on titles, regard-
less of the number of prints or different versions
of the same picture, are issued for a calendar
year, and are not transferable.
CENSORSHIP — A prerogative of the various
Cantons. Since the war, military censorship has
been instituted and films are now subject to ad-
vance censorship by the Film Section of the Press
and Radio Division of the Army.
COMPETITION — American, 49.4 per cent;
France, 21.8 per cent: Germany. 15.4 per cent.
COPYRIGHT RELATIONS — Films protected by
Federal law of Dec. 7. 1922.
PRODUCTION — In 1939. one feature, plus some
shorts and advertising reels, were produced.
TAXATION — Import duty on films is 60 francs
per 100 kilograms gross weight, and a supple-
mentary fee of four francs per kilogram.
1116
THEATERS — All 360 theaters are wired for
sound.
Distributors
Eos-Film A.G., Reichensteinerstrasse 14, Basel.
Alfa-Film, Effingerstrasse 29, Bern.
Cinevox S.A., Haus Capitol, Bern.
Sehweiz. Schul- & Volkskino, Erlachstrasse 21,
Bern.
Charriere-Bourquin-Films, 4, Rue Chantepoulet,
Geneve.
Comptoir Cin. S.A., 4, Rue Pradier, Geneve.
Distributeur de Films S.A., 10, Rue de la Con-
federation, Geneve.
Films Independants S.A. (Les), Grd. Lancy, Clos
du Midi, Geneve.
Films Parlants S.A., 59 Rue du Stand, Geneve.
Ideal-Films S.A., 15, Rue Levrier, Geneve.
Fox-Europa (Les Productions), 12, Rue de la
Croix d'or, Geneve.
Majestic-Films S.A., 5, Place de la Fusterie,
Geneve.
Monopole Pathe Films S.A., 4, Rue de la Rotis-
serie, Geneve.
Nestor Fuchs, 7, Rue Pierre Fatio, Geneve.
Royal Films S.A., 10, Rue d'ltalie. Geneve.
Selection Films S.A., 12, Rue General Dufour,
Geneve.
S.A. d'Expl. de films sonores, 6, Passage dee
Lions, Geneve.
Unartisco S.A., 3, Rue de la Confederation, Gen-
eve.
Warner Bros., 4, Rue du Rhone, Geneve.
Office Cin. S.A., 2, Grand-Pont, Lausanne.
P.A.D. (Les Films), 10, Mauborget, Lausanne.
Self (Agence Cin. S.A.), 12, Via Emilio Bossi,
Lugano.
Columbus-Film A.G., Glarnischstrasse 30, Zuerich.
Coram-Film A.G., Lowenstrasse 20. Zuerich.
Elite-Film A.G., Lowenstrasse 59, Zuerich.
Emelka-Filmgesellschaft, Lowenstrasse 55, Zuerich.
Etna-Film Co. A.G., Bahnhofplatz 3, Zuerich.
Interna-Film A.G. (Neue), Stauffacherstrasse 41,
Zuerich.
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Sihlporteplatz 3, Zuerich.
Monopol-Films A.G.. Todistrasse 61, Zuerich.
Nordisk Films Co. S.A., Uraniastrasse 33, Zuerich.
Pandora-Film A.G., Dufourstrasse 29, Zuerich.
Praesens-Film A.G., Weinbergstrasse 15, Zuerich.
Resta-Film, Zahringerstrasse 20. Zuerich.
Rex-Film-Verleh A.G., Stampfenbachstrasse 69,
Zuerich.
Sphinx-Film A.G., Talstrasse 83. Zuerich.
Star-Film, Seminarstrasse 110, Zuerich.
Tobis Filmverleih A.G., Talstrasse 15, Zuerich.
Producers
Praesens-Film A.G., Weinbergstrasse 15, Zurich.
Tonfilm Frobenius A.G.. Munchenstein/Basel.
Eoscop A.G., Reichensteinerstr. 14, Basel.
Pinschewer-Film, Kollerweg 9, Bern.
Cinegram S.A., Rue Beau Site 3, Geneve.
Central-Film A.G., Weinbergstrasse 11, Zurich.
Syria
LEGISLATION — French subtitles required on
foreign language films. No quotas in force.
CENSORSHIP — Mild.
COMPETITION — American, 80 per cent; bal-
ance mostly French.
PRODUCTION — None.
TAXATION — Films are assessed 331 Syrian
piasters per kilo upon importation. Censorship
charges are 35 piasters per 100 linear meters.
THEATERS— All 40 theaters are wired for
sound. r,-, .
Taiwan
LEGISLATION — Japanese Motion Picture Law
of Oct. 1, 1939, is also in effect here.
CENSORSHIP — No films rejected in 1939.
COMPETITION — Japanese, 60 per cent: Ameri-
can, 28 per cent: others, 7 per cent.
Production — None.
THEATERS — All 41 theaters are wired for
sound.
Thailand (Siam)
LEGISLATION — No quota or contingent laws
in effect.
COMPETITION — American, 95 per cent; Brit-
ish, 4 per cent; Thai, 1 per cent.
FOREIGN MARKETS
COPYRIGHT RELATIONS — Signatory of the
International Copyright Convention.
PRODUCTION— During the first nine months of
1939, 12 features were produced.
TAXATION — Import Tariff of Feb. 19, 1939:
Films, Baht 1.00 per 100 linear feet; Censorship
fee: Baht 1.50 per 100 meters.
THEATERS — Some 60 to 66 of the 80 to 90
theaters are wired for sound.
Trinidad
LEGISLATION — Exhibitors are required to
show 20 per cent British films but this has
not been enforced.
COMPETITION — British, and to a small extent
East Indian, films are the only competitors of
American films, which comprise about 95 per cent
of those shown, in spite of quota restrictions.
PRODUCTION — None.
TAXATION — Distributors pay a censorship fee
of $1.00 for each reel of sound film.
THEATERS — All 31 theaters are wired.
Producers, Distributors, Exporters
and Importers
PORT OF SPAIN
Columbia Pictures of the West Indies Ltd.,
Frederick Street.
20th Century-Fox Films, 22, Henry Street.
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer of the West Indies,
Broadway.
Paramount Films of Trinidad, Inc., 82a, Queen
Street.
R-K-0 Radio Pictures of Trinidad, Inc., 13, Aber-
cromby Street.
United Artists Corp., 21, Chacon Street.
Warner Bros., First National South Films, Inc.,
58, Frederick Street.
British Colonial Film Exchange Ltd., 36, South
Quay.
Indo-Asiatic Fil mExchange, 138, Henry Street.
West Indian Film Distributors, 36, South Quay.
M. I. Baking Co., 59, Charlotte Street.
Tucker Picture Productions Ltd., 30, Victoria
Square.
Globe Theaters Ltd., 61, St. Vincent Street.
Royal Theater, 120. Charlotte Street.
58.
10.
Tunisia
LEGISLATION — No quota or contingent laws.
CENSORSHIP — All films previously censored
in France. Local censor authorities check scen-
arios and. when necessary, re-censor films.
COMPETITION — American, 60 per cent; French,
30 per cent; balance from England, Italy and
Egypt.
PRODUCTION — None.
THEATERS — All 43 theaters are wired for
sound. m ,
Turkey
LEGISLATION — Mid-summer new regulations,
tightening up somewhat, the censorship control
of education and technical films and scenarios
went into effect.
COMPETITION — During 1939, distribution of
films by countries was as follows: United States.
126: France, 49; Germany, 10; Turkey, 4; Egypt,
5; Italy, 1.
COPYRIGHT RELATIONS — While Turkey is
not a signatory of the Berne Convention, the
principal exhibitors in Istanbul have an agree-
ment whereby they forego the exhibition of pi-
rated films.
PRODUCTION — Four features and a number
of advertising shorts and newsreels were produced
in 1939.
THEATERS — Wired theaters are estimated at
140.
U. S. S. R.
PRODUCTION — During 1939, 50 films were pro-
duced, compared with 40 in 1938.
COMPETITION — The limited number of foreign
films shown are apparently chosen because of
their social, political, or economic content.
THEATERS — Stationary theaters total about
3,000 and portable houses about 27,000.
1117
FOREIGN MARKETS
Union of South Africa
LEGISLATION — No adverse film legislation.
COMPETITION — American films, 81 per cent:
United Kingdom. 17 per cent.
PRODUCTION — Confined to news reels and oc-
casional historical films.
TAXATION — Import duty is three pence per
foot on first prints of sound films and two pence
per foot on additional prints.
THEATERS — All 340 theaters are wired for
United Kingdom
LEGISLATION — Prior to 1938. motion picture
legislation in the United Kingdom for a 10-year
period was based upon an Act which expired March
31, 1938. At this time a new Films Bill was
adopted to govern the industry for a further 10-
year period from April 1. 1938. This compli-
cated legislation was subject to extensive and de-
tailed consideration and discussion for months
before its final acceptance.
Since the commencement of the war, the ques-
tion of the retention of the Act has been the sub-
ject of lengthy negotiations between the industry
and the President of he Board of Trade. Mr.
Oliver Stanley announced in November that the Act
would be retained until March, 1940. (the end
of its second year), and in the meantime an al-
ternative form of protection is being discussed.
The Cinematograph Films Council, appointed under
the Quota Act. has elected a special committee to
examine the problem, and the result of its inves-
tigations are expected to be communicated to the
Board of Trade early in the New Year.
CENSORSHIP — Normally, censorship of films
in Great Britain is carried out by the British Board
of Film Censors. This is not a statutory body,
but one established by the trade many years ago.
Since the outbreak of war. however, all Questions
of censorship have been passed over by the Gov-
renment to the Ministry of Information, which has
appointed the B.B.F.C. as its agents. Films can
only be shown in British theaters if they bear the
• Security" certificate of the Ministry, a condi-
tion applying not only to entertainment pictures,
but also to news reels.
Final acceptance or rejection of a film for exhi-
bition officially rests with the Local Licensing
Authorities throughout the country, numbering
some seven hundred, but almost universal accept-
ance is given to the decisions and control exercised
by the Board and generally the situation is consid-
ered satisfactory. In connection with the power
of Local Authorities it should be noted that when
a film is rejected by the Board of Film Censors an
application for special review can be made to
Local Authorities and a few notable instances have
occurred where tihs procedure has resulted in local
exhibition of the rejected film.
Detailed discussion of the specific standards fol-
lowed in censoring film appears to be superfluous
hut it might be mentioned that three grades of
centificates are issued. "U" means passed for
universal exhibition. "A" is recommended more
especially for adult audiences and under nearly all
Local Licensing: Authorities children must be ac-
companied by adults when attending. The "H"
category stands for "Horrific" and usually atten-
dance of children is entirely prohibited. Recent
experience has been that well over four-fifths of
the film subjects passed by the Board receive the
"U" certificate while the "H" category has been
confined to one or two per year. It should be
noted, however, that this proportionate division
applies to the total number of subjects and not
to feature film alone which get a smaller propor-
tion of the "U" certificates.
COMPETITION — In the motion picture film
market of the United Kingdom competition is
practically limited to that between British-made
and American films. Other foreign pictures ac-
count for an entirely insignificant proportion of
the total shown and are practically confined to a
few theaters in the largest centers which specialize
in this type of entertainment.
In view of the change over from the first Quota
Act to the new Act, the Board of Trade did not
issue its customary analysis of the percentage of
British films shown for the year ended September
30. 1938, but owing to the operation of the double
and triple certificates, there has been some decline
in quantity, although a more than proportionate
improvement in quality.
One result of the artificial stimulation caused by
the legal quota requirements has been the increase
in British-made films by American producers and
a change in the type of these is evident under
the provisions of the new Act.
A distinct problem for the motion picture in-
dustry during the year has been the decline in the
total number of pictures available. On the basis
of trade information, including early December,
it appears that the number of "feature" or long
films (both British-made and American) to be reg-
istered during the year has dropped between 15
and 20 per cent, while the number of short films
is off by one-third or more. Actual releases made
or scheduled for 1938 number 463 foreign "fea-
ture" films — almost all American — and 162 Brit-
ish-made pictures.
One result of the current shortage of films has
been a series of so-called revivals or re-issues of
older pictures throughout the year and in many
instances these have given surprisingly satisfac-
tory results, although recognized as a temporary
expedient to solve the immediate situation. It
can be said in general that without qualification
American films are well received by the British
public and give continually recurring evidence
of their popularity.
COPYRIGHT RELATIONS — Under British law
and practice the interest of the author and pro-
ducer are fully protected. The ordinary legal ref-
erence is the Copyright Act of 1911 as amended.
Great Britain entered into copyright relations with
the United States on July 1, 1891: extended April
9, 1910: further extended January 1, 1915. Great
Britain is a member of the International Copy-
right Union at Berne.
PRODUCTION — The actual production figures
for 1939 are not available at the time this is
written, but in trade circles it is generally con-
ceded there has been a decline on the figure of 150
in the previous year. This is due to two causes.
First, the lower percentage in the Quta Act does
not demand such a great amount of compulsory
production on the part of American companies.
Secondly, the temporary cessation of activities
during the early weeks of the war by the majority
of British studios. As, however, the requirements
of the Quota Act have to be fulfilled by the end
of March, the trade is anticipating an acceleration
of production at the beginning of the year.
Obviously, dubbing is no problem for distibu-
tion of American films in the British market, but
one official proposal in this connection is inter-
esting. This concerns the possibility of an ar-
rangement to handle foreign films, admitted duty
free under bond, for dubbing and re-export as a
stimulus to British employment in the industry.
On the technical side of British production thp
increasing use of and interest in color is note-
worthy. Another phase concerns the possibilities
in connection with television, although the out-
break of war has impeded development in thi>
direction.
TAXES — There is a national Entertainment Tax
which is specific in amount for each price cate
gory of tickets. Local taxation is governed by
the individual local rating laws which provide
normal tax treatment for motion picture theaters
The import duty for films is reasonable and in the
general high field of British taxation the treatment
of motion pictures can be considered as moderate,
although the Entertainment Tax yields some six
or seven million pounds sterling to the Exchequer
annually.
While not considered in the direct category of
taxation there is a special related feature worthy
of note under The Sunday Entertainment Act.
1932, which gave local authorities permission to
open and regulate cinematograph theaters on Sun-
day. The local authorities alone have the power
to give such permission and it is estimated that
about 1,000 out of the approximate 5.000 theaters
in England are now permitted Sunday opening.
1118
It is provided under this Act that the local au-
thority shall demand from the theater a propor-
tion of the profits for that day, part of which
sums collected shall be used for local charitable
purposes and another proportion paid into the
"Cinematograph Fund" under the direction and
control of the Privy Council for the purpose of en-
couraging: the use and development of the cine-
matograph as a means of entertainment and in-
struction. Something like 9 or 10 thousand
pounds sterling is now received into this central
fund annually and the principal use for it has
been in supporting the British Film Institute,
which is active in the promotion of the use of
motion pictures for educational purposes. The
amount paid into the national "Cinematograph
Fund" is only equal to about 5 per cent of the
total collected by the various Local Authorities,
the balance collected under the Sunday Entertain-
ments Act, 1932, being devoted to local chari-
table purposes.
THEATERS — Practically all motion picture
theaters in the United Kingdom are now equipped
with sound apparatus. The number varies from
time to time, due to openings and closings, as
a result of new construction, reconstruction, etc
The total number of theaters is well in excess of
5,000 and one of the best trade sources puts the
figure at approximately 5,300. There are a
number of relatively small so-called marginal thea-
ters which come and go from time to time but
are not considered in the above analysis and the
importance of these is relatively insignificant. The
estimated total seating capacity of these theaters
is approximately 5,000,000, while an estimate for
the seating capacity of those not including Ire-
land would be between 4.5 and 4.6 millions.
An estimate of the average admission price in
motion picture theaters, based upon an analysis
of a very large number of tickets is placed at
10.2 pence and the estimated total number of
weekly admissions is placed at 23 million. On
this basis total annual gross receipts would be
more than fifty million sterling and a published
estimate places the total at forty-six millions
Official information is not available on the above
but the data mentioned are believed to be quite
sufficiently accurate to furnish a background for
all necessary trade purposes. It is believed that
the number of theaters now in operation will re-
main relatively static in the early future and that
new construction will largely consist in replace-
ment for, or reconstruction of, relatively old
theaters now in operation. This statement does
not preclude some small net increase from year
to year, but it cannot be anticipated that the total
number will change materially in the near future.
However, any cessaion of growth in the number
of theaters should not be construed as a recession
for the motion picture industry but rather an indi-
cation that something near the saturation point
has been reached to supply the needs of the country
under existing circumstances.
Producers
LONDON
Argyle, British Productions, 21 Panton Street,
S.W.I.
Associated Sound Film Industries, Raglan Gar-
dens, Wembley Park, Middlesex.
Brittania Films, Ltd., 32 Shaftsbury Avenue.
British Lion Film Corp., 76 Wardour St., W.2.
British National Films, Ltd., 15 Hanover Square.
W.l.
Butcher's Film Service, Ltd., 175 Wardour Street,
W.l.
Wembley Film Studio, Ltd., Empire Way, Wem-
bley, Middlesex.
G. B. Instructional, Ltd., Film House, Wardour
St.. W.l.
George Smith Productions, Ltd., 91, Shaftesbury
Avenue, W.l.
Gainsborough Pictures, Ltd., Film House, War-
dour St., W.l.
Gamma Films, Ltd., 69, Shaftesbury Ave., W.l.
Gaumont British Picture Corp., Ltd., Film House
Wardour St.. W.l.
Alexander Korda Productions. Ltd., Denham Stu-
dios, Denham, Uxbridge, Middlesex.
London Film Productions, Ltd., Denham, Bucks.
FOREIGN MARKETS
Nettlefold Prod., Archibald, Hurst Grove, Walton-
on-Thames.
Pathe Pictures. Ltd.. 103/111 Wardour St., W.l.
Phoenix Films, Ltd., 28, Mortimer Street, W.l.
Jack Raymond Productions, 43, St. James' Place
S.W.I.
Standard International Pictures, Ltd., 199 Picca-
dilly, W.l.
Strand Film Co., 37, Oxford Street, W.l.
United Kingdom Films. Ltd., 91, Regent Street
W.l.
Vogue Productions, Ltd., 32 St. James Street,
S.W.I.
Wainwright Productions. Astoria House, 62
Shaftesbury Avenue, W.l.
Warner Bros., Teddington Studios, Teddington
Middlesex.
Widgey R. Newman Productions. Ltd., National
House, 60. Wardour Street, W.l.
Jack Buchanan Productions. Ltd., Leicester Square
Chambers, W. C.
Conway Productions, 40, Shaftesbury Avenue
W.l.
Associated British Picture Corporation. Ltd.. Film
House, Wardour St., W.l.
Liberty Films, Ltd., 4, Golden Square, W.l-
Two Cities Films, Ltd., 1/4. Warwick St.. W.l.
Ambassador Films, Ltd., 179, Wardour Street W 1
Viking Films Ltd., 107, Shaftesbury Avenue, W.l.
Bushey Film Corporation, Melbourne Rd. Bushey
Metropolitan Film Studios, Ltd., Gladstone Road.
Southall.
Premier Stafford Productions, Ltd.. Sound City,
Littleton Park, Middlesex.
Welwyn Studios, Ltd., Welwyn Studios, Welwyn
Garden City, Herts.
St. Margaret's Film Studios, Ltd., Alliance Stu-
dios, St. Margaret's, Mddx.
British Instructional Films, Ltd.. 103/111 War-
dour Street. W.l.
D. & P. Studios, Ltd., Denham.
G. & S. Films Limited. 127/133, Wardour Street
W.l.
Pascal Film Productions, Ltd.. 10 Bolton St., W.l.
Ealing Studios, Ltd., Ealing Green, W.5.
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer British Studios, Ltd., Den-
ham Studios, Denham Bucks.
Major Pictures, Pinewood Studios, Iver Heath,
Bucks.
Associated Realist Film Producers, Ltd.. 34, Soho
Square, W.l.
British Commercial Films, 50, Bryanston St., W 1
Capad, Ealing Studios. Ealing. W.5.
Columbia British Productions, Ltd., 139, Wardour
St.. W.l.
Embassy Pictures (Associated) Ltd., Sound City,
Shepperton.
Highbury Studios, Ltd., 96, Highbury New Park
N.5.
George King Productions Ltd., Sound City. Shep-
perton.
Paramount British Productions Ltd., 104 Oxford
St., W.l.
Pinebrook Ltd., Pinewood Studios. Iver Heath.
Bucks.
Riverside Studios Ltd.. Crisp Road, Hammersmith
W.6.
Winack. Ltd., 54/58 Wardour St., W.l.
Worton Hall Studios. Isleworth. Middlesex.
Distributors
LONDON
Ace Distributors. Ltd., National House, 60/66
Wardour Street, W.l.
Anima Film Co.. 76, Wardour St., W.l.
Associated British Film Distributors, Ltd., 169/171
Oxford St., W.l.
British Lion Film Corporation. 76 Wardour Street
W.l.
Butcher's Film Service, Ltd., 175 Wardour St.
W.l.
Columbia Pictures, 139 Wardour St., W.l.
Demning Films, Ltd., 25, Saville Row, W.l.
Equity British Films. Ltd., 26 St. Anne's Court,
Wardour St., W.l.
1119
FOREIGN MARKETS
20th Century-Fox Film Corp.. 31/32. Soho Square.
WJL.
Gaumont British Distributors. Ltd.. Film House.
Wardour St.. W.l.
General Film Distributors. Ltd.. 127/133 Wardour
St.. W.l.
Grand National Pictures. 113/117 Wardour St..
W.l.
Independent Film Distributors. Ltd., 111a. Ward-
our Street. W.l.
J. G. & R. B. Wainwright. Ltd.. Astoria House.
62 Shaftesbury Avenue. W.l.
Independent Film Productions. Princes House. 39
Jermyn St.. W.l.
International Productions. Ltd.. 101 Wardour St..
W.l.
Metro -Gold wyn-M ayer, Ltd.. 19 Tower St.. W.C.2.
Paramount Film Service. Ltd.. 160. Wardour St..
W.l.
Pathe Pictures, Ltd.. 103/111 Wardour St.. W.l.
R.K.O. Radio Pictures. Ltd., 2-4 Dean St., W.l.
Sherwood Exchange Film Agency. 191 Wardour
St. W.l.
Standard Film Agency, 26 St. Anne's Court. Ward-
our St.. W.l.
United Artists Corp.. Ltd.. Film House. Wardour
St.. W.l.
Warner Bros. Pictures. Ltd., 135 Wardour St..
W.l.
European Film Distributors. Ltd.. Wallace HoUBe.
113/117. Wardour St., W.l.
Ambassador Films. Ltd.. 179 Wardour Street, W.l.
Anglo-Canadian Distributors. Ltd.. 76 Wardour
Street. W.l.
Associated British Picture Corporation. Ltd., Film
House. Wardour Street. W.l.
Cavendish Pictures. Ltd.. 26 St. Anne's Court.
Wardour Street. W.l.
Exclusive Films. Ltd., National House, 60/66
Wardour St., W.l.
Renown Pictures Corporation, Ltd., Independent
House. Wardour Street, W.l.
Technique Distributors, Ltd.. 93/95 Wardour
Street. W.l.
Fidelity Distributors, Ltd.. 113/117 Wardour
Street, W.l.
International Film Renters. Ltd.. 167 Wardour
Street. W.l.
Anglo-American Film Corporation, Ltd.. 123
Wardour Etreet, W.l.
Unity Films. Ltd.. 31/32 Poland Street. W.l.
Liberty Films. Ltd.. 4 Golden Square. W.l.
Victor Film Distributors. Ltd., Victory House.
Regent Street. W.l.
Exporters and Importers
LONDON
Baer. M.. 176 Wardour Street. W.l.
British Dominion Films Ltd. of Australia. 18/20
Regent Street. W.l.
British & Overseas Film Sales, Ltd.. 169 Oxford
Street. W.l.
Cattermoul. Cecil. Ltd.. 1S4 Wardour Street. W.l.
Fried. A.. 191 Wardour Street. W.l.
E. S. Fredman. 37/38 Golden Square. W.l. (Rep-
resenting Samuel Goldwyn Productions).
International Variety & Theatrical Agency. Ltd..
Queen's House. Leicester Place. W.C.2.
Jamily. D.. 12 D'Arblay Street. W.l.
Levetus, Ltd.. 194 Bishopgate. E.C.2.
Smith. S. W.. 76 Wardour Street. W.l.
Standard Film Agency. 26 St. Anne's Court.
Wardour Street. W.l.
Wainwright, J. G. & R. B.. Ltd., Astoria House.
62 Shaftesbury Avenue. W.l.
British Empire Films. Ltd.. 14 Regent Street.
S.W.I.
P. Alliata. 95 Forset Street. W.2.
Miss M. Swift. National House. 60/66 Wardour
Street, W.l.
Associated British Picture Corporation (Export).
Ltd., Film House, Wardour Street. W.l.
Film Alliance. Ltd., 199 Wardour Street. W.l.
Illustra Enterprises. 159 Wardour Street. W.l.
Uruguay
LEGISLATION — No quota laws on films.
CENSORSHIP — None. Films may be banned or
cut by the police, acting on a specific complaint.
All films are examined by a Children's Board which
indicates films unsuited to children.
COMPETITION — American, about 70 per cent:
French 13 per cent: Argentine. 9 per cent, and
British. 5 per cent. Balance, German, Spanish,
Italian and Mexican.
COPYRIGHT RELATIONS — Copyright law of
Dec. 27. 1937 provides for adherence to the Berne
Convention.
PRODUCTION — One feature produced in 1939.
TAXATION — Import duty is 52 per cent on a
fixed valuation of five pesos per kilogram. 25 per
cent of which must be paid in gold.
THEATERS — There are 81 theaters in Monte-
video, all wired for sound. Balance of country
contains about 100 theaters, mostly wired.
Venezuela
LEGISLATION — No quota or contingent laws
in effect.
CENSORSHIP — Jurisdiction is with the various
state governments. Films passed on Caracas are
usually accepted by other boards.
COMPETITION — American films, 70 per cent.
Spanish language films, from Mexico and Argen-
tina, also popular.
PRODUCTION — One feature and a number of
educational, news and travelogue shorts produced
in 1939.
TAXATION — Customs duties are Bs. 2.60 per
gross kilogram on positive films and from Bx.
0.16 to Bs. 4.00 on advertising material and film
accessories.
THEATERS — All 174 theaters are wired for
sound.
Yugoslavia
LEGISLATION — Management and control of
production, import and trade in motion pictures
has been placed in the hands of a State Film
Control, whose duties include the sponsoring of
domestic production and the furtherance of eduea-
tional efforts, and propaganda for pictures of
cultural value. No quota of contingent laws in
effect.
COMPETITION — American. 66 per cent: Ger-
man. 15 per cent: French, 13 per cent: British
2.5 per cent.
COPYRIGHT RELATIONS — Laws do not pro-
tect as present.
PRODUCTION — One feature. 19 educational
films, and 11 advertising reels were produced in
1939
THEATERS — Of 395 theaters. 379 are wired
for sound.
Distributors and Importers
ZAGREB
Alfa Film (also Distributor for RKO Pictures). 8
Jelacicev trg.
City Film. 1 Hica.
Fox Film. 1 Bogoviceva.
Jusrofilm. 2 Varsavska.
Kleinleinfilm. 12 Nikoliceva.
Metro-Goldwyu-Mayer Film. 17 Pejaeevicev trg.
Merkur Film (also Distributor for Columbia Pic
tures. 3 Gunduliceva.
Monopol Film. 5 Gjorgjiceva.
Pan Film ( also Distributor for United Artists
Pictures). 11 Svacicev trg.
Paramount Film. 5a Frankopanska.
Royal Film. 4 Baruna Jelacica.
Warner Bros. Film, 34 IUca.
1120
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