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Vol. 10, No. 4
RUEBEN W. BOLSTAD Vice-President of FAMOUS PLAYERS CANDN. CORP.
“Rube” Bolstad was korn in Fertile, Minnesota in 1901 and began his business career as a junior in the First State Bank in that community. He then moved on to the big city of Minneapolis as a public accountant with C. H. Preston & Co.
He figured his way into show business, becoming an accountant with F & R_ Theatres, Minneapolis, in 1925. He must have figured pretty good because by 1928 he was chief accountant of the Minnesota Amusement Co. In 1930 he came to Famous Players Canadian Corporation as comptroller. Today he is vice-president and treasurer of the company and president of Eastern Theatres, Ltd.
He is a member of the Albany Club, Toronto, and the Mount Stephen Club, Montreal; is a Mason; loves fishing; is married and has a daughter.
Bi-Pack Color
7% VOICE of the CANADIAN MOTION PICTURE INDUSTRY
TORONTO, JANUARY 24, 1945
Dominion’s Leading Circuit Reaches Silver Jubilee
The word “industry” is usually associated with throbbing machinery, conveyor belts and smoke and grime. It is not easy to think of movie exhibitors as industrialists, but that is what they are, as can be seen in the statements of
Exhib Assocn Opposes Tax
Imposition of an amusement tax on theatre tickets by the Ontario government—should it be determined that the government is about to impose such a tax— will be opposed by the Motion Picture Theatres Association of Ontario. N. A. Taylor, president of that organization, revealed in a statement last week that basic plans to deal with such a situation had been formulated at a recent meeting of the directors.
Referring in his statement to
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Famous Players Canadian Corporation, now celebrating their 25th Anniversary. Famous Players, in the year just passed, served 2,250,000 customers every week, maintained a payroll of $6,000,000 and paid out in taxes of various kinds more than $10,000,000. And when you deal in those figures, you’re an industry.
From the day Famous Players gave a Toronto audience “Pollyanna” in the Regent theatre in 1920 until the present time, their chain of theatres has grown from an original group of 18 to 311. In their first year there were seven theatres in Toronto controlled by Famous Players, led by the
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Favors More Time For Alien Films
In the future playing time must be allowed foreign films on the screens of the United States and Canada, Tom Connors, vice-president of Twentieth Century-Fox, told a luncheon gathering of exhibitors at Toronto’s Royal York
Hotel last week. That would be necessary in order that Hollywood films receive reciprocal playing time in foreign countries.
The reason for this somewhat radical point of view, according to Connors, is that Hollywood films are show windows for goods manufactured in the USA and Canada and much of the peacetime export trade of both countries arises from attractive presentation of articles to the peo
Fox’ 4035 in Service
Twentieth Century-Fox has 4,035 employees in the armed forces of the United States and Canada.
N.L. Nathanson Home Now Gov't Hospital
Lyndhurst Lodge, former Toronto home of the late N. L. Nathanson, was recently purchased by the Federal Govern
$2.00 Per Annum
25 Candles on FPC B-Day Cake
—_—_————— ee a ees ‘
@ “Enchanted Forest,’’ PRC pro
— duction, will be the first feature shot in Eastman Bi-Pack color stock.
JOHN J. FITZGIBBONS President of FAMOUS PLAYERS
CANDN. CORP.
ples of other lands. It was important that the 35 per cent of (Continued on Page 5)
ment as a rehabilitation hospital. It will be devoted to paralytic cases.
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