Motion Picture Herald (Nov-Dec 1944)

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EXIT BLURMITES when PLASTIC-FINISHED n^lcwite Is Installed! Marlite can make the some marvelous transformations in your theater. Dingy, somber walls and ceilings come to colorful, vibrant life when Marlite is installed. Theater patrons are pleasantly impressed with attractive Marlite installations. Marlite has the pioneer high-heat-bake finish that guards interior walls and ceilings against the deteriorating effects of dirt and moisture (Blurmites)* Marlite's large, wall-size panels are easily and quickly installed for new construction or remodeling. They clean easily, retain their original beauty for many years — reduce maintenance time and cost. Marlite is ideal for attractive, practical theater installations in lobbies, lounges, restrooms, powder rooms and toilets. Leading theaters (names on request) recommend Marlite. Plan to install Marlite in your theater — it's modern and moderately priced! SEND FOR DESCRIPTIVE DATA NOW! Marlite is manufactured in plain-colors, tile-patterns, horizontaline, genuine wood-veneers and marble-patterns with harmonizing moldings in plastic, wood and metal. Write today for complete information! Remember, Marsh Engineers will gladly help with plans and specifications. MARSH WALL PRODUCTS, Inc. 1269 MAIN STREET, DOVER, OHIO jiJiiijiJiij'iliigiiwifimBrar ^unRS LOOSE CHAIRS TO r^. "^^PERM ASTON E ANCHOR CEMENT None genuine wiffiouf fbis trade mark '° EVERYWHERE BY DEALERS SQ"'* \lWk\ IT YoUltSKif Some amount popped corn fills four % # bags ... or 5 of our cartons at 5c extra profit. Write for prices. Also world's finest seasoning., popping oil, lalt. AMERICAN POP CORN CO. SIOUX CITY, IOWA LEAPN MODERN THEATRE MANAGE/VEHT Advance to better tlieatre pvsltions. Big opportunities for trained theatre men and women. Free cataiog. I7tl) year. Theatre Managers Institute 380 Wasliington St.. Elmira, N. Y. 12 to and from the island. Transferred to Oahu Island, where he was made manager of his battalion theatre, he "promoted" equipment for eight theatres and designed two others. | It's a long way to Crawfordsville ! ! Historical Correction These columns last month contributed somenK information on the early projectors, and submitted that the first American commercial projection of a motion picture, was at Koster j & Dial's Music Hall in New York in April, i 1896, and that the projector employed was j Thomas Armat's Vitascope. This has not met Terry Ramsaye's standard of accuracy. The editor of Motion Picture Herald, author of "A Million and One Nights," history of the motion picture, has demurred in the following memorandum: "The first commercial offering of the Armat projector, which was the first actually successful motion picture projector in the United States and the first to make important impress on the development of the art, was, at the Cotton States Exposition in Atlanta, Ga., in September of 1895. Contemporary, but ineffectual, was a flickering attempt known as the Latham Eidoscope, a device of dubious history and no developmental consequences,, which had in fact been given a feeble commercial introduction in lower Broadway, New*: York, in May of 1895. ' "The Lumiere Cinematographe to which you refer, was given a shop derhonstration in France in May of 1895, and was commercially introduced in Paris in December of that year, and was brought to New York to compete with the Armat Vitascope in June of 1896, following the Vitascope Broadway presenta-[ tion in April of that year. The Lumiere device, incidentally, was presented at Keith's Fourteenth Street, then a vaudeville house; today a picture house. "As further information, I have had from Louis Lumiere, in his own haad, a letter in which he has set forth the fact that he builtl; his Cinematographe after examining the Edi-' son Kinetoscope, a peep show machine, at Werner Brothers' exhibition in Paris in the summer of 1914. M. Lumiere has, himself in person, never made the sweeping claims for him which have characterized most of the^ French writings and the frequent discoveries, of dilettantes in motion picture history." , Mr. Ramsaye assures us that the facts are,' amply of record. —G. S. Conferring a fourth Army-Navy "E" awarcJ for pro ducfion excellence on fhe DeVry Corporafion, Chicago.V Shown are Leo J. Polublck! ancJ £. S. Schweig' (leff), and John Lang and Joseph Nefiel (righf), 25-year-men; with Naval Inspector T. W. Daniels, and William C. DeVry, president of the company. BEHER THEATRES. DECEMBER 9. 1944