Business screen magazine (1958)

Record Details:

Something wrong or inaccurate about this page? Let us Know!

Thanks for helping us continually improve the quality of the Lantern search engine for all of our users! We have millions of scanned pages, so user reports are incredibly helpful for us to identify places where we can improve and update the metadata.

Please describe the issue below, and click "Submit" to send your comments to our team! If you'd prefer, you can also send us an email to mhdl@commarts.wisc.edu with your comments.




We use Optical Character Recognition (OCR) during our scanning and processing workflow to make the content of each page searchable. You can view the automatically generated text below as well as copy and paste individual pieces of text to quote in your own work.

Text recognition is never 100% accurate. Many parts of the scanned page may not be reflected in the OCR text output, including: images, page layout, certain fonts or handwriting.

Film Shows Manufacturers How to Make Their Own Boxes :r How the manufacturer who buys iet-up boxes can save time, space, md usually money too by producng his own rigid boxes from flat blanks is told in Profit Packaging With Bo.xmaster. an 18-minute ;ales and demonstration sound;olor film presented by the Indusrial Sales Division of United Shoe vlachinery Corporation. Purpose of the film is to show low the Boxmaster. a semi-auto What's IVfevv in Sponsored Pictures Current Motion Pictures & Slidefilnns for Business )ernonstrating a new box-malting machine ; purpose of this film. latic machine for forming rigid loxes, can be used to improve allost any manufacturer's packagig operation. The film shows a typical busiess man who faces a challenging St of packaging problems in repect to box strength, storage pace, availability and costs — and ow the packaging machinery elps him to meet his objectives. Scenes taken in factories using :e Boxmaker show the variety of pplications of this equipment. Representatives of folding box roducers who are local sources 3r the die-cut blanks have a promlent role in the film. The film was produced for 'nited"s Industrial Sales Division y Bay State Film Productions, ic. It may be purchased at cost y folding box companies as a lies tool. Bookings for trade roups and others are being hanled by the Advertising Departlent of United Shoe Machinery brporation, 140 Federal Street, oston 7, Massachusetts. ^ * * if You and the Silicones" Is lew Dow Corning Color Film Dow Corning Corporation of lidland, Michigan has released ou And The Silicones, a 16mm )und-color motion picture with a inning time of 31 minutes. You And The Silicones covers le newest industry-wide applicaons of silicone materials. Inuded are such diverse uses as licones in cosmetics and a new licone rubber stock that selfjlcanizes at room temperature. Designed for showings to top anagement and technical audi ences, the m o t i o n picture was produced by the film section at Dow Corning, with final editing work performed by George W. Colburn Laboratory. ^' "Redwood Roundtable" Shows Logging of Forest's Giants " The thunderous roar of a 200ton redwood tree crashing down through the forest is one of the authentic sounds included in Redwood Roundtable, a new 20-minute sound slidefilm in color sponsored by Simpson Redwood Company for showings to its distributors, lumber dealers and builders. Interspersed with other sounds of redwood forestry operations and of milling machinery. Redwood Roundtable describes the company's selective logging of redwood lumber. Full color photographs show the timber expert selecting trees for cutting, and explain why over-large trees must be downed periodically so that young seedlings will get more sunlight and grow faster. Color scenes and narration follow the huge trees as they are transported to the mill and carried through the entire lumber process, including stacking for air and kiln drying. Data on grading and uses of redwood for home building and in industry also are included. The slidefilm is available for free showings to trade and consumer groups. Requests should be directed to Simpson Logging Com BBHIiCK \m\Q^>(^'^^^t?a^ ^^33fid<^] BUSINESS FILM PRODUCERS i? ix i:^ MOTION PICTURES THAT WIN RESULTS AND THE ACCLAIM OF AUDIENCES & JURIES 20 NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL FILM AWARDS IN THE PAST NINE YEARS . . . Hollywood Studio: 6063 Sunset Boulevard Hollywood 28, California Hollywood 4-3183 Eastern Office: 1022 Forbes Street Pittsburgh 19, Pa. Express 1-1846 The sound of the saw lends authentic realism to new Redwood film. pany, 1031 White Building. Seattle, Washington. ^ How Farmers Can Profit by Using Plastics Is a Film Topic V How the modern farmer can realize extra profits through the practical use of polyethylene film is the theme of a new 30-minute 1 6mm sound motion picture in color, sponsored by the Plastics Division of Visking Company, Division of Union Carbide Corporation, Chicago. Titled Production Protection and Profits on the Farm, the film is available for free showings as an educational service to farmers and county agents. Produced for Visking by Graphic Pictures, Inc., Chicago, the film highlights the use of "Visqueen" polyethylene film as a mulching material, as liners for ponds, bins and ditches, silo covers and caps. It also explains other applications such as irrigation tubing, animal shelters, crop covers, etc. Applications for showings should be made to: Advertising Dept., Visking Company, Plastics Division, 6733 W. 65th St.. Chicago, Illinois. S "Most Famous Pants" Subject Of Six-Minute Documentary iV Blue Jeans, a six-minute documentary about "the most famous pants in the U.S.A." has been produced by the National Cotton Council for public service tv programming and subsequent release to school and college audiences as an educational feature. The 16mm b/w sound film was produced in cooperation with the Denim Council of the Association of Cotton Textile Merchants of New York, by the Cotton Council's audio-visual department at Memphis, Tenn. Blue Jeans shows how cotton fibers are processed into denim and manufactured into jeans for Americans of all ages. It traces the use of denim by early settlers, railroaders, cowboys and others over the past 100 years, and its popularity with suburbanites today. ff BUSINESS SCREEN M..\GAZINE