“ INDUSTRY ON PARADE “ RAILROAD FIREMEN FOUNTAIN PENS POTATO CHIPS HAWAIIAN AIRLINES 97134a

This 1950s film, one of a series titled “Industry on Parade“, was created by the National Association of Manufacturers. It seeks to promote American production by examining the benefits of mechanization and manufacturing, which produce prosperous, contented employees. This episode features railroad employees, and employees in a pen and a potato chip factory, and the benefits of aviation for Hawaii. The footage covers employees doing additional work such as firefighting, redesigning manufacturing sequences, and a fully automated chips production process. There is also footage of Hawaiian Airlines aircraft being loaded and unloaded with various goods. 0:09 Title “Made available by Utah Manufacturers Association”, 0:26 Title “Industry on Parade”, 0:40 Title “Railroad Firemen, New Style”, 0:47 Engineer operating a diesel locomotive, 1:09 Conductor stops train and throws out a fire extinguisher to give to people with a burning car, 1:20 Conductor putting out fire with the extinguisher, 1:38 Firefighting training of Atlantic Coast Line employees, 2:05 trainees are trying to put out an oil fire with an extinguisher, 2:27 Man loads a rail cart with Oil barrels full of flammable materials, 2:58 Employee in a maintenance yard working on a train, 3:10 group of employees coming out with a fire hose extinguishing a fire in a house, 3:57 Title “A message from Industry to you”, 4:03 Scientist in a lab coat working with plants, 4:16 man working at a machine manufacturing something, 4:36 Title “A Penny for your Thoughts”. 4:42 shots of machinery in a modern fountain pen factory, 4:57 man working in a workshop on pen nibs, 5:26 Supervisor walks around and talks to employees in the factory, 6:04 Woman talks to supervisor about a work tray, 6:27 Supervisor speaks to a female employee, 6:46 female employee draws a circular diagram which is given to engineers, 7:02 Engineers sit around table and discuss the diagram, 7:08 female employees now sitting at a circular table working on pens, 7:26 Title “The Island Hoppers”, 7:40 Hawaiian Airlines DC-3 being loaded with cargo, 7:59 plane takes off at Honolulu airport, 8:25 Several shots of Honolulu from the air, 8:53 Same aircraft being unloaded at Hilo Airport in Hawaii, 9:01 Convair 240 of Hawaiian Airlines being loaded, 9:22 Passengers get on the same flight, 9:50 Convair 240 taxiing on the apron, 10:07 shots of Hawaii from above, 10:21 short shots of men and women working at different machines and operating forklifts, 10:55 Title “Spud Saga”, 11:00 farmer driving a tractor spraying pesticides on a potato crop, 11:26 front shot of the “Cain’s Potato Chips” Factory, 11:29 Employee loading potatoes into a machine, 11:41 sequence of how machines sort, peel, wash, slice, and bake the potatoes to create the chips, 12:38 female employees placing bags on a machine for the chips to be bagged, 13:04 Female employees manually seal chips bags, 13:10 children shown eating potato chips, 13:23 End Title “The National Association of Manufacturers” Cain’s Marcelle Potato Chip Co., Inc. operated in Bowling Green from 1936 until 1977. Company founder Emerson Cain is credited with coining the term “marcelled” to describe their unique type of thick, wavy-cut potato chips, now a popular style out of northwest Ohio. We encourage viewers to add comments and, especially, to provide additional information about our videos by adding a comment! See something interesting? Tell people what it is and what they can see by writing something for example: “01:00:12:00 -- President Roosevelt is seen meeting with Winston Churchill at the Quebec Conference.“ This film is part of the Periscope Film LLC archive, one of the largest historic military, transportation, and aviation stock footage collections in the USA. Entirely film backed, this material is available for licensing in 24p HD, 2k and 4k. For more information visit
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