Moving Picture Age (1920) . day after-noons, June 7 and 8, and much of the time during the latter sessionwill be devoted to an experience meeting, when prominent ad-vertisers will discuss their usage of moving pictures as a businessbuilder. Industrial and educational films will be exhibited on thescreen in the Claypool Hotel convention hall every afternoon andevening of the convention from four oclock until ten films will show both national and local advertising campaigns. Painting Made for Cover Illustration Depicts FamilyGroup Watching Topics of the Day Norman Rockwell, the well


Moving Picture Age (1920) . day after-noons, June 7 and 8, and much of the time during the latter sessionwill be devoted to an experience meeting, when prominent ad-vertisers will discuss their usage of moving pictures as a businessbuilder. Industrial and educational films will be exhibited on thescreen in the Claypool Hotel convention hall every afternoon andevening of the convention from four oclock until ten films will show both national and local advertising campaigns. Painting Made for Cover Illustration Depicts FamilyGroup Watching Topics of the Day Norman Rockwell, the well-known artist, in a beautifully exe-cuted painting has depicted a typical American family group—father, mother, older daughter, older son, little daughter and littleson, registering, respectively: appreciation, approval, amusement,delight, enjoyment and glee—When Topics of the Day Is Flashedon the Screen. This painting was used as a cover illustration onThe Literary Digest, which has a circulation of over a million, and. Timely Films, Inc., the producers of Topics of the Day, issiit as an art insert in the motion picture trade journals, as well asgiving it prominent display in over 300 daily newspapers in theUnited States and Canada. June, 1920 MOVING PICTURE AGE 15 Value of Moving Pictures in the Study of All Plant and Animal Life The Screen Is Giving to the Children a Truer Picture of Characters Met in Mother Goose Rhymes and IsAcquainting Boys and Girls With Animal and Plant Life in All Countries By Jerome Lachenbruch THE use of colored pictures in acquainting young childrenwith the habits of animals; the personification of animalsin order to lend a human touch to their instincts, and thebuilding of stories of their daily lives have brought delightand information to the growing understanding of the young. Wehave always used the pictorial method for imparting fundamentalknowledge of this sort. Old Mother Goose, with her brood ofhorses, dogs, cats, mice and ducks, has give


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, booksubjectmotionp, bookyear1920