CELLULOID DANGER.
SAFETY FILMS MADE IN • ; ENGLAND.
Every ft: .*:f knows what a, dangerous thing celluioid is if it catches fire, and the fact that cinemato.crraph films have been made on celluloid lias always caused great anxiety. Cinematograph, fihiia cannot be shown in the home or in .schools unless they are printed on the new kind of celluloid which will not catch fire, and the day is not far distant when films of all kinds will be made on film which will not burn. Until recently all the noninflammable film was made in America, but it is now being made in England, of Very muth the same material as that used in the manufacture of artificial silk. It is to the artificial eilk industry we owe the progress that has been made in the production of non-flam film, and once this is established there should be no more danger of fires in cinemas.
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Bibliographic details
Auckland Star, Volume LX, Issue 200, 24 August 1929, Page 3 (Supplement)
Word Count
153CELLULOID DANGER. Auckland Star, Volume LX, Issue 200, 24 August 1929, Page 3 (Supplement)
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