Producer's synopsis: "This picture shows how professional models -- beautiful girls -- are used in making up magazine covers. A Chevrolet is shown on the magazine cover, emphasizing its beauty."

The story of America's railroads and the conglomeration of lines that comes together to connect the cities across the land.

Tour of an auto parts and accessories factory climaxing with a stop-motion product parade.
Produced by Jam Handy in association with General Tire & Rubber Company, this traffic and road safety film stresses the importance of maintaining your tires to prevent accidents.

Prom rules and regulations
A commercial for the new 1955 Chevrolet.

Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer is a timeless family holiday classic.
Officer O'Mara, a normally grumpy traffic cop, lightens up one day and smiles at a passing motorist. This sets off a chain of goodwill and pleasantness in the entire town, which leads to better business practices, but leaves O'Mara wondering why everyone is now so pleasant.
A corporate history of the Coca-Cola Company.

Portrays all Americans as makers, with a rich tradition of pride in workmanship and satisfaction of needs.

A production by Chevrolet from 1935 on safety around trains

Comedian Edgar Kennedy teaches a driving safety lesson.

An educational one-reeler for elementary aged children demonstrating the concept of American free-enterprise. The film utilizes wooden toys designed and animated by Goldman, all set to a music box-ish xylophone score by Jam Handy musical director Samuel Benavie and narration by notable commentator Lowell Thomas.

Humorous "sketches" of human interest stories by Max Fleischer, who headed Jam Handy's animation department in the mid 1940s and 1950s.

A visiting young man prefers the household electrical appliances over the teenage daughter!
A commercial for the new 1955 Chevrolet.

Shows the interdependence of all workers, jobs, and mechanization in the manufacturing process from raw materials to finished product, focusing on the car industry, and argues that this leads to greater personal independence and freedom.
The new Motoramic Chevrolet introduces the big long look.
Chevrolet's 1950 short film, “E for Efficiency,” produced by Jam Handy, touts the efficiency of Chevrolet's valve-in-head engine.

A documentary outlining railroad work and the effects on the lives impacted by the iron horse