Another Kimberly-Clark corporate history,
Four Men and a Machine: Commemorating
the Seventy-fifth
Anniversary of Kimberly-Clark Corporation
(1947)
Corporate
history of Tampax: Small
Wonder: How Tambrands began, prospered,
and grew (1986)
How
Modess
Sanitary Napkins Began: excerpts
from"A Company That Cares: One Hundred
Year Illustrated History of Johnson and
Johnson"
"Cooperation"
Excerpts (U.S.A., 1931-34)
Sometimes funny publication for
Kimberly-Clark employees during the Great
Depression
Marjorie May, three booklets, 1935 main page
See a Kotex ad
advertising this booklet.
See Kotex items: First ad
(1921; scroll to bottom of page) - ad 1928 (Sears and Roebuck
catalog) - Lee
Miller ads (first real person in a
menstrual hygiene ad, 1928) - Marjorie May's Twelfth
Birthday (booklet for girls, 1928,
Australian edition; there are many links
here to Kotex items) - Preparing for
Womanhood (1920s, booklet for girls;
Australian edition) - 1920s booklet in
Spanish showing disposal
method - box
from about 1969 - "Are you in the
know?" ads (Kotex) (1949)(1953)(1964)(booklet, 1956) -
See more ads on the Ads
for Teenagers main page
|
Museum of Menstruation and
Women's Health
Four Young
Men Go In Search Of A Profit!
The Story of Kimberly-Clark
Corporation
(1872-1957)
[By] John R. Kimberly
An address at New York to the
Newcomen Society in North
America, 1957
Introduction
Wikipedia writes
this about the Newcomen Society:
The
Newcomen Society is a British
learned society formed to foster
the study of the history of
engineering and technology. It was
founded in London in 1920 and
takes its name from Thomas
Newcomen, one of the inventors
associated with the early
development of the steam engine,
who is widely considered the
"father of the Industrial
Revolution".
The motto of the society is
actorum memores simul affectamus
agenda, meaning "mindful of things
that have taken place, at the same
time we strive after things yet to
be done". The choice of a griffin
regardant for the logo was to
symbolise vigilance and looking
backward while going forward.[1]
The Society is based at the
Science Museum in London (there
are also regional branches in
Birmingham, Manchester, Newcastle,
Bristol and Portsmouth), and is
concerned with all branches of
engineering: civil, mechanical,
electrical, structural,
aeronautical, marine, chemical and
manufacturing as well as biography
and invention.
It publishes the Transactions of
the Newcomen Society as well as
occasional extra publications.
An American branch was established
in 1923, but the Newcomen Society
of the United States was entirely
separate from its UK counterpart
in 2007, when the chairman and
trustees announced the society's
closure.
I thank
the donor of the booklet!
Below:
Inside front cover
|
|