The contribution of franchise system in the United States. A poster reads "Weight Watchers Welcomes You." A woman shows her own picture when she was overweight. She encourages people sitting in the room listening to her presentation about the Weight Watchers program. View of participants listening and smiling during her presentation.
The contribution of franchise system in the United States. Advertisement help franchises to boost up sales. A car comes out of a gate and moves on a road. A banner reads ' Midas'. A muffler manufacturing plant that makes quality and standardized parts. Technicians in the factory discuss. Men work at the factory.
The contribution of franchise system in the United States. Franchises as a way to achieve personal and financial independence through owning a small business. View inside a Insty Prints franchise print shop. A woman at the shop as she takes out the printouts. Men and women tour a low cost modular home structure that can be used as a home or vacation home. It is ultra modern and shaped like a dome or igloo, with port hole windows all around. People tour the inside of the modern dome house. A franchise retail store sign for a "7 Eleven" store. People purchase products from the 7 Eleven store. A man and woman clerk assist the customers. Next scene shows Gus Sam , the African American owner of a Carvel Ice cream parlor. He is seen filling customer orders and working in the store. Series of shots show him meeting with representatives from the Carvel franchising system as they helped him plan location, build-out, financing, and operations of his franchise store. Sam at his shop gives ice cream to children and decorates a cake that he sells to an African American woman and her daughter. Girl looks at the cake and appears happy.
The contribution of franchise system in the United States. Henry Landworth, a refugee who came to America owns four Holiday Inn hotels in Florida. He talks about his hard work and success. The chefs work in a kitchen. Henry looks at them. People dance in the disco.
Henry Ford is seen standing beside his Ford Quadricycle, outside of his Bagley Avenue workshop building. Next scene shows Ford seated in the quadricycle, the first vehicle he built. Henry Ford standing in discussion with another man and looking at the rear of a Ford vehicle, with Henry Ford pointing at part of the car. The two men then walk past a line of various Ford cars representing many model years, all parked in front of the then recently restored Clinton Inn (formerly Eagle Tavern) at Greenfield Village in Dearborn, Michigan. Final scene shows Henry Ford again seated in his quadricycle.
Henry Ford in the Highland Park plant steps into the fifteen millionth Ford Model T car just before it rolls off of the production line on May 26, 1927. Ford's son, Edsel Ford, is driving the car. Next scene shows Ford auto workers during car production on assembly line in factory. Wheels and tires moving on overhead line. View of the twenty millionth Ford automobile, a Model A, as it is completed and rolls off the line in Dearborn, Michigan, driven by Edsel Ford, on April 14, 1931. It is a 1931 slant windshield Town Sedan 160B.
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