SUPPOSITORY BOXES WITH PARTITIONS.

Suppository Box—Covered with white enameled paper,
four bronze edges—Lined with tin foil.

Suppository boxes with partitions are made much the same as square or oblong shouldered pill and powder boxes, with the exception of the lids being deeper, and the addition of the partitions. Some boxes of this variety are hinged.

The stock used for the partitions is usually lined on both sides with white enameled paper, or with tin foil. The interior of the box and lid is also lined either with white enameled paper, or with tin foil, to correspond with the partitions.

The Charles Beck company, of Philadelphia, supply a paper box-maker’s saw which is particularly adapted to the work of sawing slots for partitions of paper boxes. The E. G. Staude Manufacturing company, of St. Paul, Minn., furnish the Junior and Standard Slotters which are adapted to all kinds of slotting work for paper box partitions. The Staude slotting machines are equipped with automatic feeders, and they are capable of turning out a great amount of finished product very rapidly.

The edges of the partitions are glued to the sides and bottoms of the boxes.