Automatic Age

Issue: 1926 March

T h e A u t o m a t ic A ce
93
A T YP IC A L CASE OF ROTTEN
PROMOTION
From the St. Louis Post-Dispatch
I f “ Sunny Jim” pie and sandwich
vending machines had never been
rifled, if they had not had to digest
80 pounds of slugs in the eight
months they were operated in St.
Louis, if the topheavy overhead had
been reduced to a minimum and the
drivers who filled the machines and
Collected receipts had been carefully
checked up against “ knocking down,”
would the defunct Automat Sales
Company have operated at a profit?
“ I f the company had received a
dime for every package put in every
machine every day, the company still
would have lost money,” repliea
Walter L. Prack of Webster Groves,
former auditor of the bankrupt, at the
first hearing recently before R ef­
eree Coles. “ I wrote Hool to that
effect”
Description of Hool
Prack had agreed to Referee Coles’
description of James A. Hool as
“ something better than an officer,”
and said that he “bossed” officers o f
the service company and also seemed
to direct the Automat Sales Company.
That concern is a bankrupt, too, with
liabilities estimated by the receiver at
$300,000, and assets consisting prin­
cipally of a $01,955 claim against its
fellow-bankrupt, Hool, with James
A. Readey, seeretary-treasurer, was a
plaintiff in the petition against the
service company, therein describing
himself as sales manager,
“ Hool knew it was impossible for
the machines to make a profit and
still continued to sell the machines to
the public?” asked the Referee,
"Y es.”
_
*
“ And the worse the business be­
came, the higher the price o f the ma­
chine for the unfortunate buyer?”
Prack agreed that was so. He had
said the price began at $125 a ma­
© International Arcade Museum
chine and increased to $200 before
the failure last month.
Cites Other Cities
An attorney fo r one o f the bank­
rupts asked with some heat if Prack
did not know that similar machines,
with perhaps a little better manage­
ment, were making a good profit n
Chicago, Detroit and New York,
Prack did not. “ The cost o f food
products was more than they took in
here,” he explained simply.
Scientific, psychologized, punchful
salesmanship, backed by a pamphlet,
“ Turning Dimes Into Dollars,” had
sold 5000 machines in St. Louis— of
which about half were not delivered
— but it was just this that killed the
goose that laid the golden egg, it ap­
peared from Prack’s testimony.
He said that his first study o f the
-accounts disclosed that some of tha
machines, due to poor location, sold
only two or three sandwiches or two
or three pies a day, at the expense
o f the 12 or 13 others. Referee Coles
asked if there was anything in the
lease to prevent shifting the machines
to a better location. “ No,” Prack an­
swered, “ but the service company had
too many machines to place. They
were coming in at the rate of 200 or
300 a week.” So, he indicated, the
new ones were placed and the old
ones were left where they were, loss
or no loss.
Sales Organization Moved
When the situation in St. Louis be­
came uncomfortable, the sales organ­
ization moved to “ new and fairer
fields” in Detroit. The service con­
cern, Prack said, was losing $600 or
$700 a day. The sales concern’s claim
against the service company was for
weekly advances, paid by check o f
“James A. Hool, vice-president,” to
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T h e A u t o m a t i c A ge
94
cover budgets prepared by Prack,
minus credit of $22,000 to the service
concern on 1100 machines which had
been placed.
The advances had stopped two
weeks before the failure, “ Hool was
here the first week,” Prrck related.
"I asked him about the budget, and
he said he would mail a check. It
did not come. Later I wired to him,
but- it did not come then, either.”
“ Hool and Readey were gone when
the crash came?" lieferee Coles in­
quired. They were, Prack answered,
and he added that he did not know
where they were.
Chuquieamata in Chile is the heart
o f the greatest copper-bearing area in
the world. The largest single North
American investment south of Pan­
ama employs here $100,000,000. The
Chileans are the Yankees o f Soutl)
America.
Waterproof Matches
By incorporating- rubber latex
with the fulminating material ana
then vulcanizing by a special process,
matches and match-box strikers are
now made absolutely water and damp-
proof.
Tests have proven that
matches so treated can be actually
immersed in water without a single
match being spoiled or its ability to
Are when rubbed on the striker im­
paired.
Slot Machine
Doomed in Iowa
Des Moines, Iowa— The Iowa su­
preme court handed down a decision
which means the doom of the slot
machine. In the test case the court
sustained the decisions o f District
Judge Hubert Utterbach and Munici­
pal Justice Herman Zeuch o f Des
Moines ordering destruction o f slot
machines which had been confiscates.
giiiM yiB iiiisiiiraiiiiiiiiiiijiiiraijiiiiraiiiiijiB iB iisiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiLisH tB iiiiiiiiJiB iniiaiB tB iiiiiiiiiM iiiiM iraiiim n^iiiiisraaiD iiiitaiiiiiiH g
Let Good Will Prevail at the
Convention
The roses red upon my neighbor's vine
Are owned by him, but also they are mine.
His was the cost, and his the labor, too,
But mine as well as his the joy their loveliness to view.
They bloom for me, and are for me as fair
As for the man who gives them all his care;
Thus I am rich, because a good man grew
A rose-clad vine for all his neighbors’ view.
I know from this that others plant for me,
And what they own, my joy may also be;
So why be selfish, when so much that’s fine
Is grown for you upon your neighbor’s vine?
'
— Selected.
^ K U J ia a n iiu a n iiia iiM ^
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http://www.arcade-museum.com/
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