Automatic Age

Issue: 1930 January

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the a u t o m a t ic a g e
V
o l
. 6
CHICAGO, JA N U A R Y , 1930
No. 6
LONG LIVE T H E Y E A R
William Lyon Phelps in Delineator
“ There is always something inspiring about a begin­
ning ; a new day, a new month, a New Year. Goethe said
life was like a game o f whist: the cards are dealt out to
Us by the Unseen, and it is left to us, whatever the na­
ture o f the hand we hold, to play it as well as possible.
For surely it is not the kind o f hand given to us by the
dealer that determines our character; our character is
shown wholly and exclusively by the way we play. In
one of his novels, Howells said that a foolish or evil ac­
tion did not reveal the real nature o f any man, because
every man does something foolish or wicked occasionally.
It is the way the man behaves after he has done the fool­
ish thing that really shows him up.
“ Many people laugh at others for making New Year
resolutions, knowing they will not keep them. Jonathan
Swift, after writing down sixteen resolutions, wrote a
seventeenth as follow s: ‘Not too set fo r observing all
these rules, for fear I should observe none.’ Yet, al­
though he was one o f the most clear sighted and most dis­
illusioned o f men, he knew there was genuine value in
writing resolutions. What is that Value?
“ Well, life is not only like a game— it is a game, the
most exciting and the most complicated o f all games,
which owes its fascination partly to the fact that no one
has ever completely mastered it. Now in eve"ry game
there are pauses where the players stop for a moment
and get a fresh start. And the fresh start always has
about it a certain zest. You have just lost a hand at
bridge. Well, it is lost and you cannot change it any
more than you can change history. But there is a new
deal, and you glance eagerly at your handful o f ca rd s...
On the first day o f January, 1930, the. phrase heard most
often in every part o f the world is the greeting o f a
Happy New Year. Every one seems to take heart and
feel that what is past is past and gone, and a new and
better era is at hand.”
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12
T
he
A
u t o m a t ic
A
ge
Some of the broad definitions 'of CO-OPERATION are illustrated
and applied to the automatic trade.
SIG N IF IC A N T M E A N IN G OF T H E WORD
CO -O PERATION
B y A . E. G EBERT, President, Vending Machine Manufacturers’
Association, and Manager, Advance Machine Co., Chicago
Websters Dictionary defines the
meaning o f this word as “ the associa­
tion, or collective action, o f persons
fo r their common benefit, especially in
an industry.
Our civilzation is based on CO-OP­
E RATIO N . One fo r all, and all for
each, is the keynote. W e can visual­
ize primitive man playing a lone
hand, until compelled by circum­
stances to unite with his fellow man
fo r the purpose o f mutual protection
and advancement. The fam ily units
merged into clans and tribes. The
village, city and nation was the out­
growth o f this co-operative principle
and today with the league o f nations
spreading its doctrines, the world bids
fair to become one great co-operative
body.
The manufacturer or operator who
fails to get a vision o f the benefits o f
CO-OPERATION has little chance to
succeed.
One o f our national maxims is,
“ united we stand; divided we fall.”
During a crisis in early American
history a great patriot said to his fe l­
low conspirators, “ we must hang to­
gether or we will hang separately.”
Organization means co-operation as
well as protection and the more sta­
ble the better the results.
Part of- Napoleon’s strategy con­
sisted o f driving a wedge in the ranks
o f his opponent, thus dividing the
army o f the latter, which he pro­
ceeded to defeat by holding back one
portion while demolishing the other.
Assuming that organization does
© International Arcade Museum
bring CO-OPERATION , we should
realize that the Association must not
be one in name only, but must func­
tion in order to give it life. The pur­
poses o f the Association may be beau­
tifully expressed in print, but it
means nothing unless put into action.
Without CO-OPERATION , civili­
zation would fall. There is no single
individual who could by himself lift
the race into higher things, or who
could produce any commodity involv­
ing complicated conditions.
Imagine a lone manufacturer o f
vending machines digging the iron
ore, converting it into steel, trans­
porting it, making the machinery fo r
producing the product, gathering and
form ing the materials to make the
packing boxes and last but not least
attempting to find a market by the
slow process o f individual and per­
sonal contact, instead o f advertising
in a medium that would reach hun­
dreds of prospective buyers with each
issue.
Such a proposition is unthinkable
and helps to make us realize how de­
pendent we are on others— yes. even
upon the water boy who refreshes the
miner who digs the ore.
The story is told o f a little girl who
was lost in a wheat field. A score
o f searchers scattered out in different
directions,
without
accomplishing
their purpose.
A fter a conference
they organized, form ing a line by
grasping hands and spreading out;
then in this formation they covered
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