Automatic Age

Issue: 1930 October

12
T h e A u t o m a t ic A g e
Inventive imagination and a nose for ideas
finds it profitable to peep into various nooks
and corners of the business world, and far­
fetched suggestions may sometimes be the
means of starting new vlans and devices in
the automatic world.
HINTS FO R THE AUTOM ATIC TRADE M A Y
COM E FRO M V A R IE D SOURCES
Face Soap in Tubes
The toilet preparations market is an im ­
mense field and spasmodic efforts have been
made here and there to get a share of these
sales for vending machines. The chang­
ing demands of milady in the way of toilet
preparations may be worth watching. I f
the ladies show a preference for soap in
tubes, it might be tpossible to steal a march
on the retail stores and offer a novel prod­
uct and packages for sale through ma­
chines.
It seems that the ladies have been car­
rying around in their handbags small tubes
of shaving paste to use as a toilet soap.
They seem to feel that shaving paste is
easier on the skin than the ordinary toilet
soap. In fact, they find it a very pleasant
substitute for soap and one that soothes as
well as cleans.
Now a progressive manufacturer of toilet
articles has come out with a soap cream
which they will put in tubes to be carried
in the ladies’ handbag.
This new article will be placed on the
market very soon. We ,predact that this
new toilet cream soap in tubes will be a
very fa ir seller and it is more than likely
that other toilet goods manufacturers will
put out similar articles.
Nothing new in the line of soaps has been
really introduced to the American public in
a good many years and it looks as though
the time is ripe for many new innovations
in toilet and bath soaps.
Chain of Roadside Stands
The development of the roadside mer­
chandising of food products and beverages
has reached a new status with the organiza­
tion of the National Roadside Taverns, Inc.
The new company will establish the nucleus
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of the organization in the Michigan terri­
tory, headquarters being in the Citizens
Bank building, Flint, Mich. Other chains
of roadside stands are being organized, and
within a short time it is predicted this kind
of selling will adopt the chain method of
operation in all its aspects, with central
buying offices.
— N. Y. Journal of Commerce.
Square Pie Bakeries
The Square Pie Bakeries, Inc. of New
Haven has bought the building formerly
occupied by the Manchester Evening Herald
here and will remodel it for the manufac­
ture of its product. Fred B. Oliver will be­
come local manager of the plant, which is
expected to go into operation early in Octo­
ber with a staff of fifteen men. It is an­
nounced that the company also plans to
open plants in Albany, Providence and
other cities in this general area.
— N. Y. Journal of Commerce.
Grocery Chains
in Drug Field
Current experiments 'by one of the lead­
ing and most successful grocery chain sys­
tems indicated another step in the fa r
reaching efforts of such organizations to
increase sales volume and profits. This
expansion involves the addition of staple
drug lines, such as tooth pastes, cold creams
and standard remedies to regular stocks,
says the Standard Statistics Co., of New
York, in a current survey, which follows in
part:
“ The highly specialized nature of the
drug trade will necessarily lim it the num­
ber of such lines which can be distributed
through these channels, but over the long-
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T h e A u t o m a t ic A g e
er term the comparatively high margin of
profit secured from such articles, even after
due allowance for cut rate practices of
chain organizations, could allow some addi­
tions to income of distributive systems of
this type.
“ Effects of this development on the drug
industry will be varied. It will further in­
tensify already keen competition in the re­
tail drug field, of course, with its attendant
adverse effects on retail concerns but, in
our opinion, will have no serious effects on
the drug manufacturers over the longer
term.
“ Certain manufacturers of drug products
that are actively opposed to the cut-rate
ipractices of chain organizations or that
are to a great extent dependent on their
own jobbing activities for distribution,
could easily be unfavorably affected, but
even these units should overcome such ob­
stacles in time. Moreover, those concerns
cooperating with chain units will be offered
additional distributive activities which
should prove beneficial to both sales volume
and earnings.
Packaged Ice Cream
The Retail Druggist offers some good
reasons for selling ice cream in packages.
Since ice cream venders at present use only
packaged cream, the ideas are good talking
points for the automatic trade.
For years druggists have merely been
affording an outlet for the ice cream manu­
facturers’ product. They have turned over
to the ice cream manufacturers the most
valuable spaces in their stores and have
allowed (profitable trade to cool its heels
while they calloused their hands dipping
profit for ice cream manufacturers.
Packaged ice cream is the answer to the
dealer’s complaint. The present of a new
iceless refrigerator or some other free con­
cession will not solve the problem of the
dealer’s losses.
The ice cream manufacturer who makes
no effort to build up a consumer demand
for packaged ice cream generally claims
that there is no demand for it in his trade
territory. Possibly he has tried putting out
'packaged ice cream and made a failure of
it. Possibly he put the same kind of ice
cream into packages that he makes for his
fountain trade.
That fact in itself is
enough to insure failure.
For years the trend in the production
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13
and handling of food products has been in
the direction of packages.
The grocery
store of twenty years ago was filled with
boxes and barrels, holding various food
products in bulk. Now the modern grocery
has its wares in small packages all ready
for the consumer.
W hat should be the attitude of the men
in the ice cream industry toward packaged
goods? If packaged ice cream is more satis­
factory to the dealer, and if packaged, ice
cream is more convenient and satisfactory
for the consumer, what should be the a tti­
tude of the manufacturers of ice cream
whose success depends on the cooperation
of the dealer and the satisfaction of the
consumer?
Coffee Warms Hearts
Much favorable publicity is being given
to coffee and since there are coin machines
for dispensing this popular drink, the trade
should note this publicity with favor. There
is good reason to believe that proper in itia­
tive in the trade might expand the market
for coffee sales by machine, especially dur­
ing the winter months when the public de­
mand for hot drinks is up. A little investi­
gation will show quite a field of locations
where a machine dispensing a hot cup (pa­
per cups being dispensed also) of good
coffee would receive good patronage. Be­
sides, the vast coffee marketing organiza­
tions would no doubt be glad to help such
a development with publicity campaigns, if
real enterprise could .be shown.
The National Grocers Bulletin publishes
the following story, which is a sample of
current coffee publicity:
Coffee— plenty hot and lots of it— was
the drink that made a big contribution to
the success of the Byrd Antarctic Expedi­
tion. In the long, bitterly cold months dur­
ing which the forty-two men wrote history
upon the ice of Little America, they drank
sixteen gallons of coffee a day. A t the base,
on the trail with the dogs, in the air, hot
coffee helped to fight off the penetrating
cold and to stimulate tired brains and
muscles. As one member of the Expedition
put it: “ We melted the ice with coffee."
Mr. George W. Tennant, chief cook of
the Expedition, besides being chief cook was
the one and only cook on many days. Nor
did be confine his menus to simple, easily
prepared dishes. Every Sunday, for in ­
stance, there was roast turkey with all the
(Continued on page 21)
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