Automatic Age

Issue: 1937 August

AUTOMATIC AGE
August, 1937
11
Stop Turning The Other Cheek!
By A rthur W. Luchs
U R IN G the past seven years, a
great industry has been surg­
ing rapidly ahead by leaps and
bounds, lifting its head high above the
economic depression. That industry,
the Coin Operated Machine Industry,
has become a veritable giant, permeat­
ing to the far comers of the civilized
world. It’s sudden growth has been
awe inspiring, coming as it did dur­
ing a period in which the entire world
suffered what was probably it’s worst
business depression in history. Recent
figures which have been published
convey the fact that the coin operated
amusement and vending machine busi­
ness has assumed a place among the
ranks of the nation’s major industries,
representing a tremendous investment
of capital and numbering thousands
of employees among it’s personnel.
Therefore may we not assume that a
business of such magnitude and scope
is satisfying a definite economic need
and therefore merits it’s own degree
of legal recognition.
D
Recognition An Elusive Factor
The public has been very quick to
recognize the value of amusement and
vending machines. Their early accep­
tance of those machines has made the
tremendous growth of this industry
possible. The big obstacle, which has
been confronting the coin machine in­
dustry, and which has also been prov­
ing an elusive factor, has been recog­
nition by constituted authority. There
appears to be a very decided and pre­
conceived method of attack on the
part of local authorities, directed in
turn against each of the activities con­
stituting the livelihood of the coin
machine industry.
This attack usually makes its ap­
pearance in the form of agitation and
propaganda emanating from some self
appointed custodian of public morals,
or some blue stockinged publicity
seeker, who desires the spotlight for
his own personal aggrandizement. Past
history verifies, that whenever a per­
son wants to exploit themselves in an
effort to secure public approbation,
they invariably turn the “ heat” on the
coin machine industry.
There isn’t
a single type of machine in the indus­
try, which has not at one time or
other been subjected to the blasts of
the agitating publicity seeker, or pro­
pagandist. Attacks are often directed
against coin machines in an effort to
divert public attention from nefarious
practices being conducted by the peo­
ple who are so loud spoken in de­
nouncing the coin machines.
Necessary T o Defend Ourselves
I do not claim that we in the coin
machine industry are spotless. Some
of the attacks which have been direct­
ed against the industry have been
justified. That is always to be ex­
pected, wherever the human element
enters into a situation. Since all hu­
man beings do not think or act alike,
we are bound to have discrepancies
in their behavior.
Granting that some of the attacks
against the practices of the industry
have been justified, is it not also logi­
cal to assume that some of the ani­
mosity directed toward the industry
on the part of misguided public offi­
cials and office seekers, who are only
human after all, has no logical basis
or foundation? In their zeal and ef­
fort to boost themselves into the spot­
light, they are so ready to attack an
outstanding industry, which is assum­
ing rank as a public institution, solely
for the public eye. The Don Quixote
attitude of such an attack is becoming
a laughing stock to the general public,
who are seeing through the reasons
for this pompousness on the part of
strutting public officials. The public
should be informed that much of this
animosity toward the industry, is in
the form of a mask to cloak their own
sinister work.

This method of attack compels us
to adopt a program of concerted ac­
tion in order to defend ourselves. The
mud slinging directed at us must be
stopped. Where our pursuits and ma­
chines are legitimate, they must be
given the respect and recognition
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which they deserve. A unified pro­
gram should be adopted by the indus­
try which will provide for adequate
and wide awake representation, both
locally and nationally.
It must be
strong enough to thoroughly combat
"Tialicious propaganda and adverse
publicity.
Personnel of Industry Unequalled
The majoriy of the personnel of the
entire coin operated machine industry
are conscientious, straight forward
business people, who cannot be sur­
passed by the personnel of any other
industry. They are engaged in a le­
gitimate, productive enterprise, which
should be rocognized as the honest,
outstanding business that it is. It is
up to the industry as a whole to eli­
minate any phases that in any way
bear any semblance to the racket, a
word which is used so glibly by our
antagonists.
It is time for the coin machine in­
dustry to do an about face and tell
the public the true facts about itself.
W e have been maligned and misrepre­
sented on all sides, in recent years.
The public should be educated through
an educational program carried out
with true strength and courage, de­
picting factors about the industry
which, if they were generally known,
would eliminate the continual “ anvil
chorus” to which the coin machine in­
dustry is subjected today. There is
no better time than the present.
Stop turning the other cheek for a
slap. Fight back for that public
recognition and respect which should
be ours.
Tell the public about the coin ma­
chine industry, the part you play in
it and the essentials of its structure.
The public appreciates the truth when
it is given to them in an intelligent
manner. A forceful educational cam­
paign should be inaugurated and kept
up until the antagonism and adverse
propaganda directed at the industry
has been abated. Only then will we
have accomplished our goal.
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12
AUTOMATIC AGE
T he
C o in
August , 1937
M a c h in e
as
a
O p e ra to r
S a le s m a n
An address delivered by Herb Jones, Advertising Manager,
Bally Mfg. Co., before the Wisconsin Association of Coin Machine Operators
at Wausau, Wis., July 14, 1937
BOUT five oclock this morning,
I woke up on the train and
looked out over one o f those
majestic tracts o f forest lands which
makes the State o f Wisconsin so beau­
tiful and brings so many thousands
o f visitors within your borders each
year. The thought came to me that,
if only I were going to talk to a
group o f lumbermen, I would find a
world o f inspiration simply by lying
in my berth and watching the scenic
splendor o f Wisconsin roll by. Then,
I began to think o f some o f the fig­
ures I had gathered together and it
struck me that in a certain sense I
was on my way to Wausau to speak
to a group o f Wisconsin lumbermen.
Because, gentlemen, you are selling
Wisconsin lumber and selling a tre­
mendous quantity o f it. Into each ma­
chine operated by members o f your
group there is built from 40 to 120
feet o f high grade lumber— probably
75 feet in the average amusement
game. Each year in the neighborhood
o f 100,000,000 feet o f lumber— that’s
well over 5,000 carloads— is used in
the manufacture o f coin operated ma­
chines. Just how much o f this lumber
originates in Wisconsin is difficult to
say, but anyone who knows that Chi­
cago is the coin machine manufactur­
ing center o f the world could tell by
merely glancing at a map that W is­
consin is the logical source o f lumber
used in building coin machines. A
very safe and conservative estimate
would be that 75% o f the lumber go­
ing into games originates in W iscon­
sin. In fact, I know o f one company
that alone purchases $250,000 worth
o f lumber annually direct from W is­
consin mills— and every stick o f it
goes into coin operated games.
A
However, figures on volume are not
as interesting or significant as the
picture behind those figures. Amuse­
ment g-m es not only create a market
for lumber but a steady continuous
market. In fact, it might even be said
that lumber built into games is actu­
ally consumed. By that I mean it
gets used up rapidly and has to ba
replaced. Now, that’s a very impor­
tant point because lumber is not usu­
ally consumed in the sense that food
or clothing is. Lumber is a durable
product and the long life o f most wood
products puts a limit on its sales vol­
ume. For example, a wood house en­
dures a lifetime or more. The same
is true o f furniture. A fam ily pur­
chasing a set o f dining-room furni­
ture is, so to speak, in the market for
a quantity of lumber. But after that
dining-room set has been bought, that
particular fam ily will not be in the
market for that particular wood prod­
uct fo r a long, long time to come.
But in the case o f amusement ma­
chines the public is constantly in the
market for more lumber. Every time
a man slips a nickel in the chute he is
indirectly purchasing lumber — be­
cause he is paying in part fo r the
lumber that went into the construc­
tion o f that game. And, the interest­
ing fact is this: Lumber becomes a
perishable product when it is built
into a game. Not because it actually
wears out, but because being in the
amusement field we must constantly
give the public something new and
different.
That is the essence o f
amusement— something that will ap­
peal to the public because it is new
and different. Therefore, the 75 feet
or so o f lumber in yesterday’s game
must pass away and be replaced by
75 more feet o f lumber in the game o f
today. Thus the amusement machine
industry becomes the lumbermen’s
dream— he can still point with pride to
the durability and long life o f lumber
— yet he can see his lumber being used
up at a rapid rate— 75 feet every time
an operator junks an old machine and
replaces it with a new one. In other
words, gentlemen, whether you know
it or not, you are among the best
salesmen the lumber industry has.
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And what I’ve said about lumber
goes fo r other products too. F or ex­
ample, since we have been building
the elaborate electrical games o f to­
day, I estimate that 150,000 miles—
not feet, but miles— o f electric wire
are used annually in the manufacture
o f games. More than 3,000,000 feet
o f plate glass is used annually by this
industry. About three-quarters o f a
million dollars worth o f motors are
used each year in the coin machines
o f various kinds — and, incidentally
one company, buys $75,000.00 worth
of motors annually from a Wisconsin
motor manufacturers. Approxim ate­
ly one-half a million dollars worth o f
electric bulbs are used each year in
light-up games.
And so on down the list— dozens o f
industrial products— used in tremen­
dous quantities by an industry in
which you, gentlemen, are the most
important factor— because it is your
efforts which finally succeeds in sell­
ing these millions o f feet o f lumber
and these miles and miles o f wire to
the public.
Please understand that when I say
you are selling wire and motors and
lumber to the public, I am not at­
tempting to glorify your business. The
amusement machine business needs no
alibi. In itself it is one o f the most
worthy callings a man can follow , for
it serves a fundamental need o f the
human race— the craving fo r amuse­
ment; the normal, healthful impulse
to escape from time to time from the
pressure o f modern life ; the desire to
pause for a moment o f relaxation and
fun. But, important as your busi­
ness is from the recreational or social
view point, I want to emphasize to­
day how much more important it is
from an economic viewpoint.
For example, I spoke o f you men
selling wire by the mile. Now, we
all know that the average man doesn’t
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