Automatic Age

Issue: 1938 February

February , 1938
Celebrates Silver
Anniversary In
Music Business
121
AUTOMATIC AGE
penny vender that can be had at a
moderate price. It gives ample dis­
play at front and two sides of the
machine, glass is double thick and
cabinet has features which give it
double strength, the makers state.
“It has a capacity of approximately
five pounds and has many features
which the operator will greatly ap­
preciate, such as easy servicing, two-
toned enamel with chrome trim, non­
corrosive, simplified slug detection,
etc.
“The Penny Shop is a machine to
bring bulk vending up to a high
plane in merchandising that it de­
serves,” officials of the firm say. “It
is the pride of our presentation and
is recommended to operators who
want a real business in the vending
field. It has three compartments
and all the features that we know
how to build into machines. We can
also make a real automatic store by
putting on additional columns, such
as a six-column store.”
FACTORY CLOSE OUT ON KICKERS!
5 Ball Novelty Game
From a spring-wound phonograph
to Wurlitzer Automatic Phonographs
—that’s the 25-year story of J. F.
Johnson of Omaha, Nebraska, sum­
med up in one sentence.
Yes, the owner of the Johnson Mu­
sic Company is now celebrating his
silver anniversary in the automatic
music business—and one sentence
can’t begin to do justice to his activi­
ties during the past quarter century.
Now 62, Mr. Johnson left a profit­
able hotel and restaurant business to
enter the more profitable automatic
music business. That was back in
1913. Today the Johnson Music Com­
pany is looking forward to even
greater activity in the next 25 years,
and Mr. Johnson’s son Cliff L. John­
son is going to play a major part in
that activity.
The picture of Mr. Johnson shows
him in the famous Wurlitzer “clam­
bake costume.” He was one of the
nine honor guests at last August's
Wurlitzer Century Club Convention,
of happy memory.
Here’s how he feels about phono­
graphs: “ I can say without hesita­
tion that I’ve done a lot of business
and made money with phonographs.
I’m 100% sold on them.”
$ O C 0 0 EACH FOR BALANCE
****
OF STOCK
This is the final sale on this model
SHYVERS MFG. CO.
2315 W. HURON ST.
CHICAGO, ILL.
METAL TRADE CHECKS!
for the Coin Operated Trade
W E OFFER
,4 ° ° %\
A COMPLETE
CHOICE OF
METALS,
SIZES,
SHAPES
Two Bulk Venders
Featured By Ad-Lee
The Ad-Lee Company reports that
two types of vending machines dis­
played by it at the 1938 Coin Ma­
chine Show drew an immediate and
heavy response. The two machines
have been designed to give the oper­
ator a real machine for the present
trend toward the bulk vending field.
One of the machines, the Century
confection vender, is a single-column
AND FINISHES
W ITH OR
WITHOUT
YOUR OWN
NAME
S H Y V E R S MFG. CO.
2315 W. H U RO N ST.
© International Arcade Museum
C H IC A G O , ILL.
http://www.arcade-museum.com/
122
AUTOMATIC AGE
Lumber Is Scientifically Prepared
At Mills Novelty Co.
February, 19S8
prevent proper glue adhesion if used
“as is.” It is necessary then, if the
cabinets are to justify the claims
made for them, to reduce this mois­
ture content to the very m inim um be­
fore the lumber is touched by saw or
plane. Proper drying makes lumber
lighter and at the same time stronger.
It prevents warping and minimizes
the capacity for expansion and con­
traction.
Although the technique of drying
lumber correctly is acquired only
through long years of experience, the
methods used are apparently simple.
Large rail trucks are loaded w ith fu ll
board length lumber and rolled into
heat insulated compartments called
kilns. These kilns are equipped with
tig h t fitting doors to prevent the en­
trance of outside air. Heat is sup­
plied by steam coils capable of raising
the temperature w ithin the kilns to
the maximum point that m ight be re­
quired.
T his
lu m b e r gets
a T urk ish
B a th
begin with, the basic raw m a­
terials used in industry are not
perfect. This is as true of a piece of
lumber as of tobacco. You would quit
smoking forever if your only source
of tobacco enjoyment were the natural
leaves of the plant as they are taken
from the field. A nd just as the to­
bacco in your favorite cigar or cigar­
ette has been cured and blended to
produce a distinctive flavor so all the
wood products used in the cabinet
work have to undergo somewhat
sim ilar processes.
I t is a fascinating experience
watching the transformation of slabs
cut from a tree thousands of miles
away, into the polished beauty of a
Zephyr or a Club Bell.
This transformation does not hap­
pen over night. I f you wanted to see
ju st how it is accomplished you m ight
start your inspection trip in the Cabi­
net Shop. You would watch the pre­
cise operations of glueing and joining
the individual pieces that come from
the M ill Room in a great variety of
shapes and fashioned from many dif­
ferent species of woods. Your reac­
tion would be one of amazement if
you went directly from there to the
receiving yard where from 25 to 30
carloads of timber are normally stor­
ed. Here you would see huge piles of
rough, discolored boards instead of
at
the
M ills
N ovelty C o m p a n y
P la n t.
smooth mill work upon which cabinet
makers ply their magic.
Gust H ultm an, Mills m ill room
mentor, would explain that, while this
is very fine lumber, it is not in a con­
dition for manufacture. It is literally
fu ll of water. Green lumber often
contains from 40% to 50% moisture.
W hile the percentage is much lower
in the air-dried lumber, it is sufficient
to cause warping and checking and to
B ut the proper drying effect can­
not be obtained by the immediate ap­
plication of dry heat. Everyone has
observed the effect of the sun’s heat
on growing corn or other plant sub­
stances during a dry stretch in m id­
summer. Too rapid drying has a some­
what similar effect on lumber, leaving
moisture in the center and form ing
a hard crust or case at the surface.
So the lumber is first given a bath in
steam which is sprayed into the kiln
from jets supplied for that purpose.
Then just as your skin dries more
easily after a turkish bath than after
a cold shower, this heated lumber be­
gins to dry uniform ly from the cen­
ter outward when the dry heat is
turned on.
The steaming process occupies only
about 24 hours but the actual drying
requires m any days. I t starts after
the temperature of the kiln has drop­
ped to about 110 degrees. For each
lot of lumber the kiln operator follows
a schedule based on a number of fac­
tors including species of wood, thick­
ness, and original moisture content.
In all cases the temperature is in ­
creased gradually under controlled
humidity until toward the end of the
drying process it has reached about
160 degrees in moisture-free air.
M ill Room F orem an G u st H u ltm a n o pe r­
ates the B lin k o m e te r
m ac h ine w hich
m easures the percent of w a te r contained
in piles of “ g re e n" lum ber.
© International Arcade Museum
The lumber so treated is never
again exposed to atmospheric condi­
tions. It is put in dry storage and
kept there until it is withdrawn for
the m illing and assembly operations.
F inally the completed cabinets are
given the surface finish which is us­
ually thought of as a cosmetic oper­
ation but which further has the eff-
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