Automatic Age

Issue: 1940 March

March, 1940
89
AUTOMATIC AGE
Today’s Products Are Obsolete!
R adically New Products Needed to Stim ulate
Production, Sales and Em ploym ent
Cleveland, Ohio— To help manufac­
turers speed recovery, absorb the un­
employed, and prepare now for the
post - war competition of foreign
manufacturers, by the introduction
of improved and radically new prod­
ucts that present advanced thought
in function, convenience and ap­
pearance, is claimed for a three-
production service termed a Master
Products Service, inaugurated by
Designers for Industry, Inc., an in ­
dustrial design and engineering or­
ganization of this city, according to
announcement by Chas. H. Oppen-
heimer, its president.
In making the announcement Mr.
Oppenheimer states that the master
Products service involves the applica­
tion of the scientific principles of
modern product research, engineer-
'Ug development and product styling
for the development of radical im ­
provements that will create a definite
obsolescence factor in existing
Products.
“As a matter of fact,” he declared,
in view of potent'alities it is obvious
that a large percentage of today’s
Products are already obsolete. There
1S little difference in the service pei'-
formance or appearance of many com­
petitive products. Buyers are not,
ln most lines, being furnished with
sufficient inducement to make new or
^placem ent sales. Unlimited oppor­
tunities await those manufacturers
wbo anticipate consumer require­
ments and furnish the radically im ­
proved products necessary to meet
them.
of their products, nor upon product
styling or industrial design as a con­
structive stimulant in marketing.
“ Manufacturers as a rule have
ignored the factor of obsolescence
as a powerful trade stim ulant and
business-builder,” he continued, “as
so forcefully demonstrated by the
new life and activity in the auto­
motive, office and store equipment,
and some divisions of the domestic
appliance fields, and especially in
the machine tool field, — in all of
which radically improved products
have increased sales and employment
to a marked degree. Immediate pub­
lic acceptance of today’s smart auto­
mobiles, flourescent lighting, pianos,
electric razors, nylon fabric hosiery,
streamlined typewriters and products
of synthetic plastics, and the adop­
tion by industry of new alloys,
finishes and processes, furnish ample
proof that radically improved or prac­
tical new products will find immediate
consumer response.
“ However,” he points out, “few
of the more than 100,000 active plants
that constitute American industry,
have the facilities, personnel or means
that have enabled the automotive,
steel, and chemical industries and a
few outstanding manufacturers to
create the radically new materials or
products that experience has shown
are assured of immediate public ac­
ceptance.
“ Furthermore, but few manufac­
turers have the facilities for keep­
ing abreast of the constant new de­
velopments in all materials, processes,
products and finishes, noteworthy ex­
amples of which are found in the
beryllium alloys, silicon bronzes, tel­
lurium-copper alloys, silver and lead
alloy steels, one-coat one-fire porce­
lain enameling, flame gouging, in fra ­
red ray drying, m a g n e s i u m alloys, im ­
proved grey iron castings, glass and
synthetic fabrics, and the scores of
other material and product develop­
ments that pave the way for the
radically new products that will sti­
mulate production and sales.
.
“ The iMaster Products Service was
created to overcome the handicaps
that confront all but the very largest
of organizations, to give them the
benefits accruing from scientific m ar­
ket research, the latest engineering
technique, and the selling force in­
herent in artistic and correct func­
tional design.
“ To these manufacturers, Ameri­
ca’s employed 35,000,000 wage earn­
ers offer a healthy, profitable m ar­
ket. And it is noteworthy that in
spite of economic conditions, the pre­
sent income earners will spend genei*-
ously for new things, provided the
new things have a distinctive new
appeal — refinement, beauty, greater
utility, convenience, simplified opera­
tion,— individually or in combination
that will automatically put the “ out
of date” stamp on existing products.
There will be no unemployment prob­
lems when industry as a whole grasps
the significance of not only keeping
its products up-to-date, but, let us
say, a little ahead of expressed de­
mands.”
M o d e rn ’s M o d e rn Offices
"^be situation is aggravated by
e fact that fully fifty per cent
° the products in use today are in-
®0rrectly designed. This is largely
Ue to the fact that many manufac-
Urers have failed to utilize impar-
product research to determine
Sei requirements, character and
° f competing products, pos-
low ^ GS
better products and
ei production costs made possible
y substitute materials, and market
ized n^ a^ t ies; ^bey have not capital-
^.e upon modern engineering tech-
thqUe and new materials to improve
e mechanical and service features
© International Arcade Museum
A view of the new general offices of Modern Vending Company
http://www.arcade-museum.com/
March, 1940
AUTOMATIC AGE
90
M ills Mens Interview Dorsey
SJCKilTIPICS
W
I N N E R S .'
S K E E
J U M P
Heavy session on “ swing" between M ills men and Tommy Dorsey, the sentimental gentlsman
of swing. Left to right: Larry Burnham, M ills phono engineer; Swing Leader Tommy Dorsey;
Jim Mangan, M ills Advertising M anager; Hans Schweigert and David Cole, phono experts.
Illinois Lock Company Reports
Record Year In 1939
Skee Jum p is w elcom e in A L L locations.
It is a fa s c in a tin g and highly popular
s k ill gam e. T h e b e a u tifu l deluxe console
c a b in e t is only 48 inches in len g th .
Skee Jum p w ill earn “ lo n g -life ” profits!
COU N TER S K IL f. G A M E
5 B A L L S lc
T h e FA STEST
m oney m aking
counter gam e
ever o rig in a t­
ed. Equipped
with
clever
score “ a d d e r-
u p p e r ” th a t
w o rk s
lik e
m agic.
G u a ra n te e d
m e c h a n ic a lly
pe rfe c t.
O perators and
jobbers h a v e
flo o d e d
us
w ith orders.
ONLY
T A K E O U R T IP !
$19.50
ORDER N O W !
11— - G A M E S C O R P . = y
21 Steuben St.
Brooklyn, N .Y.
Genial W illiam Lias went home to
Wheeling, West V irginia, from the
Chicago Show $400 richer, the w in­
ner of the grand prize in the contest
conducted by The Illinois Lock Com­
pany. Lias picked the w inning key
that opened the Illinois Duo Lock
on the contest machine in the See­
burg exhibit, and thus won the $400
Seeburg Symphanola.
More than 2,500 operators par­
ticipated in the contest, making it
one of the highlights of the show.
Each operator that visited the Illi­
nois Lock exhibit was given an op­
portunity to select a key. I f it
opened the lock on the Seeburg Sym­
phanola, the machine was his, the
g ift of The Illinois Lock Company.
Illinois
Lock
president,
Gray,
pointed out that the contest, which
aroused unusual interest, was the
company’s way of expressing ap­
preciation to operators for the very
successful year Illinois Lock Com­
pany has had. Always a leader in
the field, the company closed 1939
with sales at an all-time peak. The
registered key plan, which the com­
pany sponsored several years ago,
is reported to be responsible for
much of the gains the company made
in recent years. Under this plan, an
unduplicated key is registered in the
© International Arcade Museum
name of an operator. The pattern is
kept with his signature in the vaults
of The Illinois Lock Company. Only
that one operator can get duplicates
of this key pattern. As the operatoi
replaces locks on his machines, the
company supplies them so that his
key— and no other— will open them.
His one key will open all the ma­
chines on his route. Thus the opera­
tor is relieved of having to c a n y
dozens of keys. In recent weeks, the
company has supplemented its plan
by allowing a trade-in value to opera­
tors on their old locks that they wish
replaced with new Registered Keys
and Locks.
Meters Earn $2,563
In Two W eeks
Grand Rapids, Mich.— Receipt from
the parking meters for a period o
two weeks amounted to $2,563.55, a
new high record, according to City
Manager C. Sophus Johnson. Thirteen
slugs were found in the collection.
779,649 Meter Nickels
In Two Years
New Castle, Pa.— City Solicitor
Sid Lockley recently reported that m
two years a total of 779,649 nickels
were inserted into parking meters in
the city.
http://www.arcade-museum.com/

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