Automatic Age

Issue: 1940 September

September, 1940
AUTOMATIC AGE
13
AUTOMATIC SHOTS!
by Frank C. Petrine
BETTER B USINESS FO R E C A S T
'T IS T H E S E T O F T H E SA IL
Present production schedules, shown by in­
creasing payrolls right through the usual dog-
days of July and August, are a sure fire guaran­
tee of continued better business. The contrariness
of the summer improvement will also be over­
shadowed by the contradiction of the traditional
business lull in a presidential election. The forces
that make better business are so mighty that
nothing will be able to stop or retard their pro­
duction of jobs and payrolls
Plans for defense spending and new plants
has barely begun to show their power. There will
be gobs of it soon. Secondary spending will then
follow . . . new housing, expansion of power com­
pany facilities, railroad equipment replacement,
just to mention a few of the major links in the
chain that will be completed with consumer spend­
ing of increased pay rolls.
■ To introduce “ Composer” Jim Mangan, Mills
Novelty Co. merchandising executive, is like in­
troducing a happily married husband to his loving
wife and their children on their silver wedding
day! (No sly hint at Jim’s age intended!)
Mangan looks on the fabric of human relation­
ship in terms of friendship. He interprets this
relation to his craft or business in the spirit of
live and help live. His song reflects this spirit.
“ We’re All Americans— All True Blue” released
August 30, 1940, Bluebird B-10840, is a warm
hand-shake for the entire coin machine industry.
Ella Wheeler Wilcox, famous authoress and
poet, expressed in these revealing lines, why some
men, some organizations, and Americans, hold up
their heads a bit higher:
HOBBY
*
*
*
An operator was telling his partner about his
hobby— pets. He said: “ I’ve got a rabbit that
was born, brought up, and never leaves our house­
hold.”
“ He’s an ingrown hare,” replied the partner.
* * *
ES K IM O S P O L K A
TO PH O N O
M U S IC
J. D. Leary, president, Automatic Sales Co.,
Minneapolis, sent the following interesting item
clipped from a local paper:
“ Don Leary, the phonograph specialist, yearly
joins a Canadian Railway tour up into the Arctic
regions of Hudson Bay. He forwards this tid-bit:
In every Eskimo hut or igloo up in the Hudson
Bay region, you’ll find portable phonographs, and
they’re as common as our radios. An item that
every Eskimo puts on his shopping list when he
comes to town is more records. The phonographs
are the old style wind-up affairs, and the records
are polkas and schottisches.”
When the Eskimos graduate to automatic
phonographs, Mr. Leary, we hope you’ll let us in
on it. Sounds like a new, wide open territory for
an operator who wouldn’t mind being sewed in
his underwear every winter.
SENSE O F H U M O R
*
*
*
The day of the man without a sense of humor
is about over. As intelligence advances this
sense is recognized as an asset. Without it, a
man is not wanted in high places.
© International Arcade Museum
One ship drives east and another west,
W hile the self same breezes blow;
’Tis the set of the sail and not the gale
T h at bids them where they go.
*
*
*
FA T H E R A N D S O N P IC T U R E
An especially welcome letter from George A.
Miller, hustling Rock-Ola distributor in Oakland,
Calif:
“ I was very pleased to find, on page 63 of your
August issue, a picture of my son. Please send
me five additional copies.
“ May I take this opportunity to thank you for
your courtesy which I appreciate not only from a
personal viewpoint but which will be of value to
me from an advertising standpoint.”
* * *
P O P U LA R RECORDS
“ An average of six records get all the play,”
reports a large phonograph operator.
Does that mean the music fraternity is lagging
in its ability to sense the popular demand ? What
is restricting the supply of more song hits? Is
the dearth of hit music due to lack of competitive
enterprise among the music authors, composers,
and publishers? Has monopolistic consolidation
or control lulled the inspirational incentive to ex­
cel? Is the fire to “ write the nation’s songs”
quenched by the dollar sign of protective, cooper­
ative profits? Are new authors and composers
check-mated outside the gates of limbo, posted
“ Private Reservation— For Members Only” ?
The automatic phonograph manufacturers have
consistently shown their progressiveness. Their
http://www.arcade-museum.com/
14
AUTOMATIC AGE
new, better, more luxurious products offer ample
selectivity. They have provided the facilities for
more hits. The responsibility and obligation to
create the music supply to meet the facilities pro­
vided by mechanical inventiveness rests squarely
on the music fraternity.
Coin operated phonographs have furnished a
national net-work of hundreds of thousands of
outlets for music hits. The need and demand for
more hits is great enough to support competitive
enterprise to create them.
* * *
G O O D O LD DAYS
Sixteen years in the coin machine industry
qualifies J. Korengold, of Kimmel & Korengold,
Chicago phono operators, as a veteran in our
youngish industry.
He knows the answers.
Equally important is that he doesn’t “ live in the
good old days.” He’s alert to the present and
present day requirements.
“ Manufacturers’ sales managers have got to
have the merchandise today,” Korengold capped
his observations about yester-year conditions
when extravagant spending was the acme of
salesmanship. That the leading manufacturers
have sales managers with ability commensurate
to the qualities of their machines was noted by
Korengold’s mention of a string of sales man­
agers’ names.
* * *
SM ALL
TO W N
R O U TES
Too many operators think that the big cities
are the only territories for locations that will earn
them a good living.
But along comes a letter from Arvin W. Kurtz,
operator in a Wisconsin city of about 5,000 in­
habitants, with even smaller cities and towns in
the surrounding territory. He informs us that he
has a route of peanut machines and is going to
increase it to about 150 machines.
“ The machines which I have, bring me about
85 cents a week, for each machine,” Kurtz states.
That’s a mighty good living.
Maybe it takes a little determination and steady
work. These small town operators have what it
takes—and should be pointed to with praise as
“ success stories” for some of the big-town oper­
ators.
* * *
A D V IC E
“ All advice is made up for average people” —
a quotation from Fred B. Barton’s book, “ How to
Sell in Chain Stores.”
That may be true, but my experience is that
advice is taken by superior people only. The
superior man is always on the alert for ideas and
advice. The ordinary man resists both.
© International Arcade Museum
A
September, 1940
T R IB U T E T O A L SEB RING —
For an open mind and for helpful service.
* * *
BEFORE Q U IT T IN G , OR P A Y IN G
U N F A IR
TAX
One of the finest accomplishments is credited
to Thomas Novelty Co., Kentucky operators. T. O.
Thomas writes A u t o m a t i c A g e the following let­
ter, which merits the study and emulation o f all
operators faced with similar situations:
“ Believe it would interest some of your readers
to know of our experience with our city in con­
nection with privilege or occupational license for
operation of legal merchandise vending machines.
“ We operate 97 coin machines of various types,
such as lc peanut, lc gum, lc amusement, 5c
candy, 5c gum, and 15 to 20c cigarette vendors.
The city council imposed an ordinance assessing
the operator of the various machines $3.00 for
the lc vendors, $5.00 for the 5c, and $15.00 for
the 15c machines. We refused to pay the license,
were arrested on five counts, asked for trial after
having our attorney prepare the case and defend­
ed ourselves on the grounds that the license was
out of proportion to the possible revenue from
the business, and was therefore confiscatory. At
trial we were sworn as usual and answered the
many questions of prosecution, then we submitted
a sworn statement in writing as to the income
from the several machines for an exact period of
half a year. The court ruled in our favor, that
the licenses were out of reason and uncollectable,
and the ordinance void by reason of being entirely
out of proportion to income for which license was
required.
“ Other operators might have the same experi­
ence with their respective cities as we have had,
and we pass this on as a suggestion that they too
question through their attorneys the legality of
any ordinance imposed by the city council, before
just quitting, or paying an exhorbitant license.
“ Best wishes for your good A u t o m a t i c A g e .”
This individual achievement shows that
Thomas is an alert operator who conducts his
operation on a high level business basis. He
demonstrated the importance of record-keeping,
which is one of the strongest arguments against
discriminatory and unfair taxation.
* * *
BUND
M A N 'S
IN D E P E N D E N C E
H.
L. Burt tells about a blind man who oper­
ates a route of 300 Automatic Games’ machines.
Simplicity and fool-proof qualities assure the
independence of this handicapped citizen.
* * *
“ D O U B L E FEA TU R E ”
Gypsy Rose Lee goes to the airport to fly to
Hollywood.
And 5,000 men go to see Gypsy take off.
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