Automatic Age

Issue: 1941 August

5
OPERATORS
W. Big Income on Small Investment, with A
A Route of Prophylactic Latex Venders in Kt
^
#
f
The Henry Grille in River­
side, California is one of the
busiest refreshment spots on the
West Coast— a gathering place
for a great many Army and
Navy men.
Recently this location in­
stalled a new Victory Model
Wurlitzer 750. Says Henry
Meyers, the proprietor, “Am
very well pleased with the new
Wurlitzer 750. Since it has been
installed, I have done consider­
able more business.”
As a matter of fact, as pic­
tured above, this instrument
struck a responsive note with
the boys in olive drab who fre­
quent Henry’s Grille and, as Mr.
Meyers laughingly admits, “A
civilian hasn’t got a chance to
get a nickel in it. The Army and
Navy monopolize it all the time.
It helps keep the boys in good
spirits, and is as popular as a
furlough in these parts.”
GEORGE SAX AND
FAMILY ENJOY
VACATION
Arcade at Ocean Park, Cali­
fornia, and commented enthu­
siastically about the layout and
crowds at this nationally fa­
mous amusement center.
Teacher: “Now, Johnny, what did
Caesar exclaim when Brutus stabbed
him?”
Johnny, after a moment: “Ouch.”
August, 1941
© International Arcade Museum
For Details I
Modern Distributing Co.
17400 Kentucky Ave.
A
Detroit, Mich.
A
A
The
BUSINESS UP SINCE HE INSTALLED A WURLITZER
George Sax, chief executive
of Superior Products, Chicago
manufacturer, returned to his
headquarters on July 30 after
an e x t e n s i v e vacation trip
throughout the West Coast.
He was accompanied by Mrs.
Sax and their two sons, Samuel
and Eddie. Their vacation trip
was high-lighted by visits with
many celebrities.
While in Los Angeles, Sax
visited Paul Gerber’s Sportland
Tave.ns, Nite-Clubs, etc.
Write
AUTOMATIC *
PHOTOGRAPHY
M a il O r d e r A n g le
What It W ill Do For
Your Advertising
The hardest-boiled advertising
school in the world is the mail
order school, which is made up
of realists who face facts.
I f you’ re not entirely satisfied with
results of your advertising and
sales promotion, w e’ d like to talk
to you about putting it on a mail
order basis— introducing this mail
order angle.
W e’ re sales counselors with a long
and distinguished record for sales
at low cost. T w ice we won the
Premier A w ard of the Advertising
Federation of Am erica for our
campaigns.
We
have
assisted
many executives to more sales and
lower selling cost.
If you have a sales or an adver­
tising problem; if you could use
additional business at low cost, we
invite you to write us. N o cost,
no obligation for our analysis of
your problem.
Charles B. Roth
and Associates
Chamber of Commerce Building
Denver, Colorado
The
remarkable
coin-operated
PH O TO M ATIC
machine, a worldwide public favorite, autom ati­
cally takes, frames and deliver* a fin* personal
picture In only 40 secondsl Requires no attendants;
very litt le weekly servicing. PROVEN a steady
money-maker.
Investigate
without
obligation.
International Mutoscope Reel Co., Inc., 44-03 ll t h
St., Long Island C ity, New York.
AUTOMATIC AGE
http://www.arcade-museum.com/
65
LITTLE BENEFITS
— most often it is the little things, not
the big ones, that move folks to buy, writes Lewis
C. Brownson in "O pportu n ity" the
straight line selling magazine— eloquence or dominating personality or exceptional
force and aggressiveness do not always make the sale. --------------------------------
N one of our larger cities
there is a night club that
enjoys a very large patron­
age and makes a great deal of
money. Its owner is inevitably
the target of innumerable at­
tempts to sell promotional plans
and advertising.
Recently one of the most
“high powered” advertising
salesmen in the city called on
this prospect with an elaborate
advertising plan, concocted by
“the best brains” of the adver­
tising world. The salesman was
eloquent, forceful, and aggres­
sive and thoroughly accustomed
to “push over” prospects. But
this particular prospect refused
to be pushed. The gorgeous
prospectus was a dead loss.
“That guy needs advertising;
he can make a profit in adver­
I
tising ; yet he is so dumb that he
can’t appreciate a marvelous ad­
vertising plan when it’s shown
to him!” the salesman fumed.
“It’s over his head!”
HE GETS A N IC E ORDER
But an elderly man, shabby
and diffident, sidled into that
night club in the dead hours of
a Monday afternoon, the next
week, and sidled out again with
a nice order for advertising. His
advertising did not have the
benefit of “the best brains,” nor
of a high priced art department.
He carried nothing but a sample
wrapped in a piece of news­
paper.
He said to the night club
owner, “I been noticing that
more than half your customers
come from the smaller towns
ENTERTAINS PAMPA MUSIC MERCHANT AND DAUGHTER
Recent visitors to
Commercial
Music Company's
Dallas distributing
headquarters were
M. M . Rutherford, W urlitzer music merchant and his daughter . . . Daughter was said to
be highly intrigued by the display of W urlitzer equipment and phonographs, while her father
penned an order that proved his opinion, "Wurlitzers are first choice o f the better Pampa
locations."
66
AUTOMATIC AGE
© International Arcade Museum
out through the state . . . small
town boys bringing their girls in
for a good time. Would you like
to have more such customers ?”
“I sure would!” the owner an­
swered, “those small town fel­
lows are good spenders when
they come to town. One of them
will spend more in an evening
than a local fellow would spend
in a month.”
THE " Y O U " A N G L E IN SELLIN G
“Well, in that case,” the sales­
man said, “here’s something that
every out-of-town woman will
take home with her. She’ll show
it to her women friends because
she wants them to envy her for
her trip to the big city. Her
friends are going to keep up
with her if it’s the last thing
they do; so they will needle their
husbands and boy friends to
bring them to your place, too.
Any woman that comes here has
at least a dozen or more friends
at home; so you will get a dozen
or more good plugs for your
place for the cost of this one
souvenir at 15c. Take 2,000 of
’em and I can let you have ’em
for 13c.”
“It’s a deal!” the prospect an­
swered. “I ’ll take 2,000!”
Do you see the essential differ­
ence between the sale that failed
and the sale that succeeded?
The “high powered” salesman
was trying to sell something so
big, so broad, that it was far
beyond the prospect’s experience
and foreign to his accustomed
way of thinking and acting. The
successful salesman first turned
the prospect’s mind to a fa­
miliar, simple, everyday subject
with which he was thoroughly
familiar and then proposed a
August, 1941
http://www.arcade-museum.com/

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