Automatic Age

Issue: 1942 September

OVERCOME C ON FUSIO N
AND YOU SELL
A man goes into the average
store to buy an average item
and'an average salesman waits
upon him. The average salesman
shows the average man the aver­
age item and the average man
asks: “You say it is better.
Why is it better?”
Then the salesman proves
that he is only an average sales­
man— he doesn’t know. He mur­
murs something about quality,
reputation of manufacturer;
some banal thing like that.
Sometimes the average man
buys. Oftener he does not.
One man was telling about
how much difficulty he had had
in finding out the difference be­
tween a first- and a second-line
tire. This was in the good old
days when you could buy a tire.
The price difference he knew—
$4. He wanted, to know what
he’d get for that $4. He asked
the salesmen.
One said: “I don’t know. One
is better than the other or it
wouldn’t cost more. That stands
to reason, doesn’t it?” Another
said: “It has more rubber.” No.
3 opined: “It will last longer.”
“Not so much danger from
blowouts,” said No. 4. Not one
could answer the simple ques­
tion.
To ferret out the real reason,
this man wrote to the manufac­
turer. He learned that there is a
difference which makes the $4
price discrepancy seem small.
The better tire is made of long
staple cotton, twisted into cords,
which forms a much stronger
fabric, able to withstand greater
pressure, provide more safety,
give more life, bring more for
the money.
Customers are confused these
days. The salesman who sets
himself out to do a job of over­
coming that confusion will get
the lion’s share of business in
his line.
+
tests, as inaccurate as they are
unscientific. But the customer
believes in them and acts upon
his belief.
A survey recently made re­
veals that it is easy to fool the
public about quality, if one
wants to, because the public
really judges quality by the
“window dressing”— that is to
say, by the environment in
which the goods are shown.
Packaging, store interior, even
prestige advertising all give the
public its ideas of quality.
The quality of the product
can be low and the public will
stick to the idea that it is high,
just so long as the surroundings
suggest quality, luxury, high
class.
In the long run, of course, the
public discovers its error, and
rebels, and no man can put over
shoddy merchandise on a large
scale or for a long time.
H O W CUSTOMERS
TELL Q U A LITY
A good many customers be­
lieve themselves to be experts on
quality. They rub a fabric be­
tween thumb and forefinger and
pronounce it wool; they smell
the olive oil and tell whether it’s
genuine or not; they apply other
SPECIAL SMALL CANDIES FOR VENDORS
Pistachio Nuts
Boston Baked Beans
Chocolate Peanuts
Ind ian Nuts (P inion Nuts)
Charms
Salted Peanuts
Ball Gum
Midget Burnt Peanuts
Rainbow Peanuts
Pee Wee Licorice
Pastels
W R IT E F O R O U R P R IC E L IS T
PEANUT SPECIALTY CO.
400 W . S U P E R IO R ST.
C H IC A G O
fiS IV
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IT’S IN THE BARREI____ 7 2 0 Holes . . . 5 / per sale . . .
Barrel-style tickets . . . . Takes in $ 3 6 . 0 0 . . . . Pays out
$ 1 7 . 5 2 . . . Total Average Profit $ 1 8 . 4 8 . . . THIN DIE-
CUT board . . . A real “ Hoop Chest” of profit!
SUPERIOR PRODUCTS
14 N. P EO R IA ST.
September, 1942
© International Arcade Museum
CHICAGO,
AUTOMATIC AGE
ILL.
13
http://www.arcade-museum.com/
CLASSIFIED AD DEPARTM ENT
Classified Ad Rates
M inim um ad $1.00. All classified
ads are payable in advance. Send
check, money order, cash, or
stamps with your order and copy.
1 Month ............. 6 cents per word
2 Months ........... 8 cents per word
3 Months ........... 10 cents per word
A U T O M A T IC
A G E ,
4416-18
E ls to n
50 cents extra for handling and
forwarding Box Number ads. Re­
mittance with ad. Classified depart­
ment is for used machines only.
A v e n u e , C h ic a g o ,
III
FO R S A L E — SECO N D HAND
FO R S A L E — S E C O N D H A N D
WANTED TO BUY
SLOTS FOR SALE: SIX COLUMBIA
Bells, complete with parts for pen­
ny, nickel, dime or quarter play. One
Pace KITTY 5c play. All in good
shape. $100 each. One third deposit
with order.— Box 191, Rigby, Idaho.
P5-6
FOR SALE: SCALES. 10 Sheffler De
Lux, $350.00, reconditioned like new.
Original cost, $125.00 each. Also two (2)
Jenning’s Low Boys.—George H. Losey,
3703 Buckingham Road, Milford, Balti­
more, Md.
P8
FOR SALE: (5) U-Need-A Merchandis­
ers, 5 column, 105 bar capacity, newly
refinished, reconditioned, $45.00 each.—
Box 801, c/o Automatic Age, 6416 Elston
Ave., Chicago, 111.
P8
SPECIAL TAB GUM MACHINES. 5 col­
umn vend. Wrigley, American and
other tab gums. Sliding bar selector,
penny play. Full display glass front.
Machine with one filling of tab gum com­
plete, $5.00.—Hecht Nielsen, 1322 Con­
gress St., Chicago, 111.
tfb8
FOR SALE—5 chines—rebuilt, very attractive, very
good arcade machine, $50.00 each. Sub­
stantial discount in lots of ten or more.
Write—Peerless Weighing and Vending
Machine Corporation, 22-19 41st Avenue,
Long Island City, New York.
P8
FOR SALE—Nut and Gum Machines—
all types, over 300 machines, $1.00 and
up.—Penny King Co., Pittsburgh, Pa. P8
U-SELECT-IT 54 bar nickel machines.
One or fifty. Splendid condition. $35.00
each.—Dillman, Box 696, Davenport,
Iowa,
P8-9-10
FOR SALE—Candy Vending Machines :
5-6-7 and 9 columns. New and rebuilt,
very attractive.—12 Floor, 123 West 64th
St., New York City.
P8-9-10
WILL BUY Penny Shocking Machines,
or trade nut machines for same. —
Penny King Co., Pittsburgh, Pa.
P8
PHONOGRAPHS — 20 MILLS, 12
record Ferris Wheel models. Will
sell cheap.—Babe Levy, 2830— 10th
Court South, Birmingham, Alabama.
'
P5-6-7
PIN TABLES, SPRING BUMPER
type $5.00 up. Rock-Olas 12 and 16
record, priced to sell.— Lidgard Vend­
ing Company, Tenth Street, Logans-
port, Ind.
P5-6
FOR SALE — Territorial patent
rights on war time amusement de­
vice (not pinball machine). Throws
missle at push of button, varying
factor determining aim makes it an
interesting war time game. Write
only.— Harry Fuchs, 114 East 28th
Street, New York, N. Y.
P6/42
A COMPLETE STOCK of recondi­
tioned 5c candy bar machines—all
types, all kinds. Priced from $12.50
up. Send for free leaflets giving speci­
fications and all details.— R. H. Adair,
733 S. Euclid Ave., Oak Park, 111. tfb
5c Candy Bar Machines, U-Select-It, 109
bars, $45.00. U-Select-It, 54 bars,
$27.00. Selecteria’s, 39 bars, $20.00. Rush
Hour, 54 bars, Selective, $15.00. All of the
above machines are clean and in perfect
condition.—Hecht Nielsen, 1322 Congress
St., Chicago, 111.
tfb8
FOR QUICK SALE—10 Skill-A-Rette,
$10.00. 15 Master Vendors,' $5.00. 6
Hitler Target Gum Vendors, $8.00. 3 l Pool Tables, $10.00. All good appearance
and working condition. Will pay CASH
for Kicker-Catchers.—C. B. Carmack,
Chuckey, Tenn.
P8
W A N T E D T O BU Y
W IL L PAY CASH FOR USED SE­
lective 5<* candy bar machines —
either column or cabinet types. Want
especially U-Select-It 54 bar vendor
manufactured
by
Coan-Sletteland
Company. Give serial numbers, age of
machines, type of finish and best cash
price in first letter.— S. W. Faram,
1518 Hollywood Ave., Chicago, Illinois.
Btf
WANTED FOR CASH OLD BATTERY
Operated "Dewey’s”, Old Obsolete Slot
Machines, Old Arcade Machines, Auto­
matic Pianos, Lifters, Pullers, Lung
Testers, Band Organs, Music Boxes, any
condition.—Boyer, 2700 Wabash, Chi­
cago.
14
© International Arcade Museum
AUTOMATIC AGE
F O R S A L E — S U P P L IE S
Sanitary Napkins— Napkin Machines
— Prophylactic Latex— Latex Ma­
chines. Highest quality. Lowest prices.
Coin Wrappers 60c per 1,000; 55c in
20,000 lots.— Sanitex Company, 14182
Meyers Road, Detroit, Mich.
P6/42
COIN W RA PPERS— Tubular lc, 5c,
10c and 25c guaranteed heavy
paper, 65c a thousand in 25,000 lots,
75c single thousand. Accurate penny
and nickel Coin Counters, heavy alu­
minum $1.25. Operators Handy Belt
Pockets 35c each prepaid. Collection
books 75c a dozen.— Hecht Nielsen.
1322 Congress St., Chicago.
tfb
ATTENTION, OPERATORS AND DEAL­
ers. You can now get Decalcomania
Transfers in small quantities. An at­
tractive name plate insures wide adver­
tising publicity at low cost. Also serves
as a permanent identification. Samples
on request. Sideline salesmen wanted.
RALCO, 727 Atlantic Ave., Boston, Mass.
tfb
STANDARD JOHNSON, Coin Counting
Machine, motor driven, for all coins
with tray and stand, $150.00. Hand ma­
chines from $45.00.—Hecht Nielsen, 1322
Congress St., Chicago, 111.
tfb8
HEAVY GLASS GLOBES for Advance
Gum and Peanut Machine. Holds 650
size % gum. $5.50 dozen.—Confection
Specialties, 3437 W. Madison St., Chicago,
111.
P8-9-10
September, 1942
http://www.arcade-museum.com/

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