Automatic Age

Issue: 1945 January

its Baby Ruth, Butterfinger and
other bars to men and women
embarking for foreign service
or in cantonments and service
centers in the United States.
------------ o------------
Veteran Seeks Opportunity
in Automatic Field
Designer Wins Praise
Paul Fuller, (left above) the
man who designed the now
famous and long popular mod­
ernized Wurlitzer, hears again
that it is doing a great job of
getting and holding locations
for W urlitzer music merchants
everywhere.
This time, it is Tim Crummet,
a partner of the Central Distri­
buting Co. of Kansas City, Mis­
souri and Omaha, Nebraska,
who tells Paul that the modern­
ized Wurlitzer is a magnificent
money maker.
Constructed entirely of non-
critical war materials, this cab­
inet enables music merchants
to convert W urlitzer models
24, 500, 600, 700 and 800 into
phonographs with new eye and
ear a p p e a l and consequent
greater earning power.
------------ o------------
Candy Bar in “ K” Ration
Jolly Jack, candy bar manu­
factured by Curtiss Candy Co.
of Chicago, has been accepted
by the Chicago Quartermaster
Depot as a confectionery com­
ponent for the A rm y’s “ K ” ra­
tion and is being withdrawn
from the civilian market, ac­
cording to an announcement by
Otto Schnering, founder and
president of the company.
“ WTe regret that it has been
necessary to w i t h d r a w this
popular bar from the regular
channels of distribution in or­
der to supply the Army with
the huge volume it needs, but
the boys and girls in the Armed
Services must come first, and
we are proud that J O L L Y
J A C K has met the Arm y’s
high r e q u i r e m e n t s , ” Mr.
Schnering said. “ A s soon as
military needs have been taken
care of, Jolly Jack will again
be made available to civilian
consumers.”
In a d d i t i o n to producing
nearly a million and a half Jol­
ly Jack bars a week for the
Quartermaster Corps, the com­
pany is making m a n y other
contributions to the armed for­
ces. It is manufacturing hard
candy squares in special export
packing and fruit drop rolls
for export;; and it is shipping
the bulk of its regular candy
products for export to the arm­
ed forces for sale in post ex­
changes and ships’ s e r v i c e
stores, and for issue to the men
in combat areas.
The company also is donat­
ing hundreds of thousands of
I am writing with the thought
in mind that you might be able
to give me some advice on plan­
ning a future in your field after
the war.
A t present I am an army of­
ficer in the Signal Corps acting
as the Post Signal Officer of this
station.
I
am interested in automatic
vending machines and automa­
tic games and devices of all
kinds. Have you any sugges­
tions as to a specific geographi­
cal area where I can procure
a franchise either as an inde­
pendent operator or as a repre­
sentative of one of the larger
companies.
Wouid you have any other
suggestions for a young man
with limited capital but who
has a good knowledge of mer­
chandising and some mechani­
cal ability to establish himself
in a community and build a
business.
If you have any previous is­
sues of your publication which
might add some light to my
problem ; or if you have the
names of any manufacturers
whom I might contact, or if you
have any suggestions please
let me hear from you.
------------ o------------
Poor Fish!
“ W hat lovely salm on!”
“ That’s not salmon— that’s
cod blushing at the price they
are asking for it.”
Career W om en
There are more than 1,000
women in the United States
who have taken up law. There
are several million other wo­
men who lay it down.
A U T O M A T IC AGE
4
© International Arcade Museum
http://www.arcade-museum.com/
T r a in in g
fo r
S m a ll
Postwar planning conducted
by many civic-minded institu­
tions strengthen the come-back
of so-called “ small business” .
The widespread operation of
small businesses is important to
the coin operated machine in­
dustry because t h i s class of
enterprise furnish many ‘stops’
for appropriate coin operated
and automatic v e n d i n g and
amusement machines.
Special training for veterans
and others who desire to own
and operate small business est­
ablishments will be offered by
Western Reserve University,
Cleveland, O. Classes in opera­
tion and management of small
business will be started in Jan­
uary at Cleveland College, by
the division of Business Admin­
istration of the University.
In announcing the new train­
ing program, Professor Thomas
M. Dickerson, Head of the div­
ision, said, “ W e believe this
will be unique, and so far as
we have learned, no other uni­
versity has offered a course
such as we have planned.
“ It is designed particularly
to help veterans who plan to
apply for loans to set them­
selves up in small business est­
ablishments under provisions of
the G. I. Bill. But it is also de­
signed to help civilians who
are interested in s e t t i n g up
their own establishments and
to help present owners and op­
erators who wish to improve
their methods.”
The course will be intensive,
lasting for eight weeks. Each
class will be limited to 20 stu­
dents. The classes will be un­
der the direction of Professor
K e n n e t h Lawyer, associate
professor of marketing, who,
because of the lack of a suitable
text on the operation of a small
business, has drawn up a uni­
que plan of teaching.
B u s in es s
Under his plan of instruction,
each s t u d e n t will make a
searching analysis of his own
qualifications and his chance
for success in his own estab­
lishment. He will first receive
a questionaire in which he will
set forth his plans, the type of
business he wishes to establish
and the extent he may wish to
expand and develop his busin­
ess.
He will be expected to obtain
much of his information on his
own initiative, through his own
investigations and through in­
terviews with successful Cleve­
land businessmen. To help him
in obtaining this material he
will be given a workbook, pre­
pared by Prof. Lawyer, which
is an expansion of the original
questionaire.
The student will bring his
information to class where it
will be discussed openly and in
conference with his fellow stu­
dents and his instructor. The
instructor’s lectures will be sup­
plemented by lectures by bus­
iness men, governmental rep­
resentatives and by trade as­
sociation heads.
He will record his informa­
tion in the workbook, and the
information h e obtains will
serve as a guide both in the
operation of his establishment
or in making up h i s mind
whether he should start in bus­
iness, Professor Lawyer said.
“ Because no great invest­
ment is needed, small busines­
ses are easily entered and easi­
ly established,” Professor Law­
yer commented. “ Their great
problem is continued and per­
manent existence. The mortali­
ty of small business concerns
is tragically high.
“ Poor location, competition,
changing p u b l i c tastes, are
ever-present hazards. In spite
of the h i g h mortality rate,
small business establishments
are essential to a democratic
AN OTH ER M ONTH
N E A R E R V IC T O R Y !
INTERNATIONAL
M UTOSCOPE
CORP.
PENNY ARCADE HEADQUARTERS SINCE 1895
Manufacturers of Photomatic and Other Famous Coin Operated Equipment
44-01 Eleventh Street
Long Island City, New Y ork
SU B SC R IPTIO N
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AUTOMATIC AGE
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