THEY'RE ALL CRYING FOR
YANKS
MANUFACTURING
COMPANY
161 W . HURON ST., CHICAGO 10, ILL.
W EST COAST O FF IC E
WILLIAMS DISTRIBUTING CO.
2309 W. Pico Blvd., Los Angeles 8, Calif.
money he has to spen d. It i es pecially
important to kee p in mind th e lower in-
come groups, for in toto th ey can con ume
a lot of goods.
Our machine age is gea red to turn out
goods in quantity hardl y dreamed of bc-
fore. When some shortages still ex ist, it
eems foolish to mention oversupply, but
~oods are beginning to pile up in some
li elds.
Maybe th e coi n machine manufacturer
was ri ght: our factories can produce enough
so that employees should on ly work half
a week, get full weekly pay, and then have
plenty of time for leisure, travel, etc., in
which tim e they would spend more and help
10 con ume all the goods we can produce.
Sounds like a paradise.
Co nsum er relations is a much bigger job
than labor-mana gemen t relations, but one
of th e shortest ways to promote bigger con·
su mption of goods is to keep expanding
the many ideas to improve labOl'-ma nage-
ment relations.
5.000 Visitors Daily
At New N. Y. Arcade
NEW YORK-West 42nd Street, be-
tween 7th and 8th Avenues, has been
tagged "Arcade Alley" with th e recent
opening of the new 42nd Street Playland.
Street, whi ch draws vast throngs to a
number of second·run movi e hou ses, al-
ready has three amusement centers, two
operated by Schork & Shaffer and the third
by Johnny Christopher.
New site is operated by 42nd St. Enter-
prises, Inc., headed by Dave Simon of
Simon Sales, Inc., coin machine distri-
butor, and is managed by Nat Chodecker.
Head mechanic is Ray Schultz, who previ-
ously worked at the Fun Center in Oak-
land, Cal.
JULY, 1948
42nd St. Playland occupi es the 50 by
100 foo t si te of a former bus depot, and
it rear entrance fronts th e load ing lot of
another terminal , Pllllin g patronage from
waiting travell ers as well as from the
normal tran sie nt trade on 42nd Street. A
glass front makes activity in th e loca tion
visible to passer -by. In its opening weeks,
the arcade was drawin g an estim ated 3500-
5000 visitors per day, and mo t of them
dropped co ins in one of the spot's ma-
chines.
On e front co rn er of the s ite is occupied
by a cigar stand and a snack shop , with
balance of th e floor space devoted to the
arcade layout. Unique fea tures are a
marquee· type green and orange electric
sign out front , co mpetin g witb the neigh-
boring movie hou se sign for attention; and
a fluorescent lightin g system which jJ1umi-
nates the interior of th e arcade.
Basic feature of the pot is a " bank" of
37 custom-b uilt pokerino tables (made by
Scientific Machine Corp., New York),
which occupi es the right-hand side of the
loca tion. Sole break in th e tables is a
premium co unter, at whi ch pa trons redeem
coupons won at pokerino. Of the 59 other
arcade pieces, a major novelty is provided
by the introdu ction of roll· downs. Three
Singapores (U nited Mfg. Co., Chicago),
two H y- Rolls ( Bally Mfg. Co., Chicago),
and two Advance R oll machin es appeared
to be getting a major share of the play,
while two Arrows (Esso Mfg. Co., Ho-
boken, N. J .) and two Bing-A-Rolls
(Genco, Chicago) rounded out the roll-
down picture. Among a group of sports
machines, th e first model to reach the
East of Bally's Big I nning, a new baseball
game, proved a good drawi ng-card. A new
40-selection AMI coin phonograph is spotted
in the center of the loca tion .
Among the standard equipment were
Internati onal Mutoscope's Photomatons and
Voice-O-Graphs, ABT target guns, a nd Ex·
hibit fortune-tellers. Panorams, converted
to individual viewi ng and geared to dime
play, were doing well. On e interesting
unit was a battery of four ni ckel-opera ted
M utoscopes, each featuring a different
prizefight, with a Joe Louis bout rated as
top coi n· pull er.
Spot h as plenty of flash and color, and
the natural wood finish of the pokerino
tabl es and roll-downs adds a note of " new-
ness" to the equipm en t th a t has long been
missi ne; in pos t-war arcades in these parts.
42nd St. Playland expects to add a number
of new machin es after the CMI show, in-
cl uding Scientific's new baseba ll game, to
bring its total of arcade pieces well ove r-
the hundred mark.
Dr. Pepper Report Gives
Interesting Sidelights
DALLAS-Annual report of Dr. Pepper
Co. gave some sidelights on trend in sales
. of soft drinks. Don C. Bryan, president,
said the firm expects 1948 to be fairly as
good as last year, although costs continu e
to rise. H e sa id th e business now has
entered a buyer's mark et and that th e in-
dustry should be able to hold retail price
at five cents.
Sales began to decline in the last quarter
of 1947 bu t started upward aga in in De-
cember, he sa id. Supply chann els had
fill ed up by the end of the summer la t year,
accordi ng to Bryan , hence national sale
began to decl in e in October.
The pickup that started in December co n-
tinued into January, and th en leveled off
in the la tter part of the month, also during
the first two weeks of February. Sales
started upward again by th e end of Febru-
ary. Demand during March is normally
abou t 30 per cent below th e peak summer
mon th s, he sa id .
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