Mortimer Mills was granted United States
patent 450,336 on 14 April 1891 for an improvement in
"coin-actuated vending apparatus". The improvement allowed the purchaser to select the product being sold and manipulate it so that it was carried to the point of delivery. Focusing on the devices covered by the patent, Mortimer Mills founded the M.B.M. Cigar Vending Company sometime between 1891, In 1897, the company launched the Mills
Owl, which was the first mechanical upright cabinet slot machine. The machine's design included a circle of owls perched on a lithographed tin wheel. The machine was a great success and the company would later adopt an owl motif as its trade mark. In 1898 , Mortimer Mills sold a controlling interest in the company to his son, Herbert S. Mills, and the name of the company was changed from M.B.M. Cigar Vending Company to Mills Novelty Company, Incorporated. In 1906, Bert Mills left school at the age of 14 to work for Mills. He would later establish a separate company, Bert E. Mills Corporation, and, in 1946, help to develop the first vending machines to sell hot coffee. In 1926, the company had moved to a plant of , comprising a factory and administrative building, at 4100 Fullerton Avenue in the northwest of Chicago. A 1935 Dancemaster jukebox may be seen and heard at the
Musical Museum, Brentford, England. By May 1935, the company was run by the four sons of Herbert Stephen Mills: Fred L. Mills was President, Ralph J. Mills was Vice President in Charge of Sales, Herbert S. Mills Jr. was Treasurer and manager of the plant, and Hayden Mills was Secretary. The family's wealth included a private yacht named
Minoco, after the family firm. In 1940, the Mills company introduced
Soundies, short 16mm musical films played in a coin-operated movie jukebox, its projection and sound mechanism made by RCA. Wartime restrictions curtailed manufacturing of the jukeboxes, but the Mills company continued to produce and distribute new films for them into 1947. During
World War II, Mills received authorized federal funding to use its industrial facilities to produce bomb carriers, directional antenna, hand control slip rings, and poppet valves. The company changed its corporate name from the Mills Novelty Company to Mills Industries, Incorporated on September 1, 1943 to better reflect their wider manufacturing output initiated by the United States entry into World War II. In 1944, Mills representative D. W. Donahue was appointed to a planning committee of the coin machine manufacturing industry which would explore the transition of the former coin-operated machine factories from wartime manufacturing to their prior business. By the end of the 1940s, the Chairman of the Board of Mills was Ralph J. Mills and the President was Herbert S. Mills. Both men were Vice Presidents of Bell-O-Matic Corporation, whose officers included President V. C. Shay and Vice President in Charge of Advertising Grant F. Shay. Both companies were still located at building in Fullerton Avenue, Chicago. In October 1954, F. L. Jacobs Company, a manufacturer of automobile parts based in
Detroit, announced that it had acquired both Mills Industries, Inc. and Selmix Dispensers, Inc. of
Long Island City, Queens (another manufacturer of equipment in the vending and dispensing industries). At that time the main products of Mills Industries were commercial ice cream freezers,
frozen custard and milk shake machines and all types of vending machines. During 1953 and 1954, the company had added a coin-operated
coffee vending machine, a three-flavor beverage bottle vendor, a citrus fruit juice vendor, and an ice cream package vendor to its product line. The intention of F. L. Jacobs Company was to operate Mills Industries as an independent subsidiary. However, component parts for the equipment were to be produced in the factories of F. L. Jacobs in
Detroit,
Traverse City, Michigan and
Danville, Illinois. By September 1954, the controller of Mills Industries was James A. Pound. In November 1955, Mills Industries announced a project to consolidate, over a number of years, most of its operations in Traverse City, Michigan. In November 1955, Mills Industries, Inc. announced a coin-operated vending machine, developed jointly with
H. J. Heinz Company, that would dispense a
tin can of hot food (one of a selection of six soups or dinners), a
can opener, and a spoon. The cans were maintained a constant temperature of 150 °F (65 °C). The machine was intended for use in factories or large offices, and the company claimed that it was a first of a kind in the United States. By the early 1960s, there were five major manufacturers of slot machines in the United States. The table below sets out their approximate comparative percentages of sales: By the early 1960s, the Bell-O-Matic Corporation was being run by Tony Mills. He sold the company to
American Machine and Science, Inc. (AMSC) owned by
Wallace E. Carroll (later the chairman of
Katy Industries), reportedly for USD500,000. AMSC had also acquired
O. D. Jennings & Company and the two companies were merged to form
TJM Corporation. AMSC would later merge with
CRL Industries, Inc. (subsequently renamed CRL Inc.). TJM Corporation was run by Tony Mills and his brother John Mills. The merged company failed to compete successfully with the electro/mechanical models produced by
Bally and also suffered because it had not protected its intellectual property rights in Japan. The company ceased trading in the 1980s. The name "The Mills Novelty Company" still survives today, in the form of a business that installs digital player systems in the Mills
Violano Virtuoso. The registered owner of United States trade marks 78625380 (the Mills Novelty Co. prize ribbon) and 78625372 (the Violano Virtuoso Self-Playing Violin and Piano laurel wreath, lyre, banner and ribbons) is Robert W. Brown of
Wisconsin. == Mills Violano-Virtuoso ==